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LitReactor Photo Album: Show Us Your Writing Environment

May 14th, 2012

For many writers, one of the most important parts of his or her process is environment.  Some of us prefer to have a private little space to which we can disappear. Others need to feel the energy of other people, at coffee shops or parks. Some need sunlight while others require darkness. There's no right way to write, but each of us has our own special way of doing it. 

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Ask The Lit Coach: "What Self-Published Authors Must Do to Win Friends, Influence Readers and Possibly Gain the Attention of a Publisher"

May 14th, 2012

As an agent, the number one self-published genre to cross my desk was children's - never mind that I didn't specialize in the trade. Children's publishing and adult publishing have many differences, except when it comes to what publishers look for when considering a self-published title. There is no set criteria for a self-published author to meet in order to be considered "pub worthy" by the publisher. If you're considering self-publishing in general, read on.

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The Top 10 Best Books... With The Worst Amazon Customer Reviews

May 11th, 2012

Writers - feeling down about a harsh review? Shrug it off! Even the most critically acclaimed novels of all time aren't safe from a scathing Amazon customer review or two. If you've never taken the time to check out the one-star reviews of your favorite classic novels, I urge you to do so. When they aren't tragic, they're hilarious, and most often they're tragically hilarious.

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YA Gateway Books: A Primer

May 11th, 2012

"Wait, does it have sparkly vampires in it? Because no." "Uh, you know we're not in high school anymore, right?" "Sorry, but I only read real literature."

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Ten Gay Men’s Novels You Should Already Have Read If You Consider Yourself Even Semi-Literate

May 10th, 2012

We’re glibbets, which rhymes with the froggy ribbets, and we have a literary canon that most of you won't read. What’s a glibbet? A glibbet is a member of the GLBT community: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender.

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You’ll Never Write In This Town (Or Any Other Town) Again! 5 Ways To Survive and Overcome Creative Burnout.

May 10th, 2012

In November of 2010, I was laid off from my job of six years along with one thousand of my former co-workers. The layoff didn’t exactly come as a shock. I’d been living with the specter of possible job loss for over a year; my immediate supervisors made sure to remind everyone that if we didn’t work harder than we ever had before, the company would have no choice but to start looking for ways to cut costs. And as with most American corporations, it wouldn’t be management who would take a pay cut in order to save jobs.

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Can Joss Whedon Save The Superheroine?

May 8th, 2012

With any other director at the helm of The Avengers, Black Widow could have been lost amongst the larger-than-life power profiles of characters like Iron Man, Thor, The Hulk, and Captain America. But we aren't talking about any other director, we're talking about Joss Whedon. And Joss Whedon has always been interested in female characters, and seems particularly compelled by women as superheroes. He is, of course, the creator of one of the most powerful female superheroines in the history of media – Buffy Summers, aka Buffy The Vampire Slayer.

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Through A Touchscreen Darkly: What Technology Can Do For The Novel

May 8th, 2012

The book remains the same. From scratched wax tablets to scrawled parchments to leather-bound beauties to airport paperbacks, the novel has largely been experienced in a uniform way: you open the front cover and commence reading. Close when finished. Experience flood of words and ideas and emotions if you’re lucky. Experience mild diversion if you’re not. Still, the medium has barely altered. Few authors strive to make their books anything beyond a staid vessel for the linear text within. A wad of paper leaves stuck between two flaps of cards, glued up and shelved.

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Lady, Go Die!: A Behind The Scenes Look At Completing Mickey Spillane's Lost 'Mike Hammer' Novels

May 7th, 2012

In the final week of his life, Mickey Spillane said to his wife Jane, “When I’m gone, there’ll be a treasure hunt around here.  Take everything you find and give it to Max.  He’ll know what to do.” Mickey had already called me, a week before, asking me to finish the final Mike Hammer novel, The Goliath Bone, if he was unable to.

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Guess The Plot, Episode II: Plumb Away!

May 7th, 2012

Guys, we did it. We really did it. Last month, in Guess The Plot's debut, I offered up four classic science-fiction covers and asked for LitReactor's help figuring out what the novels inside could possibly be about. And you all didn't just show up, you killed it. Go back and check out the hilarious comment section in that link. Gold, people, hot bubbling gold! So I'm back, with just one cover this time. One amazing cover. 

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