Finding the Right Balance With Your Stage Directions — an older post from Janice
Hardy at Fiction University, but useful.
Not exact matches
My friend Janice
Hardy came up with the perfect solution: joining the Indie Author Series
at Fiction University, where I'm writing a series digging into some of our options for indie publishing.
After a one - month break for my health issues and to let Janice run her fantastic, month - long Revision Workshop on her blog, it's time once again for my monthly guest post over
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University.
However, my years of blogging and my indie - focused guest posts
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University have added up anyway.
Wow... Today marks my last monthly guest post over
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University for my series about Indie Publishing Paths.
For a great short piece on what contemporary writers need to know about writing descriptions, see Janice
Hardy's post
at Fiction University: Three Things to Consider when Writing Descriptions.
And my whole two - year - long series
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University was all about how -LSB-...]
Check out our resource library here
at The Kill Zone (down the right sidebar), as well as blogs like Writer Unboxed, Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University (formerly The Other Side of the Story), K. M. Weiland's Helping Writers Become Authors, Angela Ackerman & Becca Puglisi's Writers Helping Writers (formerly The Bookshelf Muse), Elizabeth Craig's Mystery Writing is Murder, Joanna Penn's The Creative Penn, John Yeoman's The Wicked Writing Blog, and more.
It's time once again for my monthly guest post over
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University.
My monthly guest post over
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University is digging deeper into our options for our pricing strategy and why we might want to make each choice.
-LSB-...] week, I shared my monthly self - publishing - focused post over
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University, and this week kicks off a short series of monthly posts from Janice that she's sharing with -LSB-...]
My monthly guest post over
at Janice
Hardy's
Fiction University digs deeper into the pros and cons of pricing low.