We found 10 episodes of Writing Tips and Writerly Musings with the tag “writing tips”.
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Authors and Social Media: Friend or Foe
September 26th, 2022 | Season 5 | 24 mins 23 secs
beta-reading, books, critique, social media, worldcon77, writers, writing, writing tips
Authors get a lot of mixed advice when it comes to social media. Let’s talk about different author approaches and tips and tricks to make social media work for you. In this post, I’m combining notes from two panels.
From the titular panel, Francesca T. Barbini, Gareth Powell, and Georgina Kamsika discussed if social media was our friend… or our foe.
And in Social Media: Tips and Tricks, Brenda Noiseux, Stevie Finegan, Lydia Gittens, and Pablo Defendini shared their experience with us.
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Down the Rabbit Hole: The Appeal of Portal Fantasy
September 19th, 2022 | Season 5 | 6 mins 41 secs
beta-reading, books, critique, fantasy, writers, writing, writing tips
Portal fantasy has always been popular. From tales of fairy circles to Narnia, we’ve always enjoyed watching people from familiar places enter fantastic realms.
At the titular panel at WorldCon2019, Seanan McGuire, Vina Prasad, Genevieve Cogman, and Kathryn Sullivan discussed what it was about portal fantasy that kept people coming back for more.
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In the Background: Class in YA Fiction
September 12th, 2022 | Season 5 | 12 mins 6 secs
beta-reading, books, class, critique, worldcon77, writers, writing, writing tips, ya
In the real world, the social class we come from can have far-reaching consequences into our lives: from the jobs we hold, to the things that worry us, to our long-lasting health. Getting class, and its consequences right, can be tricky to do.
In the titular panel at WorldCon2019, Marieke Nÿkamp, Avery Delany, Caroline Hooton, and Victoria Lee discussed the ways their class upbringing compared to their current social class, and the implications inherent in that.
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Challenges and Anecdotes from Acquiring Editors
September 5th, 2022 | Season 5 | 6 mins 32 secs
beta-reading, books, critique, editors, writers, writing, writing tips
Whether you’re looking to break into the editing field, or just learn more about the so-called gatekeepers of the traditional publishing world, it’s always good to know more about what happens behind the scenes.
As a reminder, acquiring editors work for the publishing houses and are the ones who actually make those large-figured book deals — in addition to revising and editing manuscripts.
At WorldCon 2019’s “Editors’ panel: Challenges and Anecdotes”, I got to hear industry veterans Michael Rowley, Eleanor Teasdale, Ginjer Buchanan, John R. Douglas, and David Thomas Moor talk about their experiences.
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Building an Online Community
August 29th, 2022 | Season 5 | 8 mins 23 secs
beta-reading, books, community, critique, writers, writing, writing tips
The internet can be a cesspool that promotes the worst of humanity. But? It can also bring people together. Depending on where you hang out and who you hang out with online determines if you’ve found a supportive group of friends who share your hobbies/etc or a group that will bring you down.
At WorldCon 2019’s “Building the SFF Community Online” panel, Christopher Davis, Heather Rose Jones, Elio García Jr., fromahkyra, and Kat Tanaka (oh-cop-nick)Okopnik shared tips they use to help the online communities they moderate thrive.
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What The Writer Needs To Know: The Brain and the Body
August 22nd, 2022 | Season 5 | 11 mins 16 secs
beta-reading, books, critique, writers, writing, writing tips
Writers do their best to bring life an authenticity of the full range of human conditions. Sadly, however, writers are mere mortals and can fall into some trope-tastic misunderstandings and assumptions.
At the titular panel at WorldCon2019, Daryl Gregory, Dr. Keren Landsman, Benjamin Kinney, Mick Schubert, and Hadas Sloin were there to set the record straight.
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YA Futures
August 15th, 2022 | Season 5 | 8 mins 55 secs
beta-reading, books, critique, worldcon77, writers, writing, writing tips, ya
YA is big and has been since the late 90s. But the future today doesn’t look like it did even 10 or 20 years ago. What do YA fantasy and science fiction readers want today?
At the titular panel at WorldCon2019, I had the opportunity to listen to the top professionals in the field discuss what they see coming. On the panel were Charlie Jane Anders, James Smythe, Eric Picholle, Fonda Lee, and Kristina Perez.
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Booktube: The World of Online Book Discussions
August 8th, 2022 | Season 5 | 11 mins 56 secs
beta-reading, books, booktubers, critique, writers, writing, writing tips
The booktuber world is right next door to the authortuber world — full of people talking about their to-read lists, the books they’re actually reading, and their own community. As opposed to us authortubers, talking about writing tips, writing progress, and apparently streaming virtual write-ins. Both are full of people passionate about books and wanting to talk about it on youtube.
In the titular panel at WorldCon, Stevie “Sablecaught” Finegan, Claire Rousseau (Books and Quills), Thomas Wagner (SFF180), Linnea Sternefält (RobotMaria133), and Brianne Reeves (BreeReadsBooks) shared with us their experiences being booktubers.
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Done to Death: The Art of Killing Characters
August 1st, 2022 | Season 5 | 11 mins 5 secs
beta-reading, books, critique, writers, writing, writing tips
When you’re reading a story and a character dies, you can tell if it’s just the writer trying to manipulate your emotions or if it’s good storytelling.
In the titular panel at Worldcon77, Patrick Rothfuss, Veronica Roth, Su J Sokel, Amy Ogden, and Daryl Gregory did their best to make sure we know that every death should count.
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The Future of Podcasting
July 25th, 2022 | Season 5 | 7 mins 29 secs
beta-reading, books, critique, writers, writing, writing tips
Podcasting has had its ups and downs since it first started. The market is big, but there’s a lot of small fish out there and it’s hard to get noticed.
At the titular panel at Balticon53, Mark Redfield, Mike Luoma, Philippa Ballantine, Christiana Ellis, and Fred. G. Yost discussed where podcasting has been and what they hope and fear we’ll see in the future.