A New Twist on Predictable Ideas

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Several months ago I entered a themed short story contest that included a list of tips to improve your chances of winning. One tip was to not write about the first thing to pop into your head because if it popped into your head, chances were it popped into the heads of dozens of other writers. So I discarded my first two idea nuggets and finally settled on the third. It was about something I never write about -- sports rivalries. Actually had to consult my sports expert (husband) for two football teams that were rivals. But the story must have worked because I did get mentioned as a runner up.


I've spent much of my time as a freelance writer, trying to craft my ideas into queries that perfectly match what the editor is asking for in their guidelines or call outs. After that contest I wondered if the advice would carry over to the nonfiction world. After all, if I thought my idea was so perfect for this market or editor what were the chances that some other writer had settled on the exact same idea? So I would do the opposite. I would uncover that idea that had never been submitted. I was going to be off-the-wall.


As a new grandma, I have read countless pieces about grandparenting. They are everywhere! So when Business Insider put out a call for essays from new grandparents I had some ideas about what they meant. I had been reading these essays and articles for months. Pushy grandparents, ignored grandparents, reluctant grandparents, blended family grandparents, grandparents as childcare, long distance grandparents, grandparents during childbirth.


I settled on the last one. Grandparents during childbirth seems to run into two themes: being present at my grandchild's birth changed my life and the battle over who should be present during childbirth. I'm sure the editor would be getting many versions of those two themes. Mine was a bit of a twist - I didn't expect to be at the childbirth, I was invited and I was terrified. I sent out the query and heard back the next day! Less than twenty four hours. Of course, then I had to check with my daughter and son-in-law about the wisdom of my sharing the experience with the world. 


I've secured two more assignments that were an unexpected twist on what the editor was requesting. I frequently submit to Chicken Soup for the Soul but normally skip it when the theme is cats. Not that I don't have cat experiences. Over the years I've shared my home with four cats - reluctantly. But I imagine the submissions are from people who LOVE cats. I don't LOVE cats. I don't even love cats. Occasionally, I find myself briefly liking cats. That's what I pitched. I share my home with three cats and we don't like each other. Bingo!


It's enlivening to challenge yourself to come up with the twist on a request that the editors have never come across. Sometimes I'll submit two ideas. One that matches the call out more closely and one that is off-the-wall.  Some days I wonder if editors really like the off-the-wall query or if they are just curious to see what the heck I'm going to do with my proposed idea.


Don't forget that editors are people too. People who might get bored reading endless variations on the
same theme day after day. Give them something new to read. They just might like it!



Jodi M. Webb writes from her home in the Pennsylvania mountains about everything from DIY projects to tea to butterflies. Next month her writing will be included in What I Learned for My Cat (Chicken Soup for the Soul). She's also a blog tour manager for WOW-Women on Writing and a writing tutor at her local university. Get to know her @jodiwebbwritesFacebook and blogging at Words by Webb

Read More »

Interview with Anny Stone, WOW! Fall 2024 Flash Fiction Contest Runner Up

Tuesday, April 22, 2025
Anny Stone is trying to resuscitate her dream of being a writer who actually writes. In the daytime, she is a librarian. She mostly writes about the odd frequency of her mind. She writes to connect, to find those with a similar frequency. You can reluctantly find her on Instagram @mrsjohnwaters.

--interview by Marcia Peterson

WOW: Congratulations on your top ten win in our Fall 2024 Flash Fiction competition! What prompted you to enter the contest?

Anny: Thank you! I’m thrilled to have been placed and grateful that this weird little story finally has a home. I found WOW through my desperate searches for writing competitions that might give my voice a shot. I’ve entered a few past contests since, and I’m always impressed with WOW's communication and supportive environment.

WOW:  Can you tell us what encouraged the idea behind your entry “How to be unsuccessful at modern dating?” I’m guessing that the story, while darkly humorous, is close to reality for many people.

Anny: I’ve workshopped this piece several times, and I’m always amazed at how many really resonate with this one. We all want to believe we’re the most socially awkward person in the room, but it’s just not true. Modern dating, which pretty much defaults to dating apps now, is a weird form of social torture. Nobody likes it or is good at it, yet here we are. This piece rubs the border of fiction and personal essay. It definitely came from a place of feral insecurity and from that random intense hiccup of loneliness that finds you at 10 p.m. on a Friday.

WOW:  What advice would you give to someone wanting to try writing flash fiction for the first time?

Anny: Don’t get flustered by traditional plot structure. Flash is fun because there’s more acceptance for anarchy and play. Capture a moment, a feeling, a memory, whatever—it’s your move.

WOW: What are you reading right now, and why did you choose to read it?

Anny: I’m about to finish Close to the Knives: A Memoir of Disintegration by David Wojnarowicz. It’s haunting, infuriating, raw, and devastatingly beautiful. Memoirs are hugely influential to me as a writer and as a human being living in this inflamed world. Collect voices, all types of voices, and continue to fine-tune your capacity to listen.

WOW:  Thanks so much for chatting with us today, Anny. Before you go, do you have a favorite writing tip or piece of advice you can share?

Anny: I always go back to Toni Morrison’s “Write what you want to read” advice.

***
Read More »

Friday Speak Out!: WRITER’S BLOCK? TRY USING A WRITING PROP

Friday, April 18, 2025


By Laura Yeager

Writer’s block is a common problem. It can last an hour, a day, a year or two or, God forbid, even longer. People try many things to get over it – brainstorming, writing to music, using writing prompts – to name a few. Whole books have been written on the subject.  Now, here’s an idea -- if writer’s block happens to you, the issue might be solved through the use of a writing prop.

I had never purchased a writing prop until recently. What I mean by “writing prop” is an object that I use to generate ideas for an article I want to write. Take, for example, a miniature Zen Garden retailing at $24.99. I invested money in this because I believed I’d get a story out of it, and I knew I’d probably be able to market the piece and make a profit from it.

With the Zen Garden, I began experimenting to see how using it daily would make me feel. Zen Gardens are meditation/relaxation devices. And guess what? The tray of white sand and little rakes actually promote calmness. I ended up writing about Zen Gardens and their benefits for cancer patients for Curetoday.com, a cancer website. The article was published on April 4, 2025.

Writing props can be anything that helps you generate ideas for an article or a story. A writer might invest in a deck of tarot cards to see if they assist in day-to-day living. After the writer experiments with the cards, she can write about the experience.

Another example of a writing prop might be a plant that you purchase, or raise from a seedling, with the sole purpose of discussing its growth progress in an article.

What about buying a white noise machine. Does this prop make your life better? The point is if you’re stuck for ideas, invest in a seminal object, a writing prop.

Try essential oils and candles in the boudoir. Do these make your bedroom activities better? Worse? If so, write about this.

There could be an article in the purchase of diet drinks. Do they really help you lose weight? Does eating more fruit and vegetables make you feel better? Invest a little money on them, or grow your own, and find out, and then discuss your findings in an article.

