
The power of putting it away
There is something incredibly powerful about a pair of fresh eyes on a manuscript. I often write messy first drafts, usually favouring the camaraderie of

There is something incredibly powerful about a pair of fresh eyes on a manuscript. I often write messy first drafts, usually favouring the camaraderie of

Writing can be a lonely old pastime, spending hours and hours with your characters, who are great (of course they are, you created them!), but

Screenwriter William Goldman says, ‘You always attack a movie scene as late as you possibly can. You always come into the scene at the last

If you’re anything like me, you will have the beginning of hundreds of stories planned, written and scrapped. This is a habit I started in

If you’re anything like me, I thoroughly enjoyed the run up to Christmas, Christmas day itself and the cheese induced haze that followed. But very

What happens after you’ve completed your first draft? You’ve written every day (or nearly every day) for a month and after all the plot wrangling,

Write the big stuff small and the small stuff big In romance writing, as in life, it’s the small things that count: the brush of

Two things prompted me to write this post. First, my realisation that by focusing on querying and editing, I’d not written anything for a very

Editing can be a huge investment – in both time and money – especially for the new author who is yet to make anything from

I recently discovered the term ‘As you know Bob.’ I loved it instantly because the terminology made me giggle, and the meaning levelled up my

So, you’ve just finished your manuscript. It’s been to a couple of friends or beta readers and you’ve completed at least one self edit. Soon,