This week, Lawrence Block reminds us that while real life often does not make sense, our fiction must. Ruth Harris provides a handy checklist on effective dialogue while Jami Gold and Janice Hardy expound ways to ensure that our characters are not puppets to plot.
Calling all Scrivener users, Gwen Hernandez and Joslyn Chase offer tips on using some of the app’s features to organize our work.
Jennifer L. Harris shows us how to determine whether or not our story ideas will support a full-length novel. Over at the Write Practice, David Stafford reviews methods for applying the principle’s of the Hero’s Journey, and Jane Friedman delivers a comprehensive guide to writing query letters.
All that a little more. Enjoy!
Stop Making Sense: Explaining Some Fiction Rules of Logic by Lawrence Block
He Said. She Said. Fifteen Keys to Writing Great Dialogue by Ruth Harris
How Can We Make Our Protagonist More Proactive? by Jami Gold
Things to Consider When Adding a POV Character by Janice Hardy
What is Causing the Uptick in Independent Bookstores? by Mike Shatzkin
Using Bookmarks in Scrivener 3 for Quick Access to Supporting Materials by Gwen Hernandez
How to Use Scrivener to Write Scenes That Work by Joslyn Chase
5 Essential Hero’s Journey Themes and Symbolic Archetypes That Will Thrill Your Readers by David Stafford
The Complete Guide to Query Letters by Jane Friedman
13 Tips for Writers Who Just Want to Finish Something For Once by Meg Dowell
How to Test Your Story Idea: Is Your Idea Strong Enough to Support a Novel? by Jennifer L. Harris
Why I Don’t Write Every Day by Phoebe Quinn