Tag Archives: writing wednesday

Writing Wednesday V

Welcome back to Writing Wednesday! Since so many of us are writers, I know we all must read lots of writing blogs. So let’s share some of the great things we learn about writing through a fun new linkup! It’s like a blogfest, only easier!Writing Wednesday

Last time, we had seven really great entries:

Aaaaand the winner of the $20 Amazon gift card, chosen at random is . . .

Ronda Hinrichsen

Congrats, Ronda—I’ll get that on its way to you ASAP.

Share your best posts on writing today! Note that there isn’t a drawing this week, but keep your eyes peeled for the next one!

What are the rules?

  1. All articles must directly relate to writing. If you see something that makes you think of a writing principle, and you want to participate, I recommend you blog about your thoughts, and then submit your blog post.
  2. You should use a descriptive name so we all want to click on the article: Jordan McCollum wouldn’t be very enticing, but Doing Backstory Right would.
  3. Articles can come from your blog or someone else’s.
  4. If it’s your post, PLEASE link back to Writer Wednesday in the post so your visitors can join in the fun! (You can use the badge below—the code includes a link!) Seriously, guys: it only benefits everyone in the linkup. If everyone links back, we we can all benefit from traffic from one another.
  5. You can submit up to three articles total.
  6. Posts can be old or new.
  7. You have until Tuesday, 13 September 2011 to submit.
  8. If you’d like to follow me, I certainly wouldn’t object! It’s not required, though.

Why should you participate?

  • We can all benefit from this!
  • Find new blogs and great writing advice—without sifting through the ENTIRE INTERNET.
  • Share the articles you’ve worked so hard on with my 200+ RSS subscribers.
  • It’s a great way to grow a blog!

How can I get a cool badge?
Copy the code below and paste it into a blog post or a gadget/widget in your sidebar. (It’s in HTML, so be sure you’re adding an HTML gadget, or select the Edit HTML/HTML tab above the text window on the edit post page.)

<a href="http://jordanmccollum.com/tag/writing-wednesday/" target="_blank"><img src="http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z41/MamaBlogga/th_writingwed.png" border="0" alt="Writing Wednesday" ></a>

Where do we put our links?
Right here! Please remember to link directly to your post (i.e. ihaveablog.blogspot.com/2011/05/i-have-a-post.html and NOT ihaveablog.blogspot.com—this makes it easier to find the article!) and use a descriptive name (i.e. How to handle backstory and NOT Yippity Skippity Blog!).

Just fill in the boxes below to get started:

Thanks for participating!

Photo: writing with my new pen by Melanie Cook

Writing Wednesday IV

Welcome back to Writing Wednesday! I let it slip a couple weeks, but now we’re back and better than ever—seriously. Check out the change—now there’s a prize!

Since so many of us are writers, I know we all must read lots of writing blogs. So let’s share some of the great things we learn about writing through a fun new linkup! It’s like a blogfest, only easier!Writing Wednesday

Last time, we had two fantastic entries:

Share your best posts on writing today!

What are the rules?

  1. All articles must directly relate to writing. If you see something that makes you think of a writing principle, and you want to participate, I recommend you blog about your thoughts, and then submit your blog post.
  2. You should use a descriptive name so we all want to click on the article: Jordan McCollum wouldn’t be very enticing, but Doing Backstory Right would.
  3. Articles can come from your blog or someone else’s.
  4. If it’s your post, PLEASE link back to Writer Wednesday in the post so your visitors can join in the fun! (You can use the badge below—the code includes a link!)
  5. You can submit up to three articles total.
  6. Posts can be old or new.
  7. You have until Tuesday, 6 September 2011 to submit.
  8. If you’d like to follow me, I certainly wouldn’t object! It’s not required, though.

Why should you participate?

  • We can all benefit from this!
  • Find new blogs and great writing advice—without sifting through the ENTIRE INTERNET.
  • Share the articles you’ve worked so hard on with my 200+ RSS subscribers.
  • It’s a great way to grow a blog!

How can I get a cool badge?
Copy the code below and paste it into a blog post or a gadget/widget in your sidebar. (It’s in HTML, so be sure you’re adding an HTML gadget, or select the Edit HTML/HTML tab above the text window on the edit post page.)

<a href="http://jordanmccollum.com/tag/writing-wednesday/" target="_blank"><img src="http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z41/MamaBlogga/th_writingwed.png" border="0" alt="Writing Wednesday" ></a>

Where do we put our links?
Right here! Please remember to link directly to your post (i.e. ihaveablog.blogspot.com/2011/05/i-have-a-post.html and NOT ihaveablog.blogspot.com—this makes it easier to find the article!) and use a descriptive name (i.e. How to handle backstory and NOT Yippity Skippity Blog!).

Just fill in the boxes below to get started:

  • Jordan McCollum – Burying clues using context & interpretation
  • Noah – This Premise is alarmed
  • Margot Hovley–Perspective
  • James Duckett – 1 word vs 2 words
  • Daniel R. Marvello – The Beta Experiment – Week 3
  • Ronda Hinrichsen–A Suspense Block
  • Question Doc: Dealing with the questions that come up while writing
  • Ch-ch-ch-changes!
    I’m going to change two things for this link party. The first will be that the party will move from being held biweekly, to being held every Wednesday.

