My recent
post about fiction book bags as Christmas presents proved very popular so here another one about creating non-fiction book bags for blokes.
Not exact matches
HotAirAce, you
posted «Given that The Babble is a work of (bad)
fiction, learning the history of any of the characters in it would be
about as useful as learning the detailed history of the Hobbits.
I
posted a Fact or
Fiction about this topic Friday on instagram and many of you had a lot to say!
From graphics to fan -
fiction, and perhaps even a splash of roleplaying, we're your one - stop shop for a fix of everything HP Frequency -
about 2
posts per week
For the past decade I've been helping indie authors design, publish and promote their books, but now I want to write my own.Experiments in popular
fiction by a literary scholar Frequency -
about 2
posts per month
Lufkin, TX
About Blog The author of
Fiction Books
posts honest reviews of all types of books.
Here you can read stories, both
fiction and real, share your thoughts and much more Frequency
about 2
posts per week.
For the past decade I've been helping indie authors design, publish and promote their books, but now I want to write my own.Experiments in popular
fiction by a literary scholar Frequency
about 2
posts per month.
Worldwide
About Blog British history
posts by authors of British historical
fiction.
Fiction, non-
fiction, view, review, fantasy, adventure, horror, and many more Frequency
about 7
posts per week.
Cape Town, South Africa
About Blog Blog is about Virology - related and hopefully educational posts authored by a virologist who dabbles in biologics - related plant molecular biotechnology, science fiction and red
About Blog Blog is
about Virology - related and hopefully educational posts authored by a virologist who dabbles in biologics - related plant molecular biotechnology, science fiction and red
about Virology - related and hopefully educational
posts authored by a virologist who dabbles in biologics - related plant molecular biotechnology, science
fiction and red wine.
About Blog Fantasy and science
fiction author and editor Philip Athans shares his experience through witty, informative, entertaining and inspiring
posts.
I use categories that lend themselves to info
about NYC or snippets, sometimes poetry and then mix in longer
posts... my Flash
Fiction category doesn't usually go over 1,000 words.
As a follow - up to last week's
post about Jonathan Franzen and his comments on the «little videos» that authors sometimes publish, I here offer some of my own thoughts
about literary
fiction and the likelihood that it will survive the indie revolution.
(Though for authors I recommend focusing not on writing itself as a topic, but on what you write books
ABOUT — i.e., I write fantasy fiction, so I post about things like the monster in Netflix» Stranger Things ser
ABOUT — i.e., I write fantasy
fiction, so I
post about things like the monster in Netflix» Stranger Things ser
about things like the monster in Netflix» Stranger Things series.)
Tags: blog, blog
post,
fiction, inspiration, nanowrimo, nathan fillion, national novel writing month, the starlight contingency, things nanowrimo taught me
about writing, writing, writing advice, writing blog
James Scott Bell wrote a great
post on What's the Deal on Dreams in
Fiction where he talks
about starting a novel with a character in thought, no action or disturbance.
But Amy's
post did get me thinking
about pinning down my own book preferences, which range from literary
fiction, to classics, to «women's
fiction» and YA.
Elizabeth, I have learnt much from your
post about «trad pub» and «self - pub,» especially since I'm working on my own
fiction.
Louise Harnby presents 5 tips for writing
about physical pain in
fiction posted at The Proofreader's Parlour, saying, «Drawing on guidance from Milton to medicine, I offer 5 tips to help beginner novelists write
about physical pain.
Last fall, after nearly six years dabbling in creative writing, I thought
about how I had produced dozens of flash
fiction, blog
posts, and essays, but no novels.
I did a New World of Publishing
post a few
posts back talking
about how I could find the balance between short
fiction indie publishing and short
fiction traditional publishing.
Posting weekly flash
fiction is a great way to get involved with the #FridayFlash community on Twitter, and it's an easy way to build a network of followers if you're all sharing flashes and chatting
about them.
About a year ago, in one of my guest posts for Janice Hardy's Fiction University, I talked about what we should do for our author web
About a year ago, in one of my guest
posts for Janice Hardy's
Fiction University, I talked
about what we should do for our author web
about what we should do for our author website.
