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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Some of us run into it right from the beginning, when we first begin to put words to paper. Others are luckier and don’t encounter it until later on their journey. But either way, if you’re a writer, at some time or another you are bound to run into Self Doubt. Self doubt hits all of us differently. It can be an uncomfortable itch between our shoulders or a paralyzing force that prevents us from getting any words down on the page. Whatever form it takes it can be, if not conquered, at least managed. There are three distinct branches of the self-doubt tree. Competence is about craft and skill. Do I have the writing chops to pull this story off? Permission is about judg…
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I used to think I wanted to be a full-time writer – that there would be nothing more wonderful than having the expanse of a day, day after day, to write. But the thing is, when I happen to have a lot of time on my hands, I do anything but write. I will clean until the cows come home, work out, or spend time with friends and family. But I will not sit down and crank out words. Case in point: I lost my job a couple of months ago. Suddenly I had a lot of time to just write if I wanted to. But I was expecting a baby and there was a ton of stuff to do to get ready for her. I barely wrote, even though I wanted to turn in a new draft of a middle grade manuscript to my agent. I s…
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The more writers I guide in my career as a book coach, the more I see the need for writers to embrace key lessons from the world of business. Writing is art, to be sure. It springs from a writer’s imagination and from our very souls, it is brought forth by skill with craft, and is made whole when it encounters an audience of readers. But that art is made within a world of commerce, where books are bought, produced, distributed, and sold through various vendors and mechanism. It’s a business world, and writers need to understand that world in order to succeed within it. As I have built my own business, and guided writers to build theirs, I have made it a practice to read …
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We’re thrilled to bring you this exclusive Q&A with multi-published bestselling author and longtime WU contributor Juliet Marillier today! Juliet’s latest novel, A SONG OF FLIGHT, releases in the U.S. on September 21st. Said Publishers Weekly in their starred review: “The alluring plot feels like the literary equivalent of a bardic opera and makes a powerful case for how a people can move on from the disastrous errors of their past. This is a remarkable achievement.” How can you not want to know more about a novel that is the literary equivalent of a bardic opera? Read on. And congratulations, Juliet! We cannot wait to read A SONG OF FLIGHT. Q: What’s the theme of…
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I work with a writer who is in a refugee camp. She’s been there for a while (I don’t know exactly how long), and she’s been in a few others along the way (I don’t know where or how many). As you can imagine, she’s heard many stories from the other refugees on her journey. Some are harrowing, some violent, some heart-wrenching, some laugh-out-loud funny. She has a little notebook where she writes down many of these stories, simply because she loves stories like some people love exquisite chess pieces or Civil War memorabilia. She collects them. Some elements of these stories enter into her own writing. She takes little bits from this one and details from that and combine…
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A good writer can transform any idea into a captivating, intriguing story. In writing, masterful execution can compensate for a mediocre idea. You couldn’t say the same about book cover design as it’s, first and foremost, a marketing tool. A proper cover should target a book’s genre, cater to your target audience’s preferences, and intrigue the viewer. A good idea — the main pillar of an effective cover design — helps achieve that. So As a writer, you have two challenges: coming up with a good book cover idea; finding a designer that can execute it well. Here at MiblArt – book cover design company, we can help you with both challenges. If you ever struggled wi…
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The R&B group Shalamar told us that love can be better the second time around, but I wonder if that’s true. When I met with my publishing house editor a few weeks ago, she said, “You know what they say about second books.” I wanted to respond, “No, what do they say?” But of course, I knew. The publishing world and readers love a debut—shiny and new—but by the time book two comes around, the bloom is off the rose. There are the inevitable comparisons, and authors desperately want to prove they aren’t one trick ponies and that their glorious debut wasn’t a fluke. I had great success launching The Kindest Lie in February, catching the attention of journalists, bookselle…
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A few months ago, my younger daughter, then not-quite-sixteen, requested to drop out of high school. A rising junior and easily in the top 2% of her class, she had learned from home since March of 2020. Unfortunately, Texas law required all students back in the classroom this fall, pandemic be damned. Despite the way she noticeably bristled each time we drove by the school building and the crying emoji drawn on the calendar square for August 17th, I thought she was resigned to returning. I was wrong. After considering every possible objection her father and I could have and preparing counterarguments for each point, she presented her case. With SAT and Texas Success I…
