#5onFri: Five Eye Care Tips for Writers
…important to see a professional for proper maintenance and monitoring. An annual exam should be a must. Usually the first eye professional you’ll see is an optometrist. If needed, you…
…important to see a professional for proper maintenance and monitoring. An annual exam should be a must. Usually the first eye professional you’ll see is an optometrist. If needed, you…
…it’s more than a dozen. If you’ve written a book in a competitive niche and you’re sending out tons of queries, it could be more than fifty. In that sense,…
…to try taking the pressure off. Staying with the characters and world of your story, seek out some simple writing prompts online and have a go at some flash fiction….
…those down. The only stupid question is the one that you’re afraid to ask.” –Sandy Lu (L. Perkins Agency) 3. Be able to with the flow. “Be confident, conversational, and…
…and family commitments, this might mean you can only spare a couple hours a week. That is completely fine! As long as you are dedicating at least a little bit…
…selling it to anyone else. To ensure Ello keeps this promise, it’s set up as a Public Benefit Corporation. Sure, it sounds a little crusade-y. But the timing is in…
…writing exercise: pick an object on your desk or in the room. Describe it as if to someone who can’t see it. Pay close attention to the words you choose….
…virtual writing retreat, one that you can participate in from the comfort of your home computer or your favorite local writing spot. Read on to learn more or head on…
…but I keep coming up against the same fundamental problem: Writers are not like other people. We’re weird. We’re awesome. We don’t fit into any one box, so most people…
…our computers. Perhaps I’m acutely aware of this because I have fifteen million drafts of each of my books on my computer. I think most writers probably do. And the…