The Every Day Novelist
Summary: The Every Day Novelist delivers a new 3 to 30 minute episode each day discussing writing craft, discipline, publishing, and business, all geared toward helping you achieve a professional pace (four to twelve or more novels in one year) in your writing. The direction of the show is steered by your questions, ideas, and disagreements.
- Visit Website
- RSS
- Artist: J. Daniel Sawyer
Podcasts:
Subscribe Here! JR asks: What do you recommend for organizing your worldbuilding and writing projects?
Subscribe Here! Tim asks: How many, if any, review copies should a new writer send to reviewers and organizations?
Subscribe Here! JR asks: Help! I finished book one and can’t get the sequel off the ground, and I’m under deadline. What do I do?
Subscribe Here! Sgt Mike asks: I have too much dialog in my novels. How do I balance it with good POV, avoid passive voice, etc?
Subscribe Here! Caine asks: What is the bare minimum for editing on a budget, while still turning out a quality product?
Subscribe Here! Sgt Mike asks: How can I attract women to my military SF? How do you attract readers, in general, who don’t traditionally read your genre?
Subscribe Here! Caine asks: What are the differences in how you approach a novella, a novelette, or a novel?
Subscribe Here! Sgt Mike asks: What are some good exercises for improving craft? What workbooks do you recommend?
Subscribe Here! Rob asks: How do you decide where to start new chapters and scenes?
Subscribe Here! Sgt Mike asks: Once you’ve finished your novel, how do you find good designers, editors, and artists to help you get it ready for publication?
Subscribe Here! Here’s a podcast promo for NaNoWriMo Every Month! Spread it far and wide! Bring the good news to everyone! Or, you know, give it to your friends so they can listen too.
Subscribe Here! Michael asks: How do you manage multiple works-in-progress at once?
Subscribe Here! Sgt Mike asks: How do you spot clichés when you don’t know what the clichés are?
Subscribe Here! Sgt Mike asks: How do you make the setting its own character? How do you avoid spoon-feeding setting to the audience?
Subscribe Here! Joseph asks: My books are too short–should I merge them into a larger book?