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This Holiday Season, Give the Greatest Gift of All: Books!

December 5th, 2014

If you're a writer or a passionate reader, you probably like giving books as gifts. It's in our nature, isn't it? These things become so precious to us that we have to share them with other people. By sharing a book that we love we're sharing a part of ourselves—that mutual point of connection we want other people to see and understand. 

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The Gift of Gab: Mastering the Maximal

December 4th, 2014

As beginning writers, we're often counseled to cut our sentences down to size. And no wonder—beginning writing tends to be full of redundancies, mixed metaphors, and clauses (of often questionable relevance) stacked ceiling to floor. So you learn to limit your youthful excesses and voila! You've got hard, crisp sentences that don't fuck around.  Damn, you think. Me and Hemingway, chillin'.

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Where To Buy Cheap eBooks

December 4th, 2014

'Tis the Holiday Season, when gift giving abounds. Okay, maybe you don't participate in a yearly ritual that involves exchanging gifts for familial love and bonding, but many of us do.

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Noir at the Bar: An Oral History

December 3rd, 2014

Header image via Brent Schoonover If you’re on Facebook or other social media outlets and you're following characters like LitReactor’s Rob Hart or Thuglit’s Todd Robinson, chances are you’ve seen invites and pictures of an event called Noir at the Bar. Even if you’re not connected to those two and you’re friends with someone like Benjamin Whitmer, Hilary Davidson, Owen Laukkanen, Megan Abbott, and J.

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Three Books About... Snow

December 1st, 2014

They say no two snowflakes look alike, an idea with such immediate relevance to the over-nurtured product of modern middle-class rearing practices that a whole subreddit is devoted to tales of Special Snowflakes — people afflicted with the syndrome of thinking that they’re unique, special and just a bit better than everyone else.

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UPDATED WITH WINNER - LitReactor's Flash Fiction Smackdown: November Edition

November 26th, 2014

Flash fiction: A style of fictional literature marked by extreme brevity. Welcome to LitReactor's Flash Fiction Smackdown, a monthly bout of writing prowess. How It Works We give you inspiration in the form of a picture, poem, video, or prompt. You write a flash fiction piece using the inspiration we gave you. Put your entry in the comments section. One winner will be picked and awarded a prize.

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A Writer's Gratitude List: 12 Things to be Thankful For

November 26th, 2014

Thanksgiving approaches, and it's time to give thanks. As writers, we have a unique set of items to be thankful for. Having trouble finding that gratitude inside yourself? Maybe this list of writerly items will help steer you in the right direction.

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5 Books that Say "Fuck You," not "Thank You"

November 26th, 2014

Face it: In this season of harvest, bounty, and plentitude, sanctimony reigns. We justify our piggishness at the Thanksgiving table by fooling ourselves into thinking that we’re celebrating a noble emotion: gratitude. But in fact, we give thanks, oh Lord, for our third helping of stuffing, for the host’s choice of a delightful tarte tatin over a clichéd pumpkin pie, and most of all for the fact that nobody makes that godawful 1950s canned sweet potatoes with marshmallows casserole any more. (What’s that you say? Your grandmother makes this horror every year?

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Try Before You Buy: The Joy of Free Online Lit-Mags

November 25th, 2014

Cover art by Jeff Simpson, Mark Greyland and Sandro Castelli, respectively. Back in May of this year, the lit-mag Shimmer—which publishes mainly dark fantasy—went all digital with its 19th issue.

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So You Want To Write A Book, Part 3: This Is The End

November 25th, 2014

Wow, you guys. This is it! This is the column in which we discuss completing our novels. We've come so far together, talking about research and planning, getting started, and the daily grind of writing our words.  But what about ending our books? What about those final moments? How do we know when our stories end? At how many words? And what should we do once we've typed that exhilarating phrase: The End? What comes next?

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