The Question of Book Reviews
The question of book reviews is vexing for many writers. Over my years of writing the world of reviewing has changed radically.
The question of book reviews is vexing for many writers. Over my years of writing the world of reviewing has changed radically.
I may have told this book story here before, but since it happened exactly thirty years ago…
One of the particular joys of writing for kids is that they write to you.
I was feeling gloomy. It had started to snow. I started a read-through of my current project. A favorite recipe for Tomato Soup popped into my mind.
The more books I begin, the worse they seem at the start.
I was talking to a sixth-grade class the other day when one of the students asked: “How do you make a character in a book, you know, all the different things and feelings she has?”
Today is the day my newest book, Lost in the Empire City, will be published. People often ask me, “How does it feel to have a book published?”
Logic. While we may not think of the concept as having anything to do with fiction, it is not just a key aspect of narrative, but particularly important to readers.
What does a good title have that makes it good? Lots of notions here. The truth is, as any author will tell you, a good title is hard to compose.
I suspect that there are countless American family stories akin to this one, the journey to point of departure, the voyage itself, the arrival, and early years of tragedy and/or triumph.