Common Word-Choice Errors

Saturday, April 30, 2022
  By Bobbie Christmas  Q: What are the most common errors you find in manuscripts you edit? A: I find and correct errors in word choice, punctuation, spelling, grammar, and more, so the answer is far too long to address in full here. My Purge Your Prose of Problems reference book (available only through my website, ZebraEditor.com) cites more than seven hundred errors I’ve spotted...
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Look for the Positive News Where You Can Find It

Wednesday, April 27, 2022
 In a time where things feel as bleak as ever, it's important to find the good news where you can find it. Being grateful for what I have and for the positives in my life is an important part of my day-to-day way of being. I can't say I'm always really good at it, but I do try. Recently I had a strange new positive way of looking at a situation that would have deeply bothered me before.It started...
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Interview with Michelle Jayne: Fall 2021 Flash Fiction Contest Runner Up

Tuesday, April 26, 2022
Michelle’s Bio: Michelle Jayne is a post-middle-aged, middle class, middle manager of average height and IQ. She is a US Army veteran and introverted community activist. She has a useless degree in Soviet and East European Studies and only the M of her M.A. in Russian Linguistics, because she kept falling asleep during class and decided taking expensive naps was a bad idea. She lives in a suburb...
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The Landline Life and Uses of Phones in Literature

Monday, April 25, 2022
Photo by Pexels  April 25 is National Telephone Day. As a child of the late 1980s and early 1990s, oh how I loved the telephone. I was talking to someone the other day about how many phone numbers I had memorized when I was a teenager, and now I can barely remember my own kids’ phone numbers because they are automatically programmed into my phone. I'm an only child, and once my parents...
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INTERVIEW WITH Bethany Jarmul, FIRST PLACE WINNER OF Q2 2022 creative Nonfiction Essay CONTEST

Sunday, April 24, 2022
Bethany Jarmul is a writer, editor, and work-from-home mom. She has worked as a magazine writer, a copywriter, and in various management roles. But leaving her full-time job in 2019 allowed Bethany to focus her time on her greatest passions—raising her kids and writing compelling, creative essays, stories, and poems. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Literary Mama, Scribes*MICRO*Fiction,...
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Book Clubs

Saturday, April 23, 2022
 I recently was the featured author at a book club meeting. This was the third book club (that I know of) that read Greenwood Gone: Henry's Story, my novel. The other two were quite different. One was a church group, and my publisher, Margo Dill was a member; all the readers were white. The other was an all-Black group, and one of my friends, Astra, belonged to it.The group that just met this...
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Friday Speak Out!: The Book Marketing Pitch

Friday, April 22, 2022
by Claudine WolkYOU are the secret to a successful PitchThink of a pitch. Visualize it. A pitcher stands on a baseball mound and throws a ball to a batter. Instead of real time, let’s slow things down a bit and imagine the pitch resuming in slow motion. The pitcher releases the pitch and it slowly reaches the batter. The batter takes a swing and his bat either hits it or misses it. One of the...
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I Get By with a Little Help from the Pros

Thursday, April 21, 2022
On New Year’s Eve of 2020, I bought a new car. This was a momentous event because I’d been driving the same car for over 15 years. I LOVED my red CRV and it was in great shape but yeah, it was a bit basic; instead of all the bells and whistles, it had a bell and a wheeze or two.So the new car, an HRV (a wee bit smaller than a CRV), arrived in my driveway and I literally had to have a lesson in how...
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Productive Procrastination

Wednesday, April 20, 2022
  This post made me think about how I work.Monday, I needed to dive into my rewrite. After all, I have a teen nonfiction book due Friday. It is 8 chapters, 15,000 words, and too long already. I need to focus the text, work in some more examples and descriptions, and cut the excess. One chapter is 700 words too long. Others include notes to myself like “Transition!” or “Brilliant conclusion...
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Interview with Lori Lyn Greenstone, Runner Up in the WOW! Fall 2021 Flash Fiction Contest

Tuesday, April 19, 2022
  Lori Lyn Greenstone/Ekphrastic Mama is a writer who prefers purple gel pens and builds life-size giraffes from driftwood, then blogs about how art teaches us to trust our creative process. You can see this and more of her writing and art history at Ekphrastic Mama. Her art is on the cover of the anthology, Mothers Creating Writing Lives: Motherhood Memoir along with her chapter, “Ekphrastic...
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She Rested

