Writer's Digest magazine is a comprehensive source of writing instruction for writers. Each issue provides advice and insider tips on writing and selling fiction, nonfiction, poetry and scripts.
The Five Senses
A Questionable Choice
Writer's Digest
CONTRIBUTORS
What’s in a name? • The Importance of Naming Characters
Worth a Thousand Words
Daring to Show My Dark Side
Poetic Asides • No matter what you write, a bit of poetic license can be a valuable asset to any writer’s arsenal.
Write It Out • Writing prompts to boost your creativity.
Independent Printing • How to Find and Negotiate With an Offset Printer
Offset Printers
Jessie Kwak
Breaking Into Books: Different Kinds of Literary Collaborations
Mazey Eddings
Kristin Ostby • THE GREENHOUSE LITERARY AGENCY
BREAKING IN • Debut authors: How they did it, what they learned, and why you can do it, too.
Love to Hate Them • Four types of unlikable characters and how to make them work in your writing.
Bringing Characters to Life on the Page • How to effectively reveal characters through showing and telling.
Anchoring Characters in a Series • Seven techniques for writing a series-sustainable character.
Finding Your Character’s Voice • Get inside your character’s head with these 15 exercises.
Turning Real People Into Characters Is an Act of Translation • On balancing truth and subjectivity when writing about the self and others in memoir.
Tommy Orange • The award-winning author on the power and limits of fiction and the breakthrough moment for his second novel, Wandering Stars.
Letting Curiosity Lead • Claire Fraise, author of They Stay and grand prize winner of the 31st Annual WD Self-Published Book Awards, shares how she utilizes curiosity in every aspect of publication.
The Winners
WRITER'S DIGEST TUTORIALS • Writing instruction on demand! More than 350 videos from industry professionals on everything from improving your craft to getting published.
A Single Red Balloon • THE CHALLENGE: Write a short story of 650 words or fewer based on the photo below.
129 • THE CHALLENGE: Write a drabble—a short story of exactly 100 words, excluding the title—based on the photo prompt below. You can be funny, poignant, witty, etc.; it is, after all, your story.
What’s My Motivation?
Analyzing Agent Responses
Craft a Micro Memoir That Sells
5 Literary Journals Open to Submissions
Connecting Theme to Character
To Conlang or Not?
Writers in Toyland • Author Allie Millington shares the process of writing a book from the perspective of a typewriter in her debut middle-grade novel, Olivetti.
A Single Woman
CREATIVE QUILL • A playground for your pen.