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Blog

Writing Romance: The Inciting Incident

Posted on October 11, 2017May 20, 2020 by Jax Hunter

Last month, we compared and contrasted WANT vs. NEED. Again, we’re using Jami Gold’s beat sheet as a basis for these articles. This month, we’re moving on to the Inciting Incident. If you research “inciting incident,” you’ll find that most definitions include the idea of thrusting the protagonist(s) forward into the main action of the…

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Rocky Mountain Writer #102

Posted on October 10, 2017 by Mark Stevens

Aimie K. Runyan & Daughters of the Night Sky After listening to this episode with historical fiction writer Aimie K. Runyan, you might want to think about keeping an idea file. When things went flat with her first publisher, Aimie needed a Plan B and she was ready, dipping into a list of concepts she…

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Where Do Your Ideas Come From?

Posted on October 10, 2017 by J.A. (Julie) Kazimer

(Writer’s Digest, 1952)

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Thrillers, Part 2 of 4: Heroes

Posted on October 5, 2017 by Kevin Paul Tracy

Heroes in thrillers can be anyone: male, female, any walk of life, any level of expertise in solving crimes, spying, or thwarting villains. Heck, in the long-running television series Dexter, probably the single best example of genre-bending fiction, the hero was a serial killer. (If you haven’t binged this series, I submit it is among…

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Montana: Big Book Country

Posted on October 3, 2017 by Mark Stevens

Pulitzer Prize winner Jane Smiley (A Thousand Acres) is on stage at The Union Club Bar & Grill in downtown Missoula. Earlier in the week, she turned 68. Jane Smiley has been publishing books—26 by my count—since 1980. Short stories, essays, non-fiction, young adult stories, and more. She is wearing blue jeans and a checked…

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