Last spring I finished what seemed like the “book from hell”. Every chapter felt dredged from the depths of my creative soul. Like getting water from a well running dry, I could only scoop up a bare teaspoonful of story at a time. It got worse when two thirds of the way through I realized…
Author: Mary Gillgannon
Advice From Editors and Agents—Revisited
If this were a typical year, I would be attending Colorado Gold conference this month. Besides a few workshops and the social activities, I would make sure to attend the editor and agent roundtables, where “the experts” answer questions and give advice to aspiring writers. Over the years, the questions asked at these programs were…
Writing As Therapy?
Before the pandemic, a good friend of mine wrote in public places, environments where there were people around and quiet background noise. That was his routine for over twenty years. With those places no longer open, along with all the other stressors of the pandemic, he stopped writing. Now he is struggling with anxiety and…
Word of Mouth Goes Viral
Bestsellers have always been created by word of mouth. One reader loves a book and tells other readers. They love the book and tell more readers. In a few weeks, or months, a bestseller is born. Publishers obviously try to influence the process. They pick out books on their lists they think have the potential…
To Plot…Or Not
Plotter. Pantser. Is your writing style ingrained? Can you change it? I’ve wrestled with this question since the beginning of my career, and I know several other authors who’ve had the same struggle. I started out as a pantser (which I prefer to call “writing into the mist” or intuitive writing) mostly because I didn’t…