LitLinks

 

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

LitLinks are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 70,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers. While you’re there, check out the Writer’s Digest award-winning Hiveword novel organizer.

Have you visited the WKB lately?  Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox!  Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here. Follow the WKB on Facebook here.

Why Amazon Book Launches Fall Flat—and What to Do Instead: by Joe SolariFrankfurter Buchmesse Cheers ‘Five Successful and Intense Days’: by Porter AndersonFinding Your Writing Flow After NaNoWriMo: by Michael SolisHow to resurrect your dead writing resolutions: by Daphne Gray-GrantFeature: A Capital Mystery – Ottawa’s First Mystery Anthology: by Mike Martin Five Horror Films Set in Hospitals: by Caitling StarlingDoubles, Glitches, Hallucinations, Dreams: Nine Books that Feature David Lynchian Deja Vu: By Vanessa RovetoUse the Enneagram to Bust Procrastination: by Rochelle MelanderWhy a Nineteenth-Century Scandal of Class and Identity Still Speaks to Us: By Nell StevensWhat Jane Austen’s Possessions Reveal About Her Literary Ethos: By Kathryn SutherlandHaunted by Writing Procrastination? Meet Your Ghouls: By Colleen M. StoryHow I Do Morning Pages (and break all the rules!): by Gabriela PereiraWhy Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland—a Disappointment When It Was Published—is the Novel We Need Right Now: By Devin Thomas O’SheaOn the Joy of Building a Sci-Fi World with a Korean Inflection: By Elaine U. ChoIf It Hurts Too Much, Stop: By John GilstrapWriting: How to Live Through Feedback: by Linda S. ClareInk Stains on Fingers and the Smell of Coffee: A Guide to Writing Elsewhere: Steve HortonDon’t Be Afraid to Go Big: from Fox Print EditorialStuck on Chapter One? Here’s How to Finally Move On: April DávilaWhen Structure Is the Enemy, and Also the Lifeline: A Neurodivergent Writer’s Survival Guide: By Kelsey AllagoodThe 7 Pillars Of Historical Fiction: By Susanne BennettFear, Freedom, and the Joy of Writing Horror: by Andre GonzalezWhat Is A Cozy Horror & How Do I Write One? by Christopher Luke DeanWhy Horror Books Resonate with Kids: by Elle EenOlder Characters in Crime Fiction: @mkinberg.bsky.social5 Ways to Level Up Your Crime Fiction: by Hank Phillippi RyanCompanions in Crime Fiction: @mkinberg.bsky.socialAccess All Areas: How To Get Past Industry Gatekeeping: by Lucy V HayFind Your Ideal Readers by Attending a Genre Convention: by Nichelle Seely @janefriedman.comHow a Box of Misprinted Books Became My Most Creative Marketing Tool Yet: by Jen Craven @janefriedman.comThe Difference Between Literary Fiction & Commercial: By Brandi ReissenweberInterplay in Openings: Donald MaassThe Secret Weapon Behind Every Great Character Arc By Janice HardyHow to Show Your Character Is Healing from an Emotional Wound: by Angela AckermanAmazing Resources for Neurodivergent Writers: by Jenny HansenTaming The Backstory Beast: by PJ ParrishNot What I Had Planned: By Dr. Diana StoutAdding Scare to a Story: by D.L. FinnHow Writers Write Characters Who Are Writers Writing About Themselves; Or, But Is It Autofiction? By Megan CumminsPunctuation: Quotation Marks: by D. Wallace PeachThe 5 Types of Scene Endings Every Writer Must Master: by KM WeilandTry on another writing voice: by Anne JanzerWhen Words Don’t Say What You Want Them To: By Carolyn Howard-Johnson

 

The Top Writing Links From Last Week Are On LitLinks:
Share on X

The post LitLinks appeared first on Elizabeth Spann Craig.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 01, 2025 21:01
No comments have been added yet.