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December 17, 2023 By Anne R. Allen 38 Comments

Just Finished Your First Novel? Do’s and Don’ts for NaNoWriMo Winners

Just Finished Your First Novel? Do’s and Don’ts for NaNoWriMo Winners

  by Anne R. Allen So you won NaNoWriMo! You had to skip Thanksgiving dinner with your brother-in-law’s fabulous spatchcocked turkey, and watching the game with your favorite cousins. Plus your houseplants died, your cat evaporated, and you still have your Halloween decorations up. Tip: Make some Santa hats for all your bats, witches and […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, first novels, NaNoWriMo, The Author Blog: Easy Blogging for Busy Authors

October 22, 2023 By Anne R. Allen 24 Comments

Can NaNoWriMo Cure Your Creativity Wound?

Can NaNoWriMo Cure Your Creativity Wound?

  by Anne R. Allen A “creativity wound” is the psychological injury we feel when someone we trust says harsh, negative things about our creative work. Executive director of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) Grant Faulkner explains it like this: “We put our souls, the meaning of our lives, into the things we create, whether […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: creativity, Ghostwriters in the Sky, Grant Faulkner, NaNoWriMo

November 3, 2019 By Anne R. Allen 51 Comments

Writing that First Chapter: 10 Do’s and Don’ts for Starting Your Novel

Writing that First Chapter: 10 Do’s and Don’ts for Starting Your Novel

by Anne R. Allen I’ve had questions from several writers recently about how to approach a first chapter. New writers hear so many rules about what they must do in the first line, first paragraph, and first chapter that they can feel paralyzed, afraid to write a word. Let’s hope that NaNoWriMo is helping some […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: first chapters, NaNoWriMo, Nathan Bransford, Novel openers, The Camilla Randall Mysteries boxed set

October 20, 2019 By Anne R. Allen 48 Comments

What Keeps You From Writing Success? Are you a Prisoner of Unexamined Beliefs?

What Keeps You From Writing Success? Are you a Prisoner of Unexamined Beliefs?

Unexamined beliefs can keep a writer in a prison of your own making. by Anne R. Allen “Think outside the box” has become a mindless cliché these days. It’s repeated so often that the meaning has pretty much disappeared. But it’s still excellent advice—if you know how to follow it. Unfortunately, most people are unaware […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: How to Be a Writer in the E-Age, NaNoWriMo, The "was" police, the Dunning-Kruger Effect, unexamined beliefs

November 4, 2018 By Anne R. Allen 82 Comments

Confessions of a Slow Writer: Why NaNoWriMo isn’t for Everybody

Confessions of a Slow Writer: Why NaNoWriMo isn’t for Everybody

  by Anne R. Allen We live in a speed-obsessed civilization. Whatever it is we crave—cars, trains, electronics, food, dates—we want them ever-faster-and-furiouser. In fact, much of the developed world seems to be engaged some turbocharged drag race of the soul, hurtling our frenzied selves from cradle to grave, terrified of slowing for even a […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: Googling Old Boyfriends, NaNoWriMo, slow writers, The Camilla Randall Mysteries boxed set, the gig economy

October 21, 2018 By Anne R. Allen 36 Comments

Creativity Wounds: Can NaNoWriMo Help Overcome Them?

Creativity Wounds: Can NaNoWriMo Help Overcome Them?

Creativity wounds: the slings and arrows of outrageous criticism.  by Anne R. Allen.  A couple of weeks ago, Grant Faulkner, executive director of NaNoWriMo, wrote a short piece for Jane Friedman’s blog about what he calls “creativity wounds.” The post resonated with me. Oh, yeah, I know about creativity wounds! I have to admit that […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: creativity wounds, critique groups and criticism, Ghostwriters in the Sky, Grant Faulkner, Michael Ventura, NaNoWriMo, rejection

November 12, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 85 Comments

Why NaNoWriMo is Liberating for Some Writers and Dangerous for Others

Why NaNoWriMo is Liberating for Some Writers and Dangerous for Others

  by Anne R. Allen Okay, I’ll confess: I have never been tempted to join in NaNoWriMo. That doesn’t mean I don’t admire the heck out of people who can do it. Charles Dickens wrote A Christmas Carol in a little over month. You can’t argue with that kind of success. But some writers prefer to […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: Andrews and Thomson, Dr. Elaine Aron, Fonda Lee, Ghostwriters in the Sky, NaNoWriMo, The Highly Sensitive Person

