Writer Unboxed - The "Connect Kitty" Approves
AAC can't help but deliver the best bloggish content that will inspire writers to new leaps of imagination. This one is mostly new releases, bestsellers, literary fiction historical fiction, mysteries, popular non-fiction, memoirs and biographies.
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I’m reading instead. I’ll take your questions now. (Joke.) Actually, that opening answer is very much true, for reasons I’ll discuss below, but it’s not the whole picture. It’s also not the case that I’ve stopped writing entirely. I just turned in a story I was asked to provide for an anthology benefitting Democracy Docket, the organization run by Marc Elias fighting against the multiple voter restriction and suppression laws springing up all over the country. The anthology is the third in a series, Low Down Dirty Vote Vol. III, and my story is titled “An Incident at the Cultural Frontier,” based on my own experiences and concerns serving as a poll worker in my hometow…
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Worldbuilding gets a bad rap sometimes. If you ask certain people, worldbuilding is either for nerds looking for almanacs, not fiction, or it’s a useless distinction that should be an intrinsic part of writing. But there are plenty of writers who recognize the essential nature of worldbuilding separate from the act of storytelling—for science fiction and fantasy, sure, but also for all genres. And there are a ton of amazing, detailed guides to creating worlds. But years ago, when I was first looking to build out the world I had created for my first foray into fantasy writing, I looked up resources for worldbuilding and quickly got bogged down in the sheer number of detai…
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The writer’s notebook is one of the most powerful gifts you can give yourself as a writer. It is personal, private, intimate, and real—pretty much the opposite of what social media asks of us. That constant curated stream of social media prevents deep thought. Whether your poison is Instagram or SnapChat, Twitter or Pinterest or Facebook, the point is to create a clever or beautiful stream that shows how smart or tasteful we are. Don’t get me wrong—I’m as addicted to social media as the next person. My particular downfalls are Instagram and Facebook, but I’ve been known to get lost in Pinterest, too. I love food photography and will scurry down that rabbit hole for ho…
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Please welcome back today’s guest: author Alison Hammer! During the day, Alison is a VP Creative Director for an advertising agency in Chicago, and nights and weekends, she writes upmarket women’s fiction—stories about family and friendship, love and loss. She also founded the Every Damn Day Writers group on Facebook. Her two novels, You and Me and Us (April 2020) and Little Pieces of Me (April 13th, 2021), are unique in that they will both be released during the pandemic–when book releases as we knew them could not exist. But they still did exist in the digital landscape–a landscape that not only had to be navigated but also, in some instances, created. These new digita…
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Cliffhangers are a favorite technique of thriller and suspense writers, but every genre can benefit from a suspension in information. Cliffhangers contribute to pacing and tension, and they are one of the most effective ways of encouraging a reader to start a new scene or chapter when they might otherwise set the book down for a short break. They’re useful even in literary fiction, short stories, and narrative nonfiction (Erik Larson is a master at inserting compelling cliffhangers into his nonfiction books!) Many authors are confused about cliffhangers versus twists. Cliffhangers are a short-lived suspension of information, whereas twists are a long-lived redirection of…
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It is with a heavy heart that we relay to you the passing of fellow Writer Unboxed contributor KL Burd. Keivon Liburd had two young sons, was married, and was the pastor of a youth ministry. He was a rising writer, newly agented, and with much excitement for his works-in-progress. He was deeply thoughtful about the human experience and about forging genuine connections, and both of those qualities were reflected in his posts here. He was a joy to work with, and he will be dearly missed. For any who would like to contribute to Keivon’s family, please read the Mosaic Church’s post for details. If a public fundraiser is later established for Keivon’s family, we will share …
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Welcome to the first day of National Novel Writing Month, or as it’s generally abbreviated, NaNoWriMo! While I’m not signing up for NaNo this year, I’ve done it a number of times in the past, often “winning” in the way winning is defined by the NaNoWriMo organization: writing 50,000 words of a new project from scratch in just 30 days. Given the timing of my post this month, I felt like writing about NaNo was almost a no-brainer, but one thing held me back: I wasn’t sure there was anything new to say. So I checked in with fellow writers on Facebook. Before long, it was obvious from the volume of comments that there’s plenty of interest in the topic! And I started to see a…
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I often turn to Disney and Pixar for easily identifiable examples of craft elements for my classes, as well as their approaches to plot in general. Their writing is dependably clean, clear, and effective in their most popular movies. So when I heard there was a documentary Disney had banned about an unfinished movie, I was immediately intrigued. It appeared the documentary filmmakers had been granted unparalleled access behind Disney’s closed doors, gleaning a rumored 150 hours of footage. When the documentary debuted, Disney responded by buying up the rights and shoving the film into their infamous vault. But the internet being what it is, a fine cut of the documentary…
