First off, if you’re a fanatical pantser you should probably skip this article and go stare at a blank page for a couple hours regretting your life choices. However, if you have even a little urge to learn the miracles of writing with direction, stick around and try the clam dip. It’s an old family…
Tag: setting
Break Your Characters Out of Your Writing Ruts
We often fall into ruts. We drive the same route to work. We go to the same restaurants when we can’t face another night of our own cooking. We return to the same stores. We even vacation in the same locales year after year. There’s nothing wrong with a good rut or two. After all,…
10 Tips for Writing a Boring Story
A friend recently confessed that she was bored by a book she had read for a book club. Having just slogged through the same book myself, I agreed completely. As I writer, I knew exactly why the book didn’t work for me. But the woman I was chatting with couldn’t articulate why she hated the…
How real is your fiction?
I’ve now published three novels in my Four Corners Mystery Series. Book One is The Road to Lavender and Book Two is A Lavender Wedding. Both novels take place in the mythical village of Lavender on the wild Western Slope of Colorado. And both works chronicle the adventures of my handsome detective/lavender farmer, Trinidad Sands,…
Using Weather to Strengthen Scenes in Your Writing and Storytelling
Let’s talk about the weather. I know, I know. The weather is what you talk about when you can’t think of anything else to discuss. Person A: “Hot enough for you?” Person B: “Yeah. That was some storm last night, wasn’t it?” Person C: “Did you notice how that heat wave that moved in this…