More Zombie news…
Another link to a heads’ up for Choose Your Doom: Zombie Apocalypse. The author blogs about writing at EdwardGordon.com.
Another link to a heads’ up for Choose Your Doom: Zombie Apocalypse. The author blogs about writing at EdwardGordon.com.
Remember the yummy recipes I posted about Valabar’s feast from Dzur? They’re started to spread.
A have a flash fiction piece up at Terribleminds, Chuck Wendig’s site, “Vacation Day at Wonderland Simulations.” Go check it out!
A review of the book is up at Vampire Kisses. Well, I’m not sure if it’s a book review or a prelude to a book review. But wheeee! Update: Here’s the actual review. I don’t think it’s possible to have someone say something nicer or more inspiring to keep writing: “Being an adult you forget
It’s on my mind. It’s on a bunch of people’s minds.* Everyone who does National Novel Writing Month is getting ready for it, so it should surprise you, if you follow writers’ blogs, that we’re nattering on about it. What we’re doing, how we’re going to do it. Tips on getting started. Professional writers are
I would like to direct you to my food blog (more of an online recipe book than anything else) for the recipes that are the last tangible result of “Valabar’s in Colorado,” a feast inspired by the restaurant in the Vlad Taltos books by Steven Brust. There is klava.
Let us imagine, you and I, that we are watching a movie. We move past the opening credits, during which the camera pans across the blackness of outer space, with a few stars here and there. There’s a lot of text scrolling across the screen while heroic music plays…this takes two minutes. Then a spaceship
I read a story for a friend yesterday; she’s in a college writing class and doesn’t yet have a lot of experience. I ended up explaining something that I hadn’t fully realized I knew, so I’ll add it here, too. You may have heard this a bajillion times already, but in case you haven’t, I’ll
My daughter Ray keeps asking me to help her with her homework…not her math homework (she’s got that down; mostly I just need to check it for careless errors) but her writing homework. Every time she does, I’m reminded how not everyone has writer brain. For instance, she has a recurring set of questions: “What
Writer Mom explains how to do your reading homework. Read More »
As you may know, I am trying to launch myself as a professional writer. This has had its ups and downs, mostly a series of small, soul-eroding downs interspersed by a few interruptions almost-unbelieved ups. One of the series of small, soul-eroding downs is the short story rejections I receive. I am at [checks Duotrope]