By Liz Melchor Last Sunday, I went to the track. To run one mile. I was there with everyone from my CrossFit gym. We were timing it to get a baseline. Retest in April. The measurement was supposed to motivate us. I hate running. Despise it. But okay, I am in. Let’s get better at […]… Continue reading Chasing Crappiness: One Writer’s Journey — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
Author: wildsoundwritingfestival
Daily Writing Festival Deadlines: Submit your novels, short stories, screenplays, poetry to the festival. Get performance video of your work.
Daily Newspapers Still Offer Superb Training for Young Writers — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
By Samuel Autman I wish I could say reading novels by James Baldwin or Toni Morrison spurred me on to becoming a writer, but my career choice is more likely tied to my Southern family’s penchant for spinning tales, my comic strip heroes Clark Kent and Peter Parker, and the fact that I was seven-years-old […]… Continue reading Daily Newspapers Still Offer Superb Training for Young Writers — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
Creative Marketing with Book Blurbs — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
By Stephanie Weaver You might have heard writers say, “Blurbs don’t sell books unless they come from big-name authors.” I don’t agree and here’s why: getting creative with how you use blurbs from lesser-known authors might indeed help sell your book. When my book The Migraine Relief Plan came out in 2017, I knew I […]… Continue reading Creative Marketing with Book Blurbs — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
Memoir, Novels, Lives and the Quality of Our Attention — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
In William Stoner and the Battle for the Inner Life, Steve Almond discusses a book that changed his life—John Williams’ 1965 novel Stoner—and argues that novels are not merely books, but instead “manuals for living.” Almond never disappoints: his prose is always powerful, provocative. He is a respected teacher and literary advocate. He is funny.… Continue reading Memoir, Novels, Lives and the Quality of Our Attention — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
Interactive Narratives: Role-Playing Games and Storytelling — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
By Vivian Wagner At Origins Game Fair in Columbus, Ohio last month, I played a soon-to-be-released collaborative role-playing game called “Turning Point.” Unlike RPGs that focus on dungeons and elves, this one focused on a woman in a contemporary setting trying to decide whether to undergo a new treatment for her chronic fatigue syndrome. It […]… Continue reading Interactive Narratives: Role-Playing Games and Storytelling — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
When You Write What Scares You—And Then See It in Print — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
By Diane Gottlieb An essay I wrote was just published last week. It was my third publication, the first that will appear both online and in print. You’d think I’d be thrilled. Part of me was. I had worked this shorty (432 words) for about two years, off and on. I’m proud of it. It’s […]… Continue reading When You Write What Scares You—And Then See It in Print — BREVITY’s Nonfiction Blog
William Shakespeare — Jalvis Quotes
“And this our life, exempt from public haunt,/ Finds tongues in trees, books in running brooks,/ Sermons in stones, and good in everything.” via William Shakespeare — Jalvis Quotes
Ali Vincent — Jalvis Quotes
“Big, sweeping life changes really boil down to small, everyday decisions.” via Ali Vincent — Jalvis Quotes
Clifton Fadiman — Jalvis Quotes
“When you travel, remember that a foreign country is not designed to make you comfortable. It is designed to make its own people comfortable.” via Clifton Fadiman — Jalvis Quotes
Marguerite de Valois — Jalvis Quotes
“Tears may be dried up, but the heart – never.” via Marguerite de Valois — Jalvis Quotes