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Author Tips Published Every Monday & Thursday
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Wild Dark Shore Book Club Guide: Discussion Questions + Author Career Insights
So your book club chose Wild Dark Shore. Smart choice. Charlotte McConaghy's latest thriller has everything a great book club selection needs: complex characters, controversial themes, stunning prose, and enough ambiguity to fuel heated debates over wine.
How to Write Setting as Character: Lessons from Eowyn Ivey's Alaskan Wilderness
Part 1 of Wilderness & Wisdom: A Master Class with Eowyn Ivey
Lessons from Eowyn Ivey's Alaskan Wilderness
Picture this: Every time your protagonist steps outside her remote Alaskan cabin, she carries a rifle.
Not because she's expecting human trouble, but because the wilderness itself—with its bears, wolves, and unforgiving terrain—is as much a threat as any antagonist you could dream up.
Silence for Authors: Meditation Practices That Actually Improve Your Writing
Time-tested techniques that fit your schedule and target your specific writing challenges. Beyond Basic Breathing: Meditation Practices Built for Writers. You've decided to incorporate silence into your Miracle Morning routine—excellent choice! But now you're wondering: what exactly should you DO during those quiet minutes to maximize the creative benefits? Generic meditation apps and one-size-fits-all approaches often fall short for authors because they don't address our specific challenges.
From Stone Circles to Social Media: The Evolution of Author Platforms
Long before authors worried about author website design or building their online presence, storytellers understood a fundamental truth: you need a recognized, trusted space where your audience knows they can find you.
In ancient Scotland, stone circles like Stonehenge and the Ring of Brodgar served as more than just mysterious monuments.
Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy: A Complete Review & Analysis
Charlotte McConaghy's Wild Dark Shore hit shelves in March 2025 and immediately became a phenomenon. If you're wondering whether Wild Dark Shore lives up to the hype—or what authors can learn from McConaghy's success—you're in the right place.
Let Them Say Writing Isn't a Real Job
You're at Sunday dinner with your extended family. You’re feeling pretty good about the progress you've made on your writing career this year. You've published two books, built an email list of devoted readers, and you're finally earning enough from your writing to cut your day job hours from full-time to part-time. When your cousin asks what you've been up to, you're excited to share your wins. "I've been focusing more on my writing career," you begin, explaining how you've been building your author business. "I'm actually planning to go full-time with it next year."
Beauty in the Shadows: How Scottish Folk Tales Blend Light and Dark to Create Emotionally Honest Storytelling
Scottish storytellers understood something that modern fantasy writing sometimes forgets: the most memorable stories aren't the ones that avoid darkness or languish within it—they're the ones that weave darkness seamlessly into the light. Sound impossible? Let me show you how Scottish folk tales master the art of emotionally honest storytelling that satisfies both children and adults.
Your Author Platform as a Liberation Tool
Too Slick, Not Enough Soul. We’ve all seen these types of author websites. Every page screams for attention: "Buy my book!" "Follow me on social media!" "Sign up for my newsletter!" "Leave a review!" "Share with friends!" It may be perfectly optimized for conversion. It might follow every "successful author platform" rule in the book. But it is completely soulless. I had a client like this once, and when I asked her how she felt about her website, she said: "Honestly? I hate it. It feels like I'm constantly begging people to care about me. But isn't that what authors are supposed to do?"
The Author Website CTA That Actually Converts (Hint: It's Not "Subscribe")
Most author websites have terrible calls-to-action (CTA). You've seen CTAs everywhere—those boring "Subscribe to my newsletter" buttons that sit there like digital tumbleweeds. Meanwhile, smart authors are using CTAs that convert at rates 161% higher than generic ones. The difference? They're not asking people to "subscribe." They're offering something irresistible in exchange for an email address.
Let Them Say You're "Just" Indie
You're at a local literary event, feeling proud as you chat with other authors about your recent success. Your self-published novel just hit 10,000 copies sold, you've built an email list of devoted readers, and you're finally earning enough from your writing to cut back your day job hours. You're explaining your journey to a traditionally published author when she nods politely and says, "Well, that's great for indie publishing. But when are you going to try to get a real publisher?"
Creating Author Community Through Collective Rest
How Competition Kills Creative Collaboration. Three years ago, I watched a Twitter thread that made my heart sink. A debut author had shared her excitement about her first book deal. Instead of celebration, the replies filled with barely concealed resentment. "Must be nice to have connections." "Guess we know who got lucky." "Some of us are still waiting for our 'big break.'" The author, crushed by the response, deleted the thread and later told me she felt guilty for months about her success.