    And change #2 is a bit more exciting: How about a prize for one contributor? One link author, chosen at random (only links entered by their authors are eligible), will receive a $20 Amazon gift card! Winner to be announced next Writing Wednesday.

    Thanks for participating!

    Photo: writing with my new pen by Melanie Cook

    Writing Wednesday III

    Welcome back to Writing Wednesday! Since so many of us are writers, I know we all must read lots of writing blogs. So let’s share some of the great things we learn about writing through a fun new linkup! It’s like a blogfest, only easier!Writing Wednesday

    Last time, we had six great entries:

    Share your best posts on writing today!

    What are the rules?

    1. All articles must directly relate to writing. If you see something that makes you think of a writing principle, and you want to participate, I recommend you blog about your thoughts, and then submit your blog post.
    2. You should use a descriptive name so we all want to click on the article: Jordan McCollum wouldn’t be very enticing, but Doing Backstory Right would.
    3. Articles can come from your blog or someone else’s.
    4. If it’s your post, PLEASE link back to Writer Wednesday in the post so your visitors can join in the fun! (You can use the badge below—the code includes a link!)
    5. You can submit up to three articles total.
    6. Posts can be old or new.
    7. You have until Tuesday, 2 August 2011 to submit.
    8. If you’d like to follow me, I certainly wouldn’t object! It’s not required, though.

    Why should you participate?

    • We can all benefit from this!
    • Find new blogs and great writing advice—without sifting through the ENTIRE INTERNET.
    • Share the articles you’ve worked so hard on with my 200+ RSS subscribers.
    • It’s a great way to grow a blog!

    How can I get a cool badge?
    Copy the code below and paste it into a blog post or a gadget/widget in your sidebar. (It’s in HTML, so be sure you’re adding an HTML gadget, or select the Edit HTML/HTML tab above the text window on the edit post page.)

    <a href="http://jordanmccollum.com/tag/writing-wednesday/" target="_blank"><img src="http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z41/MamaBlogga/th_writingwed.png" border="0" alt="Writing Wednesday" ></a>

    Where do we put our links?
    Right here! Please remember to link directly to your post (i.e. ihaveablog.blogspot.com/2011/05/i-have-a-post.html and NOT ihaveablog.blogspot.com—this makes it easier to find the article!) and use a descriptive name (i.e. How to handle backstory and NOT Yippity Skippity Blog!).

    Just fill in the boxes below to get started:

    How about a prize for one contributor? One link author, chosen at random (only links entered by their authors are eligible), will receive Next time around, I’m thinking about offering a prize for one participant chosen at random. What would you like to see as a prize?

    Thanks for participating!

    Photo: writing with my new pen by Melanie Cook

    Writing Wednesday II

    Welcome back to Writing Wednesday! Since so many of us are writers, I know we all must read lots of writing blogs. So let’s share some of the great things we learn about writing through a fun new linkup! It’s like a blogfest, only easier!Writing Wednesday

    What are the rules?

    1. All articles must directly relate to writing. If you see something that makes you think of a writing principle, and you want to participate, I recommend you blog about your thoughts, and then submit your blog post.
    2. You should use a descriptive name so we all want to click on the article: Jordan McCollum wouldn’t be very enticing, but Doing Backstory Right would.
    3. Articles can come from your blog or someone else’s.
    4. If it’s your post, PLEASE link back to Writer Wednesday in the post so your visitors can join in the fun! (You can use the badge below—the code includes a link!)
    5. You can submit up to three articles total.
    6. Posts can be old or new.
    7. You have until Tuesday, 19 July 2011 to submit.
    8. If you’d like to follow me, I certainly wouldn’t object! It’s not required, though.

    Why should you participate?

    • We can all benefit from this!
    • Find new blogs and great writing advice—without sifting through the ENTIRE INTERNET.
    • Share the articles you’ve worked so hard on with my 200+ RSS subscribers.
    • It’s a great way to grow a blog!

    How can I get a cool badge?
    Copy the code below and paste it into a blog post or a gadget/widget in your sidebar. (It’s in HTML, so be sure you’re adding an HTML gadget, or select the Edit HTML/HTML tab above the text window on the edit post page.)

    <a href="http://jordanmccollum.com/tag/writing-wednesday/" target="_blank"><img src="http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z41/MamaBlogga/th_writingwed.png" border="0" alt="Writing Wednesday" ></a>

    Where do we put our links?
    Right here! Please remember to link directly to your post (i.e. ihaveablog.blogspot.com/2011/05/i-have-a-post.html and NOT ihaveablog.blogspot.com—this makes it easier to find the article!) and use a descriptive name (i.e. How to handle backstory and NOT Yippity Skippity Blog!).

    Just fill in the boxes below to get started: Check out our contributors this week!

    Next time around, I’m thinking about offering a prize for one participant chosen at random. What would you like to see as a prize?

    Thanks for participating!

