Last week I was on a work trip. I travelled from Sydney to Broome via a connecting flight to Perth. The first leg of this trip alone was four hours. Knowing this, I decided to print one of my works in progress, The Midnight Man, because I’ve been feeling the urge to get it ready …
Obsessing over Chapter Four
As you may know, my writing is more sporadic these days. Gone are the days when my fingers regularly tapped frantically in the hope of churning out a best seller. Now there is more time to obsess over each chapter before I return to my trusty laptop. In the past I have lived with the …
5 Sci-Fi Novels Shaped by Real World Politics – Guest blog by Emmanuel Nataf
This week's guest post comes from Emmanuel Nataf. He is a co-founder of Reedsy, a marketplace that connects authors and publishers with editors, designers, and marketers. Emmanuel dedicates most of his time to building Reedsy’s product and is interested in how technology can transform cultural industries. One of his blogger friends at Reedsy contacted me …
Continue reading "5 Sci-Fi Novels Shaped by Real World Politics – Guest blog by Emmanuel Nataf"
Conversation with a Book Cover Artist – Natasha Snow
When my first novel was being published, I received a curt email from the head of the publishing company saying that I had asked too much of my cover artist. I had no idea. It was my first book. I was new to this. I'd seen a stock photo of a waiter and wanted him …
Continue reading "Conversation with a Book Cover Artist – Natasha Snow"
Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part Four
I'm still not even halfway looking back at my old notebook... But I'll make this my last musings on its contents. One thing that's surprised me straight away is that I originally was going to title the last in the Angel and Actors series novels, Drama Queens and Demonic Beings. So glad I didn't. There …
Continue reading "Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part Four"
Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part Three
This week I'll be sharing notes from a workshop on editing between drafts. Over the last two weeks I've been going through my first writer's notebook and rediscovering my musings on improving my manuscripts, and sharing dot points from seminars I attended on writing. Today's blog is a hybrid of the two from an author …
Continue reading "Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part Three"
Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part Two
Notes on first time publishing, working with your editor, and writing villains is what I'm sharing with you this week. Last week I told you that I'm browsing through my first notebook, rediscovering its contents. Many of its initial pages are devoted to rewrites of my first novel. The next few pages are from seminars …
Continue reading "Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part Two"
Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part One
I filled my first writer's notebook. My friend, Brett, gave it to me as a present for my birthday over ten years ago. It also came with a lovely pen on which he engraved 'The pen is mightier than the sword'. Inside the notebook, he wrote an inscription of which some of the lines are: …
Continue reading "Looking back at my Writer’s Notebook – Part One"
Writing Tips – Guest Post by Ari Meghlen
Today's guest blogger is a bit of an enigma. We know Ari Meghlen's avatar from her Twitter site as she shares daily questions for us to consider under the hashtag #TheMerryWriter. She is working on several books yet hasn't been published. But she has flash fiction pieces on her website, as well as a wealth …
Writing Tips – Guest blog by author, J.P. Jackson
The third in this series of Writing Tips this year are from J.P. Jackson. By day, J.P. Jackson works as an IT analyst in health care during the day, where if cornered he’d confess to casting spells to ensure clinicians actually use the electronic medical charting system he configures and implements. At night however, the writing …
Continue reading "Writing Tips – Guest blog by author, J.P. Jackson"
