My writing space is mobile. But since I need a keboard, I also need a plug.
What’s yours like?
The Writer’s Room – NYTimes.com
can't help telling stories
My writing space is mobile. But since I need a keboard, I also need a plug.
What’s yours like?
The Writer’s Room – NYTimes.com
This is one way to keep bookstores alive. Kudos to Jim Patterson.
And a writing prompt: How do your characters share their wealth?
The Check Is in the Mail: Patterson Sends Over $267,000 to Booksellers
If you’re a millennial, you probably already know these traits. If you’re not, how many of them — in good or bad incarnations — do your characters have?
Or try impatience as a writing prompt.
5 ‘Bad’ Millennial Traits That Are Actually Good for Entrepreneurs | Entrepreneur.com
I hate traditional outlining. I think lots of people found it hard to deal with during those teacher-enforced research paper projects in school.
Still, we need organizing tools when we write. I tend to use spreadsheet software to keep track of my characters and events in longer fiction. Kira Brady has another approach.
How to Plot a Novel: The Plotting Board Method | Kira Brady
http://kirabrady.com/2012/09/24/how-to-plot-a-novel-the-plotting-board-method/
Seeking a different perspective? Consider author Virginia Morrell’s revelations about animal minds.
Try a prompt: write a sketch from a parakeet’s point of view. Or a chimpanzee’s.
What Are Animals Really Thinking? Author Explores Hidden World
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/02/140223-morell-animal-wise-animals-science-book-award/