Magic in the Mundane: What Scottish Household Spirits Teach About Sustainable Fantasy
While American fantasy often chases bigger explosions and more spectacular spells, Scottish household spirits understand something crucial: sustainable fantasy isn't about escalating power—it's about magic that enhances daily life rather than disrupting it. Sound counterintuitive? Let me show you why Brownies might just revolutionize your approach to fantasy world-building.
Why Every Author Needs an Email List (And How Your Website Can Build It)
The bottom line: If you're serious about your writing career, you need an email list. Period.
While other authors chase social media followers and pray their posts get seen, smart authors are building direct lines to their readers through email marketing.
The results?
Book sales that don't depend on algorithm changes, loyal readers who actually buy their work, and sustainable author careers that grow with every release.
The Pseudonym Revolution: How Women Writers Disguised as Men Changed Literature Forever
"Literature cannot be the business of a woman's life, and it ought not to be."
This devastating response came from Poet Laureate Robert Southey in 1837 when a twenty-year-old Charlotte Brontë sent him a collection of her poetry, seeking guidance and encouragement.
Southey's dismissal wasn't just personal cruelty—it was the official position of the literary establishment.
But Charlotte Brontë didn't disappear. Instead, she did something revolutionary: she became Currer Bell.
Silence for Authors: Why 5 Minutes of Quiet Can Unlock Your Creativity
The science-backed reason why the busiest authors need quiet time the most—and how this Miracle Morning practice transforms your writing life. "I Don't Have Time to Sit and Do Nothing." Let me guess what you're thinking right now: "Meditation? Really? I barely have time to write, let alone sit around doing nothing." "My brain never stops racing. I'd be terrible at meditation." "I'm not a woo-woo person. I need practical solutions, not mystical practices." "Five minutes of quiet won't solve my writer's block." If any of these thoughts crossed your mind, you're not alone. These are the exact objections I hear from authors every single week.
When Water Whispers Danger: Create Authentic Fantasy Creatures by Studying Scottish Water Mythology
If you've ever struggled to make your fantasy creatures feel authentic rather than borrowed, you're not alone. We see this challenge constantly when reading fantasy novels that aren’t juuuust quite there. A frequent culprit? Their magical elements feel generic, like they could exist anywhere, in any story. But here's the thing—Scottish water mythology shows us exactly how to fix this common fantasy writing problem.
Why Author Branding Isn't Vanity—It's Survival: Professional Design in the Age of Digital Censorship
When Lauren Roberts built her massive social media following before landing her traditional publishing deal with Simon & Schuster, she wasn't just marketing—she was surviving.
Roberts understood something that many authors miss: in an era where voices are systematically silenced and stories are under attack, professional author branding isn't about vanity or ego.
It's about ensuring your voice can't be erased.
Let Them Expect You to Follow Trends
The Terror of Trends. You're at your local bookstore café, laptop open, working on the fantasy novel you've been passionate about for the past year. A fellow writer slides into the chair across from you—someone you know from the regional writers' group who always seems to have their finger on the pulse of the industry. "Still working on that dragon book?" they ask, glancing at your screen. "You know fantasy is kind of over, right? Everyone's writing BookTok romance now. Have you seen how much money those authors are making? You should pivot to enemies-to-lovers contemporary romance. That's where the readers are."
The Author's Guide to The Miracle Morning
The Author's Daily Struggle: When There's Never Enough Time "I don't have time to write." "I'm too exhausted to be creative after work." "By the time I sit down to write, my brain is fried from everything else." Sound familiar? In today's fast-paced world, authors face an impossible juggling act. Between day jobs, family obligations, social media marketing, and the endless demands of daily life, finding time to actually write feels like searching for a unicorn.
Daydreaming Your Way to Better Books
I have a confession: Some of my best writing happens when I'm not writing at all. Last month, I was stuck on a blog post. I'd been staring at my screen for an hour, typing and deleting the same paragraph over and over. Finally, I gave up and went to wash dishes—something I usually consider a chore, a distraction, something I wish I didn’t have to do. But as I stood at the sink, watching soap bubbles swirl down the drain, my mind began to wander. I started thinking about how those bubbles were like the tiny, iridescent ideas. Then I imagined an author whose ideas literally appeared as soap bubbles around her head, and how she'd have to catch them before they popped...
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