Sunday, April 17, 2022
  Where's Crystal? Just like her beautiful daughterin this picture...she's in bed. SHE RESTEDMost of you reading this are a lot like me - we are busy women who wear many hats. Some of us our writers, some readers, some mothers, daughters, friends, business people, employees, cooks, managers of households, etc...If we are honest with ourselves, we are all tired. Tired of being busy....
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Questions on Chapter Length, Page Counts, and Rhetorical Questions

Saturday, April 16, 2022
 By Bobbie Christmas  Q: For a two-hundred-page novel, how short is too short for the chapter length? A: The length of a chapter has only to do with the scene or scenes that need to be covered in a novel or the subjects to be covered in a nonfiction book. No rules apply to chapter length. I’ve seen a one-word chapter, albeit a contraction, in Angela’s Ashes. If I remember correctly...
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How to Write a Travel Story: By Staying Home

Friday, April 15, 2022
By Barbara Noe Kennedy You don’t need to jet-set around the world to come up with a good travel story—as nice as that may be. Remember that old adage about writing what you know? Maybe you live in an under-the-radar small town, a hidden gem of Khmer culture, a wilderness/camping/trail haven, or home to the best small museum/cooking school/monument you’ve never heard of. The possibilities are...
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Thriller Writing Tips Gleaned from a Netflix Parody

Thursday, April 14, 2022
I enjoy writing thriller/suspense and true crime, so it stands to reason those are the programs I’m drawn to when I’m in the mood for a good binge. Netflix presented me with a show suggestion called “The Woman in the House Across the Street from the Girl in the Window,” and once I saw Kristen Bell was the star, I decided to check it out. Here’s the synopsis: When a handsome neighbor moves in across the street, Anna, a heartbroken woman for whom every day is the same, starts to...
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10 Interesting Words from Other Languages

Wednesday, April 13, 2022
I love coming across beautiful words from other languages, especially ones that have no English equivalent. Some are deeply meaningful, some are interesting for writers, and some describe the funny parts of life. Here are ten from my ongoing list:Petrichor: the wonderful smell in the air after it’s been rainingKomorebi: sunlight filtering through treesWaldeinsamkeit: The feeling of solitude and connectedness...
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INTERVIEW WITH Kathleen Dunn, FALL 2021 FLASH FICTION CONTEST runner up

Tuesday, April 12, 2022
Kathleen Dunn is a native of Portland, Oregon, and now currently lives in Knutsford, England. She finished her first novel during lockdown, and hopes to write many more without succumbing completely to madness. When she isn’t writing, she loves hiking, dancing around to The Strokes, and reading spooky stories.interview by Marcia Peterson WOW: Congratulations on your top ten win in our Fall 2021 Flash...
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Perspective on Writing is a Fickle Thing

Monday, April 11, 2022
Ask me today how I feel about a certain story of mine and I'll answer differently if you ask me next month. I've been working on revising a short story of mine and it's been a challenge. Yesterday was the first time I looked at it in a month, and I thought it needed quite a lot of shaping up. The plotline was solid but there were other factors that made me feel a bit "blech" about it. It made me...
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Interview with Julie Lockhart Runner Up in the 2022 Q1 Creative Non-Fiction Essay Contest with "Nature's Sanity"

Sunday, April 10, 2022

 Congratulations to Julie Lockhart and Nature's Sanity and all the winners of our 2022 Quarter 1 Creative Non-Fiction Essay Contest!




Julie's Bio:
Julie Lockhart loves an adventure, especially in wild places. She spent most of her career in academics, where she published extensively in peer-reviewed journals, such as Critical Issues in Environmental Taxation; Social Accounting, Mega Accounting and Beyond; and Advances in Accounting Education. During the final six years of her professional career, she led a grief support nonprofit, where she discovered the beauty and depth of personal stories, sharing her own experience as well as that of others to help grieving people feel less alone. From that she has embraced a memoir style in writing about her adventures, sharing vivid details and insights that come from her life experiences. Julie has published two personal essays in Southern Oregon newspapers. She was raised in the Chicago area, and has spent her adult years in the Pacific Northwest. Julie recently moved to Port Townsend, WA.

If you haven't done so already, check out Julie's talent in writing with the touching story Nature's Sanity and then return here for a chat with this talented author. 

WOW: Thank you Julie for sharing your essay - it's so inspiring to hear from our contestants - I always learn something! I'm sure you've got some great tips and tricks to share, so let's get to it!
 Thank you for writing this essay - what is the take-away you'd like readers to gain from "Nature's Sanity" ?

