Skip to main content
can find what you are looking for. Or, you can try finding it by using the search form below.

SITEMAP

PAGES:

CATEGORIES:

AUTHORS:

MONTHLY:

RECENT POSTS:

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

》¡》》》¡》 NAVIGATE Want To Spend More Time On Your Writing And Tired Of Doing It All? A Virtual Assistant Can Help Alexandra Amor Sometimes you need specific help for your situation Indie authors often have an edge of control freakery … well, I do! I like being in control and I enjoy pretty much all aspects of being an author entrepreneur. But I hit a wall about 18 months ago, and I definitely needed some help, so I started looking for a virtual assistant to help me. I had a few varied experiences and learned some lessons, and then  Alexandra Amor reached out to me with some brilliant suggestions for how she could help. Alexandra is a children's author, but she is also a fantastic virtual assistant for me and a number of other authors. I trust her to help me with key tasks in my author business, and she even suggests things that I may not have thought of. Alexandra Amor Today, Alexandra explains how a VA can help authors. Joanna has previously...
× DeviantArt DeviantArt FREE - In Google Play VIEW Deviant Art Morgan S Hazelwood 10 Questions to Ask Your Beta-readers   Morgan Hazelwood 1 year ago Advertisements Asking for Feedback Now that NaNoWriMo is over, a lot of us are asking “what’s next”? I mean, clearly there are those of us, many of us, who either didn’t finish NaNo, or whose NaNo wasn’t long enough to finish our stories, and of course the answer for us is clear – finish that rough draft. For the rest of you, run your novel through spell-check, do a few read-throughs, make sure your story says what you want it to. I like to print it out at this stage, mark it up, write pages and pages of new material on the back, sort it out by chapter, making index cards for each one… There are a lot of ways to edit it, to clean it up and make it consumable by eyes-that-aren’t-our-own. But, eventually, we’re going to have to let the manuscript go. To send it to a beta reade...
》》》》 》 How to Plan, Plot, Write, Edit, Publish, and Market a Story PLAN   PLOT   WRITE   EDIT   PUBLISH   MARKET ABOUT Contact Resources Books Store Courses Programs Disclosure   HOME What to Ask Your Beta Reader October 24, 2013  by  Valerie Comer   12 Comments A beta reader is going through a completed, polished manuscript much like a random reader would do. While they may be fellow writers, there’s no rule that says they must be. The main criteria for a beta reader is that they are widely read in the genre of your story, they know what they like and don’t like, can make a guess as to why they have either reaction—and aren’t afraid to tell you. A fellow writer is going to give you plenty of opinions about metaphors, punctuation, cliches, and grammar, which is why they’re more likely to fit the bill as a critique partner than beta reader. A beta reader isn’t an...