Help! I’m Lost and Can’t Find My Way

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Brainstorming, Friends of ACFW, writing Leave a Comment

By Ane Mulligan I’d hit the 43,000-word mark in the fourth book in my Chapel Springs series. I knew the characters like I know myself. Better even, since I don’t pretend they don’t have faults. But the story stalled on me. It lacked the usual “feel” of its sister books. It was missing the heart. I had to force myself …

Dress for Success and Corrie Ten Boom

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Friends of ACFW, Speaking, tips Leave a Comment

By Carol Hamilton Today’s authors should be speakers, also. To become more comfortable before an audience and to allow your audience to be more at ease with you, learn to dress for success. When you stand on a stage, the crowd sees more of your feet than they may want. Women, be sure heels aren’t too spiked. They could get …

Story Structure

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Friends of ACFW, Plots, Story Structure, writing Leave a Comment

By Katherine Reay As I begin a new story, my mind turns to structure. No matter how much I say I’m an “organic” writer, I need solid hooks on which to hang my musings. I can get lost easily if the basics of the road aren’t cleared in front of me. Whether you think the “rules” of structure are important …

The Capacity to Obey

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Encouragement, Friends of ACFW, writing Leave a Comment

By Davalynn Spencer “What if I run out of things to say?” For some authors, this can be a serious concern. Other writers dip from an ever-flowing font and never worry about where the next words are coming from. I began my writer’s journey as a journalist and crime-beat reporter. Talk about unending fodder. But deep down in the creative …

When Things Aren’t as they Seem

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Friends of ACFW, Speaking, tips Leave a Comment

By Deborah Raney A few years ago, I was speaking at a MOPS group (Mothers of Preschoolers) in a small Midwestern town. As I learned to do from the wonderful speaker and writer Liz Curtis Higgs, I had picked out my “balcony people” in each quadrant of the room–those women who were nodding and smiling and giving positive feedback with …

Writing Through Grief

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Encouragement, Friends of ACFW Leave a Comment

By Linda Robinson It’s hard to write anything when you’re grieving. I know that all too well. We recently lost our grandson, who was twenty-nine years old, had fought lymphatic cancer as a four-through-six-year-old, underwent two separate rounds of chemo, radiation, and a bone marrow transplant. Praise the Lord, he survived and was still cancer free at his death. But …