cover of The Witch the the Warrior

Learning from Mistakes: Rethink, Redesign, Rewrite

Writing is in some ways a strange process. First you tell the story you want to tell; when you're done with that you have the option of sharing it with others who might enjoy reading it. (I've written about this Writing vs. Storytelling dualism before.) On platforms like Ao3, the "sharing with others" part is easy and low-risk, because everything is free. People browse, they skim the tags (sometimes), they click, they start reading. If the story goes somewhere they don't like they stop reading. Sometimes they yell at you in the comments; usually they just move on. Sharing your…
stacks of wooden tiles and concrete blocks in a field

E-book self-publishing checklist for first-time authors (Part 1)

After 30 years functioning as a systems analyst—driven to make procedures both efficient and humane—but being paid as a tech writer—explaining procedures clearly—it's second nature to write down processes I've wrestled with. Here's a summary of what I've learned the past few months as I scrambled to get ready to self-publish my first books. (My goal here is to do a brief summary: most of these points could be entire posts on their own.) The tasks are listed in the general order I did them (or wished I'd done them!) Also, before I get into details, let me say up…
Baby Steps: From casual fanfic writer to published author

Baby Steps: From casual fanfic writer to published author

I've been writing since I was 7. In that first story—my memory of it is paradoxically both sharp and dim—Amazons in sherbert-colored chitons leapt about fighting off... something? All I remember is that they had gold cord belts. My next writing memory is in the churn of my preteen years: I stood in front of the class and made up a story about a witch in a wood. I don't remember the story I told, only that I shuffled blank sheets torn from a yellow legal pad as I pretended to read. I was caught, of course, and taken to…