Using writing props is ultimately a form of research. For a minimal investment, you might come up with one or more stories.

Or if you’re short on money, get creative and look for (free) props around your house. For example, if you’ve never recycled before, start saving empty cans and bottles and see where it takes you. Who knows? This earth-friendly experience may generate a whole novel.

In conclusion, objects can be inspirational and can help banish writer’s block.

Dig up the family jewels. Put them in a creative work. See how they sparkle…in prose.

* * *

Laura Yeager is a frequent contributor to Curetoday.com, a cancer website. She teaches writing at Kent State University at Stark and at Gotham Writers. Laura is happy and proud because her son, Thomas, has started writing and illustrating children’s books.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Would you like to participate in Friday "Speak Out!"? Email your short posts (under 500 words) about women and writing to: marcia[at]wow-womenonwriting[dot]com for consideration. We look forward to hearing from you!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Read More »

Reader Review Wrap Up & Giveaway for Merikay McLeod's The Day After His Crucifixion

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

The Day After His Crucifixion by Merikay McLeod

Today I'm happy to share thoughts from the reader review event for The Day After the Crucifixion by Merikay McLeod.

About the Book

"Rich in biblical allusions and symbolism, ... the standout to me is McLeod's focus on the gathering of women to share memories of Jesus, a communal space for women where storytelling reinforces faith and offers comfort. Although the outcome is well-known, the journey to get there is both powerful and affecting, beautifully conveyed through McLeod's skillful writing."

-- Jamie Michele, Readers' Favorite Reviews

The Day After His Crucifixion weaves together the lives of the women who followed Yeshua the Nazarene when they gather the day after His crucifixion to comfort one another with personal, heart-felt stories of how the Promised One changed their lives forever.

Eavesdrop on their inspiring conversations and learn behind-the-scenes details of Yeshua's baptism, the Cana wedding feast, and other New Testament events, and discover afresh the power of His love.

ISBN-10: 1662955510

ISBN-13: 9781662955518

Publisher: Front Porch Publishing (April, 2025)

Length: 164 pages (paperback)


The Day After His Crucifixion is available in print at AmazonBarnes & Noble, and Bookshop.org. Take a moment to add it to your Goodreads list. Read an interview with the author, Merikay McLeod, about this book here.


Here is what WOW! reader had to say about The Day After the Crucifixion by Merikay McLeod:


Joan says: 


Two of the women's stories really stood out to me. One was that of the woman caught in adultery. Wow. McLeod's imaginative backstory really puts a different take on that biblical event. Another woman's story of great impact was that of the mother of the boy with the few loaves of bread and fish from which Jesus fed thousands. McLeod imagines her thoughts kneading the bread, preparing food for her family. That her common labor for her family would be used by Jesus was just an amazing story.


I highly recommend this novella. It highlights how Jesus treated women, respecting them, never ignoring them and never turning them away. The Author's Note at the end is a good resource for identifying the Scriptures upon which McLeod's stories are based. There are also questions for deeper study so this novella would make a good personal or group study. It provides a new take on familiar stories yielding insights I never would have seen on my own.


Celia says:


Too often the women in the Bible are on the fringes, serving, observing; very aware of what's happening, they are helpmates in Jesus's story/ministry. The Day After His Crucifixion shows the women as real, suffering with Jesus, weeping, laughing, supporting each other. It's almost as if we, the readers, are eavesdropping--and learning the very human side of being near the crucifixion--of being a woman there.


Pastor Lin Johnson, First Presbyterian Church of Hendersonville, NC says:


Beautifully written and thought provoking. The author's take on the days after Christ's death and the women's perspective is heartfelt and beautiful. This is a very memorable book. You'll want to have it on your shelves to share often.


Jodi says:


I always enjoy books about the bonds between women and this book shows us the strength of women's relationships that have been hidden in a patriarchal society. I was fascinated by how author Merikay McLeaod was able to seamlessly weave together several females from the Bible and their stories, making them all friends. Although I think this book is best suited to practicing Christians, I think even a person not particularly interested in religion aspects could enjoy The Day After the Crucifixion for the historical aspects of the novel.


Carol says:


These women come to life on the page as they gather together and share how Yeshua touched their lives. A compelling story that will speak to your heart.


Darlene says:


Brava! This is a page-turner with a timeless illuminating message. From the outset, the reader is drawn into the story by way of vivid descriptions, raw emotions, and the heart-felt actions of courageous women. The point of view is reminiscent of women’s experiences within the context of Patriarchal power structures. I highly recommend this novella.


About the Author, Merikay McLeod


A Midwesterner by birth, Merikay McLeod spent most of her adulthood in northern California where she worked as a newspaper reporter, magazine editor, newspaper columnist and freelance writer. Her articles and stories have won state and national awards. Her freelance work has appeared in such magazines as Good Housekeeping, MS, Sunday Digest, Insight, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and many others. 


Her walk with Jesus is expressed most accurately by the 23rd Psalm. She has long pondered Jesus' respectful treatment of women despite the surrounding culture's view that women were inferior. The Day After His Crucifixion is her first fiction book. 

The Day After His Crucifixion by Merikay McLeod Reader Reviews and Giveaway

*****BOOK GIVEAWAY*****


Enter to win a copy of the Biblical fiction, The Day After His Crucifixion by Merikay McLeod! Fill out the Rafflecopter form for a chance to win. The giveaway ends April 29th at 11:59 CT. We will choose a winner the next day and announce in the widget and also follow up via email. Good luck!

a Rafflecopter giveaway
Read More »

Interview with Annalisa McMorrow: Runner-Up in the Fall 2024 Flash Fiction Contest

Tuesday, April 15, 2025



Annalisa’s Bio:
Annalisa McMorrow is a Bay Area author whose work has appeared in multiple venues including The Point Reyes Light, on KQED radio, and in the New York Times. She once beat out 300 entrants to win a 50-word writing contest to land a spot as a deejay on her college radio station (she penned a murder mystery), and her first ever poem was published in a “Youth Said It” column when she was five. Now, a full-time caregiver for her disabled husband, she dabbles in fiction whenever she can. 


-----Interviewed by Sue Bradford Edwards-----


WOW: What was the inspiration for “Naysayers and Skeptics?” 


Annalisa: There is a beach near where I live that has the most stunning sunsets. The type of magical, sky-changing-colors, hidden alcoves, nobody knows you’re there location that seems made up. If you haven’t seen the beach after the harrowing "13 curves" road, you might not believe me. The location came first, and the characters came second. 


WOW: I'm sure I'm not the only reader who is glad to know you have such an inspirational location nearby. So much of writing is revising. How did this story change through the revision process? 


