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.
1,303 topics in this forum
-
- 0 replies
- 330 views
Well, I just finished another revision pass on my WIP. This one was for the final edition of a trilogy, and revising the ending has really gotten me thinking. Not just about the story. It’s also made me take a look at myself—at who I am as a storyteller, and how this process has changed me. As well as how my story and I reflect the times and fit into the world around me. Before I go on, I’m going to offer a mild potential spoiler warning to anyone who plans on someday reading my upcoming trilogy…. Hey, stop laughing. Honest, it’s coming. Oh, I see—you’re laughing because you think it’s cute that Roycroft is worried about some dubious future audience. I suppose I deserve …
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 429 views
I’m writing this close to International Women’s Day. I’ve blogged elsewhere about the vile sexist culture that’s recently been exposed within Parliament House here in Australia, and the realisation that in many ways we’ve gone backwards since the changes wrought by the Women’s Liberation Movement in the Sixties and Seventies. Having vented my fury on that matter, I want to make today’s post a celebration of women in storytelling, both those who tell the stories and those who appear in them. So here are two of my favourite books featuring great women characters, and two of my favourite female characters from (ancient) story. The last two novels I read for pleasure just h…
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 757 views
If there’s one topic I love talking about with fellow writers, it’s women’s empowerment in fiction. For this reason, I was thrilled in late January to see that Publishers Weekly had run a fabulous piece on exactly this subject, titled “Is Women’s Empowerment Coming to Publishing?” The article was from the perspective of big players in the industry like marketing and sales managers, executive editors, and editorial directors, and it outlined what publishers are seeking in the women’s empowerment space. It also covered the impact of recent political changes on women’s fiction and popular sub-genres related to women’s empowerment. While I enjoyed the article, I felt that so…
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 453 views
Last night I sent an email to my editor, to which was attached the revised manuscript of my novel. The last six weeks have passed in a blur. I’ve been hunkered down dealing with a structural report that required rewriting large portions of the book, while beyond the insulating walls of my workspace the world was growing ever crazier, or so it seemed. I had to apply strict limits on my engagement with news media, despite the urge to tune in frequently and find out what bizarre thing had happened now. (The answer usually was, something even less believable than what happened yesterday, or an hour ago.) Truth really has become stranger than fiction: the current wild ride of …
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 422 views
Flickr Creative Commons: Cheryl Foong Everything we write whether it’s literary fiction, memoir, or science fiction, comes from the influence of our own lives. Those parts of our lives might be written in metaphors or vague references. Some of us are more direct, we write stories based on actual events in our life. We write to play and make sense of our reality. The question I’ve been playing with? Well, what is reality? In context, especially, to us writers. Reality is our perception of the world, the priorities we arrange in our day to day existence that become most notable. For example, someone who is caught up in the intricate details of the mundane may take note of…
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 393 views
At graduation, by all objective measurements, I should have been a well-trained family doctor. Yet during my first three years of medical practice, I don’t think a day passed when I didn’t want to tear my hair out in perplexity. People would walk in with vague symptoms that didn’t seem to fit any specific diagnostic pattern. In my newly minted state, I wouldn’t know if I was seeing an obscure condition I hadn’t been taught about, a minor biological glitch that would soon fix itself, or the earliest, nondescript stage of a dangerous illness. As a hyper-conscientious nutcase—an extremely scientific term that encapsulates my personality—let me describe how this affected me…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 446 views
I know I’m not alone when I say I have been in a place where the pain is blinding, and the very idea of writing is unimaginable. This is one of those posts. It’s about survival and self-love and honesty. It’s also about finding joy. My child was in great distress from early fall through the end of the year. I could not see or think or hear. I could only feel, and what I was feeling was intangible and immeasurable. It’s something I’m still grappling with, to say nothing of how I am trying to support my kid, but some days, I still feel as if I’m on a wild ocean current without a life vest. During those months, I also happened to have the largest number of deadlines I’ve ev…
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 917 views
Please welcome guest Kristin Owens to Writer Unboxed today! Kristin grew up in Buffalo, NY and moved immediately after the Bill’s fourth Super Bowl loss for better odds. After a two-decade stint in higher education, she’s now a full-time writer in Colorado and a contributor for many magazines and blog posts. Topics range from wine to cruise ships to kvetching. She provides high-energy classes motivating new writers to stick with it. She’s represented by Madelyn Burt at Stonesong Literary. Check out her published articles, essays, and videos on her website, and follow her on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram! You Asked for It Ahhh… feedback. It’s inevitable. After scribbl…
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 249 views
I recently had to write the acknowledgments for my forthcoming novel. This caught me off guard because I hadn’t thought about writing acknowledgments, maybe because I’m superstitious about pondering over that part of the book until you have to write that part of the book. But the process was so interesting that I’m now thinking it’s a good idea to occasionally stop while working on any sizable creative project to acknowledge what allows you to do this crazy thing. But don’t trust Writer Me, check out YouTuber Me, who captures more aspects on acknowledging and appreciating this writing space, along with the usual dose of self-mockery. NOTE: No stick figure drawings …
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 251 views
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 …
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 286 views
We’re honored to introduce you to today’s guest, author Catherine Adel West. Catherine’s powerful debut, SAVING RUBY KING, released just over a year ago and made an instant impact. It’s a multigenerational story about two friends–Layla and Ruby–and the lengths they’ll go to save their lives, their families and their friendship. Zakiya Harris, author of THE OTHER BLACK GIRL, calls Saving Ruby King is “a stunning force of a novel that has everything anyone could want in a family saga…” We’re thrilled to learn that Catherine’s sophomore effort, BECOMING SARA KING, is in the works and will be released in 2022. More about Catherine from her bio: Catherine was born and raised…
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 387 views
photo adapted / Horia Varlan In 1999, when Janet Fitch’s debut, White Oleander, was chosen as an Oprah Book Club pick, Winfrey described Fitch’s prose as “liquid poetry.” In an interview at the time, which I’ve never forgotten, Fitch said something that she’s repeated during the free “Writing Wednesday” talks she’s been giving on her Facebook page since the start of the pandemic: that her constant goal, in revision, is to replace any wording in her draft that she’s seen before with something that feels fresh. Clouds like cotton candy? Out. Heart-breaking sorrow? Out. In: a sky the color of peaches; sorrow that tastes like a copper penny. Whether or not you write on the …
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 26 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 25 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 27 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 23 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 29 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 41 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 34 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 32 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 33 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 24 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 27 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 33 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin, -
- 0 replies
- 24 views
Last reply by EditorAdmin,