In the two years since Copyblogger ran this
post about serialized
fiction, Sean has also published another two million words at his other company, Collective Inkwell, with David Wright.
Once Humans (Daimones Trilogy) by Massimo Marino
Posted in Science
Fiction & Fantasy by editor — December 30, 2013 Amazon, $ 4.50, 314 pages The second in the Daimones Trilogy from Massimo Marino, does a great job of clueing in the reader
about the first book with a detailed prologue, making the reading of the first volume not necessary.
If I
post my very specific
fiction writing goals here in a public place then I'll feel much more urgency
about actually putting in the effort required to achieve those goals.
This isn't specific to books anymore, it's
about all kinds of writing: articles, blog
posts, poems, short stories, flash
fiction, novels, memoirs, nonfiction books... all of it.
While in the midst of my virtual book tour with Historical
Fiction Virtual Book Tours, I was asked to write a
post about the issues my characters might face in 1846, being that sodomy was against the law and all.
In her
post, «The Total Beginner's Guide to Submitting Short
Fiction for Publication,» she offers tips for newbies on how to go
about submitting your stories for publication.
I'm new to Kindle Publishing, and have released a few titles in the
fiction / short story section and thinking
about expanding into non-
fiction soon, so this
post is awesome fodder to chew on.
Posted by Victoria Strauss for Writer Beware I've been getting some questions
about the BookLife Prize in
Fiction, a new award for unpublished and self - published novels.
In this blog
post, Carr writes
about what women's
fiction and romance mean to her.
When you complain
about this on message boards and article
posts, excuse me, but stupid people who only do casual reading or fantasy /
fiction, think they represent the whole market, are tech experts who should ridicule more sophisticated readers simply because in their opinion an ereader is not a tablet.
On the Kindle store,
fiction outsells nonfiction by a wide margin, so I expected that the blog's most popular
posts in 2017 would be
about writing
fiction.
Wow... Today marks my last monthly guest
post over at Janice Hardy's
Fiction University for my series
about Indie Publishing Paths.
That's why I wrote a whole
post about it at Writer Unboxed, who so generously hosted me in front of their wonderful community of
fiction writers.
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.
I also set up a blog on wordpress.com, where I thought I would
post a lot
about historical
fiction, but it ended up almost exclusively being
about my journey as a self - published author (which turned out to be much more successful than I could have ever predicted.)
As summarised in this great article by the Huffington
Post, genre
fiction is
about captivating writing that offers escapism and entertainment, while literary
fiction explores the human condition.
I wrote a huge book launch
post a couple weeks ago
about the launch of my first ever
fiction.
Posted by Victoria Strauss for Writer Beware Following on my
post last week
about unattractive deal terms at Random House's new digital - only imprint, Hydra, the Science
Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America has determined that Hydra will not be a qua... -LSB-...]
Last week, Janice Hardy of
Fiction University visited with us here to share a great
post about how we can find the right balance of backstory.
-LSB-...] week, Janice Hardy of
Fiction University visited with us here to share a great
post about how we can find the right balance of backstory.
We like this
post about non-
fiction queries from GalleyCat and this one
about fiction queries from Writers Digest.
I am almost DONE with writing up guest
posts and interviews for the blog tour craziness, which means my brain is
about to be — GASP — clear for something resembling: whispers:
fiction.
Update: A day after putting up this
post, while doing more reading
about the publishing industry, I ran across another dirt - dishing voice with a similar (but different) last name: Daniel Menaker, who is a «a former Executive Editor - in - Chief of Random House» and «
fiction editor for The New Yorker.»
If you've followed my other
posts about the ethics of fan
fiction or what authors should know
about fan
fiction, you can probably guess that a writer profiting off the fans, characters, or worldbuilding of another author doesn't sit well with me.
If you've followed my other
posts about the ethics of fan
fiction or what authors should know
about fan
fiction, you can probably guess that a writer profiting off the fans, characters, or worldbuilding of -LSB-...]
I'm
about to
post in the article that the IBC founders just told me they will give copies of their other ebooks (ie, their own
fiction works) to random commenters on this
post!