Annalisa: I edit like a fiend. I have no fear of putting words on paper, and then I revise and revisit, hem and haw, and kill my darlings and resurrect them. I may do 12 drafts for a very short story, and I infamously took over a year once to write 1,000 words. With this piece, I knew exactly what I wanted to do. So the revision was mostly trying to sprinkle as much detail as I possibly could into a very small box. Exchanging three short words for one perfect long word. Listening to the cadence of the sentences to make sure they sang. 


WOW: You set up such a powerful twist. What tips can you give our readers on how to do this? 


Annalisa: My goal was to make every reader certain there was going to be a sad reveal. I did everything I could to set up the cringe moment that most people have experienced—I’ve experienced—where someone you like lets you down gently. Or not so gently. In this particular time (unprecedented times, some folks are saying), I truly wanted to give readers a happily ever after. 


WOW: I for one was sure a sad ending was on the way! Your bio says that you “dabble in fiction.” Tell us more about your fiction writing. Do you always write short? Do your stories always have a twist? Are you a closet romantic? 


Annalisa: This is my real name. Under my pen name(s), I’ve written extensively in racy romance (and beyond) for Harlequin and other publishers. I was once called the "queen of the quickies,” and I’ve probably written several thousand short stories. (I’m 55, and I’ve been writing since I could hold a pencil.) Many of my stories do have a twist. (I love a good twist.) I’m an upfront romantic. I am a heart-on-my-tattooed-sleeve kind of girl. I don’t know that I’ve written any fiction stories that didn’t end happily. My real life (I’m a caregiver for my disabled husband) is pretty sad right now. I cling to the happy with both hands. 


WOW:  And finally, what question do you wish I had asked you? How would you answer it? 


Annalisa: What did entering this contest mean for you? 


Insomnia and I go way back. So it was the middle of the night, and I was thinking of one of my best friends who is an artist. She enters contests regularly with her paintings. It occurred to me I could see if there were any writing contests that would fit my style. I tripped over W-O-W at the most opportune time. I have been a caregiver round the clock for 63 months, and I write a lot about being a caregiver. My fiction has suffered. The contest was the impetus to fall into fiction again. To daydream and paint a scene and live for a little bit in an alternate universe. I was honored to make the first cut and grateful to be in the top 10. But even if I hadn’t placed, simply the sensation of loving the words again made me feel a little like the me I used to be.


WOW: Thank you, thank you, thank you for rediscovering loving the words!  We are so honored that you chose to spend the energy doing something that brought so much happy to all of us.  And, thank you for sharing how your used writing to pull yourself up and out and rediscover this part of who you are.  This will be the encouragement someone else needs to hear!  

Read More »

Turn Your Passion into a Book

Thursday, April 10, 2025

 

Years ago, I read a fun book by author Christina Katz called Get Known Before the Book Deal: Use Your Personal Strengths to Grow an Author Platform. She shared practical tips on simple ways to slowly create a brand and online presence while creating content about something you really love. 

 Phase 1of her blueprint included “Platform Development and Building.” Although I have been writing for years, I spent the first part of my career writing parenting and lifestyle articles, as well as working in magazine publishing. Those markets were oversaturated so I never focused much on building a platform besides establishing an online presence with my writing blog. 

My ideas about platform building changed when I started my podcast, Missing in the Carolinas, almost five years ago. I’ve mentioned here before that it evolved over time—focusing on missing people and then adding in cold cases and crimes that have already been solved. My listeners have grown organically, they e-mail their ideas, I conduct interviews with local true crime authors, and I’ve become fascinated by finding crimes in old newspaper archives. Although I don’t have a large following on Instagram, Facebook, or YouTube, I did establish separate pages for the podcast and try to update those a few times a week. The small group of followers I have there are curious, encouraging, and often engaged. Where I’ve seen the most organic growth is in my podcast feed—between Apple and Spotify podcasts I have close to 10,000 followers. 

As Katz suggested in her book, I’ve established my niche, regional true crime in North and South Carolina. I created a separate website specifically for the podcast. Because I write most of my own scripts, I’ve amassed a stack of research and true crime stories in the past several years. I try and repurpose my content wherever I can, either sharing it or my blog or creating short videos for my YouTube channel, but there is still so much more I can do. Most podcasters I know have either created a Patreon channel with bonus content, published books, or created merchandise to sell to their followers. I’ve done none of that. 

Last week I made a decision and texted it to my whole family. “This is what I’ve decided to do,” I said. “I’m finally going to self-publish a book with crimes that have been featured on the podcast. My target date is fall.” I’m trying not to tell myself that this is an unrealistic deadline, when I’m still working on revising and pitching my suspense novel to agents and trying to start a new work of women’s fiction. Most of the writing and research of the true crime book has already been completed—I need to organize it into chapters, rewrite a bit, conduct some new interviews, and hire an editor and cover designer. I have a focus for the book, crimes from the Carolinas that aren’t as well known to the public. After almost five years of working on this podcast, I’d like to create a product to sell and am hoping the podcast audience will help with book sales. We'll see how it goes!

 Have you used a passion of yours to write a book, create a blog or podcast or any other products? I’d love to know more!

Renee Roberson is an award-winning writer who also produces the true crime podcast, Missing in the Carolinas. She's currently seeking representation for a novel about, what else? A podcaster trying to solve a mystery. Learn more at www.FinishedPages.com and www.MissingintheCarolinas.com.


Read More »

Interview with Myna Chang - Fall 2024 Flash Fiction Contest Runner Up

Tuesday, April 08, 2025
I’m thrilled to chat with Myna Chang today about her riveting story, “Amygdala,” which placed in the Fall 2024 Flash Fiction Contest! Join us as we talk about the inspiration behind her winning story, writing “breathless flash,” entering contests, and her fab Bluesky group, Electric Sheep. 

Myna Chang
Myna Chang is the author of The Potential of Radio and Rain (CutBank Books). Her writing has been selected for Best Microfiction, Best Small Fictions, and WW Norton’s Flash Fiction America. Find her at MynaChang.com or on Bluesky at @MynaChang.

--- Interview by Angela Mackintosh

WOW: I absolutely love your story for its action, lyricism, and creative format. What inspired “Amygdala”?

Myna: Thank you! I came up with the basic idea when my dog needed to go outside in the middle of the night. While I waited for him to do his business, I heard a weird noise at my garage door. It was only a rabbit, but I wondered: what if I really did catch someone trying to break in? Then I started to feel sorry for this hypothetical burglar, because, of course, I’d beat him ruthlessly with that garden rake my husband keeps leaving outside. Like most moms, I’d do anything necessary to prevent a bad guy from gaining access to my sleeping family. And then I realized a full-on brawl with a robber might be a foolish choice for a middle-aged woman in fuzzy slippers. I typed out the first draft of the story the next morning.

WOW: It's such a gift when life moments inspire stories! The backstory moved me—how you expertly wove it into the forward momentum/action. It’s complex, and I feel for Mrs. B, who tragically lost her husband and son. Since I have you here, I’m dying to know what the “hooligan” was doing there, breaking into Mrs. B’s house?

