When Your Setting Takes on Character

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Characters, Description, Friends of ACFW, Setting, writing 2 Comments

By Norma Gail Setting that takes on character brings our stories to life in the minds of our readers. When the author knows the setting well, small details can enhance what our characters experience. In a recent review by Connie Porter Saunders, she wrote, “You know an author is talented when they can convince readers that a country is one …

Making It Real

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Friends of ACFW, Plots, tips, writing 4 Comments

by Kathy Harris In a plot twist few had fathomed––although Dean Koontz predicted something eerily similar in his 1981 novel The Eyes of Darkness—a tiny organism too small to see without a microscope has turned our lives, and our livelihoods, upside down, setting off a giant conflict in the story we call day-to-day life. Although this real life “inciting incident” …

How Can YOU Reach a Broader Audience?

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Encouragement, Faith, Fear/Doubt, Friends of ACFW, Plots, tips, writing 2 Comments

By Mesu Andrews When I was choosing dates to write for the ACFW blog, I noticed that today, May 21st, is Ascension Day. Now, I’m a theological mutt. Mom’s charismatic. Dad was Quaker. My grandparents were Pilgrim Holiness ordained ministers—both grandpa AND grandma even way back when. Since my spiritual heritage is Evangelical, I don’t know much about Ascension Day. …

Always Too Many Words

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Editing, Encouragement, Friends of ACFW, revisions, tips, writing 2 Comments

by Ann H. Gabhart Have you ever been asked to condense a novel you have written down into one sentence? Perhaps fifteen to twenty words? You are talking about a story that perhaps took you one hundred thousand plus words to tell and now somebody wants you to give them a one sentence description?? Impossible, you say. I am there …

Chapter Endings: Keep your Readers on her Toes, not her Heels

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Friends of ACFW, Plots, tips, writing 3 Comments

By Suzanne Woods Fisher A while ago, I read an interview in my local newspaper featuring a woman who had just turned one hundred years old. The reporter wanted to know this centenarian’s inner motivation. What had given her that “oomph factor” to live so long? “I want to know,” she said, “what happens next.” That comment hit me like …

Six Ways to Write While the World is Stressing You Out

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Encouragement, Friends of ACFW, tips, writing 6 Comments

By Allie Pleiter As the author of How to WRITE When Everything Goes WRONG—A Practical Guide to Writing Through Tough Times, I’ve been getting a lot of cries for help from writers these days. The crisis we find ourselves in right now can squelch any writer’s creative energy. New words can feel impossible, the focus to revise eludes us, and …

Cooking Up a Story

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Encouragement, Fear/Doubt, Friends of ACFW, Learning, tips, writing 3 Comments

By Tanara McCauley “Are these…scones?” My teen’s guess was generous, considering the cookies looked more like jagged blue biscuits coated in a suspicious glaze. She held one in her hand, eyes skeptical. I frowned at the cookie-biscuit-scone between her fingers and shook my head. It was a lemon blueberry cookie, or it was supposed to be. Only I’d had to …

Boredom as Writing Inspiration

ACFWAdvice, Authors and writing, Characters, Conflict/Tension, Friends of ACFW, Learning, tips, writing 4 Comments

By JPC Allen Little did I realize when I wrote this post in March how many of us would be battling boredom in the near future. Every month on my blog, I choose some aspect about the month—a holiday or the weather—and brainstorm ideas about how to use the month as writing inspiration. March is my least favorite month. I’m …