No, not the setting of your book. The setting in which you write. When I started writing fiction, I could write anywhere and any way. Longhand or on a keyboard. At work or in a hotel while traveling. By myself or with co-workers or family in the same room. In the early morning, late at…
Author: Mary Gillgannon
Endings
Every editor and writing instructor will tell you how important the beginning of a book is. It sets the stage, draws the reader in, and likely influences whether the reader will buy (and read) the book at all. Lately I’ve been thinking about the importance of endings. My thoughts were drawn there partly because I’m…
Rejection
While we’re in that period between people receiving their scores and critiques from the contest, and preparing for pitch sessions at the conference, this seems like a good time to talk about rejection. If you’re engaged in an artistic endeavor like writing, rejection is almost inevitable. There are a few people who get published right…
Genre Hopping
A friend of mine recently told me she has started writing in a whole new genre. It definitely wasn’t a career change I would have expected. Her previous books have been long, complex stories written in an elegant, almost literary style. Now she has decided to write in a genre that is much lighter and…
The Writer As Serial (Book) Monogamist
Very early in my career, when I was visiting there for my class reunion, I held a booksigning at a bookstore in my hometown in Iowa. There were few interested customers. The store manager, obviously thinking to cheer me up, told me a story about how author Robert James Waller had held a booksigning there…