Myna: In my mind, the hooligan is simply trying to find shelter for the night. I think he was once friends with Mrs. B’s son, so he’s been a guest at the house before and is trying to remember the garage door code. He’s a troubled runaway, not yet a criminal, and he needs someplace safe to sleep.

WOW: That's interesting to know! Since he was a friend of Mrs. B's son, I had several possible scenarios in my mind, so thank you for sharing that. One-sentence stories are tough to write, and you just took it to the next level with “Amygdala”! I’ve tried this form before and the hardest part for me was the transitions. What are some tips you can share with writers who want to try this format?

Myna: Transitions are so hard in breathless flash! It’s tempting to string everything together with “and.” I allow myself to do just that in my first draft. Getting the rush of words on the page is the most important thing, I think, so the emotion and momentum are not lost. Then editing the transitions is where the hard work comes in. I look for opportunities to turn those “ands” into specific actions or emotions. When that doesn’t fit, I try to vary the connecting words and punctuation so it doesn’t feel too repetitive. Sometimes it works!

WOW: Well, your transitions sparkle! So hard to do, and this is why I love chatting with flash authors, to find out more about their work. I know you do that too with your fantastic blog, MicroVerse, which I subscribe to. I recommend all flash writers check it out! When did you start it and what’s your mission? Please tell our readers about some of your regular features.  

Myna: You’re so kind! I’m glad you’re enjoying MicroVerse! I read a lot of stories and I love to share them with my writing friends. I thought it might be fun to formalize this sharing process with a monthly roundup of great speculative flash. I try to choose 10 or 12 flash pieces that wow me with fresh ideas, a distinct voice, or vibrant language. I feel like speculative flash doesn’t get as much attention as it deserves, so I hope MicroVerse will entice more readers into becoming dedicated spec flash fans. I also interview authors, editors, and publishers about their work in the speculative community. I want folks to find encouragement and inspiration when they visit MicroVerse.

WOW: It is very encouraging, Myna! You also created a vibrant and successful group on Bluesky called Electric Sheep. I remember in a guest post, you mentioned creating it because book clubs only discuss full-length novels and critique groups mostly focus on WIPs. I think it’s a fabulous idea to focus on short pieces. What is the group up to right now? Any exciting events?

Myna: We just celebrated our fourth birthday! We’ve hosted Q&A sessions with almost 100 guest authors and editors, and read hundreds of short speculative stories for in-depth discussion. Our upcoming guest list includes award-winning science fiction, fantasy, and horror writers, as well as editors from premier magazines. We also have several special topic discussions coming up, covering world building techniques, slipstream examples, and speculative poetry. Our main goal is to have fun, but we also hope to provide support for short story authors and the magazines that publish them. Our membership is capped to ensure everyone in the group can easily participate in the Zoom discussions, but we encourage everyone to read along with us and join the conversation on Bluesky.

WOW: Fantastic! You're so busy, and I’m always curious about writer’s schedules. Do you have a favorite time to write? What are some of your writing rituals?

Myna: I feel more creative early in the morning, when the house is quiet and I haven’t yet been distracted by the horrors of the daily news cycle. I’m at my best with a large cup of coffee and a large keyboard (not that dinky laptop keyboard that makes me feel like I have clumsy sausage fingers).

WOW: Ha! That's what I call my partner's fingers—sausage fingers or spatulas. Morning is also my favorite time to write. You’ve been so successful at winning contests (including first place in several WOW! contests) and have a busy publishing schedule. I’m curious about your submission practice. Do you have a submission routine? Any tips you can share for targeting contests?

Myna: I love the process of evaluating contests and magazines. Does the market have a general vibe that matches my work? Do I enjoy reading the stories they’ve published? Do the folks in charge have a strong track record of professionalism and integrity? As far as a submission routine, I have a loose goal of publishing every story I write. Of course, that’s a ridiculous goal. Lots of stories end up in my “abandon all hope” folder. But I’m willing to do significant editing and rewriting before I give up on a piece. I prefer markets that allow simultaneous submissions, and I usually have a story out to three markets at a time. When a rejection comes in, I immediately submit to the next market on my list.

WOW: Great tips, Myna! Thank you so much for sharing with our readers today, and I will be following your work, as always! 

Check out the latest WOW writing contests:
Read More »

Announcing Our Spring Into Reading Group Giveaway Event

Monday, April 07, 2025
 

It's spring! As the flowers bloom and the weather slowly becomes warm, we figured it's the perfect time for another group giveaway event.

If you've been with WOW for a few years, you may remember the first event we launched in the heart of the COVID era: the Stay Home and Read giveaway. It earned over 100,000 entries! We've done several more since then and they've always been a big hit with our WOW audience.

We're excited to announce the launch of another giveaway: Spring Into Reading.

Spring into Reading Group Giveaway

The details:

  • The giveaway will launch on May 1st and will last for three weeks.
  • You have until April 25th to join in.
  • All the books will be featured in an e-blast that goes out to over 53,000 email subscribers, and featured in a blog post on The Muffin, featuring all the books and authors.
  • You will be allowed to include one social media account that will be added to the Rafflecopter as an optional entry.
  • There will be three winners to the giveaway, so you will be sending out three books. Each winner will receive a book. The grand prize winner will receive the Amazon Gift Card.
  • We are opening up this giveaway to open to US only winners, so a physical copy will need to be sent to three US addressed.
  • You can also contribute an additional prize to be given to all three winners (in addition to your book), or the grand prize winner.
The fee to join in is $50. ($10 of that goes towards the grand prize winner's gift card.) 

Plus, by joining in, you'll receive a $50 credit that you can put toward any blog tour or review event

Want to join in? Sign up via this form today.

If you aren't joining in the giveaway this round, mark your calendars for May 1st for the launch. We know you'll want to win some of the amazing prizes!

Read More »

Interview with Ashly Callaway Runner Up in the WOW! Q1 2025 Creative Nonfiction Essay Contest with: "Gross Misconduct"

Saturday, April 05, 2025

Congratulations to Ashly Callaway from East Tennessee for her amazing nonfiction essay titled: Gross Misconduct!

Check out Ashly's submission, Gross Misconduct, as well as all the other winning entries and then stop back here to read Ashly's enlightening interview with Crystal J. Casavant-Otto from WOW! Women on Writing. 

Ashly’s Bio:
A lifelong solitary creature, Ashly’s most at peace when surrounded by animals—dogs, birds, moose, more dogs—and the silence nature wraps around her. Quitting teaching after too many active shooter drills, she somehow mustered the wherewithal to finish her young adult novel in year two of the pandemic, aptly titled Solitary Creatures. When not obsessively checking her nature cam for nocturnal activity, she can be found creating imperfect stained glass pieces, fostering sick puppies, and narrating her dog’s thoughts. She is Oxford-comma positive and cannot wait to retire to Maine. 

