About Write

Submitting, Waiting, Wishing

Submitting, Waiting, Wishing

For someone who writes as much as I do, I don’t submit very often. Very rarely does one of my stories hit me in the way that “Dirt Road Magic” hit me before I sent it off to Writers of the Future. And I think this is a personal flaw.

Anatomy of an Author Website

Anatomy of an Author Website

I wrote this as a reddit post recently, and thought it made good recycling material. You can find the original post here. I rebuilt my author website recently, and since I've received some compliments for it, I thought I'd share my process for other writers who want...

My First Cover Reveal

My First Cover Reveal

For a short story writer, a cover reveal is rare, and yet here I am at my first cover reveal! In April I will officially be a published author and, man, that sounds weird.

First!

First!

For years blogspot was my website, blogger my platform. But something changed in my life recently to make me take my authorship more seriously, and it was time to finally migrate here, my own website. This is the first post on my new blog. I've decided to start fresh...

About

Being named after a Stephen King novel does funny things to a person. For Carrie, it inspired her to write. Having lived in eight different states, she has plenty of material to draw from for her stories.

Writers of the Future Contest Winner

Recent Posts

Endorse Your Writing

Writing is often a very solitary pursuit--at least, it is at first. Most of us start out writing just for ourselves. For some, it's anonymous fanfiction, while others write secret fantasies in their journals. We write to explore what we like, and we often start off...

Why You Should Consider The Art of Perspective

This is the first in a series of posts, where I explore writing resources. This is not a review of whether or not I liked a particular resource, but rather a look at what a particular resource is and how it might be beneficial to different writers. The Art of Perspective: Who Tells the Story, by Christopher Castellani, is a quick and conversational look at perspective in fiction, exploring point of view, narration, and even the psychology of storytelling.

The Chrysalis

There is a myriad of approaches to the “new normal”–each valid in their own way. We could rail against it, trying to force things to be as they were before. We could throw ourselves at our work, determined to distract ourselves as much as possible in the grind. Or we could forget everything and focus on self-care with all our free time. We could allow a miasma of helplessness to seep into our bones, preventing us from doing anything. I’m choosing acceptance, and adaptation. I’m choosing to view this not as a lost year, but as a chrysalis year.

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