Writing Magazine

MAKE DO AND MEND

It’s all too tempting to race ahead and start writing something new, even when there are several other half-finished writing projects on the go. But for one reason or another those other half-finished projects have left you feeling less than enthusiastic, so you toss them aside like an old smartphone in favour of the all-singing-and-dancing new bit of tech.

It doesn’t have to be this way. A bit of cutting and pasting, and project fusion is the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writing Magazine

Writing Magazine4 min read
Piracy, Pillage & Plunder
Mary Read first entered my life when I was kneeling on the floor, doing a Horrible Histories jigsaw puzzle with my young son. There was a passing reference to two female pirates, Anne Bonny and Mary Read, and this piqued my curiosity enough that I Go
Writing Magazine3 min read
Get Published
In the 1970s and 80s horror fiction was huge, the genre dominated by bestselling titles by Stephen King and James Herbert, writes Gary Dalkin. Shelves were filled with books by Ramsey Campbell, Shaun Hutson, Brian Lumley, Mark Morris, Stephen Laws a
Writing Magazine3 min read
Tips And Exercises For Writing Historical Fiction:
In writing historical fiction, it’s easy to get lost in the dates and facts that you’ve been researching (Who was monarch at the time? Which countries were allied in the War of Spanish Succession?). This can lead to sterile writing, and getting caugh

Related Books & Audiobooks