WOW: Maine sounds so lovely - and thank you for all you do for the sick puppies! Congratulations Ashly and I'm excited to chat with you today. Thank you for writing such a personal essay. What is the take-away you'd like readers to gain from Gross Misconduct

Ashly: I think it’s important for teachers, especially those new to the profession, to feel supported by my anecdotes and maybe let them know that, no, you are not crazy or incompetent or a failure – teaching in current times can feel impossible. I also think it’s crucial for lawmakers, parents, school administrators, and students in teacher training programs to have a firm grasp of what goes on within public school classrooms. People like to say, Oh, teachers get to leave at 3:00 or, Teachers have summers off; but most people haven’t the foggiest idea of what teachers contend with. Just look up teacher videos on TikTok – former teachers’ re-enactments of educational and behavioral chaos aren’t hyperbole! 

WOW: As a volunteer at school, I give teachers all the credit in the world. Just a few hours a week has me questioning my sanity - thank you for supporting our educators! Where do you write? (As I am confident no human can actually think in a classroom full of children - I know it's not there!) What does your space look like? 

Ashly: My husband and I gave up on using our dining room table for actual dining, so it’s now tucked into a corner of my house where sunshine and critters in trees serve as my backdrop. The other day, I quickly rescinded my complaint that the sun in my eyes was making it hard to type. That’s a good problem to have, I believe. I have a small lamp on the table (for a cozy feel) and a four-photo frame of my great-grandmother, grandmother, mother, and myself. It’s worth noting I’ve covered up the photo of my mother with a print-out of my 2025 goals – it was my grandmother to whom I was closest, and since her first days of life served as the backstory of my unpublished novel, Solitary Creatures, I like to have in my space the black-and-white photo of her younger self. Also in the workspace tableau is my dog, Millie, who keeps me entertained with her expressive eyebrows. 

WOW! I love your honesty and I'm not sure what I love better, the goals over your mother, or Millie's eyebrows, but that's awesome and begs the question: who is your support, and what have you found to be most supportive in your writing life as well as in life in general? You are clearly an animal person - but are there other writers/readers in your life who help you through? 

Ashly:  That’s true, I’m an animal person because I do tend to be a misanthrope, but since I can’t ask the wrens and chickadees what they think of my writing, I ask female friends to give feedback because they’re especially good at grammar and interpreting figurative language. In general, my husband is my main source of support. A former therapist, he has tools most people don’t have for working through my psychological challenges. This tracks. 🙂 

WOW: Oh my - could you lend him out? I think I'd love having a therapist join me for my morning coffee on the daily...or maybe not...what advice would you give to others (specifically female teachers) when it comes to self care? 

Ashly: For female teachers, self-care would look like running. Not for exercise, but away from education. Many teachers who start off very young and overwhelmed may not recognize the disparity in how male educators are treated versus females. But eventually, they’ll come to find out that, because male teachers are rarer, they aren’t held to the same standards as the dime-a-dozen women. It’s bewildering to work until 7:00 p.m., come into the classroom on Sundays to plan, and prepare extensively for administrator evaluations while witnessing the handful of male teachers grab their keys and depart school at 2:50 each day. That dynamic can exist anywhere, but knowing for every one teacher there are 25 more women standing in line for your job makes it easier for principals to treat you as such – disposable. 

WOW: I had never looked at the profession that way - thank you for enlightening me and all our readers today.

What’s next for you? What are your writing goals for the rest of 2025 and beyond? 

Ashly: During the pandemic, I was laid off from my communications job, so I took advantage of the free time to finally bring a novel to fruition. I’ve been querying agents requesting representation for a long time, but with no luck. I’ve come to understand books go through fads and phases just like every other form of media, and it’s just not time yet for my family saga/young adult novel centering mental illness to be put out into the world. The most important thing for me is to keep writing, though, regardless of interest in publication. 

WOW: I'm absolutely positive you'll find representation at just the most perfect timing and the world will hear more about your book baby! In fact, if readers scroll beyond our interview, they can read an excerpt from your book and I'm sure we can all agree it's a book that needs to be born!

Just a few more questions before our time is up today Ashly (though I'm sure you'll be back in the future).

You have an impressive bio - it begs the ask - tell us more about your retirement goal and why Maine or tell us more about your creative outlet and stained glass? 

Ashly: I’m actually working on an essay about just that – retiring to Maine – that goes into why we want to be there. But suffice it to say, not being a true Southerner in the South has effectively pushed me into the margins of the community. I was looking for a place where people are kind, interdependent, trustworthy, and not preoccupied with politics or religious beliefs. It’s become increasingly important to me to feel like I can be myself where I live.

WOW: Ashly, I know it's not Maine, but you should absolutely come visit me in Wisconsin as Door County is an absolute gem filled with the nicest people and the cutest shops and of course, me - we could hang out! Keep me posted about your book and definitely will hold some space for you here at WOW! and we can plan a launch tour! Until then - keep on writing! 


Today's post was penned by Crystal J. Casavant-Otto
Crystal Casavant writes. Everything. If you follow her blog you have likely laid eyes on every thought she has ever had. Her debut novel, It Was Never About Me, Was It? is still a work in progress and shall be fully worthy sometime in 2025. She has written for WOW! Women on Writing, Bring on Lemons, and has been featured in several magazines and ezines relating to credit and collections as well as religious collections for confessional Lutherans. She runs a busy household full of intelligent, recalcitrant, and delightful humans who give her breath and keep her heart beating day after day. 

Crystal wears many hats (and not just the one in this photo) and fully believes in being in the moment and doing everything she can to improve the lives of those around her! The world may never know her name, but she prays that because of her, someone may smile a little brighter. She prides herself on doing nice things - yes, even for strangers! 


Check out the latest Contests: 


Synopsis of SOLITARY CREATURES by Ashly Callaway: When Margaret Arbeiter dies giving birth to a daughter in Depression-era Ohio, her husband absconds, leaving their young son to be taken in by family while the baby girl, Violet, is placed in a state orphanage. This injustice is rectified when a childless party line operator “overhears” the news during a conversation between neighbors and adopts her. From there, generational trauma somersaults through the lives of three women between the Great Depression and modern day.

We watch a spoiled Violet in the 1950s learn to look to men to define her while living in a constant state of self-involvement and distrust. She immerses herself in conflict, suspicion, and violence, using alcohol to numb her unease in relationships and the raising of her daughter, Jacqueline, with the limitations her genes have provided. As a mother, Violet could be described as minimally attentive at best, then we see her lose her husband to a preventable death, had she been paying attention. 

Jacqueline, Sage’s mother, knits together a threadbare sense of self for Sage and where she comes from by making her own decisions about who family should be. No matter what Sage does or doesn’t do, she lives in a home where her mother’s disappointment lurks around corners and the floors are made of eggshells. Cobbling together an unstable identity from her mother’s harsh words, constant rejection, and alienation of Sage from her family, scar tissue surfaces from these continual wounds in the form of a devastating but befitting diagnosis: borderline personality disorder, or BPD.

