Interview with Connie Boland: 2026 Winter Flash Fiction Contest Third Place Winner
Interview with Sara Winslow, Runner Up in the Q2 Creative Nonfiction Essay Contest with "Sweater"
Interview with Sara Winslow,
Runner Up in the Q2 Creative Nonfiction Essay Contest with
“Sweater”
Check out Sara's submission, Sweater as well as all the other winning entries and then stop back here to read Sara Winslow's engaging interview with Crystal J. Casavant-Otto from WOW! Women on Writing.

...interview with Crystal J. Casavant-Otto
WOW!: Thank you for being here with me today Sara and thank you for writing such a personal essay. Let’s get right down to it! Do you have advice for your younger self when it comes to making decisions, believing in yourself, and/or writing? What would your current self say to the younger you?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 her lifetime as she switched gears and is seven chapters in on a psychological thriller that has captured her heart. 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 (from her parent’s basement) 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) including college student, mom, musician, singer, administrator, writer, teacher, and friend. She fully believes in being in the moment and doing everything she can to improve the lives of those around her! She recently moved into her parent’s basement and is enjoying the challenge, recently posting some delicious meals titled: Culinary Adventures in My Parent’s Basement.
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. She is always up for a challenge whether it’s living in the basement, living on a boat, or buying a dairy farm! You never know where she’ll turn up next or what she’ll be doing, but it’s guaranteed she’ll be having fun!
Check out the latest Contests:
www.wow-womenonwriting.com/contest.php
Friday Speak Out!: Characters without Characteristics
That's because the story centers on a type of domestic abuse called Parental Alienation, where one parent deliberately gaslights the children to turn them against the other parent. I didn't want readers to think they could wave off the gaslighting parent's horrible behavior as something that only "they" (insert ethnic bias) do, that "our kind of people" would never do.
As writers, we work hard to give our characters vivid quirks, habits, speech patterns, and hairstyles. I didn't realize how difficult it would be to take some of that away--how much even the smallest ethnic clues are woven into our everyday lives.
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| photo credit Jolene Siana |
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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!
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Only So Many Words in a Life
About a year ago I found the perfect new market. I loved
reading them. It was a new publication so I was getting in on the ground floor
as a writer in a subject I’d written about for years. The editors were
supportive. And the pay was excellent. What’s not to love?
One assignment led to another and soon not only was I
sending them article ideas but they were coming to me with article ideas they
thought were a good match for me. Normally, I dive into a new assignment when I
receive it, eager to explore the topic and craft the piece. But research and
interviews for assignments from this market languished on my computer to-do
list until I absolutely had to start writing. I was still delivering features
they loved (often after a lengthy re-write) but I was struggling.
Over the years I have written a wide variety of things that
weren’t exactly my first choice but provided a steady paycheck. Brochures for
businesses. Trivia questions for a video game. Reviews of power tools
(really!). Articles for a golfing magazine – a sport I don’t play. I liked to
think of them as stretching my writing muscles. Building blocks in my writing career.
But this was something different. I was unhappy from the moment I took and
assignment until its completion.
Finally, I took a moment to examine my pairing with this new
market. On paper we seemed like a perfect pairing but, after pouring over the
editor’s notes to me and remembering my writing experience, I realized what the
problem was – voice. This market wanted an edgy, take-on-the-world voice. It
was a reasonable requirement from the editors. After all, that voice set them
apart from other similar publications on the market. But this was not my voice.
In order to create pieces to match this market’s vision I was constantly
rethinking how I would approach the subject and adopting an attitude that wasn’t
mine. It was exhausting.
Reluctantly (what freelancer turns away a perfectly good
market?) I decided to stop writing for them. I could have continued to adjust
my writing to fit into their market but life isn’t eternal. We only have so
many days of living and we will only write so many words. I decided I didn’t
want to write words that didn’t reflect who I was.
Have you ever had to stop writing for a market? Why?
Jodi M. Webb writes from her home in the Pennsylvania mountains. She's also a blog tour manager for WOW-Women on Writing. Follow her writing and reading life at Words by Webb.