October 15, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 18 Comments

Brainstorm Your Way to a Great Novel Hook

Brainstorm Your Way to a Great Novel Hook

  Brainstorm your novel hook now for your NaNoWriMo novel! By Janice Hardy A great idea helps every novel get off to a great start, but not every idea starts out great. Some need a little work to find their true potential. The key is to find the novel hook within the idea that will […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: Fiction University, Janice Hardy, NaNoWriMo, Novel Hook, planning for NaNoWriMo, Planning Your Novel, writing a hook

October 30, 2016 By Anne R. Allen 44 Comments

Slang, Jargon and Insider Lingo: 11 Ways to Find the Language that Brings Fiction to Life

Slang, Jargon and Insider Lingo: 11 Ways to Find the Language that Brings Fiction to Life

Slang, jargon, insider lingo and the perfect word make dialogue authentic and put your dancers en pointe. by Ruth Harris 1. A few words about words: Big words and little words. Everyday words and words for special occasions. Polite words and the other kind. The right words, well considered and well chosen, can take a […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: colloquialisms, Decades, NaNoWriMo, Ruth Harris, Slang and Jargon, Wordmonger

October 25, 2015 By Ruth Harris 29 Comments

The Joy of Writing: How to Keep it During NaNoWriMo

The Joy of Writing: How to Keep it During NaNoWriMo

8 Bestselling Authors Share Tips and Tricks for Finding and Keeping Joy in Your Writing   by Ruth Harris The Joy of Writing? During National Novel Writing Month? You’re kidding, right?A 55K word novel in a month?You’re fretting, nervous, sweaty. Performance anxiety in excelsis? Brain block? What brain? Writing should be fun and NaNo is […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: Consuelo Saah Baehr, Grace Burrowes, How to write a bestselling novel, Husband Training School, Joe Konrath, Khaled Talib, Lindsay Buroker, NaNoWriMo, Ruth Harris, Vanessa Kelly, Writing tips

October 26, 2014 By Anne R. Allen 55 Comments

Is Perfectionism Slowing Your Writing Process? 7 Ways NaNoWriMo Can Help

Is Perfectionism Slowing Your Writing Process? 7 Ways NaNoWriMo Can Help

by Anne R. Allen   We’ve all met those people who think their sojourn on earth is meant to be a fault-finding mission. They can spot lint on your jacket at fifty paces, provide a litany of your imperfections whenever there’s a lull in the conversation, and be counted upon to tell you why your pumpkin […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: Amazon countdown, Anne Lamott, Chris Baty, How to Be a Writer in the E-Age, Hugh Howey, Inner critic, NaNoREADMo, NaNoWriMo, Perfectionism, sucky first drafts

November 17, 2013 By Anne R. Allen 54 Comments

Are Your Family and Friends Sabotaging your Writing Dreams?

Are Your Family and Friends Sabotaging your Writing Dreams?

by Anne R. Allen Writers participating in NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) may discover that friends and family aren’t entirely enthused by your decision to disappear into your computer for a month. (I have a secret suspicion that Chris Baty invented NaNo in order to escape those painful family Thanksgiving dinners.) But at any time of […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection, Writing Craft Tagged With: beta readers, Crazy-Makers, critique groups, Dream-smashers, GalleyCat, Holli Moncrieff, Julia Cameron, Kristen Lamb, NaNoWriMo, SLO Nightwriters

January 13, 2013 By Anne R. Allen 54 Comments

The Number One Mistake New Writers Make

The Number One Mistake New Writers Make

by Anne R. Allen   Most complaints about authors by agents and editors as well as reviewers can be boiled down to the same offense. It’s the major reason so many reviewers won’t read self-published books by unknowns. What is that mistake? Rushing to publish too early. Nobody wants to read a rough draft. Your […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: 99 cent book bubble, critiquecircle.com, Editing, Kathryn Rusch, Kristen Lamb, Malcolm Gladwell, NaNoWriMo, publishing business, self publishing

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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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