Tag Archive | fiction writing
The Pros and Cons of Writing a Series
Originally posted on Kate M. Colby:
Happy Friday! Just a quick note for you today, as I want to share a guest post I recently wrote for author Margarita Morris’s website. In this article, I break down the unique advantages and challenges that writing a series offers, as well as provide a few tips for…
FRIDAY FICTION with RONOVAN WRITES Prompt Challenge #15-A spill occurs.
Originally posted on ronovanwrites:
Useful links: Grammarly.com Click HERE for STRIPPING for FICTION or HOW TO WRITE FLASH FICTION. Click HERE for Dialogue Tags, Action Beats, and the Dialogue Comma. Click HERE for What’s a GL and PSS got to do with writing. IF YOU WOULD LIKE COMMENTS ON YOUR WRITING, PLEASE NOTE AT THE…
FRIDAY FICTION with RONOVAN WRITES Prompt Challenge #3
Originally posted on ronovanwrites:
For those already signed up for the Free eBook Project, please note Smashwords will likely be the first platform used. I am looking into Amazon’s policies, but I know Smashwords allows eBooks FREE all the time, not just a price matching feature. But if I find Amazon is Free from the…
Making Believe
Originally posted on The One & Only Elgon:
If there is a secret to writing fiction, a difference that distinguishes a professional from an aspiring amateur, it is the art of making believe. In many ways it is akin to all the pretending and playing we did as children. You remember, everything was possible and…
Author incomes – when does the money come in?
Originally posted on writerlywitterings:
This is a quick post to answer the question I have been asked several times recently, which is: how soon are authors paid for their work? Oh, boy, I remember the day Marion Donaldson called me to confirm that Headline wanted to buy my first book, and that she wanted another…
Fiction Writing: Creating the Perfect Hero
Originally posted on AnitaLovett.com:
Fiction writing smolders down to the basic concept of good versus evil. A good story will include a hero and a villain duking it out in a twisted plot designed to keep the reader on their toes. The really good stories—the ones we can’t put down—are home to unlikely and…