Interview with Elizabeth Hoban, 2nd Place Winner in the Winter 2026 Flash Fiction Contest
Interview with Fiona Jensen, Runner Up in the WOW! Q2 2026 Creative Nonfiction Contest
Introducing R/evolution Story Lab from Award-Winning Essayist and Author, Nicole Breit
When Reading Tastes Evolve
I like to tell people that working in a bookstore for me is like being a kid in a candy shop. Surrounded by the unmistakable smell of new books, alluring covers, sprayed edges, and book-loving merchandise, it’s a miracle I don’t spend my entire paycheck inside the stacks each week.
But what I do is learn about more books I want to read, and lately, I’ve noticed my tastes in literature evolving. For example, let’s see if you can spot a theme in some of my favorite reads from the past year.
The Correspondent-This epistolary novel shares the story of 73-year-old Sybil Van Antwerp, a highly-educated but brusque widow who has always made it a practice to correspond with her friends and family through weekly writing sessions. Through her letters the reader discovers Sybil’s tough demeanor hides a vulnerability, devastating loss, and complicated family history many of us can relate to.
Theo of Golden-When a kind but mysterious 86-year-old man named Theo appears in the fictional Georgia town of Golden, the townspeople aren’t quite sure what to make of him. But when he begins purchasing the hand-drawn portraits of local residents from a coffee shop and gifting them to their owners, he bridges connections between himself and people he never would have expected.
The Uncool-This memoir by screenwriter and rock journalist Cameron Crowe reads like a who’s who of music history. As Almost Famous is one of my favorite movies, I was inspired by the real story of how the writer first broke into Rolling Stone magazine before he could even drive. Expect to learn about interviews with legends such as David Bowie, Fleetwood Mac, Jim Groce, Greg Allman, and more.
And now I’m a few chapters into Whistler by Ann Patchett. I’m embarrassed to say I’ve never read any of this author’s books before, but we can’t keep this one in stock at the store and I’ve heard nothing but good things about it. When I first read the premise, a 53-year-old woman encounters the man who was her stepfather for two years during her childhood in a museum, I wasn’t sure it would interest me. Was I wrong. As a middle-aged woman who had a complicated relationship with both my biological father and stepfather, I feel like Ann and I could be kindred spirits.
I have a few younger co-workers at the bookstore that have looked at me sideways and wondered why these books have been some of my recent favorites. They learn more towards romance, nonfiction, fantasy, and romantasy. But the employees that are closer to my age align with my reading taste. While in my 30s I read a lot of young adult because I was trying to learn how to write in that genre, I find myself exploring more books about family relationships, aging parents, and parenting young adults. I think that probably happens with us all, but these books are also helping me think about new topics I want to explore in my own writing.
On my TBR pile now is a new book by Anna Johnston, who also penned one of my favorite books set in a nursing home, The Borrowed Life of Frederick Fife. I can’t wait!
Have you found that your reading tastes have changed as you get older? I’d love to know what you’re reading now.
Renee Roberson is an award-winning writer who also hosts the true crime podcast, Missing in the Carolinas. In her spare time, she works at an independent bookstore in North Carolina.
Interview With Ari Honarvar, Winter 2026 Flash Fiction Contest 1st Place Winner
WOW: Congratulations on winning first place in our Winter 2026 Flash Fiction competition! What inspired you to write your story, “The Pomegranate Tree?”
I also wanted to address something that rarely makes the news: the environmental cost of war. The pomegranate tree became the heart of that. And underneath it all, the piece is asking the question that haunts anyone who has ever been attacked: Why do they hate us?
For the contest, I revised the piece to include modern warfare and the killing of schoolchildren. I had been following US/Israel drone attacks for years, and in February, I had a feeling the US was going to attack Iran again. Three days after I submitted the story, the US attacked the school in Minab and killed over 100 elementary school kids. I got chills when it happened in real life. And of course, I was devastated.















