Every time I tell someone I write horror, I feel compelled to add “but not like slasher horror.” Often I find it easiest to describe what something is not as a means of paring down to the thing’s essence. Why I feel the need to justify my writing as “not slasher” or “not too gory”…
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Writing Contests – Good Idea or Waste of Money?
During a podcast interview last week, my guest remarked that, though she’d won two prestigious awards for her women’s fiction debut, she wasn’t sure she’d enter any competitions for her next book. Since most awards charge a fee of between $50-$150 per category, she questioned whether that was a wise use of money. And there’s…
10 Prompts for Writing Ghost Stories
‘Tis the season… no, not that season. The other one. The spooky one. The one with witches and pumpkins and yellow-eyed cats and headless horsemen. And ghosts. Oh, we all love a good ghost story, don’t we? Those stories that send little tingles running along the back of our neck? Or that have us glancing…
Preparing Your WIP (and Yourself) for a Developmental Edit
The first time I offered my manuscript for a trial developmental edit was through a conference, and I couldn’t have been luckier. The editor who reviewed my first chapter, for a fee of 40 dollars, later devoted a half hour of thoughtful in-person follow up, knew my genre well and was writing in it himself,…
The Importance of Setting
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…