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I thought that if I were broken enough I would see the light —Robert Creeley, “The Revelation” In the vast majority of stories, characters pursue what they legitimately believe is in their own best interest. They misunderstand what that is, pursuing the right thing for the wrong reasons, the wrong thing for the right reasons, etc., but they don’t start off believing their goals are misdirected. The story offers a learning experience: the character either learns the price of pursuing the right thing, suffers an awakening as to how they are mistaken, or steadfastly resists whatever lesson is at hand and blunders ahead. In the overwhe…
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I’ll admit it. I fell for the title of Kelsey Allagood’s WU post on September 18th: “Active Protagonists are a Tool of the Patriarchy”. Upon reading the title my blood pressure rose, not because of the heated word “patriarchy” but because of the chilly suggestion that “active” protagonists are inherently bad and therefore “passive” protagonists are fundamentally good, and maybe even a necessary political tool for activist fiction writers. Of course, Kelsey was being slyly provocative. She did not strictly mean that writers should see passive protagonists as a weapon of change. Hey kids, here’s a great way to tear down patriarchy, misogyny, sexism, agism, homophobia, …
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image by SEWphisticate Self-promotion isn’t the most famous naughty s-word, but it can still feel like a bad word to today’s authors. I hate self-promotion, you might say. I’m so sick of talking about myself on social media.With more and more options to reach readers directly comes an expectation that authors will do more and more to reach those readers themselves, often without publisher assistance. So! How do you sell books without a single self-promotional tweet, post, or video? Simple. In most cases, you actually shouldn’t be promoting yourself. If the goal is to sell books — or at least make people you don’t know personally curious enough about your book(s) to take…
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There’s a lot of bravado surrounding the ethos of working hard. Every November, thousands of writers sign up for NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) and pledge to write an entire novel in thirty days. Other writers join Pacemaker challenges to team up with other writers and push themselves to generate a lot of words in a short period of time. Some writers religiously show up for the #5amwritersclub on Twitter. This summer, I watched authors I know sharing hashtags about writing every single day of summer. I’ve done plenty of these challenges, and I admit they can be very motivating. I love being part of a community of writers, all working toward similar goals. I thr…
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Like probably every writer who’s read it, I’m fascinated by the recent New York Times “Who Is the Bad Art Friend?” article—but not just for the obvious reasons of the astonishing story it tells. (Haven’t seen it yet? It’s worth it. I’ll wait….) Yes, this is rich story material: two driven artists who began as peers, one more successful while another still struggles, à la Mozart and Salieri; interesting, complicated characters; and a question and theme deeply, darkly resonant for authors, who so frequently draw from life: Where is the line? Heck, there’s even an organ transplant. But as juicy as the story itself is, what I think makes it so effective and haunting is how …
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I’m at a writing retreat this week and it just occurred to me how often I’m asked about where to go or how to set one up on your own. As a writer, retreats are one of my very favorite things. I get to be away from the family and all of the real-life responsibilities for several days, and relish in taking care of only myself. I get to dig in to my writing uninterrupted, with lots of space to let my mind wander and process. When I go on retreats with others, I’m so often inspired to try new techniques or styles or types of stories. My friends also help me untangle a mess I’ve been grappling with, and I do the same for them. I also allow for a little fun on the side. It soun…
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Warning: Hacks for Hacks tips may have harmful side effects on your writing career, and should not be used by minors, adults, writers, poets, scribes, scriveners, journalists, or anybody. National Novel Writing Month (sometimes referred to as “NaNoWriMo” or “November”) is just around the corner, which means it’s time to fool yourself into thinking you can write your literary opus in a mere thirty days. That’s a lot of work, especially considering you’ve got a lot of eating to do on Thanksgiving and a lot of mall doors to bust down on Black Friday. I know you can do it, though. In fact, you can finish your novel in November easily by using one weird trick. You see, NaNoW…
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Please welcome back award-winner author Alma Katsu for today’s post! Alma is the author of six novels, including historical horror (The Hunger) and spy thrillers (Red Widow). At our invitation, Alma is here to talk about what it means when your novel is reissued–something she is experiencing right now. Her debut, The Taker, was a Booklist top ten debut when it came out in 2011 and was reissued by Gallery Books this year. The Reckoning, the second book in the trilogy, was reissued on September 14. Enjoy! What to Expect When Your Novel is Reissued Congratulations! One of your earlier books is being reissued. What should you expect? Reissues happen all the time, of cours…
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Photographer: Bwag Ruth recently read a mystery in which the main character was staying in a room in a large, rectangular mansion. The room was described as a small bedroom but it had windows on three sides. Maybe the writer simply got involved in her story and didn’t bother to pay attention to the architecture. The truth is most readers wouldn’t consciously notice something like that, either. But even if they didn’t, the physical impossibility of the space would probably nag at them at a subconscious level. This is why it’s important, among all the other details you need to juggle when creating your world, to make sure that the spaces you’re describing hold together…
