Tag: women writers

Relevancy and Becoming a Mentor

Relevancy and Becoming a Mentor

Relevancy and Becoming a Mentor I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the new writers flooding the marketplace successfully. It’s very exciting to watch so much talent find their niche and blossom. Whether it’s via TikTok or ads, KU opportunities or breaking out in a hot genre, for me it’s a reminder of hope and […]

July 18, 2024 | By | Reply More
Authors Interviewing Characters: Mary Fleming

Authors Interviewing Characters: Mary Fleming

CIVILISATION FRANÇAISE When recent college graduate Lily Owens enrolls in the Civilisation Française course at the Sorbonne in 1982, she hopes to put a difficult childhood behind her and to find direction for adulthood. She moves into an historic mansion on the place des Vosges where her job is helping elderly, half-blind Amenia Quinon, another ex-pat American. Unbeknownst to […]

July 16, 2024 | By | Reply More
Making the Personal Universal:  5 Ways to Help your Narrative Resonate with a Wider Audience

Making the Personal Universal: 5 Ways to Help your Narrative Resonate with a Wider Audience

By Gina DeMillo Wagner When I was writing my memoir, Forces of Nature, I knew I had to do more than describe my family dynamics or chronicle the events of my life. I wanted to find points of connection with my future readers. I needed to figure out how my story was actually everyone’s story. […]

July 16, 2024 | By | Reply More
Vulnerability in Your Writing and Why it Matters

Vulnerability in Your Writing and Why it Matters

 by Marina DelVecchio After reading Unsexed: Memoirs of a Prostitute’s Daughter, a friend told me I was brave to write it, followed by, “Don’t you feel vulnerable, writing about your life?” Many conversations I have had with women in the past few years have brought up similar issues with truth-telling: how much of our truth […]

July 16, 2024 | By | Reply More
My Transformation from Blogger to Author

My Transformation from Blogger to Author

By Rachel Valencourt  I’ve always been a bit of a book nerd. Back in my journalism school days, I was convinced I’d end up as a writer. But you know how life goes—one minute you’re dreaming big, and the next, you’re just trying to juggle the work-life balance while wondering if you remembered to feed […]

July 15, 2024 | By | Reply More
Writing God Bless The Child

Writing God Bless The Child

The women in God Bless the Child have been tangled up in knots since I first created them nearly two decades ago. Bringing them back out into the light for a fresh look with older eyes and a wiser heart has led even their creator to marvel and wince anew at the raw ferocity that […]

July 15, 2024 | By | Reply More
How I Wrote We Are Family by Louise Walters

How I Wrote We Are Family by Louise Walters

Like all my novels, it’s rather difficult to describe how I wrote We Are Family. I don’t actually remember writing much of it… sometimes my novels just seem to appear, to grow… 20,000 words… 40,000 words… I do remember how this one started, though.  Circa 2007: I was taking a creative writing course as part […]

July 15, 2024 | By | Reply More
Authors Interviewing Characters: Kay Stephens

Authors Interviewing Characters: Kay Stephens

DAUGHTER OF THE LOST When the freshman party ends, the sophomore hangover hits. Trinity Tachel has no use for society’s rules. Not after the New Orleans police failed to investigate the murder of her sex-worker mother. Not after she was abandoned to the Louisiana foster care system as a child. And certainly not after fighting […]

July 14, 2024 | By | Reply More
Deborah L. King: On Writing

Deborah L. King: On Writing

I was a fantastic liar as a child. For years I told people that four fingers on each hand were smashed and broken by a heavy window that I attempted to close when I was four years old. I told how I removed the screwdriver that held the window up. I described the pain and […]

July 14, 2024 | By | Reply More
Authors Interviewing Characters: Sarah Lariviere

Authors Interviewing Characters: Sarah Lariviere

Sarah Lariviere, Riot Act (Knopf / Random House, July 16, 2024) Sarah Lariviere’s debut novel, The Bad Kid, was an Edgar Award finalist. In the first book in her new YA series, Riot Act (Knopf / Random House, July 2024), an alternative history set in 1991 in an authoritarian America, theater kids in central Illinois […]

July 13, 2024 | By | Reply More