Radio Show| Cheo Tyehimba, and “Like Loving Backward”
Author, and multimedia consultant, Cheo Tyehimba, discusses his collection of short stories, Like Loving Backward.
So tune in.
Radio Show| Cheo Tyehimba, and “Like Loving Backward” Read More »
Author, and multimedia consultant, Cheo Tyehimba, discusses his collection of short stories, Like Loving Backward.
So tune in.
Radio Show| Cheo Tyehimba, and “Like Loving Backward” Read More »
Author, Joyce Faulkner, discusses her novel, In the Shadow of Suribachi and her collection of short stories, Losing Patience. So tune in.
Radio Show | Author, Joyce Faulkner Read More »
The novel or short story is first and foremost a source of entertainment, what consumers turn to among myriad of choices, to provide rest and relaxation, from a world moving at breakneck speed. To insure the most comfortable reading experience, writers want to offer a story with interesting plot, centered on characters about the reader
Flexibility and the Writers Capacity for Growth and Learning Read More »
Patience was among the many aspects forming the writer-editor relationship that my guests on this weekend’s broadcast on Book Talk, Creativity and Family Matters, addressed. Developmental editor and author of Business Unusual, Linda Beed along with former editor for a publishing company and now free-lance editor, Lynel Washington Johnson, stressed the need for authors and
Patience: Perhaps the 21st Century Writer’s Greatest Strength Read More »
A poorly written story or a novel with gaps in plot structure or characters that act incongruent to the personality established at the outset of the work are like a movie that appears fuzzy on the screen, out of view and unfocused. Developmental editors like Linda Beed can spot these malfunctions in story and suggest
The Developmental Editor, The Copy Editor Read More »
This question always seemed to come up when I was attending writing conferences and workshops. Participants and fellow novice writers like myself directed it to the workshop leaders, published authors. The answers the authors offered were as varied as the authors themselves.
How Often Do You Write? Read More »
I have a notebook for every novel I write. I make notes on short stories I write, but novels deserve an entire notebook. My novels, as with all stories I write, begin in my head. Since earning my MFA I give much thought to my novels before I write, sometimes as much 3 years or
Planning Your Novel: My Notebook Read More »