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I feel like I’m committing a grievous writerly sin by even typing these words, but I must speak my truth: I would like to see more passive protagonists in fiction. While the title of this post is tongue-in-cheek, I do think that passive protagonists are unfairly maligned in part because of the unspoken association between passivity and femininity. I’ll get into why I think so a little later, but let’s discuss what “passive protagonist” means first. The importance of intent Passive protagonists are the antithesis of what we’re told makes a good story. A good story, says common wisdom, is driven by the choices and desires of the main character. Passive protagonists, on …
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Whether you’re writing your first novel or your tenth, there is a temptation to pin it to the page before it disappears. It’s such a brilliant idea and you can see the whole thing shimmering in your mind, just out of reach. Maybe you do some work on character development and plotting, but you’re a racehorse at the gate, ready to run, ready to write. Blueprint for a Book: Build Your Novel from the Inside Out is an argument to stop and define the foundational elements of your story before you keep writing – which means understanding your motivation as a writer, considering your reader’s expectations, and making sure your story has a solid structure that will hold up inside…
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I had a powerful dream about a week ago that’s stayed with me. In it, I receive confirmation that my debut is locked and loaded, ready to be published. In the dream I’m fully aware that it’s being self-published (as I intend in waking life). And this dream version of me is thrilled about it. The excitement was palpable, memorable. I must admit, the reaction of the dream version of me was notably different than how the (slightly grumpier) waking version of me has been feeling about my impending publication. The difference was so stark that it spurred the awareness that I was experiencing a dream as it occurred. Friends, this is where the dream gets strange. Here was this …
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When we think of setting, the first thing that comes to mind is likely to be a panoramic view of a place—a village, forest, castle, planet. When people ask me about my WIP, I tell them that it’s “set” in Iceland, among the glaciers and thermal lagoons. Right away, they have a vision, a way to locate the characters and picture what will happen … A setting like Iceland can situate a story in a time or culture or geography, evoke limitations and possibilities, create a mood. Yet setting can do so much more than that! When we shrink the scale from landscape to detail and focus on bits of setting—small sensory data—we can discover a whole range of story-relevant and story-enh…
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ROMANCE, SUSPENSE, AND ADVENTURE! DiANN MILLS DELIVERS ALL THREE IN TRACE OF DOUBT TRACE OF DOUBT by DiAnn Mills September 2021 Release Available in hardcover, softcover, audio, & ebook. ISBN-13: 978-1-4964-5185-9 432 pages Order your copy today! To view a short video promo about TRACE OF DOUBT, please CLICK HERE Bestselling and award-winning author DiAnn Mills delivers a heart-stopping story of dark secrets, desperate enemies, and dangerous lies. Fifteen years ago, Shelby Pearce confessed to murdering her brother-in-law and was sent to prison. Now she’s out on parole and looking for a fresh start in the small town of Valleysburg, Texas. But starting ov…
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I’m working on my eighth novel and it’s a confounding one. I’ve never written a dual biographical historical before, especially with two fairly modern “characters” (and with that, an absolute ENORMOUS amount of research). What’s more, this dang manuscript is giving me fits—it won’t let me write it my way or use the tried-and-true process I’ve relied upon in the past for biographicals. The process has completely toppled over and spun around and here I am, working BACKWARD from the END of the book. Though it’s moving slowly, I was completely stuck trying go in my typical linear fashion from beginning to end. I am also being forced to write several chapters in one point of v…
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A little less than a year ago I wrote a post here at Writer Unboxed on Black Comedy as a form, hoping to clarify the definitional ambiguities that often blur the lines between it and satire, farce, and anything else deemed “darkly comic.” Today I want to move that conversation along a bit and ask a question that’s been nagging at me for some years: Will there ever be an iconic Black Comedy for the war on terror? Is such a thing desirable, let alone possible? To consider the problem, let’s revisit one of the most improbably successful Black Comedies of all time: The Soviet ambassador has just informed the American president and his advisors that their inadvertent attac…
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photo adapted / Horia Varlan Cliff-hangers and nail-biters aren’t the only ways to keep readers turning pages. When you develop their inherent conflict, quieter, almost insignificant-seeming moments can successfully produce an itch in your reader that only reading on will effectively scratch. Here are some of the many ways that can be achieved. 1. Someone fakes it From the time we are born, we are acculturated in a way that allows us to function in a family (don’t bite your brother, even if you want to) and in society (don’t bite your neighbor or sleep with his wife, even if you want to). Showing our characters “faking it” to override baser urges adds layers of interest…
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