Be Brave. Go Write.

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

by Crystal Laine Miller What do you do with your time? “I work, eat, sleep, clean, drive, talk, cook, shop, groom, feed the dog/cat/horse/kids/spouse, eat (oh, wait, I said that,)” ….what else? I read. I write. Sounds simple, hey? Yeah, simple as opening a vein. We know that cliché. I’ve heard my fellow writers complain how real world people don’t …

The Naming Game

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

by Sarah Sundin Most authors love the process of finding the perfect character name, but it can also cause headaches. When writing my newest World War II novel, With Every Letter (Revell, September 2012), I took many things into consideration when naming my characters. Does it fit the character? Sometimes the character’s name comes immediately, but other times I search …

Graduation Day

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

by Lillian Duncan Randy Ingermanson likens fiction writing to high school. He talks about freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior writers and then there’s graduation day–becoming a published author! How does a writer reach graduation day? There are, of course, different routes to get there-more so now than ever before. This is not discussion on traditional vs. indie publishing. I believe …

Focus Your Premise

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

What’s at stake? What’s the story question? by Rachel Hauck Premise Every story needs a basic start: a premise. It’s the foundation for your idea. The premise defines what’s at stake? What the story is about? “What will the protagonist overcome to achieve her goal?” A great premise is the “hook” that grabs the attention of an editor, agent or …

Life with Lily

ACFWAuthors and writing, Friends of ACFW, tips, writing Leave a Comment

By Suzanne Woods Fisher “Your big opportunity may be right where you are now.” Amish proverb I’ve often heard that there is no better childhood than an Amish one. Mary Ann Kinsinger had such a childhood. She was raised in a happy Old Order Amish home in western Pennsylvania. A born storyteller, Mary Ann started a blog, A Joyful Chaos, …

More of Allen Arnold, Part 2

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Conference, Editors, tips, writing Leave a Comment

If you enjoyed learning about former Thomas Nelson fiction editor Allen Arnold in the October issue of ACFW Journal, here is the second of two blogs that contain more information from that interview. In this segment, reporter Christa Allan and Allen Arnold look at another side of Arnold. CHRISTA: What/who entertains Allen Arnold outside of the office? ALLEN: I am …

Four Spies that Every Writer Needs and Why

ACFWAuthors and writing, Friends of ACFW, tips, writing Leave a Comment

by Sandra Orchard “Spies?” you say. “But I don’t write suspense.” I’m talking about spies that will give you the inside scoop on the things you don’t know, and on the things that you don’t know that you don’t know. Why? So you can write believable fiction, and give readers unexpected insider details. SciFi and Spec writers don’t stop reading. …