Tag: women writers

Writing Stories with Larger Meanings and Goals

Writing Stories with Larger Meanings and Goals

By Sharon J. Wishnow On August 29, 2021 Hurricane Ida, a massive 150 mph category 4 storm slammed into Grand isle, Louisiana.   Twelve hundred miles north in my home in Northern Virginia, I wept. Stories that move us and remain with us are the ones where we feel an emotional connection to the characters and […]

July 13, 2024 | By | Reply More
Choosing Your People By Rhett DeVane

Choosing Your People By Rhett DeVane

By Rhett DeVane Friendships became vital during the pandemic. Now, as we crawl from our hideouts to physically interact, those connections are just as crucial. Recently, as I thought about the underlying themes in my novel Ditch Weed, two stood out: the importance of both heart-family and intragenerational friendships. I discovered these common threads not […]

July 13, 2024 | By | Reply More
Reasons to Love Developmental Editing

Reasons to Love Developmental Editing

By Martha Carlson Developmental editing of fiction is work that brings me joy. Writers come to me with questions and uncertainty, and I use my experience, education, and training to bring them clarity and to recharge their enthusiasm for revising their work. I love hearing clients respond to my editing by saying “I have a […]

July 12, 2024 | By | Reply More
THE CURSE OF THE FLORES WOMEN by Angélica Lopes: Excerpt

THE CURSE OF THE FLORES WOMEN by Angélica Lopes: Excerpt

THE CURSE OF THE FLORES WOMEN  by Angélica Lopes translated by Zoë Perry In this haunting novel about the enduring bonds of womanhood, a young girl weaves together the truth behind her family history and the secrets that resonate through generations. Eighteen-year-old Alice Ribeiro is constantly fighting—against the status quo, female oppression in Brazil, and […]

July 12, 2024 | By | Reply More
Novels Featuring Nature from a Feminine Perspective Are Essential for Our Times

Novels Featuring Nature from a Feminine Perspective Are Essential for Our Times

There’s a long literary tradition of writing about natural and rural places. Many of the most well-known nature writers (Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Edward Abbey) wrote about nature and landscapes in ways that focused on a separation between pristine wilderness and human beings. Their writing conveys a feeling that the natural world is compromised […]

Side Effects Are Minimal: A Novel by Laura Essay, EXCERPT

Side Effects Are Minimal: A Novel by Laura Essay, EXCERPT

Side Effects Are Minimal: A Novel by Laura Essay When ambitious attorney Claire Hewitt is asked to represent the Satoris, one of Philadelphia’s most prominent families, in a lawsuit over the death of their daughter, she is thrust into an opioid nightmare with deadly impact—and not for the first time. Claire’s guilt for not saving […]

July 9, 2024 | By | Reply More
A Cautionary Tale

A Cautionary Tale

By Anne Leigh Parrish First, a conservative, Republican leaning Supreme Court rules that the federal government will not guarantee a woman’s access to safe, legal abortion, then the Supreme Court of Alabama decides that frozen embryos are children. Next, women will be declared incubators, or potential incubators, all agency and autonomy forfeit. This is what […]

July 9, 2024 | By | Reply More
A HAPPIER LIFE by Kristy Woodson Harvey: Excerpt

A HAPPIER LIFE by Kristy Woodson Harvey: Excerpt

We’re delighted to feature this excerpt from A HAPPIER LIFE by Kristy Woodson Harvey! “New York Times bestselling author and southern sensation Kristy Woodson Harvey” (Good Morning America) presents a touching novel about eternal love and the places we call home. The historic houses in the seaside town of Beaufort, North Carolina, have held the secrets of […]

July 8, 2024 | By | Reply More
Writing Together: The Evolution of My Writing Practice

Writing Together: The Evolution of My Writing Practice

By Christina Consolino For me, writing began as a solitary act. Much like when I read, I immersed myself in the world of story, reveling in the characters, setting, plot, and themes. My lone writing time gave me the opportunity to marinate in my work, and I believed my introverted self couldn’t possibly write with […]

July 8, 2024 | By | 1 Reply More
Leap of Faith

Leap of Faith

By Marlene Wagman-Geller Dreams don’t just have to be for sleeping: The quotation is what my road to publication has taught me. To reach my mountaintop-whose pinnacle was the joy of seeing my name on the spine of books-was an arduous journey. Each writer has their own story; here is mine.  Environment is indeed destiny. […]

July 7, 2024 | By | Reply More