    Photo: writing with my new pen by Melanie Cook

    The randomest writing question I can think of

    Last year, I volunteered to trade manuscripts with a stranger. If I remember correctly, her manuscript was one of her first completed novels—and just a few short months later, Deanna Barnhart‘s running a very successful writing blog, with an awesome blogfest this month:

    Today, we’re supposed to post a writing question, so here’s mine.

    I’ve been studying writing craft since I was a teenager—which isn’t a super long time ago (I’ll just tell you, I’m 28), but still, I couldn’t seem to exactly remember how I learned to write. A couple months ago, it came to me: the Internet.

    In the mid-nineties, there was this website on writing craft. It might have even been an ezine. It had some pretty good stuff. The site color scheme was red and black, and it might have had a grayish color background.

    The only concrete writing advice I can remember from the site was to edit (what a concept!) and a story one student had written that involved postcards and balloons. It had a sleepy beginning, but the author of the article (who wasn’t the author of the story) suggested the story author add two sentences to the beginning of the story that would help highlight the poignancy of the postcards to the readers.

    I think I came across the site again a few years ago, so it might still be out there. I also think it had some form of the word “write” in the name and URL.

    My question: where can I find this website?

    Last week was our first Writing Wednesday. Maybe one of these articles will help answer your question!

    Even if you can’t help me find that website, be sure to come back next Wednesday for Writing Wednesday II, to share your favorite blog posts on writing!

    Writing Wednesday!

    Welcome to the first-ever Writing Wednesday! Since so many of us are writers, I know we all must read lots of writing blogs. So let’s share some of the great things we learn about writing through a fun new linkup! It’s like a blogfest, only easier!Writing Wednesday

    What are the rules?

    1. All articles must directly relate to writing. If you see something that makes you think of a writing principle, and you want to participate, I recommend you blog about your thoughts, and then submit your blog post.
    2. You should use a descriptive name so we all want to click on the article: Jordan McCollum wouldn’t be very enticing, but Doing Backstory Right would.
    3. Articles can come from your blog or someone else’s.
    4. If it’s your post, link back to Writer Wednesday in the post so your visitors can join in the fun! (You can use the badge below—the code includes a link!)
    5. You can submit up to three articles total.
    6. Posts can be old or new.
    7. You have until Tuesday, 5 July 2011 to submit.
    8. If you’d like to follow me, I certainly wouldn’t object! It’s not required, though.

    Why should you participate?

    • We can all benefit from this!
    • Find new blogs and great writing advice—without sifting through the ENTIRE INTERNET.
    • Share the articles you’ve worked so hard on with my 200+ RSS subscribers.
    • It’s a great way to grow a blog!

    How can I get a cool badge?
    Copy the code below and paste it into a blog post or a gadget/widget in your sidebar. (It’s in HTML, so be sure you’re adding an HTML gadget, or select the Edit HTML/HTML tab above the text window on the edit post page.) UPDATED with fixed code!

    <a href="http://jordanmccollum.com/tag/writing-wednesday/" target="_blank"><img src="http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z41/MamaBlogga/th_writingwed.png" border="0" alt="Writing Wednesday" ></a>

    Where do we put our links?
    Right here! Please remember to link directly to your post (i.e. ihaveablog.blogspot.com/2011/05/i-have-a-post.html and NOT ihaveablog.blogspot.com—this makes it easier to find the article!) and use a descriptive name (i.e. How to handle backstory and NOT Yippity Skippity Blog!).

    Just fill in the boxes below to get started:

    Thanks for participating!

    Photo: writing with my new pen by Melanie Cook

    New feature coming: Writing Wednesday!

    Okay, I know there are a lot of Writing Wednesday type memes out there: WIP Wednesday, Writing Advice Wednesday, Writers Wearing Waders Wednesday, Writers Watering Weeping Willows, Wildflowers and Wildebeests Wednesday. . . . (I may have made up one or two of those.) But this is new (I think).

    My mom, sisters and I started a craft blog a couple months ago (stick with me here). In the craft blogosphere, dozens of blogs run weekly “Linky Parties.” Participants add links to their crafts from the week, and visitors to the site get to see pictures. Hundreds and hundreds of pictures. They can click through and find new great crafts, tutorials and blogs. Lots of the linky parties also feature their favorite crafts from the week as well.

    I wanted to bring those fun benefits to the writing community, too. So starting next week, I’ll host WRITING WEDNESDAY every other week: bring your favorite articles on writing and we’ll add them to a Mr. Linky.

    What are the rules?

    1. All articles must directly relate to writing. If you see something that makes you think of a writing principle, and you want to participate, I recommend you blog about your thoughts, and then submit your blog post.
    2. Articles can come from your blog or someone else’s.
    3. If it’s your post, link back to Writer Wednesday in the post so your visitors can join in the fun!
    4. You can submit up to three articles total.
    5. Posts can be old or new.

    Why should you participate?

    • We can all benefit from this!
    • Find new blogs and great writing advice—without sifting through the ENTIRE INTERNET.
    • Share the articles you’ve worked so hard on with my 200+ RSS subscribers.
    • It’s a great way to grow a blog!

    So start collecting articles for next week!

    Photo by Heather Sunderland