Journal of Many-sized Tales
Short Story Win and Writing App Giveaway
You can now read my children’s superhero short story, Sparks, and some kind words written about it.
You can now read my children’s superhero short story, Sparks, and some kind words written about it. The story was chosen as one of the winners in Ulysses’s writing contest celebrating Disney's Flora & Ulysses.
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Continuing the celebration, I’m giving one Twitter follower a voucher for a one-year subscription to Ulysses, my favorite Mac and iOS writing software. To enter the drawing, all you have to do is
by the end of Thursday, July 1. The winner will be randomly chosen and announced afterward.
Ulysses writing app shown across iPhone, iPad, and Mac screens.
Thoughtful Feedback is a Gift
No matter what you’re making, when others help you improve your work, they deserve acknowledgement.
No matter what you’re making, when others help you improve your work, they deserve acknowledgement. And that’s what this post aims to do.
Below are fellow authors who took time away from their writing to review this site. Some of their feedback has been implemented, some of it will find its way into future iterations, and all of it is much appreciated. As a small thanks, I’d love to point you toward them and their work, so you can check out what these kind and generous writers are up to.
Adam Jarvis
Robyn Sarty
Website, Facebook, and Instagram
Sadye Paez
W.J. Kite
A Smidge of Writing Advice
“Write what grabs your heart. Write what you care about.”
“Write what grabs your heart. Write what you care about.”
That’s it. That’s the advice. If you want to stop reading there, know that’s one of the best pieces I have, and the following is general thoughts on writing advice.
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There is a bottomless well of writing advice out there. A lot of it good, but a lot of it contradictory. Here’s why.
What works for one person may not work for the next. Tell one writer to write every day, and they will form a habit. Give another writer the same guidance, and watch them freeze up from stress. Tell a third to write in bursts with extended periods of non-writing between, and they will give you a novel in weeks. Give a fourth that same guidance, and watch them lose interest to a world of distractions.
No single piece of advice exists to improve everyone’s writing. Your best bet is to consider most that comes your way, try it for yourself, and figure out what makes you more productive and, hopefully, what makes you enjoy the work even more.
Regarding “Write what grabs your heart. Write what you care about,” this works for me, because no matter what happens with the writing—whether it’s published, sits in a forgotten file, inspires more ideas or none—I never feel like I wasted a word. And more often than not, that can be enough.
A Small Story to Start
And wolf said to bird, “Sit in my mouth.”
And Wolf said to Bird, “Sit in my mouth.” And Bird said to Wolf, “Sit beneath my branch.”
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Figured the most appropriate way to start a writing journal was with a story. This one is a favorite, inspired by years and continents of fables and fairy tales. I’m sure those storytellers would be proud.
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What else can you expect from this journal? More stories, some my own, some shared secondhand. Lessons from the numerous writing courses I’ve taken. Process explorations. Design in publishing, and design in general. Publishing and contest news. A doodle or two. Notes about islands of giving and other noteworthy ideas. And more stories, always more stories.
Looking forward to sharing words with you.