Category Archives: For Writers

The Woven Tale Press

  The latest issue of The Woven Tale Press is now available. What is the Woven Tale Press, you ask? To paraphrase, it’s a monthly e-magazine that scours the web in search of creative energy that all too often lies buried in a blogger’s archives (like my stuff), be it visual arts, short fiction and nonfiction, writing advice or anything… Continue Reading

That, Which and Who, Oh My!

  In my last post, I discussed how I use the Find feature of Microsoft Word to hunt down and eliminate redundant redundancies from my manuscripts as I go through the final edit. I also mentioned how I’ll use Find to ferret out those pesky to be verbs and get rid of as many of those as I… Continue Reading

Eliminate Those Redundant Redundancies

  I’d like to call your attention to an editing tool for the editing of redundant words and redundant word phrases that turn up in rough drafts and not-so-rough drafts. (What?) Why is this important? First, good writing is concise. Thomas Jefferson said, “The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two words when one will do.” When someone writes past experience, fatally… Continue Reading

The Stretch Clock

  After spending decades stooped over operating tables, and years hunched over a keyboard, my back is pretty much wrecked. Over the past year, however, I’ve made considerable progress in reversing this trend. I’ve spent time with a personal trainer, I’ve improved my posture, and I invested in a sit-stand desk and ergonomic chair. While all of these things have been helpful, I’ve… Continue Reading

To MFA, or not to MFA …

  … that is the ongoing debate. Creative-writing MFA programs are springing up in epidemic proportions. During the last century, 84 were founded, with about half of those launched in the 1990’s. Since 2000, another 118 programs have been born, with more on the way. Every year, these 200+ programs turn out approximately two thousand poets, two thousand… Continue Reading

Chekhov’s Gun

  If there is a rifle hanging on the wall in chapter one, someone had better use it by the end of the story. So said Russian physician and dramatist, Anton Chekhov, in the late nineteenth century. Considered one of history’s greatest writers of short fiction, Chekhov stated that every element in a narrative must be necessary, and anything that… Continue Reading

You Can’t Go Home Again …

  … says Thomas Wolfe, but you can sure as hell drive by, thanks to the Google car and Street View. I’m sure most of you already know of this stupefying technology. You enter an address into Google Maps, and a street-level image of the address accompanies the map. But the amazing thing is, you can then continue on, either up… Continue Reading

The Book Marketing Platform

  If you are an aspiring author like me, you’ve probably read, or been told, that the first thing you need to do (even before you’ve completed your book) is develop a marketing platform. Whether you self-publish or go traditional, you will be doing all of your own marketing. What does this mean? It means you need a website, blog, Facebook page and Twitter… Continue Reading