
Several months ago, I wrote about the concept of an artist date. Championed by Julia Cameron in her book The Artist’s Way, an artist date is a period of time that you set aside every week to do some … [Read more...]
For Readers, For Writers, For Bloggers
Lynne Cantwell has been writing fiction since the second grade, when the kid who sat in front of her showed her a book he had written, and she thought, “I could do that.” The result was Susie and the Talking Doll, a picture book illustrated by the author about a girl who owned a doll that not only could talk, but could carry on conversations. The book had dialogue but no paragraph breaks. Today, after a twenty-year career in broadcast journalism and a master’s degree in fiction writing from Johns Hopkins University (or perhaps despite the master’s degree), Lynne is still writing fantasy. Her third novel and her first urban fantasy, Seized: Book One of the Pipe Woman Chronicles, was released in March.
Here are my most recent posts:

Several months ago, I wrote about the concept of an artist date. Championed by Julia Cameron in her book The Artist’s Way, an artist date is a period of time that you set aside every week to do some … [Read more...]

As writers, we often talk about the hook – the first sentence, or first few sentences, of our novels, that will intrigue our readers enough to keep going. Beginnings are important, of course. But … [Read more...]

I must be an absolute glutton for punishment. Here it is, April first; I’m barely recovered from the last National Novel Writing Month event in November; and I’ve signed up for Camp NaNoWriMo, … [Read more...]

I read an article earlier this month that’s got me in the mood for a good, old-fashioned rant. The thing that got my dander up was posted on The Guardian's website. In it, a popular (by all … [Read more...]

It seems as if every month or so, we have another round of discussions about the eventual fate ofbookstores. Usually it’s sparked by a news story about sales numbers or store closings. Well, … [Read more...]

With the end of the world now behind us, we can confidently step forward into the future, right? So I guess it’s time that we begin thinking about where we want to be at this time in 2013. I’ve … [Read more...]

One of the comments on my post about morning pages last month got me thinking. The commenter said he or she wouldn’t feel comfortable doing morning pages because of a past incident in which … [Read more...]

Last month, I talked about the artist’s date, one of the two key practices recommended by Julia Cameron in her book The Artist’s Way. This month, I’d like to talk about her second key … [Read more...]

I suppose it could be argued that indie authors have no trouble being creative. After all, we churn out novels at an amazing rate. We never lack for inspiration and we never, ever suffer from … [Read more...]

Once upon a time, many years ago, when my two daughters were younger but no less goofy than they are today, I was driving us home from a visit to my mother in America's Heartland. We'd been on the … [Read more...]

Mark my words: the summer of 2012 will go down in history as a watershed season for indie authors. A number of developments in the publishing business have given us a boost. In June, three … [Read more...]

Samuel Johnson once said, “No man but a blockhead ever wrote, except for money.” I have a copy of the quote stuck to my fridge precisely because of its delicious irony – by which I mean that … [Read more...]

We're reading Panoptemitry in June. Join us on Goodreads.
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