Recently, I took a class from writer Alli Martin called “Writing Advice You CAN Ignore.” It was sponsored by the Orange County Library and offered for free over Zoom. From the get-go, I made several inaccurate assumptions about the class (you know the old saying about assuming). My first faulty assumption was that the Orange…
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The Olympics, but for Writers
More awards, most of which no one has ever heard of. Training involves writing sprints, editing marathons and lots of literary gymnastics. Potential injuries include carpal tunnel, blurred vision and caffeine overdose. Even when you win, you’re not sure why, but when you lose, it was definitely rigged. Events take place in the corner of…
The Benefits of an RMFW Membership – by Bernadette Marie
As an established author and the CEO of a medium-sized publishing house, I’m often asked what my advice is to a new author. My answer is always, “Get involved with a writing organization.” There are many facets to being part of a writing organization, and membership has a lot of perks. The Rocky Mountain Fiction…
Engage, Convince, Inspire: What We Can Learn from Politicians
This week the Republican National Convention is being held in my hometown. While I will be staying physically far away in the suburbs, it’s impossible to really avoid – from packed restaurants to clogged freeways to featurettes about the city of Milwaukee on every news channel. So rather than ignoring the hullabaloo, I’ve decided to…
Exploit Your Characters’ Different Perspectives
In any given situation, each individual involved in that situation will perceive the exact same things happening in different—sometimes shockingly different—ways. That’s why crime scene witness testimony is often contradictory. The same concept should be true in every scene we write in our stories. No two characters will experience the events within a scene in…