Julie:  Thank you for interviewing me! I wrote this essay based on a prompt from Chelsey Clammer’s online class, Crazy Good Writing. As I worked to put words to my physical and emotional experience, I felt transported back to the peaceful refuge that nature provided for me. My hope is that others who read it will also feel the peacefulness, a balm in these difficult times. Perhaps the scenes will spark ideas for the reader on how to raise their spirits when life drags them down. I also hope the reader appreciates the value of cherishing wild places for the health of our humanity.

WOW: That's such an amazing gift to give strangers - especially in today's busy world. Thank you!

 What’s next for you? What are your writing goals for 2022 and beyond? 

Julie: This year, I hope to motivate myself to finish the first draft of my memoir and start to edit in earnest. I am much better at finishing shorter projects—like 1,000 word essays—where there’s more immediate gratification. As I gain confidence in my writing craft, I plan to continue to write shorter essays about the challenges I’ve worked through in my life—perhaps to inspire others. My husband and I will also be doing a lot of camping this year, and I will bring my notebook for some timed writings as we travel from stunning place to stunning place in the Western states, capturing the sights, sounds, feelings in real time.

WOW: That sounds dreamy (the camping part especially) and we wish you all the luck with your amazing goals!

I think you had mentioned you have a great support group - so we have to know; what role has writer's groups played in your life?

Julie: I am part of a weekly writing group with four wonderfully supportive women. All of us write in a memoir style, and three of us, including me, are working on memoirs. We do timed writing, of twenty or so minutes, which carries me into a zone of deeper perspectives on my life. We put pen to paper and keep writing without regard for spelling, punctuation, grammar. Then we share what we wrote. Afterward, I go to the computer and type it in, without much editing. Later I can go back for more editing. It may seem strange, but I’ve written most of what’s in my memoir by hand like this. In the group, each of us has brought finished pieces for feedback, too. We learn from each other, while retaining our own style and voice. The four of us have formed a close bond from the sharing that comes in writing and reading about our personal challenges and breakthroughs. I am where I am in this journey as a writer because of them!

WOW: It's so empowering when authors help one another - I'm so thankful you have such a fabulous support system!

Do you often enter writing contests - tell us what prompted you to submit to this particular contest? What would you like to tell other authors concerning contests and submitting their work? 

Julie: I have submitted to several WOW contests, as well as to other magazines. I thrive on getting writing out there, even though I’m collecting lots of rejection letters. When I was in academics, I had to come to terms with crushing rejection, and I realized it’s not personal. Thus, I learned in my 30’s that I have to take risks and get my work in front of critical eyes and bounce back after rejection. Essay writing often broaches the tender places of the heart, so it takes some bravery to polish a piece and send it out. Yet I made the decision to jump in and accept what comes. Plus, I love a deadline to keep me moving forward. Word limits force me to become more efficient in how I share the details of my story. I spend a lot of time with the thesaurus to find just the right juicy word to express the essence and feel of my experience without having to over-explain. What I love best in submitting to WOW is getting the critique. The editors are so positive and give excellent feedback that helps me improve what I’m working on. Even with “Nature’s Sanity,” there’s more work to be done based on the critique!

WOW: We sure love hearing that! Thank you - we are happy to be part of your story!

As our time comes to a close, I have to ask... How did you end up in Port Townsend, WA? Is there a good story we should know? 

Julie: There’s always a good story! About 15 years ago, while living in Bellingham, WA, I travelled to Port Townsend for a personal retreat. Wandering into the spiritual bookstore on Water Street, I spotted a sign: Psychic Reading Today! I made a spontaneous what-the-heck decision and signed up. The psychic began by telling me all sorts of things she couldn’t have otherwise known about my family, my work, and my relationship. Then she said, “You’re a good writer. You write things that aren’t fulfilling to you. Soon you will be writing things of meaning.” I took notice, and when I got back home, signed up for a creative nonfiction course. Fast forward to 2021, when my husband and I decided to move out of fire-prone Southern Oregon, Port Townsend was high on our list. I loved the idea of getting back to the dramatic scenery of Northwest Washington. He and I visited here last June and found a beautiful house right away—in a very tight market. It seemed meant to be. Being here now is like full circle—to have placed in the Q1 contest while living in Port Townsend where I first answered the call to write things of meaning!

WOW: This has been so inspiring - thank you ever so much Julie for sharing your essay, and your time with us today! We look forward to more from you in 2022 and beyond! 

I also need to say - I knew there would be a good story in your move - thanks for sharing!! 

  Interviewed by Crystal Otto who just keeps on keeping on!

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