Women on Writing - WOW and WOW!
Women On Writing is an online magazine and community for women writers. Among major topics are novel writing, indie publishing, author platform, blogging, screenwriting, and more. Lots of contests and general jocularity sans frittering on the part of Earth's most powerful humans.
1,052 topics in this forum
-
- 0 replies
- 179 views
Photo by cottonbro from Pexels Ever since I started my podcast a few years ago, I’ve had to endure the learning curves of writing true crime. And when you need help perfecting a certain type of writing, you read more of it. I recently read two true crime books, “Before He Wakes: A True Story of Money, Marriage, Sex and Murder” by Jerry Bledsoe and “A Tangled Web: A Cyberstalker, a Deadly Obsession, and a Twisting Path to Justice” by Leslie Rule and thought I’d discuss some observations I made while reading them. “Before He Wakes” is about a woman named Barbara Stager here in my home state of North Carolina who was convicted of murdering her husband Russ while he slept.…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 89 views
by Marcia Peterson Who would want to hear about my boring life? How can I write something compelling when my personal history is nothing special? These are questions many of us ask ourselves—and they can stop us in our writing tracks. But ordinary can be enough, even great. First, you’ve got more material from your so-called boring life than you think. Second, strong writing skills can make almost any story interesting. It’s time to believe in your stories and get your pen moving! Who’s to say you’re uninteresting? We tend to believe that most people already know or experience a lot of the same things that we do, and therefore what we have to offer is common. But e…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 388 views
We are happy to talk with Debbie Kasper today--a two-time Emmy-nominated writer, comedian, and multiple award-winning writer/performer. Before you read the chat below, please click here to read, "My Big Tree," her runner-up essay in the 2021 Quarter 1 Creative Nonfiction Contest. She has written for the seminal TV shows, Roseanne and The Rosie O’Donnell Show. As a solo artist, Debbie won the prestigious Drama Logue award for “Best written solo show” in Los Angeles, and last year, she was honored with the “Best Comedian” prize at the United International Solo Fest in NYC for her performance in Has Anybody Seen Debbie? Her humorous personal essays have appeared in multipl…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 92 views
Photo by Laurel Belle Photography I listened to an episode of Glennon Doyle’s podcast “We Can Do Hard Things” this past week that featured an interview with one of my favorite actresses, Reese Witherspoon. They were chatting about Reese’s inspiration for starting her production company, Hello Sunshine, which she recently sold for $900 million (she will still oversee day-to-day operations along with her CEO, as they are both significant equity holders). Reese got the idea for the company when she became frustrated by the lack of female stories represented on TV and in film. Her husband pulled her aside and said, “You read more than anyone I know. Buy the rights to a few o…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 190 views
This is the time of year when I do a lot of thinking. And I don’t mean like when my kids were small and I’d try to take a tiny nap and tell them not to disturb Mommy because she is thinking. I mean, sure, my eyes are sometimes closed and I will often fall asleep during all this ruminating, but honestly, I’m seriously thinking. It’s important, this thinking. I will start with taking a look at what I’ve done in the past year and that informs new dreams, new plans. Because dreams do change, y’all, but how often do we take the time to really think of how we’ve changed and how that impacts our wants and needs and goals or dreams? Certainly, my writing career has come a long w…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 300 views
Pexels.com I’m about to catapault headfirst into the whirlwind of helping a child apply for colleges in the coming months. I’m not ready for this—but I’m not sure I’ll be ready for this by the time my second child begins the college application process two years from now, either. I am grateful we weren’t experiencing my daughter’s senior year in the 2020-21, when proms, end-of-year-celebrations and so many high school graduations were simply canceled as the world began shutting down and sheltering in place due to COVID-19. About a month ago our school hosted a guest speaker discussing the current trends in writing college essays. My daughter had track practice so she w…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 21 views
Occasionally I get down on myself because I feel like I haven’t “lived” enough rich life experiences to warrant being a novelist. My travel is limited to the United States and Mexico, and I’ve spent many years grinding away at a job to help pay the bills and focusing on being a mom. I wouldn’t change anything now, because I do have a good life, but every now and then that little voice begins whispering in my ear that I have no business creating fictional worlds when my own is not always “exciting.” Then I stop to think about the topics I’ve written about. When my son was in elementary school, he developed this horrible rash that covered his entire body. The pediatrician …
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 267 views
1. First find a table socially distanced from other cafe guests and get out your laptop. Do you ever wonder if when you pull out your laptop at your favorite coffee shop, the baristas think, Oh wow! I wonder what she's writing? Or is it more like, How long is she going to be sitting there? I hope she knows we close early tonight. It doesn't really matter as long as you go on to step two. 2. Get in line to order something to drink and/or eat. Before the pandemic, I loved to go to any coffee shop to write and edit. There's something about the smell of the coffee and pastries, the busy-ness of the place, and the chatter of the customers and workers that energizes and insp…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 85 views
