How a Professional Editor Can Help You Get Published: Developmental and...
Image courtesy of acclaimclipart.com Writers are often too close to their own writing to be objective. After spending hours trying to get a concept or dialogue “just right,” it is difficult to know...
View ArticleHow a Professional Editor Can Help You Get Published: Copyediting
This is the second installment of an occasional series about freelance editing services. I wrote previously about developmental editing; this time I’ll share some thoughts on copyediting (sometimes...
View ArticleI Don’t Need No Stinkin’ Editor! Or Do I?
Your novel/memoir/nonfiction book is complete—congratulations! Now you’re ready to send it off to a literary agent or publisher, right? Whoa, slow down a minute! Your very first step is to self-edit...
View Article3 Ideas for Better Writing
From Candace: Here is some great advice about writing from fellow blogger Oliver at Literature and Libation. I hope you’ll check out some of his other posts–you’ll be glad you did! The post 3 Ideas for...
View ArticleWhy Writing Well Matters, Even When Your Product Is Free
I came across a blog post the other day that I want to share with you precisely because the author is not a novelist, but she is a consumer–the type of consumer who might one day download your e-book....
View Article10 Reasons You Need an Editor for Indie Publishing
There are many reasons why you should invest in professional editing when you are self-publishing; here are ten of them: When Michael Jordan was asked how he became the best basketball player in the...
View ArticleAsk the Divas: Creative Dialogue Tags – Write Divas | Write Divas
Creative dialogue tags are a topic of some heated discussion among writers. Do you use them? I’d love to know if you agree with Jen Matera of Write Divas, who writes that “Creative dialogue tags can...
View Article4 Tips for Getting the Most Out of Your NaNoWriMo Manuscript
November is history, and so is NaNoWriMo 2016. If you’re like most NaNoWriMo participants, you’re pretty excited about ending November with 50,000 words—maybe you have the first draft of a novel, maybe...
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