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Prepare for the Unexpected in Historical Fiction

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In an article for Writer's Digest, Janie Chang asked six writers of historical fiction for their tips on research and storytelling. Some of their...

We Welcome Our Octopi Overlords

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A peer-reviewed research paper published in the journal Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology, suggests that Earth's original octopi came from outer space. Researchers posit that...

A Visit to a Dissection Room: 1887

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The Victorian Book of the Dead blog shares a transcript of an article that appeared in The Cincinnati Enquirer on February 13, 1887. In...

Six Tips for Writing Suspense

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In an essay for CrimeReads, Sara Gran offers six tips for creating gripping suspense. "If you learn how to build a page-turning quality into...

Write What You Don’t Know for Fun and Profit

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In this share, we tackle another of writing's shibboleths: write what you know. Simple advice, easy to understand, but also incredibly vague and unhelpful. In...

Advice for Writing Tasty Prose

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In a new post on Writers in the Storm, Ellen Buikema offers more advice on using sensory language in your writing, this time focusing on...

How Nice is Too Nice?

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Despite what TV would have you believe, you can never be too nice. Creative works are full of "nice" characters who overcome the heartache...

All About the Hand of Glory

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Of course, horror and fantasy writers who read this blog will know about the Hand of Glory, but we wanted to share this article...

Not for the Faint-Hearted: Poor Man’s Medicine from 18th Century Scotland

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Old Weird Scotland shares excerpts from Tippermalloch’s Receipts, or The Poor Man’s Physician, a popular self-help book in early 1700s Scotland. They include cures...

How to Translate the Lessons of Theater to Prose

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We're big fans of diversity in reading, not only across genres but across forms. Prose fiction writers can learn a lot from non-fiction, poetry,...

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