I read an article on Huffington Post the other day about the current climate of people “quietly quitting” their jobs. The article profiled a young engineer who realized she had chosen the wrong profession in her first job out of college. She knew she wanted to make a transition, so she opted out of the certifications required to advance within her company, continued her daily tasks, but began saving enough money so she could make a transition when she needed to leave. It occurred to me that I’ve been “quietly quitting” a contract editing gig I’ve had for almost a year now. When I first took the job at a lifestyle magazine, I was familiar with the other staff and had writt…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 71 views
With an unbearably hot summer behind us, we're excited at WOW! to see the signs of fall leaves and cooler weather just around the corner. This time of year is perfect for cozying up with a good book and listening to the rain patter against the window. Since it's the first day of fall today, we're excited to reward our readers with our newest giveaway: Fall Into Reading! (#FallintoReading) This is our third big giveaway, and we can't wait to tell you about the authors and their books joining us today. A few details: Much like our last giveaways, we will have three winners. One grand prize winner will receive the grand prize of our $150 Amazon gift card, free entry into on…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
These days, the term family has morphed into a larger circle. Or perhaps to be more accurate, the concept of family has been enlarged to include smaller circles of people who have no blood or marital relation to each other. Why? Why are we are we venturing out and cherry-picking family members, instead of simply being satisfied with the family we were saddled with born or married into? Why are we calling people our work family and our writing family and our neighborhood family? Necessity. These days, our true family members are scattered. Our real families are sometimes fractured and sometimes dysfunctional. To get the support and joy we need, like making something ou…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 242 views
When you're querying and submitting a manuscript, you're afraid of failure. You're thinking, 'Will anybody say yes to my hot mess written and revised and revised again manuscript?' Even though you've labored over it for years months and months, you have doubts. It looked shiny and sparkly a long time ago, but now... Now it looks like your manuscript might end up on some bookshelf gathering dust because every agent and every publisher is either not answering your query, or they're saying no. However, what happens when you get a yes? You get a yes from a publisher, you get a yes from an artist to get a book cover, you get a yes from review team members, you get a yes f…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 281 views
While many of you are in the thick of NaNoWriMo, now that the month is a little over halfway done, and some of you are celebrating picture book month, I thought I'd take some time today and share a character flaw writing exercise with you. While those of us who live in the United States are getting ready for a big holiday full of many fall and Thanksgiving favorite delicious dishes, we can all take a few minutes out of our busy November schedules to think about... What is wrong with our main characters? I don't mean this in the sense of you are writing a poor book or a boring main character. I mean that in order to have an interesting book, you need a hero or heroine wit…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 157 views
I recently wrote the newsletter intro for the WOW! January markets e-newsletter, and I came up with the theme that small steps plus small goals can equal big success. Then, in my friend group, we've been texting a lot (on a group chat!) about feeling stagnant in careers and in life. Those conversations, along with my article for the newsletter and my own recent life changes, made me think of this: Empower yourself with small steps. Forward progress of any kind will make you feel better. Stagnation is the enemy of joy and creativity! This past year, I had a job that was not going anywhere--I felt stuck. I knew I needed change, but it's hard being a single mom and living …
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 306 views
My mother had an oversized black leather handbag she carried everywhere especially as she grew older. Although she had smaller ones in different colors that could coordinate with whatever she was wearing, this one was an appendage on her arm whether she was going to the supermarket, the doctor's office, a family gathering, or special event. It was most likely purchased from Sears, her favorite department store, and it was spacious enough to hold everything but the kitchen sink; from candy she always had on hand for a fidgety child at the doctor's office or her grandchildren at a family gathering, to important documents she never left home without, a pack of Kleenex, one …
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 161 views
Many of us have heard over the course of our writing life that first drafts are meant to be terrible. Many authors, ones more successful than me, have said that is the key to getting them done. Let them be awful! And that's true. Except sometimes we get stuck so far down on the road of revision we lose sight of some things in the story that was so important before. Recently, I've talked about my journey to revise a story that has had a character that felt underdeveloped to me. Nothing felt right in my tweaking, and I decided to go back to earlier drafts. I wondered what happened along the way that I lost so much sight of my story and my character. In the midst of feedbac…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 229 views
