http://thewritelife.com/100-best-websites-for-writers-2015/#.acdpxw:BIj0
Author: writeandthrive
Your Writing Journal – Journal Ideas and Tips on How to Write a Journal
Looking for journal ideas and journaling inspiration? Want to start a creative writing journal? Here you’ll find advice on how to keep a journal, plus hundreds of free journal prompts.
Source: Your Writing Journal – Journal Ideas and Tips on How to Write a Journal
Fiction University: Best Non-Writing Tools for Writers
Journaling to Become a Better Writer IV – Finding Your Voice
Writing prompt – learning from established writers
Copy a paragraph from a book/author that you admire.
Rewrite the paragraph changing a few small details. Now continue writing from this revised paragraph.
Write for at least 10 minutes without censoring or editing. Let the words flow, see where it goes.
What did you notice? If you’d like to share your writing or your experience of this and other writing prompts, please do – in the comments section.
Writing prompt – learning from established writers Tweet this
Shared from WordPress
Go Big, Go Weird, Go You, And Fuck Fear Right In The Ear – http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2015/10/13/go-big-go-weird-go-you-and-fuck-fear-right-in-the-ear/
Article: Your life will be far better if you copy these crafty writers
“Creativity is the route to happiness”
Article: Your Questions Answered: What Is the Hardest Part of a Book to Write? – K.M. Weiland
Your Questions Answered: What Is the Hardest Part of a Book to Write? – K.M. Weiland
Writing prompt – where have you been? #2
Select a bag or piece of luggage for this writing prompt.
Write a list: where have you been with your bag, suitcase, rucksack, luggage? As many places as you can remember.
Read through your list.
Pick one place.
Write about it for 15 minutes.
If you want to share your writing in the comments section, it would be great to see how you get on.
Writing prompt – Where have you been #2 – Tweet this
Writing prompt – inner critic #4
What stops you writing? Is there an internal critic that undermines your plans; tells you that your writing won’t be good enough; that you shouldn’t be writing? Write a fight
scene between you and your inner critic. What starts it?
Write for at least 10 minutes without censoring or editing. Let the words flow, see where it goes.
If you’d like to share your writing or your experience of this and other writing prompts, please do – in the comments section.