The bulk of SOLITARY CREATURES has a foothold in contemporary times – the 1990s – where we see Sage grapple with the narrative her mother has created: She is not loved or lovable. And SOLITARY CREATURES needs a trigger warning – Sage attempts suicide and engages in self-harm because, in her mind, these are her best coping strategies for having a mother by whom she doesn't feel loved. By necessity, Sage tries to cope with her emotional challenges on her own, but then she learns she doesn’t have to. With the support of a compassionate female teacher, a kindhearted love interest in the form of a young, educated Hindu man, and her therapist, Sage successfully navigates the treacherous waters of trying to appear “normal” in high school, not listening to her caustic inner critic, and disentangling herself from the twisted family ties that bind her to a vitriolic mother. 

And here's the first chapter of Solitary Creatures for those who have enjoyed what they've read so far!
Read More »

The Lessons I Learned in 2025 About Freelancing

Thursday, April 03, 2025
 

2025 has been some kind of year for freelancing. January was one of the largest payments I've ever received throughout my years of freelancing. It was also the most uncertain. I lost a major source of writing income and had to pivot quickly and drastically.

I'll save you the details, as I've finally learned to accept and move on, but it taught me important lessons. Ones I accidentally forgot.

  • Never rely on one source of income.
I've been freelancing for about 10 or so years. Along the way, I've discovered one thing: freelance gigs can dry up quickly. You'd figure I would have learned that and remembered that by now. But you can get complacent when freelance work stays consistent, as it did for me in 2024.

In fact, I had gotten so used to having a single source of my freelance income that I turned down a couple of gigs last year. They were lower paying, so I had my reasons. 

Then January 2025 came around, and my big freelance gig dried up. I was scrambling to replace it. Fortunately, and only because of God, I found another opportunity.

But I was reminded: never be so complacent about a single source of freelance work that you are left floundering when it disappears.

You don't want to say "yes" to every opportunity, but be careful if you only say yes to one source of income. That's when it gets into the dangerous territory of putting all your eggs in one basket.

  • Listen to what other freelancers are experiencing.
I should never have been surprised I lost my writing opportunity. Throughout 2024, the signs were there. I was flooded with work from my single source of income. Yet, other writers were talking about losing their gigs. Layoffs were happening in my niche. Editors I worked with lost their jobs. 

I still didn't think I'd be affected. I was still getting writing assignments. Why should I worry? I thought I was in a good place and thankful to the Lord for it.

I wish I had paid attention. My advice is to avoid being overly confident, especially when people in your field are affected. No, there's no reason to have constant anxiety that you might lose your gig (which I remind myself of constantly), but keep striving. 

Make new connections. Keep learning. Figure out ways you can bring opportunities to you. Practice cold-pitching editors with your ideas. Discover a service you can offer others. Don't wait for assignments. 

  • Try to avoid burning bridges.
I wish I could say I've never burned a bridge with someone. That I've always left things on a professional high note with every working relationship. Sadly, that is not the case.

I accidentally burned a bridge in 2024. You see, I was trying to diversify my income (sort of) but didn't want to cut back on what was bringing me in the most money. So, I tried to do it all.

Well, as you'd expect, I was stressing myself out too much. I had to back out of the project. Unfortunately, I had already backed out once before (and they had given me a second chance).

This year, I reached out to them again. Although I had showcased a significant lack of self-awareness of what I could handle, I had been on good terms with them before. I thought my prior good work record would be enough to make up for my flub-ups. Well, it wasn't. I got the stock answer that they weren't hiring right now.

That could be true, but I can't help but think I burned a bridge. I didn't mean to and wish I had been more aware of what I could take on without stressing myself out.

With that said, whenever possible: try not to burn a bridge. As a freelancer, I'd rather say no to a project early than say yes and ruin a professional relationship because I mess up on the work product or fail to provide.

This year some lessons have been learned. I continuously work on that ever-elusive work-life balance. Hopefully, by sharing my wisdom, you can avoid some of the mistakes I've made this past year.

Nicole Pyles is a freelance writer who has pivoted back to public relations to make up for a writing gig she lost in 2025. She also pitches people as guests for podcasts, because why not? Follow her not-so-active blog at https://worldofmyimagination.com.

Read More »

Interview with Sudha Balagopal: Fall 2024 Flash Fiction Contest Third Place Winner

Tuesday, April 01, 2025
Sudha’s Bio: Sudha Balagopal is an Indian-American writer whose work straddles continents and cultures. Her stories have appeared in Smokelong, swamp pink and Vast Chasm among other journals. Most recently, her novella-in-flash, Nose Ornaments was published by Ad Hoc Fiction, UK. She has had stories included in Best Microfiction, Best Small Fictions and the Wigleaf Top 50. 

If you haven't done so already, check out Sudha's award-winning story "Where I Come From..." and then return here for a chat with the author. 

WOW: Congratulations on placing third in the Fall 2024 Flash Fiction Contest! What excited you most about writing this story? 

Sudha: This story was born in an online poetry workshop. I don't write poetry, but I find that poetry workshops offer great fodder for my stories. The instructor prompted us to think of where we come from, to start writing from those very words and voila the story came to me. I marvel at this ignition of an idea from just a few words. And that's what excited me about the story, how a prompt took me back to my younger years, to a time and place that nests within me but hadn't found expression. 

WOW: What a great idea to use poetry as inspiration for flash fiction! What did you learn about yourself or your writing while crafting this piece? 

Sudha: I learned I remember more than I believe. I learned I carry images in my brain from long, long ago. I learned, yet again, that relationships are complex. I learned, in terms of craft, that I can use the title as my first line, that I can repeat the concept in every paragraph. I learned I can zigzag through a sweep of time in a few short paragraphs. 

WOW: I love that phrase and idea of being able to “zigzag through a sweep of time.” Please tell us more about your recently published novella-in-flash, Nose Ornaments

Sudha: Nose Ornaments was a runner up in the Bath 2024 novella-in-flash contest. Because the book is a novella-in-flash, each chapter is flash length, under one thousand words. The book started as just one story which took root when I heard family stories about women who were expected to pierce their nostrils before they could get married. The thing that struck me is that while women mostly acquiesced, this wasn't a matter of choice. Of course, all this happened a long time ago and customs have since changed and today, girls have their noses pierced because they want to. 

After that first story was published, I stayed with the character in the story, Lakshmi, and built some chapters around this strong woman who forged her own path in life under hostile conditions. When I felt Lakshmi had surmounted her challenges, I shifted the focus to her daughter Savi and illustrated her trials and tribulations and finally arrived at Savi's daughter, Mini, a woman of our current times, whose life is far different from that of her grandmother's. 

