Alison Hammer

Five Tips for Writing Every Day

Unfortunately, no one has invented a way to write a novel without actually sitting down to write it. So it remains true that the only way to finish whatever project you’re working on is to keep filling that page with words. Trust me, I know it’s not as easy as it sounds. There’s nothing more… Read more »

Depression

Writing Through Depression

Way back in 2009, five major events deeply altered me. In April, my beloved grandmother died. Six weeks later, I married my now-husband. Over the following summer, my husband lost a grandmother on one side and a grandfather on the other. And the following fall, my husband and I bought our first home. While two… Read more »

Dave Chesson

#5onFri: Five Writing Tips For Levelling Up Your Craft

There are over six million Kindle books published on Amazon. Only a small percentage will be bestsellers.  As an author, it’s up to you to make your book stand out. Sure, marketing and branding help you sell more books, but the best way to sell books is to write the best one possible.   In this… Read more »

Short Story

#5onFri: Five Tips for Writing a Great Short Story

Writing a short story always seems so easy until you try to write one. Then, reality sets in. How do you fit in character development? An entire plot? So much to fit and so few words! Because of these constraints, short stories are a great tool to practice writing. Short stories can teach you to… Read more »

Transformation

Transformation — Signpost Scene #14 (The Final Signpost!)

At last, we come to the end of my 14-column-series on James Scott Bell’s Signpost Scenes, as depicted in his wonderful book on craft, Super Structure. Signpost Scene #14–Transformation–might be short and subtle, but it’s wildly important for a story’s success. Essentially, the purpose of Transformation is exactly what it sounds like: a scene that… Read more »

Practices

#5onFri: Five Practices to Create a Thriving Writing Life

Writing can be intensely rewarding, but each book is also a messy, long-drawn trek.  Here are five practices that may help you to navigate through these journeys: 1) Treat your writing as a job  It is of course your vocation, but if you wait for inspiration from the heavens, you’ll never get anything completed. So:… Read more »