Setting effective writing goals can help you focus your efforts and achieve publishing success more quickly. Make sure your writing goals are specific, relevant, measurable, achievable, and time-bound, and make sure you are gentle with yourself as an author.
Pat Conroy, a tribute
Pat Conroy’s writing style is/was descriptive, evocative, and lyrical, and it allows you to vividly imagine the landscapes, characters, and emotions he is depicting. He had a talent for capturing the beauty and complexity of the southern United States, and his descriptions of its people, culture, and history were both nuanced and powerful. His gorgeous descriptions of Charleston and Beaufort inspired me to make those stops on my first ever solo trip, and I'll forever be drunk on the memories of walking along the marshes on hot summer nights, the Spanish moss draping over the tree branches, just as he described.
Learning to deal with criticism
Handling criticism can be challenging for many people, especially authors. It can be heartbreaking to pour blood, sweat, and tears into your book and have someone tell you it needs work. Unfortunately, though, this is all part of the process.
Criticism never gets easy, but if you can figure out how to handle it better, you can learn a lot from the process. Read on for some of the best ways to deal with criticism.
Can writing make you healthier? (Yes!)
Whether you're writing a book, a journal, a blog, or simply a list on a notepad, taking the time to write can be a powerful way to promote self-reflection, mindfulness, and personal growth. Writing reduces stress, boosts your mood, improves mental clarity, strengthens your relationships, and enhances creativity.
Reading Recommendation: Mrs. Mike
Today's book review: Mrs. Mike, by Benedict and Nancy Freedman
This book taught me everything about making someone's (true) story accessible to readers. Katherine and Mike were sympathetic, enjoyable characters, for sure, but they were terrific guides into the world of wild Canada, somewhere I had certainly never been. The minor characters are even more enjoyable. Reading this book teaches you about so much, but it is written in such a beautiful way that you feel like it was a story made up just for you.
How's your day going, writer?
You just never know where your “big break” will come from as an author. Maybe it will be a book review, maybe it will be a chance encounter with a literary agent, maybe it will be a phone call made on your behalf. Who knows? The secret is to not depend on that big break, but rather to focus on doing the legwork to get yourself there.
What's the Secret to Growing a Business? Write a Book!
As a business owner you should be consistently evolving, staying relevant and finding new ways to grow your business, image and brand. There are plenty of “quick fixes” that can be accomplished, giving your profits a temporary boost, but don’t you want to do something that will have a lasting impact on you and your business? It’s time to write a book.
Reading Recommendation: The Bookish Life of Nina Hill by Abby Waxman
Reading Recommendation: The Maid by Nita Prose
A reading recommendation for authors and readers alike - The Maid is a mystery (the eponymous maid discovers a body at a swish hotel and soon finds herself in the frame for it), but the puzzle feels like the least important part of the story. Molly is such a compelling character, and the writing is just so good, that the whodunnit almost feels like an afterthought. I even found myself bawling multiple times while reading.
I'm going to be honest with you
When we are setting goals, we need to be realistic. That doesn't mean we can't "dream big" - that just means we need to be aware of our limits and figure out the steps we CAN take it order to make these dreams come true.
You want to write a book, but you probably can't write for eight hours a day - so maybe you set the goal for 20 minutes a day instead.
And if you miss a day once in a while, is it the end of the world? No.
The important thing to remember is that you need to stay focused, and stay accountable, but also be kind to yourself. The more we beat ourselves up, the less likely we are to keep moving forward with our goals, and the more likely we are to just give up and deem ourselves failures.