The book is segmented into three parts reflecting societal changes over the decades. The arrangement evolved quite naturally. The segments are interlinked, for they are three women from the same family, but the challenges they encounter are hugely different because times change and with it, society. 

WOW: Thank you so much for sharing that! That sounds like an exciting project, and I find it fascinating to learn more about the lesser-known genre of novella-in-flash. What are you reading right now, and why did you choose to read it? 

Sudha: I'm reading Stone Diaries by Carol Shields who was a brilliant Canadian-American writer. I chose this book since I'd read her book Larry's Party decades ago and it left an imprint on my mind. I'm loving Stone Diaries, a Pulitzer winner, and deeply admire Shield's ability to delve deep into her characters. 

WOW: If you could give your younger self one piece of writing advice, what would it be and why? 

Sudha: I'd tell my younger self good writing takes time. Don't be in a hurry to finish a story. Instead, dwell, let the story marinate, allow it to develop the way it should. And, finally, understand that writing is really re-writing. 

WOW: Excellent advice! Thank you so much for sharing your story and your thoughtful responses with us. Happy writing! 


Interviewed by Anne Greenawalt, founder and editor-in-chief of Sport Stories Press, which publishes sports books by, for, and about sportswomen and amateur athletes and offers developmental editing and ghostwriting services to partially fund the press. Connect on Twitter @greenmachine459.
Read More »

Interview with Cate Touryan, Runner Up in the WOW! Q1 2025 Essay Contest

Sunday, March 30, 2025

When she isn’t editing or teaching technical writing, Cate Touryan writes short fiction, creative nonfiction, and novels. Her debut YA novel, Turning Toward Eden, is slated for a 2025 spring release. Cate’s work has won second place and an honorable mention in past Women on Writing contests. Her recent creative nonfiction piece, published in Under the Sun, has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize as well as for inclusion in The Best American Essays, 2025. You can read her essay here.

Cate lives on California’s foggy but beautiful central coast with her husband, the sweet spirit of her Yorkie, and a rafter of turkeys—as in both a whole bunch of them and in the rafters.

To connect with Cate, head to her website or Facebook page or send her an email. She loves to hear from her readers.

Interview by Jodi M. Webb

WOW: Congratulations on being a runner up in the Q1 2025 Creative Nonfiction Essay Contest for Beyond the Safari Sunset. The imagery is so rich I felt like I was watching a slideshow, not reading. Any insights on how you make your writing so incredibly descriptive?

CATE: That’s a lovely compliment, thank you. As a reader, I most admire that writing which perfectly melds form, function, and fabric such that the narrative transcends the telling and becomes a work of art in itself, an astonishment. I’m not there yet, more miss than hit, but continue to work toward a mastery of craft. To render physical setting well, I rely on conventional advice: infuse scenes with relevant sensory detail, tease out nuanced meaning through juxtaposition, backlight the symbolic, and much more.

But to render description immersive—that’s my ultimate goal, requiring me to reach beyond the physical, intellectual, and symbolic characteristics of a place. To harness the power of setting demands that I see the landscape, for example, as an indispensable thread in the story, not a character so much as a revelatory shading or texturizing. Even that—the descriptive as immersive—has a greater goal: to make my story yours, the distinction between us lost as we converge into one shared moment.

WOW: What made you decide to submit this piece to the contest? 

CATE: There’s something about putting a pet down that, as if not heartrending enough, brings mortality front and center, speaking to the loss of all things. We can, as the story illustrates, try to hem in those we love, prolong their wilted lives, concoct workarounds, tether them with unbreakable love, yet nothing can stave off the inevitable. It may be a fact of life that all things eventually perish, will be lost, but that doesn’t mean we aren’t driven by some fierce force to hold on. Death is anathema to us; though of perishable bodies, we have been set with eternity in our hearts (Ecclesiastes 3:11). Trying to come to terms with the loss of Wee Willie Winkie meant revisiting the permeating sorrows of this life. And as writers do, I wrestled with those sorrows in story, refusing to let loss have the last word and perhaps doing the one thing we can do: make beauty from ashes. It just so happened that a last-call email from WOW provided the impetus I needed to put fingers to keyboard.

WOW: Yes, I agree that a looming deadline can give us the extra nudge to write. Do you frequently enter writing contests? 

CATE: I don’t, entering maybe a half-dozen essays for WOW over the years, but I do have a
wonderful story to tell with a shoutout to two tremendously kind and encouraging editors, Angela Mackintosh and Martha Highers.

When a CNF essay I submitted to WOW last year made it to the finals but no farther, I reached out to a WOW editor to ask if the topic was too political for the contest. She thought not and pointed me to the literary journal Under the Sun, saying its editor-in-chief had recently written her own piece on the same topic. Even though my entry was too short at 1,000 words for their preferred style, what would it hurt? The editor-in-chief liked it enough to ask me to expand it. After nine months of collaborative work, my now 3,000-word essay was published and subsequently nominated for a Pushcart Prize as well as for a 2025 Best American Essays selection. As if that wasn’t honor enough, I was asked to be a reader for Under the Sun and am now working with authors we’d like to publish, paying it forward as it were. I am loving the behind-the-scenes reading and editing and can’t speak highly enough of the terrific team rooting for every submission.

Not making it past the finals in the WOW contest was a blessing in disguise. There is reward ahead for those who persevere.

WOW: Pushcart Prize and American Essay! That is an incredible story. And a wonderful example of how we all, in our turn, lift our fellow writers up. On your website, you write that you reach for "....the beginning beyond The End." Can you share what that means to you?

CATE: Simply explained, I write stories, fictional and otherwise, where real life meets real faith.
While we cannot see beyond this temporal life—and indeed, many believe there is nothing to see—I believe we catch glimpses of another story that awaits us after “the end,” a story of redemption and the renewal of all things. Or as the apostle Paul put it far more eloquently, “the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.” Christianity provides, if not the easiest, safest, or most popular life, the only one that offers both meaning to our own stories and the promise of a story beyond our own. I write to capture glimpses of that which lies beyond our temporal vision, to offer that which has brought my life both purpose and hope.

WOW: What an inspirational look at your writing process. So, what's your next big writing project?

CATE: I’m excited to be launching my debut historical YA novel, Turning Toward Eden, along with the audiobook in May. It’s a crossover in many ways—historical, mystery, coming-of-age, small town, YA/women’s, not fitting neatly into any particular genre, but with appeal to those who enjoy a good story with heart. I have a middle grade novel in the works as well as more creative nonfiction, perhaps my favorite format.

WOW: You are busy! What is your upcoming novel about?

