You are a writer. That is the first step. The second step is
admitting to it.
The third leg of the journey to Published Author is finding
help to polish your writing. I started this post by looking up Writer’s Digest,
101 Best Websites for Writers. When I followed the links of several well-known
sites, I was startled. Many were on hiatus. Some had months-old posts. Several
had wall-to-wall ads.
Blech.
So I went back to my favorites, the ones who have been there
for me ever since my early days. Now a soapbox moment. I’ve said this before so bear with me cuz I’m gonna
say it again:
Authors helping writers is one of the most awe-inspiring part of this business.
What other trade helps wannabes to this extent? I don’t know
of anyone. To follow that thought, here are a bunch of established authors, agents,
and good folks who give their time and expertise to others:
Grammar
Girl, or Quick & Dirty Tricks to Grammar. Need to know when to use the
word “which”? Hanged vs hung? Whether to capitalize dear old mom/Mom? Get the
book. Or better yet, check out the website.
Janet Reid,
literary agent. Yeah, she’s cranky at times, threatens to sic her shark on
you, and on occasion...ahem...could use Grammar Girl’s expertise. But, what a
site! She gives valuable advice, crits your queries, and smacks you upside the
head when your attention wavers. *sigh*
Marcy Hatch.
Yes, one of our own moderators at UnicornBell. She and Dianne Salerni team up each month to
critique first pages. Want experts to give your pages a once-over? Check out
their websites.
Query Tracker.
An all-purpose website that lists agents and what they represent, forums for
critiques, and advice for every writer. This is available for free or pay for
the premium subscription.
YAtopia. If Young
Adult is your passion, this is the site for you. I love the oodles of advice
this collection of talented writers give.
Literary Rambles.
Casey McCormick and Natalie Aguirre created a blog that highlights children’s
books, authors, agents, and publishing. Ms McCormick also started the awesome
Agent Spotlight to introduce agents to their potential clientele.
Shannon
Lawrence aka The Warrior Muse. Need a resource for writing tips, prompts,
and publishers accepting submissions? Well here you go.
I can’t think of a website with a better title: Writers Helping Writers. If you
know the book, The Emotion Thesaurus,
then you know these folks. Becca Puglisi and Angela Ackerman started with a
blog, The Bookshelf Muse, about
physical and character attributes. The blog grew into a monster and they decided
to move to a bigger, better organized site.
For a change of pace: Horror Writers Association. Even if
you don’t read or write horror, check out some of their writing tips.
4 comments:
I visit most of these sites regularly. They are extremely helpful. Thanks for sharing! :)
Interesting that so many websites have gone defunct. I guess people move on...
I admit I'm an editor. I don't know why it's difficult for me to admit that I'm a writer. I guess it's because people always ask, Have you written anything I would have read?
No.
Love,
Janie
well dang! Thanks for mention me and my cohort in crime, Dianne :)
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