Do Your Readers Make It Past Chapter One?
Chapter One. Probably the most rewritten chapter of any book I put together. Why do I stress so much about it? Well, it’s a make or break chapter. In those first few pages, I can either win my readers...
View ArticleThe Essentials of Writing Great Horror
Guest post by Caroline Gebbie “The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” H P Lovecraft Since we first gathered around...
View ArticleDo Your Readers Make It Past Chapter One?
Chapter One. Probably the most rewritten chapter of any book I put together. Why do I stress so much about it? Well, it’s a make or break chapter. In those first few pages, I can either win my readers...
View ArticleThe Essentials of Writing Great Horror
Guest post by Caroline Gebbie “The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” H P Lovecraft Since we first gathered around...
View ArticleWorld Building In Fiction
All writing requires a setting, something to connect that writing to. In the case of technical or scientific writing the setting will be the program, research, or piece of machinery you wish to...
View ArticleFour Ways to Get Your Setting Right – Even If You Haven’t Been There
It’s hard enough to write about a place you know well. What do you do when your story takes place somewhere you’ve never been? Let’s say you have a great idea for a novel set in Granada, Spain, but...
View ArticleDo Your Readers Make It Past Chapter One?
Chapter One. Probably the most rewritten chapter of any book I put together. Why do I stress so much about it? Well, it’s a make or break chapter. In those first few pages, I can either win my readers...
View ArticleThe Essentials of Writing Great Horror
Guest post by Caroline Gebbie “The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” H P Lovecraft Since we first gathered around...
View ArticleWorld Building In Fiction
All writing requires a setting, something to connect that writing to. In the case of technical or scientific writing the setting will be the program, research, or piece of machinery you wish to...
View ArticleFour Ways to Get Your Setting Right – Even If You Haven’t Been There
It’s hard enough to write about a place you know well. What do you do when your story takes place somewhere you’ve never been? Let’s say you have a great idea for a novel set in Granada, Spain, but...
View Article
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