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Transitions

Transitions are the words and phrases that make for a logical connection between sentences, paragraphs, and chapters in your book. Good...

Scene Development

Scenes carry the novel. Whether you write romance or mysteries, fantasies or literary fiction, the key to keeping readers’ attention is...

Dialogue

When done well, dialogue advances the story and fleshes out the characters while providing a break from exposition. But writing...

Body Language

Research shows that people convey thoughts, emotions, and feelings in three different ways: 7 percent verbal—what is said 38 percent...

Setting, Tone, and Mood

Establishing the setting, tone, and mood for your book is an essential element—without these things, the story will feel incomplete to...

Descriptive Writing

Descriptive writing is the craft of portraying people, places, events, situations, thoughts, and feelings in such a manner that readers...

Moving the Story Forward

Moving the story forward is arguably the most important and most difficult aspect of good novel-writing. If someone says, “I couldn’t put...

Conflict, Crisis, Drama, and Tension

Without conflict, crisis, drama, and tension, a story would be nothing but a string of boring facts—if every scene was peaceful,...

Show, Don't Tell

“Show, don’t tell” is often referred to as the golden rule of writing fiction and is arguably one of the most important rules for all new...

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