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Who among us is without fear? Dumb question, really. I’d argue that fear is one of the single most formative emotions in our lives from infancy to death. It’s what paralyzes us or stunts our growth…or it’s what motivates us. We use it to shape our characters and to make their lives hell as they seek their greater truths and higher selves. But it’s also the emotion that infuses our daily lives as writers. This season in which we celebrate fear, I talked with some authors to find out what it is that frightens them as writers and what they do to silence the negative voices. This is what they had to say: “I’m afraid that my readers will see right through me and figure out th…
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When day comes, we ask ourselves: Where can we find light In this never-ending shade? The loss we carry, a sea we must wade. Amanda Gorman The Hill We Climb Anyone who has ever walked through tough times can tell you that light isn’t always easy to find. Tough times can either make us or break us, but we exist in the in-between for the longest part of the journey. When we lose something we love — whether it be a job, a lover, a friend, or a family member — we are thrust into a world for which there is no simple escape. We exist between the tough times and the breaking or strengthening of our backs. Either outcome arrives without warning, signifying an unexpected…
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Where do book ideas come from? There’s a different answer for every writer, I’m sure. Personal experience, stories they heard, newspaper articles, TV shows, random thoughts, each and every one of these is no doubt the genesis of a myriad of novels. My own are often a mix of the above, pieces of ideas I’ve had sometimes for years that coalesced at some point and got written. But when you do get that idea, how do you know if it’s something you should write? I’ve come to think of those ideas, the ones that should be written, as StickyTM. Not like the mess your children leave behind after being fed, but sticky in the brain. An idea that won’t let you go, that you can’t move …
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Image by Alexandra from Pixabay A few weeks ago, coinciding with the anniversary of the World Health Organization’s declaration of a global pandemic, several newspapers published accounts on the early days of the crisis as drawn from the lives of everyday Americans. Essentially the reports were a contemporary take on a person-on-the-street story focused on a singular question – What was the moment you realized your world had changed as a result of Covid-19? I approached the articles with a tinge of curiosity and, not surprisingly, with a writer’s eye. I knew my own experience, of course. In the months since, I have recounted to friends the surreal visit to see my Mom in…
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Welcome to our second edition of Desmond’s Drops! This month, enjoy three drops about: Your character’s critical flaw Advice from David Mamet Setups and payoffs Look for more of Desmond’s Drops in April. Have your own bit of wisdom to share? Drop it in comments. About Desmond HallDesmond Hall, author of YOUR CORNER DARK, was born in Jamaica, West Indies, and them moved to Jamaica, Queens. He’s worked as both a high school biology teacher and English teacher, counseled at-risk teens, and served as Spike Lee’s creative director at SpikeDDB. He’s also written and directed the HBO movie, A DAY IN BLACK AND WHITE, which was nominated for the Gordon Parks Award. H…
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Craft books. Conferences. Seminars. Workshops. Webinars. The answers on how to write a book are out there, but in a million different places, and sifting through the information to find the essential bits takes so much time. Time you probably don’t have. We’ve been there. And we decided there had to be a better way. So, we created one: The 5th Semester. Next month we’re thrilled to be offering a fully virtual residency where we help anyone take their book from inspiration to publication. What all did we put in this magical program, you might ask? Pretty much everything we wish we’d have had at our fingertips when we were starting out: A way to develop your premise, …
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Authors spend so much time perfecting our writing—making it say just what we want it to say as effectively as we can, trying to get our vision onto the page—but it’s hard to know when we’ve actually reached that finish line and the story is ready. Yet because story doesn’t fully come to life until it reaches readers, at some point you have to push your fledgling out into the world or it’s never going to fly. There’s no objective marker for when a story is “finished,” but here’s a checklist that may help you know when it’s ready to leave the nest. The Über-question Is it on the page? This is overarching question for each element of story below. As authors we know our st…
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Welcome to a new edition of Desmond’s Drops! This month, enjoy three drops about: Concrete Desire Abstract Desire Setting: Establishing Physicality Beyond the Visual Email subscribers, please click through directly to writerunboxed.com to view. Look for more of Desmond’s Drops in November. Have your own bit of wisdom to share? Drop it in comments. About Desmond HallDesmond Hall, author of YOUR CORNER DARK, was born in Jamaica, West Indies, and them moved to Jamaica, Queens. He’s worked as both a high school biology teacher and English teacher, counseled at-risk teens, and served as Spike Lee’s creative director at SpikeDDB. He’s also written and dire…
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Hi, I’m Katey Schultz and in my Monthly Mentorship program, I support writers by teaching them how to apply thinking to language and integrate writing into their lives, sustainably. We begin by studying sample texts, with the idea that we will eventually become practiced enough to apply whatever craft concept we’re working with, to our own work. In time, this approach improves a writer’s sense of clarity and independence in decision-making. Rather than thinking, “Ok, now what?”, MM writers learn how to decide and implement the best next steps in their drafts, based on the clues they have left themselves on the page. What to Leave In, What to Leave Out This month in Month…
