Yearly Archives: 2015

Interview with R.L. King

R. L. King is an indie author and game freelancer for Catalyst Game Labs, publisher of the popular role-playing game Shadowrun. She has contributed fiction and game material to numerous source books, as well as one full-length adventure, “On the Run,”

Tagged with: , , ,
Posted in Author Interviews

Writing What You Know

This is common advice, along with write from your heart. But sometimes, when things are said in sound bites, it’s easy to become confused. After all, if we only write what we directly know, we could never have a story set

Tagged with: , , , ,
Posted in Writing

Point-of-View–Which One Should I Use?

Authors have many options when it comes to choosing the character lens through which readers will view their stories. Each one has its own strengths and pitfalls. First person–this happens to by my go-to POV, the one that I feel

Tagged with: , , , ,
Posted in Writing

Nat Russo on Adverbs and ‘Show, Don’t Tell’

I’ve seen many authors struggle with the adage ‘show, don’t tell.’ Some try to show everything, and their story gets so bogged down in description that the story takes place at a glacial crawl. And while I agree that showing

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Writing

Criticism: Friend or Foe?

Criticism can be either helpful or destructive, depending on the state of mind of the critiquer and the writer receiving it. Writing takes enormous amounts of both self-confidence and humility. You have to think your words are worthwhile, or you’ll

Tagged with: , , , , ,
Posted in Writing

Lessons Learned in a Thousand Tweets

I’ve made my thousandth tweet, so I’m feeling more experienced about Twitter. I thought I’d pass on the things I’ve learned so far. DMs (direct messages): These are really only for someone with whom you have a pre-existing connection on

Tagged with: , , , , , ,
Posted in Social Media, Twitter

Interview with Margaret Lesh

Margaret Lesh is the author of the novels Normalish, Mr. Katz is a Zombie, and Finding a Man For Sylvia, as well as her memoir Let Me Get This Off My Chest: A Breast Cancer Survivor Over-Shares. She believes tacos are

Tagged with: , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Author Interviews

Interview with Stephanie Bibb Flint

Stephanie Flint is the author of 1000 Words: A Collection of Short Stories (written under her maiden name, Stephanie Bibb), and Ashes, a prequel short story. She writes fantasy and science fiction. Her next book, Magic’s Stealing, will be available

Tagged with: , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Author Interviews

Antagonist–What Kind Do You Have?

Your antagonist is extremely important to your story. The antagonist must be enough of a threat to bring your protagonist to his/her knees, to cause them to grow beyond what they could have ever done otherwise. Antagonists can be of

Tagged with: , , , , , ,
Posted in Writing

Submitting Short Stories

First off, I have some good news. Every Day Fiction is going to be printing one of my stories, Dragon Hoard, on July 27 (2015). If you’d like to see it, it’s free–all you have to do is go to

Tagged with: , , , ,
Posted in Writing
Contact Cathleen Townsend