Robert Wood

Rob has yet to encounter a bookshop he can walk past, a habit which has become deadly now that you can buy the newest releases digitally at 1am. Thankfully, it also comes in handy for providing the best advice on writing your book.
What To Do If A Website Has Stolen Your Work - A scary burglar runs away, clutching pages.
Publishing
Robert Wood

What To Do If A Website Has Stolen Your Work

If writers share a single fear, it’s the Bibliotrice; a vast, word-eating chicken-monster that consumes nearly finished books with a ceaseless, demonic hunger. If they share a second fear, it’s having their work stolen. Rare occurrence though it is, plagiarism of this type can happen, and it makes sense to know what you should do in

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How To Make The Reader Trust Your Villain - A character holds out flowers, an ax hidden behind his back.
Writing
Robert Wood

How To Make The Reader Trust Your Villain

Sometimes, the most effective villain is the one you didn’t see coming. It’s the helpful friend who turns out to be the villain’s stooge, the kindly inn-keeper hiding cannibalistic intent, or the sage master whose long-game is to tempt you to the dark side. Of course, for these villains to work, you have to trust

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Why You Need To Know About Sense Writing - An author considers sensory organs, imagining ears, eyes, hands, etc.
Writing
Robert Wood

Why You Need To Know About Sense Writing

Seeing, hearing, touching, tasting and smelling. They’re the senses everyone knows – the way we interact with and understand the world around us – and yet so often, authors forget them when writing a story. That’s a shame, because sense writing is one of the surest ways to enliven a scene and fix your reader

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Everything You Need To Know About Funny Words - Two characters talk, one crying with laughter.
Writing
Robert Wood

Everything You Need To Know About Funny Words

Funny words are the backbone of some of the most enjoyable stories in the English language. Whether it’s Roald Dahl’s frobscottle, Dr. Seuss’ thneeds, or even Douglas Adams’ Zaphod Beeblebrox, choosing the right word can win your story a permanent place in your readers’ hearts. That’s not to say that funny words are only important

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