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Writing Academy Blog

  • Genre Conventions Are a Promise — Break Them at Your Peril
    Writing Tips

    Genre Conventions Are a Promise — Break Them at Your Peril

    Bysteve April 29, 2026May 29, 2026

    Subverting genre conventions is the most common mistake I see in ambitious first novels. The intent is to be bold. The result is usually a confused, disappointed reader. When someone picks up a romance, they’ve made a commitment: they want an emotional journey between two people that ends with hope. You can make that journey…

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  • How to Use Flashbacks Without Killing Your Scene
    Writing Tips

    How to Use Flashbacks Without Killing Your Scene

    Bysteve April 28, 2026May 29, 2026

    Most writers insert flashbacks at the worst possible moment. A character has just made a discovery. Stakes are high. The reader is leaning in. And then the scene cuts to six years ago to explain why. The flashback rule I give students: earn it first, then pay it out. Earn it by making the reader…

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  • Where Your Writing Voice Actually Lives
    Writing Tips

    Where Your Writing Voice Actually Lives

    Bysteve April 27, 2026May 29, 2026

    Writers spend years trying to “find their voice.” Most are looking in the wrong place. Voice doesn’t live in adjectives or sentence length. It lives in what your narrator notices. Pick a room. One writer sees the dirty dishes and thinks about who left them. Another sees the light on the curtains and thinks about…

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  • Your Antagonist Should Be the Hero of Their Own Story
    Writing Tips

    Your Antagonist Should Be the Hero of Their Own Story

    Bysteve April 26, 2026May 29, 2026

    Your antagonist is the hero of their own story. If you don’t write them that way, they’ll come out flat. The weak antagonist is one of the most common problems in first novels. The villain who shows up to be villainous. The obstacle character whose only motivation is “oppose the hero.” Readers don’t fear that….

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  • Why Your Subplot Might Be a Sideshow
    Structure | Writing Tips

    Why Your Subplot Might Be a Sideshow

    Bysteve April 25, 2026May 29, 2026

    Most subplots in first novels exist to fill pages. The writer adds a love interest with a job problem, a best friend going through a breakup, a mystery at the office. Each gets a few scenes, then wraps up. Nothing technically wrong. But the book feels padded. The reader skims. The subplot is answering a…

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  • The Missing Ingredient Most Writers Ignore: Internal Conflict
    Characters | Writing Tips

    The Missing Ingredient Most Writers Ignore: Internal Conflict

    Bysteve April 24, 2026May 29, 2026

    Most writers spend 80% of their energy on the external plot and almost none on the internal conflict. Then they wonder why readers finish the book and forget it. External conflict is the story’s skeleton—it keeps the plot moving. Internal conflict is the flesh and blood. The external problem gives your protagonist something to do;…

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  • Stop Ending Your Scenes with Success
    Scenes | Writing Tips

    Stop Ending Your Scenes with Success

    Bysteve April 23, 2026May 29, 2026

    Every scene you end with a success is slowly killing your novel’s momentum. I’ve seen this pattern hundreds of times. A student with clean prose and characters readers actually care about. People quitting halfway through. No idea why. The problem is always the same: every chapter ends with something resolved. Readers stop reading when they…

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  • Memoir Isn’t About What Happened to You
    Non-Fiction | Writing Tips

    Memoir Isn’t About What Happened to You

    Bysteve April 22, 2026May 29, 2026

    Most memoir writers think the interesting part is what happened. It’s not. The real material in memoir is the distance between who you were and who you became. The event is just the container. What goes inside it is the transformation—or the failure to transform. Readers don’t pick up a memoir to learn what you…

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  • The Editing Trap That Kills First Novels
    Wordcraft | Writing Tips

    The Editing Trap That Kills First Novels

    Bysteve April 21, 2026May 29, 2026

    Most writers don’t finish their first novel. The reason is almost never a bad idea. It’s editing while they write. I’ve taught over 100,000 students. The pattern is the same: you write a chapter, you don’t like it, you go back and fix it. Then you fix the next chapter. Then you loop. You never…

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  • Tension Doesn’t Require Danger
    Scenes | Writing Tips

    Tension Doesn’t Require Danger

    Bysteve April 20, 2026May 29, 2026

    Most writers think tension requires danger. It doesn’t. You can have a character in mortal peril and produce zero tension. You can have a character waiting for a phone call and make a reader’s stomach drop. The difference isn’t stakes—it’s information. Tension comes from what your character doesn’t know. When your protagonist walks into a…

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  • Show Don’t Tell Is the Most Misunderstood Writing Advice
    Wordcraft | Writing Tips

    Show Don’t Tell Is the Most Misunderstood Writing Advice

    Bysteve April 19, 2026May 29, 2026

    “Show don’t tell” is the most repeated writing advice in existence. It’s also the most misunderstood. Telling isn’t bad. “She was exhausted” works fine if exhaustion is background the reader needs to move forward. Spending a full paragraph on heavy eyelids and stumbling steps would be self-indulgent. The real distinction is stakes. Tell when the…

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  • Romance Dominates Kindle: 5 Stats Every Fiction Writer Should Know
    Indie | Keys to Success | Marketing | Publishing | Romance | Self-Publishing

    Romance Dominates Kindle: 5 Stats Every Fiction Writer Should Know

    Bysteve February 11, 2026May 29, 2026

    55% of top-selling Kindle books in 2025 were romance — and 75% of those bestselling authors went indie. Five eye-opening stats about the hottest genre in publishing.

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