CATE: When chasing another is easier than facing yourself. It’s 1971. The Cold War has cast a chill over the hot summer of California’s central coast. Caught in her parents’ own cold war, 14-year-old Eden is strapped with caring for her severely disabled brother until the arrival of a mysterious Russian immigrant unleashes a rash of escalating crimes. Rumors swirl: the “commie” is to blame . . . and Eden is her accomplice. Determined to prove her innocence, Eden embarks on a reckless game of chase—even if it means risking her brother’s life. Stumbling upon the girl’s secret, she unearths her own. But will it be too late to save her brother?

To read the short story prequel, set in 1910, please visit my website and subscribe to my quarterly newsletter.

WOW: I 'm signing up today because I can't resist a sneak peek inside a new world.

CATE: Thank you for inviting me to share about my creative process and works. It’s an honor!



Read More »

Friday Speak Out!: Write With Your Heart; The Best Writing Advice I Received From My Father

Friday, March 28, 2025


By Jeanine DeHoney

I proclaimed I wanted to be a writer at a very young age. As I sat on the sofa in my family’s Livingroom, my imagination had free reign as I wrote stories about cute little kittens and fairies with the exception of Fridays and Saturdays.

Then, as the weekend loomed in front of me, my father who was a saxophone player and jazz aficionado, who loved listening to music teeming at the seams with the barebones of improvisation, syncopation, and a melodious rhythm, would take a  jazz album from his collection out of its sleeve and play it on our stereo console.  


I would drop everything to sit beside him, and then mirror how he attended to this music; the bobbing of his head, tapping of his feet, taking mental notes of any listening instructions he gave me. 


The main one he imparted to me was, “Always listen with your heart and not just your ears.”


So, I would, and the music I thought sounded strange as a child soon sounded inviting and soothing.

 

When I became an adult, and began my journey as a freelance writer, I realized my father’s words held significance, not just for music but for writing. I paraphrased his words some to encompass that I also needed to, “Always write with or from my heart.”


For when I did, I didn’t write to anyone else’s drumbeat. I didn’t hold back from writing what others thought should be “shrouded” or “kept hidden in the closet” particularly if it concerned a sensitive or cultural issue. I opened my heart and gave myself permission to empty my emotions on paper and let readers see the authenticity and vulnerability of who I was or who I was writing about. I stopped worrying about being judged. 


Writing with my heart allowed me to unfetter my core on the page and forge a relationship with readers who might be walking a mile in my emotive shoes.


My words; the fiction stories, the creative nonfiction essays. even my first children’s picture book, are all heart stories. They are not just slivers but full-on narratives about the complexities of love, life, family, culture, the bad entwined with the good, sadness entwined with joy, etc., just like the music I learned to appreciate as I listened with my father.  


Although I never got the chance to tell my father his advice on listening to jazz would be some of the best and most inspiring advice I got about writing, I hope he knew somehow. I hope he knew when he thumbed through my first published magazine story in my early twenties, that I followed his instructions about the heart. That I listened for the heartbeat of my stories when they hovered overhead, until they defied gravity and landed on the page. 


And from one writer to another, I pass that same advice on to you, write with or from your heart, because you are a unique wordsmith and your/our stories are oh so needed in the world we live in today.

 * * * 

As a freelance writer my writing has been published in Wow: Women on Writing, Mutha Magazine, Literary Mama, Scary Mommy, Brain Child Magazine, Please See Me Literary Magazine, The Light, Jerry Jazz Magazine, Rigorous Magazine, Soul In Space, The Write Place At The Write Time, Gemini Literary Magazine, The Dirty Spoon Radio Hour and Journal, Sisters AARP,  Mahogany Blog, Carefree, Kiza Blacklit, and a fiction story in an upcoming anthology curated to spread awareness about domestic violence, “Why I Stayed," and MER literary magazine, among others. I am an essayist in anthologies by Chicken Soup For The Soul, Black Lawrence Press-"Mamas, Martyrs, and Jezebels," Black Freighter Press's- "Waiting To Exhale" and BLF Press- "Black Joy Unbound,” and in Zora’s Den anthology. I won first prize for prose for the table/feast Literary Magazine The Blossom Contest, and The Colorism Healing Contest and second place for my essay for the Light-Leaders Igniting Generational Healing and Transformation Literary Journal, and was shortlisted for a fiction story for the Embellishment Contest for Australia's Voices of Women which was performed in Australia as a monologue. I was an Honor Award winner for Sleeping Bear Press Own Voices Own Stories 2022 award season for a children's picture book, "This Sunday My Daddy Came To Church," and it was acquired for publication by Sleeping Bear Press and will be available  in August 2025. 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Would you like to participate in Friday "Speak Out!"? Email your short posts (under 500 words) about women and writing to: marcia[at]wow-womenonwriting[dot]com for consideration. We look forward to hearing from you!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 


Read More »

What Is the Heart?

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Recently I’ve been watching sessions from the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Online Conference. My favorite sessions always involve a how-to element. One session was on finding your writer’s voice. Another was on taking something from idea to full picture book. 

Yet my favorite session was on making your work stand out. The same thing kept coming up. Know what is at the heart of your project. 

It was interesting to hear agents and editors alike explain how vital it is to know what is at the heart of your project. When you are drafting a project, it helps keep you focused. Whether you are outlining or working on your draft, when you feel stuck, consider the heart. Why am I writing this? What inspired it? What do I want this piece to do for my readers? Often these questions can help get you moving again. 

Questions like these are just as critical when you are revising. This is especially true if you are revising based on an agent’s or editor’s comments. 

Think about it. The agent tells you that editors are seeing too many manuscripts set in New York. You groan. You did so much research to figure out what your characters would see as they moved through the city. Should you try revising and setting your story somewhere else? It depends. Why are you writing this piece? Let’s say that you wanted to create a fast-paced piece of fiction with two sisters as the main characters. Hmm. New York didn’t even come into play. What did you want this piece to do for your readers? You wanted them to experience a story with two smart, sassy women who have each other’s backs, come-what-may. Maybe you could try a new setting. 

But if the agent tells you that one of these two characters needs to go, no one wants a sisters-as-buddies story? That’s another situation altogether. The pair of sisters who are also buddies is at the heart of your story. Getting rid of one of them would be self-defeating. 

The agent concedes that you can keep both of your characters. But one of the sisters should betray the other. That would increase the tension and be quite the plot twist! It would. But it too would go against the heart of your story. If you want to give the agent's suggestion a try, you might try to write the big reveal and see if it feels genuine. 

Or you could employ one of my favorite tricks. The story needs more tension. Check. But who else could be the secret villain? Who else could it be that would be just as shocking? That would create just as much tension? I always try to see what is behind the request for a change. But I also try to keep the heart of my story in sight. 

I am much better at doing that when I write nonfiction. I am hoping that using this idea in my fiction will help me wend my way through that revision. 

--SueBE

  • Click here to find her newsletter.
Sue Bradford Edwards' is the author of over 60 books for young readers.  

She is also the instructor for 3 WOW classes which begin on the first Monday of every month. She teaches:
Read More »
Powered by Blogger.
Back to Top