Blog
How to Use Pretending and Journaling to Reduce Stress
I don’t know about you, but I’m worn out from opening my inbox to the masses of COVID-19 emails. Most are updates regarding businesses and their plans, and some remind us to wash and practice social distancing to “stay safe.” It’s all important and necessary stuff,...
Your Book Needs a Development Editor, not just a Beta Reader
There’s a heated debate that appears in writer’s groups and forums on a regular basis: Why hire a development editor when a beta reader can do the same thing for free? In short, they have two different roles in the revision and publishing process. And both are useful...
Requirement 5: The Resolution
The way a story ends is just as important as the way it begins. While the beginning should hook you in and drive you to continue reading, the ending should bring closure. At this point, the climax has answered many of the plot’s questions, so the ending should show...
Why It’s Important to Have a Controlling Theme
Controlling theme. Sounds a bit daunting, doesn’t it? As if there’s this point that needs to be made with your story, some lesson that you must prove. Well...there kinda is. But your story doesn’t have to be a grand statement or literary masterpiece, especially if...
Requirement 4: The Climax
This is the moment you’ve been waiting for, isn’t it? The most exciting part of the story, what everything has been building up to, the part when you’re begging for a release of tension: The Climax! In a previous post, I discussed the predicament, the big event that...
Requirement 3: The Predicament
How are they going to reconcile? Will the bad guy get away? These are some of the questions readers ask during big moments. It’s that last pickle that has us at the edge of our seats, turning pages, and staying up past bedtime. All of the conflict, big and small, has...