2024 April PAD Challenge: Day 26
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Robert Lee Brewer
5h ago
I can not believe how close we are to the finish line for this challenge. Also, everyone patiently waiting for the 2023 November PAD Chapbook Challenge results, thank you so much for your patience! I'm still committed to getting that posted before the end of the month, which is nearly upon us. So I'm going to do my thing here and get back to re-reading the finalists. For today's prompt, write a persona poem. A persona poem is just a poem narrated in the voice of a persona who is not yourself. Like I could write a persona poem in the voice of Batman or SpongeBob SquarePants or an abandoned payp ..read more
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Genres as Crushers of Creativity
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Jude Berman
8h ago
Say you go to a restaurant to order peach pie. How annoying would it be if you had to scan a long, jumbled list of appetizers and entrees and salads and side dishes and cocktails to find your pie? You want to go straight to the dessert menu. Similarly, you don’t want to scroll through online reviews of auto body shops to find a five-star dentist. (7 Things I Learned While Writing Across Genres.) Categorization simplifies life. The publishing industry is no exception. It has created and promoted a system to help you get right to the menu that matches your mood at the moment. Knowing, for exampl ..read more
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Turning Real People Into Characters Is an Act of Translation
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Lilly Dancyger
13h ago
It might seem like nonfiction writers get off easy when it comes to developing characters: We don’t have to create them from whole cloth, inventing layers of backstory and idiosyncrasy—the people we’re writing about already exist! But the work of translating a real person into a character on the page has its own messy, fraught challenges. There are the craft challenges of capturing the unknowable totality of a person (impossible) and the interpersonal challenges of facing people’s reactions to how you’ve described them (terrifying). Not to mention the exceedingly strange experience of turning ..read more
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Writing a Picture Book Based on My Grandmother’s Experience
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Ellen Weinstein
16h ago
As an illustrator, I have covered subjects ranging from global conflicts to looking for exoplanets in the universe. In writing and illustrating Five Stories, I looked much closer to home and explored my family history and the neighborhood I have lived in most of my life. (Turning a Bedtime Routine Into a Picture Book.) A while ago, I taught an illustration workshop in Russia. On the flight home, I tried to imagine my grandparents and great-grandparents crossing the Atlantic by boat from Russia to Ellis Island. While searching for a movie to entertain myself, I ruminated that I may have more in ..read more
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Kim Sherwood: Say Your Dreams Out Loud
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Robert Lee Brewer
19h ago
Kim Sherwood is a novelist and a Lecturer in Creative Writing at the University of Edinburgh. Her award-winning debut novel Testament was released in 2018, and in 2019, Kim was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award. Her latest novel, A Wild & True Relation, was described by Dame Hilary Mantel as “a rarity – a novel as remarkable for the vigour of the storytelling as for its literary ambition. Kim Sherwood is a writer of capacity, potency and sophistication.” Double or Nothing is the first in an acclaimed series of Double O novels expanding the world of James Bond ..read more
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2024 April PAD Challenge: Day 25
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Robert Lee Brewer
1d ago
For today's prompt, write a homonym poem. A homonym is either (or both) a homograph (word spelled the same with different meanings and possibly different pronunciations) or a homophone (word that is pronounced the same but has different spellings). Here are some examples of homophones and homographs to get you started: 20 Homophones Examples for Writers. 30 Homographs Examples for Writers. Remember: These prompts are springboards to creativity. Use them to expand your possibilities, not limit them. Note on commenting: If you wish to comment on the site, go to Disqus to create a free new acco ..read more
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Should Writers Have a Newsletter?
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Nancy Reddy
1d ago
To be a writer, all you really have to do is write. But if you want to grow your audience, connect with readers, and sell more books, the best tool available right now is a newsletter. (Should Writers Use Social Media?) When I started writing my newsletter, in March 2021, I had a pretty straightforward idea: I’d share a poetry prompt each day for April, and anyone who wanted to join us could write along. For years I’d celebrated National Poetry Month by trading prompts with friends and writing a poem a day (or trying my hardest to), and I thought I could share that celebration with a wider gro ..read more
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Claire Fraise: 2023 Self-Published Book Awards Winner
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Moriah Richard
2d ago
As we met to discuss her winning novel, Claire Fraise said something that resonated with every part of her writing and publishing journey: “I just try to keep a curious mindset and to explore and to keep doing something to move myself in the direction where I want to be going. Even when it can feel challenging.” After falling in love with dystopian YA fiction while reading series like The Hunger Games and The Maze Runner, she asked herself, “Why can’t I try writing one of my own?” For two years, she did nothing but think about her characters and write. Then she self-published that novel, titl ..read more
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Alicia D. Williams: We Are More Capable Than We Know
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Robert Lee Brewer
2d ago
Alicia D. Williams is the author of Genesis Begins Again, which received Newbery and Kirkus Prize honors, was a William C. Morris Award finalist, and for which she won the Coretta Scott King - John Steptoe Award for New Talent; and picture books Jump at the Sun and The Talk, which was also a Coretta Scott King Honor book. An oral storyteller in the African American tradition, she lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. Follow her on Facebook and Instagram. Alicia D. Williams In this interview, Alicia discusses how a NaNoWriMo challenge in the early months of the pandemic led to her new middle-grad ..read more
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Announcing the 11th Annual Self-Published E-book Awards Winners
Writer's Digest Magazine | Write Better, Get Published, Be Creative
by Moriah Richard
2d ago
Congratulations to the winners of the 11th Annual Self-Published E-book Awards! [WD uses affiliate links.] Grand Prize The Cruel Dark by Bea Northwick, NorthwickBooks.com Contemporary Fiction First Place Secret of the Hindu Kush by Anthony Stone, AnthonyStone-Author.com Honorable Mentions Jaguar Spirit by Zoe Hauser, ZoeHauser.com Pheidippides Didn't Die by Autumn Konopka, AutumnKonopka.com The Playgroup by Jami Worthington The Way It's Supposed to Be by April Garner, AprilGarner.com Fantasy First Place Children of Cain by S. L. Myers Honorable Mentions Find Them by Julia Ash, Jul ..read more
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