Favorite Links of the Week

How Readers React to Reactions by Donald Maass. It felt like Donald Maass was speaking directly to me in this article. I often rely on physical reactions or internal dialogue to show what a character feels—but as writers, our real job is to make readers feel. Emotional engagement is what hooks readers and keeps them invested. I’m still learning how to do that, but Donald offers a clear, practical example of one powerful way to make it happen.

The 3 Writing Exercises That Instantly Leveled Up My Writing A YouTube video from Story Lab. These are some of the most practical, immediately useful writing exercises I’ve come across—I watched it several times and took notes. Highlights include: using the Snowflake Method to generate vivid details (why haven’t I been using this more?), writing scenes that engage all five senses (smell is going to be tricky), and crafting dialogue by fully stepping into the speaker’s perspective. Highly recommended.

And a non-writing one: Sticky Chickpeas from Naturallie Plant-Based. Quick, tasty, and surprisingly satisfying. I’m not vegan or vegetarian, but I am always looking for easy ways to get more veggies into my meals—without spending hours in the kitchen or using every pan I own. This one took just 25 minutes, start to finish, served with rice, steamed broccoli, and a sprinkle of peanuts on top. Definitely going into the rotation.

Links List

Venting Doesn’t Reduce Anger, But Something Else Does, Study Finds. Smashing shit in a rage room isn’t going to help you to let it go.

ProWritingAid is offering a free Fantasy Writers’ Week Summit, April 22-26. I’m attending! “Discover the secrets for writing, editing, and publishing a spell-binding fantasy novel at this free online summit.” Yep, they’re going to try to sell you stuff but I always come away with some gold nuggets.

The 3 Best Writing Tips I’ve Gotten From Masters, and the 4 Best Writing Tips I’ve Given.

Links to Articles on Using AI for Writers

I am technologically curious and really enjoyed what little I’ve learned about using AI for creative writing. Enough that I’d like to learn more. I am concerned about how AI has been trained and what that means as far as copywrite for authors. But I think for generating ideas, characters, and other items that aren’t actual writing, AI could be very useful.

Here’s a few links about using ChatGPT for writing:

How to use ChatGPT for writing by TechRadar. Summarizing, creating characters, worldbuilding, creating outlines and some good tips for better prompts.

5 Ways ChatGPT Can Improve, Not Replace, Your Writing at Wired. Use ChatGPT as a writing assistant. Find the right word. Generate ideas. Do research, but check out the sources! Generate character and place names. Have it review your writing.

9 ChatGPT Tips for Writers (Plus Prompts) from EvatoTuts+. 9 tips for writers using ChatGpt.

How to Write a Novel With ChatGPT (Ultimate Guide in 2023) from WritingBeginner. “Write a novel with ChatGPT by generating outlines, descriptions, dialogue, and scenes. Using prompts like, “Describe the setting of the scene” or, “Create a dramatic confrontation,” ChatGPT generates unique and compelling output, scene by scene. Refine and edit the output to fit your story’s needs.”

Online courses:

Write an entire novel with AI? Sudowrite. I’ve listened to The Creative Penn’s podcast with Amit Gupta from Sudowrite and it’s worth a listen to hear their side of the AI and creative writing debate. I am technologically curious enough to at least give it a try.