The Edwards' MangoIs it just me? What works right one time, may not work right the next time. Like Sioux and Cathy, I’m looking for life lessons that can be translated into writing lessons. This one came from a mango seed. During 2020, I got a wild hair and decided to sprout a mango seed. The boy and I were working our way through numerous mangos so we had the raw material. I looked up how to do it online and found instructions for cutting away the hull and sprouting the seed in a damp paper towel. I removed the hull and discovered our seed already had both a sprout and roots. We planted it in soil which I spritzed daily until the sprout produced leaves. Success!…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 92 views
By Joni B. Cole (Excerpted from Good Naked: How to Write More, Write Better, and Be Happier) You have a Great Idea for a story. You are so infatuated with this Great Idea that you gush to your friends and fellow writers—“I’m going to write a book about [insert your Great Idea here]!” Your Great Idea takes up residence in your psyche. It settles in, as entitled and undisciplined as lesser royalty. Weeks pass, then months, but nothing gets written. Your Great Idea begins to pace the shag carpet of your mind. “What’s the holdup, hon?” your Great Idea asks. “These shoes are killing me.” “I just need a little more time,” you tell your Great Idea. “I’m not sure how to get sta…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 373 views
Hello WOW Readers! I have been one of the first-tier contest judges for WOW’s quarterly flash fiction contest for over a decade, and it has been a huge pleasure to read your stories. I am writing this blog series on Flash Fiction Contest Tips to help you strengthen your flash writing and maybe even place in one of our contests! Tips are based on our scoring criteria and craft trends I’ve seen throughout the decade. I read a piece of flash recently that grabbed my interest from the first line. It was a magical realism piece with a strong character and an unusual voice and odd events and images, and I kept reading to see how the author would tie all these strands together.…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 354 views
Hello WOW Readers! I have been one of the first-tier contest judges for WOW’s quarterly flash fiction contest for over a decade, and it has been a huge pleasure to read your stories. I am writing this blog series on Flash Fiction Contest Tips to help you strengthen your flash writing and maybe even place in one of our contests! Tips are based on our scoring criteria and craft trends I’ve seen throughout the decade. We all know the first sentence of your story is crucial. It sets the mood and tone, often introduces the protagonist and/or setting, and might be the reader's first glimpse into the story's problem or conflict. It should at least pique the reader's interest, i…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 243 views
by Caitlin Hamilton Summie I didn’t get it. I didn’t get it for 6 ½ months. But my editor, Marc Estrin, patiently stuck with me, nudging me, until I did: the opening to my novel was all wrong. The way my characters had met wasn’t “true.” I’d set the scene with the couple meeting at a college football party. Al and Sarah ended up sharing space on a couch to view the game. Despite the team getting trounced and limping off the field, a slightly inebriated but always loyal Al rose to sing the Gopher fight song, and Sarah got a kick out of him. I loved that moment of Al’s, but I came to understand that I had trivialized my characters in this scene, perhaps made Al look silly,…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 356 views
by Marilyn Kiku Guggenheim The hapa (half-Japanese) hero of a novel I obsessively re-read, grew up with a mother who cherished her. Even when teenaged Sarah betrays a family secret, her mother Yoko forgives her, and they reminisce while holding hands and strolling a leafy Kyoto lane. With Yoko, Mary Yukari Waters conjured my fantasy mother in The Favorites. Mine lacked time or energy to see or hear me, which another reading obsession, The Bilingual Edge, helped me psychoanalyze: “Many researchers have concluded that immigrants...who maintained their cultural heritage at home...also provided their children with the strength to face challenges….[T]o know who they are and…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 291 views
by Maruable (Marusa Zemva) In recent years I've often dreamed of flying. These kind of dreams has always been my favorite. If I could be any animal, I would choose to be a bird. So I can fly wherever I want to, whenever I want to. From a bird’s eye perspective, everything looks so clear, so small, almost meaningless. Well, the dreams where we can fly are supposed to tell us that we need to change something. And when we finally decide we will do something different, our insecurities come to the fore. When I decided I will pursue my writing career I was overwhelmed by a strong doubt. I doubted my ability to describe and summarize my views. I doubted my ability to correc…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 105 views
by Fran Hawthorne “Don’t drag down the narrative momentum by describing every single, ordinary action your characters take to get from Point A to Point B.” That’s a standard piece of advice for fiction writers. If Jane’s nitpicking sister, Lois, unexpectedly turns up at the front door while Jane is eating breakfast, there’s no need to mention that Jane put down her fork, pushed back her chair, and walked to the door—unless Jane’s particular style of fork-putting, chair-pushing, or walking reveals something significant about her personality. For instance, if Jane shrieks and hurls her fork to the floor, that could be a clue that she’s easily rattled. So, according to th…
Last reply by AgentModX, -
- 0 replies
- 256 views
by Theresa Boedeker "How much do you love to write?" our writing teacher asked, starting the four-hour night class. All those years ago, I thought it was a funny question. Afterall, we had signed up for a two-year commitment and were paying to get a graduate degree to learn the craft of story. To shape words and mental images crafted from 26 letters that would resonate and worm their way into the hearts of our readers. "Writing is hard. It involves working alone. Rejection. And if you want to make money, you should write ads, or choose a different field." She looked at each of us. All 17 scattered though out the room. None of us commenting. "Would you write if…
Last reply by AgentModX,