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November 6, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 29 Comments

How to Craft Award-Winning Flash and Microfiction: an Alternative to NaNoWriMo

How to Craft Award-Winning Flash and Microfiction: an Alternative to NaNoWriMo

A microfiction contest can be an alternative to novel writing in November by Amber Byers November is here, and many writers have jumped into National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), an international writing event in which writers challenge themselves to write an entire book, or 50,000 words, in the month of November. As anyone who has […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: Amber Byers, Flash fiction, Flash Fiction Writing Contest, Tadpole Press

October 30, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 34 Comments

How to Write an Absolutely Great First Sentence

How to Write an Absolutely Great First Sentence

  by Ruth Harris I wrote this post on writing a great first sentence as a companion-piece to Anne’s recent post on writing a great first chapter. With apologies to Jane Austen, it is a truth universally acknowledged, at least by writers and certainly by agents and editors, that no matter what genre, your first […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: Famous first lines, Ruth Harris, The Last Romantics, Writing tips

October 23, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 78 Comments

How TikTok Works for All Authors and Genres

How TikTok Works for All Authors and Genres

by Sue Coletta When the buzz of TikTok started spreading, I wanted no part of it. With two Facebook accounts, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, LinkedIn, YouTube, Goodreads, etc. the last thing I needed was another social media site. I could barely juggle the audience I’d amassed on social media over the last twelve years. Then I […]

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Filed Under: E-Books and Technology for Writers, Social Media and Marketing For Writers Tagged With: Book Marketing, Haloed, Social Media Marketing, Sue Coletta

October 16, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 37 Comments

Tropes and Archetypes vs. Clichés: Why it’s Okay to Use Familiar Elements in Fiction

Tropes and Archetypes vs. Clichés: Why it’s Okay to Use Familiar Elements in Fiction

Tropes of “the Other Woman” are as old as Lilith by Anne R. Allen In a workshop recently, I was gobsmacked when one writer criticized another for using a story element that’s much loved in women’s fiction. It’s the one where the heroine discovers she’s the “other woman” in her man’s life, when she thought […]

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Filed Under: Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection, Writing Craft Tagged With: archetypes, Sherwood, Sherwood Ltd., tropes, writing cliches

October 9, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 48 Comments

James Scott Bell’s 10 Commandments for Writers

James Scott Bell’s 10 Commandments for Writers

by James Scott Bell When I started to teach writing in the late 90s, I channeled my inner Charlton Heston and announced 10 Commandments for Writers. A cheeky thing to do, I admit. But when I reviewed them recently, I found I wouldn’t change one of them. So here they are, with attached comment. 1) […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: James Scott Bell, Write Your Novel from the Middle, writing rules

October 2, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 35 Comments

How to Write a Great Opening Chapter: a Revised Checklist

How to Write a Great Opening Chapter: a Revised Checklist

  by Anne R. Allen Writers know the opening chapter of a book is the most important. That’s when we grab a reader who’s browsing in a bookstore or clicking on the “look inside” function for online retailers — and persuade him to reach for that wallet and buy the book. A new writer can […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, first chapters, Food of Love, The hero's journey

September 25, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 20 Comments

7 Ways Houses, Homes (and the Rooms in Them) Can Rescue that Stalled First Draft

7 Ways Houses, Homes (and the Rooms in Them) Can Rescue that Stalled First Draft

Stalled first draft? Make plans for a new setting. by Ruth Harris Home is where the heart is. Or is it? Home sweet home. Or is it? You can’t go home again. Or can you? You can go from: Shirley Jackson’s spooky Hill House to the Best Little Whorehouse in Texas — The Rosemary’s Baby […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: fictional settings, Husbands and Lovers, Ruth Harris

September 18, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 36 Comments

10 Types of Toxic People Who Can Stall Your Writing Career and Literally Make You Sick

10 Types of Toxic People Who Can Stall Your Writing Career and Literally Make You Sick

by Anne R. Allen In her 1990 book The Artist’s Way, Julia Cameron warns creatives about crazymakers, the people who have no respect for your work and dominate your time with endless drama. But crazymakers aren’t the only people who can hurt your chances of having  a successful creative career.  There are a lot of […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life Tagged With: Crazymakers, Julia Cameron, No Place Like Home, Toxic People

September 11, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 24 Comments

What’s the Central Conflict of your Novel? Keep it Center Stage.

