Letting Your Story End at the End
…rejection. Only this time it was a four paragraph long rejection with extremely detailed comments, telling me where to expand, what characters to develop, what additional storylines I might want…
…rejection. Only this time it was a four paragraph long rejection with extremely detailed comments, telling me where to expand, what characters to develop, what additional storylines I might want…
…her email list.Although trained in multiple genres, Abigail specializes in Scripts, YA Fantasy, Contemporary Fiction, Upmarket Fiction, and Women’s Fiction, many of which she reviewed (and loved!) as an editorial…
…I love world building, and this novel had such detailed world building that I fell in love. You’ll find everything important about it here. The politics, mannerism, laws, interpersonal relationships,…
…History Matters, a foundation dedicated to historic preservation. Since 2009 Steve and Elizabeth have crossed the country to save endangered historic treasures, raising money via lectures, receptions, galas, luncheons, dinners…
…of short, short stories by literary greats. You will find Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oscar Wilde, Kate Chopin and Franz Kafka among the many authors in this list of stories, which has…
…Fine Arts. Lenore’s newest YA novel, The Manic Pixie Dream Boy Improvement Project, is now available, and she currently lives in the D.C. area with her family and her manic…
…Her hobbies include reading, scuba-diving, and traveling. She aims to promote cross-cultural understanding through her work, which has been featured in SISTERS, Blue Abaya, Saudi Life, and Productive Muslim. You…
…A to Z to find the unique nuggets that make your story come alive. From one century to the next there are clothing trends, new verbiage, furniture, and decorating styles,…
…love, unrequited love, familial love, betrayal, or friendship. If your protagonist is going on a journey to an unexplored world, but has someone to return to, or finds someone along…
…the cutting edge of technology, reading here from my Palm Pilot” sort of way. Still, it is the words of Shakespeare, Emerson, Dickinson, Omar Khayyam, and many others that make…