The Winner of the Final Show Off Writing Contest

Today we’re finally announcing the winner of the Let’s Write a Short Story contest. We had seventy-five entries to this contest, which is a new high, and the judges and I had a lot of fun reading through all your wonderful stories.

However, if you want to select a winner, you end up creating a lot of not-winners. I understand what it’s like to be a not-winner (which is different from being a loser, I think). Just yesterday I got another rejection from a literary magazine. I’ve been sticking them to my fridge, which is slowly getting covered by them. But this is what you have to do to succeed.

Instead of measuring how many times you’re published, measure rejections. Instead of trying to get everyone to like your stories, get as much feedback about how to improve your stories as you can. Don’t justify how good you are. Try to get better. If you do this for long enough, you will succeed.

How to Let Your Characters Drive Your Story

I love the way Anne Lamott described writing. She said,

“Writing is like driving at night with headlights: you can only see a little bit.”

Should you outline your novel and make sure you know everything that happens before you write, or do you take Anne Lamott’s advice and drive in the dark?

Could it be possible to do both?

How to Avoid Distractions and Create a Career in Fiction: Interview with Holly Lisle

As a writer, you’d probably like to be more focused, to avoid the distractions of Facebook, email, and, potentially, children more effectively. You might also like to spend more time working on building a large platform, without stealing any time away from your creative writing, of course. And you’d definitely like to get published.

Today, I’m talking to author Holly Lisle about how to avoid distraction, build and manage platforms,  and handle the boons and banes of publishing. Holly Lisle is the author of more than thirty novels as well as several books about writing. You can find links to her fiction and writing instruction at hollylisle.com and follow her on Twitter (@hollylisle).

Thanks for joining us, Holly!

Why You Should Edit Your First Draft for Captain Obvious

So, you’ve completed a first draft. Huzzah, and kudos to you! Take a bow, pat yourself on the back, do something else that indicates you’re proud of yourself.

OK, the moonwalk was a bit much. Nice moves, though.

But now, it’s revision time. Maybe you were on a hot streak at the Writing Time Casino and you’ve produced a first draft that’s almost perfect. Enjoy that moment of triumph.