#5onFri: Five Secondary Character Arcs to Strengthen Your Cast

#5onFri: Five Secondary Character Arcs to Strengthen Your Cast

If you’ve spent much time in the writing world, you’re probably familiar with the idea of character arcs. For those who are new to this term, character arcs are the internal transformations of your cast as they struggle to overcome major flaws or wounds—typically in the form of a positive,  negative, or flat arc. As… Read more »

Lighten Up: Injecting Humor to Relieve Narrative Tension

Lighten Up: Injecting Humor to Relieve Narrative Tension

I know I’m in trouble when I’m taking my work too seriously when I can’t find something to be amused by. I have written about some really unfunny things—addiction, cancer, death. My latest novel, An Upside-Down Sky, is set in Namyan, a Buddhist country modeled after Burma, which is a kissing cousin of North Korea… Read more »

Facing Shame: Healing through Writing a Memoir

Facing Shame: Healing through Writing a Memoir

People write memoirs for many different reasons—as a way to process trauma, find healing, or even take revenge on family members who may not have been as nice as they could have been. I didn’t start writing a memoir for any of those reasons. I began writing down my stories because I felt compelled to… Read more »

How to Write a Love Story: My Top 4 Tips

How to Write a Love Story: My Top 4 Tips

What makes a great love story? Whether you’re writing romance, mystery, or literary fiction, when you’re incorporating romance into our work, the task is the same—to write a believable, engaging relationship that keeps readers turning the pages. (I write contemporary fiction, for example, but I write contemporary fiction that sometimes has romance in it, and… Read more »

#5onFri: Five Tips for Writing a Children’s Story

#5onFri: Five Tips for Writing a Children’s Story

Have you been kicking around a children’s story idea in your head and you’re not sure where to start?  You’re in luck! I’ve compiled several key questions into a survey and asked parents, grandparents, and teachers for their input. Based on their responses, I’ve summarized the top five best tools recommended for writing a children’s… Read more »

Open Doors in Your Writing

Open Doors in Your Writing

I’ve always loved a good prompt when it comes to writing because I’ve always loved a challenge. These are usually questions or directives (though they don’t have to be) with the goal of inciting a written response from the writer, such as: “two strangers meet in a bar, and one of them turns to the… Read more »

Draft Day, or Learning to Celebrate Your Manuscript

Draft Day, or Learning to Celebrate Your Manuscript

Last summer, on a hectic day before a month-long vacation, I went to the print shop for my final errand. I’d spent the past ten months working on the second draft of my latest novel—submitting chapters to my writing group, fixing the clunky narrative arc, and generally solidifying my sketchy first pass. Now the dogged… Read more »

#5onFri: Five Reasons to Start a Morning Writing Routine

#5onFri: Five Reasons to Start a Morning Writing Routine

Over the years I’ve struggled to establish a regular writing routine. I was constantly adjusting my schedule to accommodate school, internships, and a variety of part-time jobs. But even once I settled into a full-time job with a steady schedule, my writing routine still faltered. I tried to squeeze time into lunch breaks and scheduled… Read more »

#5onFri: Five Tips for Genre Hopping with Ease

#5onFri: Five Tips for Genre Hopping with Ease

Genre hopping is a great way to introduce yourself and your writing style to a new audience.  If it is done incorrectly, it is a lot like a bad first impression. It will taint your future ventures and efforts with the audience.  I would know. When I first tried genre-hopping, I made a big mistake…. Read more »