The Top 10 Scenes In Literature To Bring You Terrorsleep: Part 2
Column by Tina Estlin Page
Books that go bump in the night. The conclusion of the top 10 most terrifying scenes in literature.
LURID: Does King Deserve The Crown?
Column by Karina Wilson
LURID: vivid in shocking detail; sensational, horrible in savagery or violence, or a monthly guide to the merits of all those Bad Books you never want your co-workers to know you're reading.
From Silk Purses to Sows’ Ears
Column by Ed Sikov
When It Comes to Books Made Into Movies, Middlebrow Assumptions Are Invariably Stupid
Write Characters In A Representation-Free Zone
Column by Jon Gingerich
Many writers eschew compelling characters in favor of mannequin tropes that serve as props for preexisting social messages, or characters a reader can “relate to.” Here’s why it’s always bad writing.
Using Social Networks To Build A Writing Brand, i.e. How To Whore Yourself On Twitter
Column by Rob Hart
Social networking is easy if you want to tell people what you had for dinner last night. When you're a writer building a brand, it requires a little more thought--and a lot more dedication.
Three Things the Author of "Gods and Monsters" Learned by Listening to His Students
Column by Christopher Bram
Three Things the Author of "Gods and Monsters" Learned by Listening to His Students.
Out of Order: A Discussion of Nonlinear Narrative Structure
Column by Taylor Houston
A Discussion of Non-linear Narrative Structure
A Recap Of... The Wicked Universe
Column by Meredith Borders
Gregory Maguire's OUT OF OZ takes readers on a journey back down that winding yellow brick road. Need a refresher on the universe before you read it?
Ask The Lit Coach: "Should Writers Settle Themselves Into A Single Genre In Order To Be Successfully Published?" and More
Column by Erin Reel
Author branding and the outlook for Transgressive fiction are the subjects in the 2nd issue of Ask The Lit Coach.
The Case Against Ebook Self-Publication
Column by Paul Graham Raven
Ebook self-publishing is a cop-out, it’s a settling-for-less born of laziness, and - lipstick the pig as much as you like - it’s no different from the self-publishing of old.