Writing

Another 3 Writing Myths You Should Feel Free To Ignore - An author reads a book, a question mark filling her thought bubble.
Writing
Rebecca Langley

Another 3 Writing Myths You Should Feel Free To Ignore

For a while now, we’ve been putting overly rigid writing advice under the microscope with 3 Writing Myths You Should Feel Free To Ignore and 3 (More) Writing Myths You Should Feel Free To Ignore. Today, we’re back in the lab, examining more absolutes to see if they belong in your writing. Myth #7: Write what you

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Why Appreciating Your Theme Will Improve Your Writing - A Batman-esque character flies through the air, singing their own theme song.
Writing
Robert Wood

Why Appreciating Your Theme Will Improve Your Writing

Theme is one of the first aspects of literary critique that we learn about in school and one of the first things we forget when it comes to improving our work. It’s an odd dichotomy so ingrained that many authors will proudly declare that they have no idea what themes are at play in their

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The Color-Coding Technique That Will Save Your Writing - A character with rainbow hair reads a book, complaining that it's bland via an icon of a bottle of milk.
Writing
Rebecca Langley

The Color-Coding Technique That Will Save Your Writing

A while back, we talked about reasons people will put a book down and how to make sure it isn’t your book they’re ditching by page 13. One major thing that turns readers off is a book that’s too homogeneous – it’s all the same, page after page. Books that are homogeneous are easy to drop,

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Why A Motif Could Be Exactly What Your Story Needs - A scene reminiscent of Forrest Gump, with a character looking at a feather and imagining flight.
Writing
Paige Duke

Why A Motif Could Be Just What Your Story Needs

When it comes to writing a story that will stick with your reader, it can be hard to bring certain things to the fore. Characters and events happen in front of the reader, but story elements like theme or larger concepts are harder to define, and therefore harder to get right. Happily, the use of

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