Martha Conway

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    • The Underground River
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May 08 2017

The Cold Open – Get Scary!

YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE Stephen King to start your narrative with something scary. You don’t even have to be writing a horror story. Maybe you just want to grab your reader’s attention right away. Starting with a scary scene or description not only grabs a reader’s emotion—which is a wonderful way to keep them…

Written by Martha Conway · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: artist, chapter one, cold open, craft, creative writing, creativity, fiction, historical fiction, historical novels, how to write the first chapter, how to write well, publishing, revision, stephen king, writing craft, writing good books, writing rules

Apr 01 2017

The Cold Open – Begin with a question

WHEN YOU BEGIN your novel using certain techniques—such as “In media res” (in the middle of the thing) or “At the last possible moment”—you are deliberately planting a question in your readers mind. In the first instance, the question is “What is going on?” and in the second, “What will happen now?” These are great…

Written by Martha Conway · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: craft, creative writing, creativity, fiction, how to write well, writers, writing, writing craft, writing rules

Oct 23 2016

The Cold Open – Start at the Last Possible Moment

THIS IS THE MOMENT WHEN, in your story world, everything has changed. The stranger has come to town, the father has died, the mother has left, the best friend has announced that she’s moving to Pakistan. Like In Media Res, in which you begin in the middle of the action, this technique relies on triggering…

Written by Martha Conway · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: chapter one, craft, creative writing, creativity, drama, fiction, good fiction, historical fiction, historical novels, how to write well, in media res, inspiration, Ohio River, publishing, reading, Thieving Forest, underground railroad, writers, writing craft, writing rules

Sep 07 2016

What? I thought I was done!

IT’S BEEN SIX MONTHS or more since I looked at my last novel, the one that was “done.” That novel is gearing up to go into production now, and I have a few notes from my editors, stuff to change. As I read through the manuscript for places to cut back or to develop a…

Written by Martha Conway · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: craft, creative writing, creativity, fiction, good books, historical fiction, how to write well, Ohio River, publishing, reading, revision, slavery, underground railroad, writing

Apr 26 2016

What are the Best Rules for Writing?

“Good stories have a quality of authorlessness. The better they are, the more authorless they seem. . . They give a sense of being out there, like facts.” (Janet Malcolm) I have this quotation in front of me on my writing desk, and every once in a while I read it and ponder once again…

Written by Martha Conway · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: craft, fiction, good fiction, good sentences, how to write well, Lauren Groff, Michael Chabon, publishing, reading, Rick Bass, writers, writing, writing craft, writing rules, Zadie Smith

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