Friday, April 3, 2026

Why Worldbuilding Fails Without Strong Characters (and How to Fix It as a Writer)

From Edie: Struggling with worldbuilding? Discover why strong characters are the key to making your story come alive—and how to create settings readers truly care about.


Why Worldbuilding Fails Without Strong Characters (and How to Fix It as a Writer)
by A.C. Williams @ACW_Author

Every author needs worldbuilding, no matter what genre you write. Sure, the most extensive worldbuilding shows up in speculative stories, but a strong grasp of setting detail will serve every storyteller. But where do you start? 

Creating a world that readers can experience on a page is a very different prospect than imagining a world in your mind. If you are an author of science fiction or fantasy or some other speculative genre, you have undoubtedly discovered this. You can dream up a vast, alien world with multiple cultures and various languages and expansive existing histories, but how do you portray it in a way that an audience can experience? 

It doesn’t work like visual media. Movies and television shows have cinematography at their disposal, and the art of visual communication has aspects that make storytelling much more straightforward than with the written word.

Of course, there are always exceptions. The instant I tell you that you can’t start your story with a paragraph of description, some other author will do it and become a bestseller. But even in that instance, the exception isn’t the rule. 

Generally speaking, starting with a descriptive paragraph detailing what a setting or a landscape looks like is a surefire way to bore a reader. If you invite readers into the story and then use the limited time you have their attention to talk about the wind blowing a leaf around or cheerful little woodland creatures scolding each other from the treetops, you’re going to lose them. Even starting with something exciting like the magma chamber of a volcano grumbling or the sudden eerie quiet before a tornado touches down will fall flat for one simple reason. 

You haven’t showed them why they should care. 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Spring, Revisions, and the Writing Process: Why Editing Makes Your Book Stronger

From Edie: Spring brings fresh starts—even in writing. Discover why revisions are essential, how editing strengthens your story and characters, and how to embrace the process to create a better book.


Spring, Revisions, and the Writing Process: Why Editing Makes Your Book Stronger
by Lynn H. Blackburn @LynnHBlackburn

It's Spring. 

I don’t know what that means where you are, but in the South? It means we could easily have all four seasons in one day. It means you can plant stuff before Tax Day, but only if you’re willing to watch them die a painful, frostbitten death. And it means that the pollen will, again, do its level best to end me. Y’all…the yellow dust is everywhere!

The weather can be gorgeous, but you don’t dare sit outside to enjoy it because if you do, you’ll basically be breathing in so much pollen that your lungs will go on strike! 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Is Creativity a Gift or a Skill? What Writers Need to Know to Grow Their Creative Ability

From Edie: Is creativity a gift or a skill? Discover how writers can strengthen imagination, overcome perfectionism, and build lasting creative habits that lead to better, more consistent writing.


Is Creativity a Gift or a Skill? What Writers Need to Know to Grow Their Creative Ability
by Sarah Sally Hamer @SarahSallyHamer

We writers have been wrestling with this question for ages, usually while we stare at a blinking cursor and wonder why inspiration behaves like a shy cat—under your feet when you don’t need it and hiding under the sofa when you do. Some people insist creativity is a gift, something you either have or don’t. Others argue it’s a skill, something you build the same way you build leg muscles, except with fewer squats and more caffeine. After years of teaching seminars, watching writers surprise themselves, and occasionally surprising myself right along with them, I’ve learned that creativity refuses to sit neatly in either category. It’s far more interesting than that.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

How Writers Can Stay Consistent on Social Media Without Burnout: 9 Simple Strategies That Work

From Edie: Struggling to stay consistent on social media as a writer? Discover 9 simple, practical strategies to build your platform, avoid burnout, and connect with readers without sacrificing your writing time.


How Writers Can Stay Consistent on Social Media Without Burnout: 9 Simple Strategies That Work
By Edie Melson @EdieMelson

We all know it’s important for writers to have a solid presence online.

But knowing something and living it out consistently are two very different things.

If we’re honest, many of us struggle with social media commitment issues. We start strong. We have good intentions. We even create a plan.

And then… life happens.

Deadlines pile up. Creativity gets drained. Social media feels noisy—or worse, discouraging. And suddenly, that “simple plan” becomes something we quietly avoid.

If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone.

The good news? Consistency on social media doesn’t require perfection—it requires intention.

Monday, March 30, 2026

How to Use Social Media to Maximize Your Writing Conference Experience (Before, During, and After)

From Edie: Learn how to use social media to get the most out of writing conferences. Discover proven strategies for networking with agents, editors, and fellow writers before, during, and after your event.


How to Use Social Media to Maximize Your Writing Conference Experience (Before, During, and After)

By Edie Melson @EdieMelson

We are deep into writing conference season.

Writers everywhere are packing bags, polishing proposals, and making plans to attend events that can move their careers forward in powerful ways. But in the middle of all that preparation, there’s one opportunity many writers still overlook—one that can easily double the value of your conference experience.

And it starts before you ever arrive.

Many writers assume social networking is only helpful online—or only useful when you can’t attend an event in person.

That’s simply not true.

In today’s publishing world, your online connections are often the bridge that turns a large, overwhelming conference into a meaningful, relational experience.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

An Easter Devotional for Writers: The Meaning of Jesus’ Hands from Creation to the Cross

From Edie: Discover a powerful Easter devotional for writers exploring the meaning of Jesus’ hands—from creation to the cross and resurrection—and how His story calls us to live with purpose and hope.


An Easter Devotional for Writers: The Meaning of Jesus’ Hands from Creation to the Cross
By Edie Melson @EdieMelson

In this season of Easter, my thoughts have turned to hands.

Of course, you know what started me down that path. The image of Jesus’ nail-scarred palms is everywhere this time of year. We see them in art, in devotionals and in the quiet reflections of our own hearts. But as I consider those precious hands, I’m reminded how the story of our Savior’s hands began long before the cross.

Saturday, March 28, 2026

What Makes a Story Meaningful? A Christian Writer’s Guide to Darkness, Hope, and Redemption

From Edie: Discover what makes a story truly meaningful through a Christian lens. Learn how to balance darkness with hope, build redemptive themes, and create stories that resonate deeply with readers.


What Makes a Story Meaningful? A Christian Writer’s Guide to Darkness, Hope, and Redemption
by Zena Dell Lowe @ZenaDellLowe

In anticipation of this year’s Oscars, I’ve been watching as many nominated films as I can—an unpleasant task at times, given the dark worldviews many of these films present. The problem isn’t that these films portray the plight of the human condition. Great stories often do. The problem is when a story makes assumptions about human beings that render suffering meaningless or inevitable.

So today I want to explore the difference between a dark tragedy and a nihilistic story. By nihilism, I don’t mean a story that is bleak or emotionally heavy. I mean a story that assumes there is no ultimate meaning, no moral order, and no real possibility of redemption.