What’s the Central Conflict of your Novel? Keep it Center Stage.

by Becca Puglisi “Conflict in Every Scene” We’ve all heard this advice, and for good reason. Your protagonist has a goal—hopefully, an audacious and high-stakes goal that is difficult to achieve. “Difficult” is important. It’s one of the qualities of a highly engaging story because the harder the goal is to reach, the less certainty […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: Becca Puglisi, conflict in fiction, The Conflict Thesaurus, The Conflict Thesaurus Volume 2

September 4, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 27 Comments

How to Write a Short Story: Wisdom from C.S. Lewis

How to Write a Short Story: Wisdom from C.S. Lewis

Write a short story–with advice from the creator of Narnia by Jim Denney When we think of short stories, we think of names like Poe, Chekhov, and Hemingway. But can you name your favorite C. S. Lewis short story? Probably not. Lewis is famed and beloved for The Chronicles of Narnia, but few readers are […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: C.S. Lewis, Jim Denney, short stories

August 28, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 32 Comments

The Upside of Impostor Syndrome and 7 Ways to Deal with the Downside

The Upside of Impostor Syndrome and 7 Ways to Deal with the Downside

by Ruth Harris What? There’s an upside to Impostor Syndrome? Yes. A sane, healthy mid-point exists between being stalled out by Impostor Syndrome and obnoxious, raging egomania so rancid even your dog hates you. Authentic modesty keeps you real — and productive. A certain degree of Impostor Syndrome can be the necessary spur that motivates […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, uncategorized, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: Diamonds Are For Now, Imposter Syndrome, Ruth Harris

August 21, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 27 Comments

Bogus Agents, Phony Communities, Fake Conferences, and Pay-to-Play Anthologies: New Scam Warnings for Writers

Bogus Agents, Phony Communities, Fake Conferences, and Pay-to-Play Anthologies: New Scam Warnings for Writers

Bogus agents are impersonating real agents by Anne R. Allen Bogus agents are ba-a-ack. Once upon a time, in the long-ago era when I was querying, fee-charging agencies and in-house editorial services were the problem. Their scams usually involved charging a “reading fee” (a no-no for legit agents) or referring writers to editorial services and […]

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Filed Under: Scams and Alerts for Writers Tagged With: agent scams, Anne R. Allen, pay-to-play anthologies, publishing scammers, Publishing scams, The Best Revenge

August 14, 2022 By Anne R. Allen 25 Comments

Can You Copyright a Character or Book Title? How about Trademarking?

Can You Copyright a Character or Book Title? How about Trademarking?

Can an author copyright a character like Harry Potter? by Joseph Perry, Intellectual Property Attorney Copyright law is complicated. Can You Copyright a Title? No. Under the US Copyright Act, you cannot copyright a title. That is because titles are too short to be protected. Copyright law protects original works fixed in a tangible medium […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business Tagged With: Abie's Irish Rose, Copyright laws, Joseph Perry, Literary vs visual characters, Rocky Balboa

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writers digest 101 best websites for writers award

Anne R. AllenAnne R. Allen writes funny mysteries and how-to-books for writers. She also writes poetry and short stories on occasion. She’s a contributor to Writer’s Digest and the Novel and Short Story Writer’s Market.

Her bestselling Camilla Randall Mystery Series features perennially down-on-her-luck former socialite Camilla Randall—who is a magnet for murder, mayhem and Mr. Wrong, but always solves the mystery in her quirky, but oh-so-polite way.

Ruth Harris NYT best selling authorRuth is a million-copy New York Times bestselling author, Romantic Times award winner, former Big 5 editor, publisher, and news junkie.

Her emotional, entertaining women’s fiction and critically praised novels have sold millions of copies in hard cover, paperback and ebook editions, been translated into 19 languages, sold in 30 countries, and were prominent selections of leading book clubs including the Literary Guild and the Book Of The Month Club.

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