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My love for writing is inseparable from a love of silence: the peaceful silence of words on a page with no other distractions. Nothing else vying for my attention, pounding in my ears, calling me out of my thoughts and my imagination. So it was hard enough for me as a book publicist when social media, with its links to videos and all other manner of noise, emerged as a way for authors to share their work. Yet in those early days, there was still space among the links for posting only words, and people still had bandwidth for reading them. Then came Instagram. Suddenly, all that mattered—all that people wanted to share and to see—were photos. As Instagram rose to become …
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Trained by reading hundreds of submissions, editors and agents often make their read/not-read decision on the first page. In a customarily formatted book manuscript with chapters starting about 1/3 of the way down the page (double-spaced, 1-inch margins, 12-point type), there are 16 or 17 lines on the first page. Here’s the question: Would you pay good money to read the rest of the chapter? With 50 chapters in a book that costs $15, each chapter would be “worth” 30 cents. So, before you read the excerpt, take 30 cents from your pocket or purse. When you’re done, decide what to do with those three dimes or the quarter and a nickel. It’s not much, but think of paying 30 …
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Revision. We all do it … and do it … and do it. Writers have had a lot to say on the subject. There’s Vladimir Nabokov, who boasted that his pencils outlasted their erasers. Dorothy Parker, who claimed that she couldn’t write five words without changing seven. Robert Cormier, who quipped: “The beautiful part of writing is that you don’t have to get it right the first time, unlike, say, a brain surgeon.” One of the clearest statements about revision comes from the always-brilliant Neil Gaiman: “When you’re ready, pick [your manuscript] up and read it, as if you’ve never read it before. If there are things you aren’t satisfied with as a reader, go in and fix them as a wri…
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Start your story at the beginning, write until you reach the end, then stop. Then start your revisions with page one and work straight through from there, too. Although there is no best way to write a novel, a lot of writers take this approach because it’s the most natural. And it may work for you. But stories aren’t always so linear. Instead, they loop back and forth, with later events affecting earlier ones. Your characters might veer in unexpected directions, plot points that seemed minor when the story started may turn out to be critical, and vice versa. The ending can change the meaning of events at the beginning. I almost never edit a client’s manuscript wit…
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A while ago, a writer friend of mine was talking about her first query letter. She’d let me read it and I thought it was well done. This wasn’t a surprise. She’d spent a lot of time on it, she’d researched, revised, and sent it out to critique partners for their honest opinions. It was at a place where further effort was just spinning her wheels, at least until agents started to weigh in. But she was frozen in place, terrified to send it out. She admitted that even though she knew the query and the manuscript were both in excellent shape, she couldn’t pull the trigger. “What if they don’t like it? What if they don’t like…me?” “They won’t,” I told her in my usual too-blu…
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Recently, I set aside the epic fantasy trilogy that I’ve been working on since 2017 to write a book about a small-town tea shop with a ghost problem. Those are two words I never thought I’d say: not ghost problem, but set aside. For years, I couldn’t imagine giving up on this ambitious project that had taken up so much of my heart and soul (and nearly four years of my time). I believed in that book. Why would I ever let it go? The answer, as answers often are, was deceptively simple. This book meant so much to me that I couldn’t imagine ever getting tired of it—that is, until I did get tired of it. When I realized that I needed to take several steps back from the trilog…
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An elderly person I know underwent a recent fall. She tripped while climbing the stairs in her apartment building. The good news is that her accident happened a few stairs up from the landing, and she didn’t break a hip. The bad news is most everything else. She landed hard, scraping both hands and severely contusing both knees. She struck her face on an upper stair, breaking her glasses at the bridge. Shock kept the initial pain away but then it overwhelmed her. Worse yet was an awareness of her vulnerability. The stairwell she’d fallen in was made of cement and the fire doors were closed tight, rendering it essentially soundproof. No one could hear her cries for he…
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photo adapted / Horia Varlan If you feel called to write about Big Issues—racial equality, gender rights, climate change, or the opioid crisis, among so many worthy others—welcome to the club! Writers have always been drawn to life’s most divisive conflicts. And if I could suggest just one piece of advice that all writers follow, it would be to write about what matters to you the most. A Big Issue novel can experience a few predictable pitfalls, however. As you plan or revise yours, here are some considerations to ponder, born of my experience as reader, writer, and editor. Consider your job Many who read novels are eager to learn things. I’m one of them. But when I …
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