You’ve given your novel an unforgettable CLIMAX. You’ve made every single page helplessly addictive. Now it’s time to learn 5 Ways to Make Your Novel Inescapable. Your reader will go into the first page. . . and never come out again.
Category: Meet the Editor
That’s me.
5 Ways to Make Your Novel Helplessly Addictive
Last week we talked about CLIMAX and how to make your novel unforgettable. This week we’re talking about DEVELOPMENT and 5 Ways to Make Your Novel Helplessly Addictive Two hundred and fifty pages. You need your reader to be in an absolute passion to turn every single one. Full-contact addiction.
5 Ways to Make Your Novel Unforgettable
It’s October again, which means we’re ramping up once again for NaNoWriMo with our first post on what you need to know as you design your new novel: 5 Ways to Make Your Novel Unforgettable Climax, people. It’s the whole point. You know it, and I know it. (If you’ve… Read more“5 Ways to Make Your Novel Unforgettable”
The 4 Keys to the 2012 Presidential Election
& One Essential Step: VOTE
Welcome to America. Conscience As the 2012 Presidential election approaches this November, I’ve found myself asking my conscience whether or not I can limit my blog presence to a pure conversation about writing, when I know the welfare of my own son hangs in the balance of this election. I… Read more“The 4 Keys to the 2012 Presidential Election<br>& One Essential Step: VOTE”
4 Reasons to Love Rafael Sabitini & Freddie Mercury
Last week we talked about reasons to love Melville Davisson Post, the great nineteenth-century mystery author of the backwoods of Virginia. In case you’re new here, that conversation was caused by a post I did that was all lurid, over-the-top covers of vintage mysteries. And that post was caused by… Read more“4 Reasons to Love Rafael Sabitini & Freddie Mercury”
4 Reasons to Love Melville Davisson Post
Some weeks ago I did a post that was almost nothing but the covers of fabulous vintage mysteries and a list of some of my favorite vintage authors. And that post was in response to a question asked by Sabine on an earlier post about being interviewed by the fabulous… Read more“4 Reasons to Love Melville Davisson Post”
Mark Twain on a Work of Art vs. Literary Delirium Tremens
My husband found this excerpt from Mark Twain’s famous criticism of The Deerslayer by James Fenimore Cooper on the blog of Marcel Gagne: Writer and Free Thinker at Large. This excerpt has become known as “Mark Twain’s Rules of Writing.” And I tell you people, verily, these rules are as… Read more“Mark Twain on a Work of Art vs. Literary Delirium Tremens”
Damn Spectacular Feet—guest post on Writer Unboxed
Well, folks, it looks like I raised a little dust storm over on Writer Unboxed this weekend with a comic post about the difference between quality fiction and the modern frantic dash for instant 99-cent fame. Sadly, a few commenters misunderstood my encouragement that we strive for spectacular art as… Read more“Damn Spectacular Feet—guest post on Writer Unboxed”
The Writer’s 3 Organizational Tools:
Jadestone Hatchet, Artist’s Easel, & Cat
So, last month was all about writers conferences, and if you were busy all month actually attending those conferences you can catch up with us here, and here, and here, and especially here (a story of hope!). Then last Friday I confessed what happened after that last writers conference, when… Read more“The Writer’s 3 Organizational Tools: <br>Jadestone Hatchet, Artist’s Easel, & Cat”
6 Steps to Tangling with the Publishing Windmill
This is the story about what happened after that Writers Conference in 1996 at which I became friends with the brilliant novelists Lucia Orth and Sasha Troyan. Actually, a lot of things happened, one of them being that I went home and completely rewrote my current novel yet once again…. Read more“6 Steps to Tangling with the Publishing Windmill”