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Hundreds of Helpful Articles

Hundreds of Helpful Articles

We have created hundreds of articles on topics all authors face in today’s literary landscape. Get help and advice on Writing, Marketing, Publishing, Social Networking, and more. Each article has a Comments section so you can read advice from other authors and leave your own.

Are You Writing the Style of Your Favorite Author?

It’s been said many times that imitation is the highest form of flattery. All artists, visual, theatre, music, and even literary, have to start somewhere, and studying and copying the art of their favorite masters is a good place to start. But, copying a writing...

Why and How to Avoid Redundancy

This article encourages writers to eliminate redundant, unneeded, and surplus words. How’s that again? Obviously, I need to kill unneeded and surplus because they’re redundant. But alas, many writers waste space and their readers’ time with unnecessary words. Here are six reasons why writers let redundancy slip in,...

Write Like You’re Writing for Radio

I started my journalism career as a newspaper reporter. Later I became an editor, then a radio news announcer, and finally worked in TV news. My point in giving you my background is to say that I learned how dissimilar writing for all three mediums...

Are You a Pantser or a Plotter?

As an author, are you a pantser or a plotter? I define the two as follows: Pantser: A writer who gets a story idea, sits down, and starts writing without an outline, character, or plot details. S/he develops the story as s/he writes it, often surprising...

Verisimilitude in Fiction

From characters to scenes to plot lines, it is important that readers can suspend disbelief; that is, the reader believes the characters to be true to life, the scenes accurate and realistic, and the storylines possible even as they know them to be improbable or...

Develop Your Story and Characters With Open-ended Questions

Let’s say you’re writing a story with a protagonist named John. He’s a frustrated golfer with a short temper. In one scene, John throws his golf cap on the living room floor and stomps on it. His wife observes John's actions and asks him a...

The War of the Spaces

After the period, do you type one space? Or two? Which one is correct? Well, historically, and yes, considering the typewriter (pre-computers) has been around for over 150 years, we can consider this an historic dilemma, two spaces was the accepted norm. One period – two...

The Awesome Power of “Why”

Most writers are familiar with the six journalistic questions. The first four are who, what, when, and where. Every writer, whether they write fiction or nonfiction, needs to answer these questions in every story or book. As a practical matter, writers almost always do answer them...

Should You Use a Pen Name?

I’ve sometimes had writers ask me if they should use a pen name. I always say “perhaps,” and then ask why they’re considering it. Usually they struggle to come up with an answer, so here are a few reasons to think about using a pseudonym. You...

The Freelance Writer and Taxes

You’re on this web site because you enjoy writing and hope to earn money from it. Assuming you make money you’ll need to pay tax on your earnings. Freelancers are considered independent contractors, so in addition to Form 1040, you’ll use Schedule C (or C-EZ), “Profit...