What do you do when a friend helping critique you work says you got it all wrong?
The fix might be easier than you think.
Morgan Hazelwood: Writer In Progress
What do you do when a friend helping critique you work says you got it all wrong?
The fix might be easier than you think.
Whether you’re looking to break into the editing field, or just learn more about the so-called gatekeepers of the traditional … More
I’m an unlikely person to compare writing to painting. I’ve confessed in the past, but my imagination is far more … More
I almost entitled this “Beta-Reading: For Fun and Profit” but… I don’t usually profit. At least not monetarily. I do … More
If you’re a writer, at some point between you putting the words down and it going out to its intended audience, you’re probably going to solicit some feedback (and if you don’t, you probably should).
Be it from one or all of these:
you’re likely going to receive some feedback other than, “I loved it! Don’t change a thing!” (Unless your mother is very different from mine)
But, when that feedback is more nebulous or overarching than typos and wording, it can be tricky to know where to start.
Here’s Post #2 in my local writer’s blog hop! Today’s post is from Katherine Gotthardt, talking about how editing your … More
There’s a writing skill that many novelists struggle with.
It’s something that read-a-chapter-a-month critique groups often miss.
We all know that you need to start off with an inciting incident — at least by the end of the first chapter. But after there, it can get a bit fuzzy.
Today, I share what award-winning Science-fiction and Fantasy Editors and Publishers had to say about:
After you’ve written your novel and revised the BLEEP out of it, one thing remains: To edit your manuscript! For … More