Fuel Your Writing Journey with Freewriting: Embrace the Messy First Draft
Adapted from Freewrite’s article: The Science Behind Freewriting. Read all the way to the end for a special offer for Scribbler fans! As writers, we often face the significant challenge of battling perfectionism and staying productive. Scribbler and Freewrite believe in the power of the messy first draft to unleash creativity, and here's why: 1. Ditching Perfectionism Perfectionism can stifle your creative process. The truth is that allowing yourself to write...
Research for Writing and Life
As a freelance editor and a mother of four kids, I have learned that basic research skills are a must, both in writing and in life. Children, like writers and editors, are curious creatures. We all wonder about things that have little to do with our everyday lives. So we do research. Sometimes we fall down the rabbit hole and don’t come out for hours. As writers, use this curiosity...
Three Ways To Motivate Yourself Out Of A Writing Slump
We’ve all been there. The days, weeks, and months crawl (or fly!) by but you’re unable to put pen to paper—or fingers to keys. Your book(s) languish away, calling softly for you to return. Even if you want to, you just don’t have the energy. I get it. And you’re no less of a writer for feeling that way. Recently, I pulled myself out of a pretty deep writing slump....
Important Things For Writers To Find (And Why Finding Them Can Be Harder Than It Sounds!)
If you’re anything like me, and I know a lot of writers are, it can be a challenge to find engaging writing communities. I think the biggest reason for this is because many of us are introverts. We may be introverts who enjoy spending time with people or introverts who prefer to spend every possible moment alone; but if you’re an introvert, too, I bet one thing we have in...
Improve Your Dialogue Using the Four S's
We know dialogue makes for good storytelling, and we know that getting two people talking can make a scene interesting. But, of course, dialogue isn’t interesting just because it exists. The possible things your characters could say at any moment need to be curated and carefully shaped by you. That shaping means you are going to want every bit of dialogue to be directed toward your story purposes. Therefore, if...
How I Access My Emotions When I Write (And You Can, Too!)
Why do you like the writing you like? I think many writers’ work becomes popular because their writing touches readers on an emotional level. Whether writing makes you laugh or cry, whether you give the novel a place of honor on your bookshelf or throw it against the wall, it makes you feel something. One of my favorite writers, Lin-Manuel Miranda, has been asked in several interviews how he writes such deeply...
You Need Story Structure: A Cautionary Tale
When I was 19, I started writing my first novel. I’d written fan fiction as a young teen, but my original works were rarely longer than a few pages. I was an avid reader, though, and I’d been told I was a prodigious writer. I thought that was all I needed to write. This was the first year I studied writing formally. I’d decided in high school that I wouldn’t...
43 Ways to Ruin a Mystery Novel: Part 4‚ Nonsense
In our final installment of how to ruin your mystery, we have bundled our greatest collection of examples from actual books we have tried to read. They showcase the utter nonsense, the ridiculous, the inane, and downright contrived ploys that authors have used to propel their story, only to have merely lost us along the way. A seemingly all-American, wholesome girl is murdered. But it turns out she led a...