Tag: book
Your English Professor…didn’t help you.
“Yeah, I know what your English Professor tried to tell you. But if your English Professor could make a living writing fiction, they would have been doing it.”
― Dean Wesley Smith
Writer’s Payment
“Every rejection is incremental payment on your dues that in some way will be translated back into your work.”
– James Lee Burke
Pre-Order Emjay Luby’s book!
J.D. Scott’s Book Available for Pre-Order!
Like Your Biographies, Hate Your Fiction…?
“I believe that people should write biographies only about people they love, or understand, or both. Novels, on the other hand, are often better if they’re about people the writer doesn’t like very much.”
― Penelope Fitzgerald
The 2013 Harvest Book Reading
Mark your calendars!
Are you in the Phoenix area? Do you want a great chance to meet other authors, browse through books, and maybe find some great reads?Come to The 2013 Harvest Book Reading!
It’s free. Parking’s free. Authors and their books. Fun. The first 50 people to arrive get a $15 voucher good for one free book!WHEN: Nov. 9th from 10am to 2pm
WHERE: South Mountain Community Library [Phoenix, AZ]
When you get there, tell them you heard about them from Editing Addict! And let us know if you are going, we just might meet you there!
The Need to Kill…Your Characters
“There is a point where, as a writer, you grow to hate your characters, their stupid motivations, and their whiny inner dialogues. The only solution I have found to deal with that is to kill the character, resurrect him, then kill him again.”
― Caris O’Malley
No Foolish, Unless a Fool
“There are no foolish questions and no man becomes a fool until he has stopped asking questions.”
― Charles P. Steinmetz
Seven Tips on How to Write a Devotion
[found on faithfulbloggers.com]
“Writing a devotion can offer hope to your readers and inspire them in a way that lectures or plain articles, may not. A devotional is a very well thought out piece about one very minute topic usually focusing on a particular spiritual lesson. Writing devotionals does not have to be difficult, there are many steps you can take to calm yourself down, get centered and write what God wants you to write.
Yes! There is something already inside you that God wants you to say. You just have to open your heart to the Holy Spirit, and listen.
- Be prayerful — Before you put pen to paper, or rather, start typing, pray. Ask God to tell you what He would have you to write about. What message does He want you to impart? Be mindful of what comes to mind as you are praying. Does a particular person come to mind with a specific issue? Does a specific verse pop into your head? Listen. He will tell you what to write.
- Pick one topic — After intensely praying about what to write, pick one topic that comes to mind and be very focused on that one topic. It is easy to get carried away writing with all the ideas that will come to you!
- Keep it short — Your devotional should be no more than one page, or 500 words. But it is even better if it’s less than 500 words, shoot for 250 words to keep yourself focused on one small laser targeted topic. This will also help to keep your reader interested and with you.
- Know your audience — When you have your topic, write it to a specific audience, this is known as your “target market” in business, but here, this is your audience. Ask yourself the question: Who is going to read this devotional? If it helps, write your devotional as if you’re writing it to a dear friend.
- Check your facts — Make sure, if you are quoting biblical scripture that you not only check the scriptures to make sure you are not taking something out of context, and that you are quoting it correctly, but make sure you are using a relevant verse to support your devotional.
- Inspire action — Ask the readers to do something at the end of your message in your closing paragraph. That action will depend on what your message was about. You can end with a very short prayer if you wish, but keep it related to the message.
- Be yourself — Remember to be yourself. You’re not perfect — no human is — and that is perfectly okay. Grammar isn’t as important as your message. Do check your spelling with the spell checker, and have someone else read it if you wish, but the message is the most important thing here.”



