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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It’s one of the most magical properties of fiction, the way we can share in the emotions of an entirely imagined character—and understand the emotions of the people that person encounters in the story. I’d even go so far as to say it’s one of the main reasons those of us who write fiction got into this game to begin with. As the great Maya Angelou said, “People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” I think the same is true of the books we love: we might forget their plots, but we never forget how they made us feel, and how they made us feel is what made us want to become writers ourselves. But…
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When I was a little kid, my younger sister and I would play a game called “Lip or Tongue?” It went like this: Concealing my mouth with my hand, I would EITHER stick out my tongue just enough to make it look like my lower lip, OR I would keep my tongue in my mouth and, I don’t know, try to make my lower lip look like a tongue. Then, the big reveal: I’d remove my hand, and my sister, ever the good sport, would have to guess (you guessed it) whether my lower lip was in fact my lower lip, OR my tongue was masquerading as my lower lip. Hence the name of the game: Lip or Tongue? I had a very happy childhood. A little weird too, but also very happy. I don’t know why I liked t…
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Last month, we took a preliminary look at a type of story that shouldn’t work but which, handled properly, does work: episodic novels. Lacking an overt central conflict or problem, wandering around without any apparent plan through a grab bag of experiences, such novels ought to come across as mere chronicles; sophomoric swaggers around town held together—if at all—only by their own sense of self-importance. In other words, junk. However, that’s not necessarily the case. Unlikely-to-succeed episodic novels can work well, but when they do there are elements, hard to discern at first, which sew up their patchwork jumble of episodes, lending them an underlying unity that…
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I’m thrilled to bring you today’s conversation/interview with debut author Harper Glenn. Harper and I met at the Writer’s Digest conference a few years back, and became fast friends. They’ve cheered me on when I’ve needed cheering, and I’ve cheered them right back. The way Harper spoke of their book idea and how it haunted them came to haunt me, too. “Harper Glenn tackles themes of class and poverty, policing and protest, with nuance and empathy. A chilling glimpse at our future, Monarch Rising asks what we owe to the places that raise us—and insists that the answer must always be based in hope.” —Kass Morgan, New York Times bestselling author of The 100 “Glenn’s impre…
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Taken as a whole, much of the most common writing advice is contradictory. Write what you know, but don’t make all your fiction thinly veiled autobiography. Write every day, but don’t reduce everything to routine. The area where I find these clashing the most lately? Say yes to everything… and don’t be afraid to say no. I’ve always struggled with taking on too much. Afraid of losing opportunities, afraid of not doing all I can to help my writing succeed, I often push myself too hard to my own detriment. Interestingly, the only time I found it easy to draw a bright line was when I started promoting my debut novel when my daughter was only three months old: I said yes to o…
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We usually wait to share book reviews for our interview days here at Writer Unboxed, but this morning our dear friend and one of my two extremely appreciated assistant editors, Vaughn Roycroft, received his first review. And I just can’t help but share it, and not just because I know how much heart and perseverance went into this series for Vaughn, but because I just can’t help but think YOU would also want me to share it as well. Bonus: The FINAL cover is revealed at the end. Email readers, you can access the YouTube video, titled, One of the best self-published fantasies I’ve read: Vaughn Roycroft’s The Severing Son, directly HERE. Enjoy! About Therese WalshThe…
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You read that right. Not what are you reading, but who. To me, that subtle change reveals an ongoing seismic shift in reading and, by extension, in writing. Who an author is has come to matter intensely in what readers choose to read (or not to read). To be clear, this is not about a reader choosing a specific author’s books because of what they write—a preferred genre; a favorite topic or theme; a beloved story-telling style; the characters; the voice; the beauty of the writing. This is about a reader choosing a specific author’s books because of who that author is—their lived experiences, their personal characteristics, their opinions. Book selection based on an author…
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It is a truth universally acknowledged, a reader in possession of a platform must be in want of an opinion. As news desks covering books have disappeared, book bloggers and bookstagrammers and booktokers have proliferated. As such, I hate to break it to you, but you’re going to see some really mean comments about your book. But chin up, because the reality is? There have always been people who hated your book. In a different generation, they just wouldn’t have had an easy way to let you know they hated it. And while that might not seem like much of a silver lining, then let this be: there are also people who love it and will talk about it so much you’ll wonder who, exac…
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