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Posts by Joseph Borden:
- 2016 Agents
- 2017 Agents
- 2017 Killer Nashville Sponsors
- 2017 Killer Nashville Sponsors 2
- 2017 Killer Nashville Sponsors 3
- 2018 Agents & Editors
- 2018 Killer Nashville Sponsors
- 2019 Agents & Editors
- 2020 Killer Nashville Sponsor
- 2020 Silver Falchion
- 2021 Agents & Editors
- 2021 Killer Nashville Sponsor
- 2022 Sponsors
- Advice
- Agents / Editors / Publishers
- Agents You May Want to Know
- Announcements
- Articles
- Attendees
- Author Sponsors
- Awards
- Blog
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- Favorite Tweets and Posts
- Featured Authors
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- Fiction
- Food
- Forensics
- Funny Pages
- Guest Bloggers
- Guests Of Honor
- How-To
- Inside
- International Look
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- John Seigenthaler Legends Award Winners
- Killer Cocktails
- Killer Nashville Book of the Day: Past Book Reviews
- Killer Nashville Readers' Choice Award
- Killer Nashville Sponsors
- Literary Studies
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- Nominees
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- Other Featured Books
- Panelists 2018
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- Panelists 2020
- Past Issues
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- Publishers You Should Know
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- Short Stories
- Silver Falchion Award
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- Uncategorized
- Video
- Writing Photo Prompt & Contest
Writing the High-Concept Novel by DiAnn Mills
Launching our books doesn’t have to be a formidable task. Instead, consider the it a challenge we can meet head-on with a plan that works. “Everybody walks past a thousand story ideas every day. The good writers are the ones who see five or six of them. Most people don’t see any.” — Orson Scott […]
The Consistent Grace of Barry Sanders by Steven C. Harms
Barry Sanders. The greatest running back in NFL history (calm down Browns and Cowboys fans). The forever pride of the Detroit Lions. Electric. An athlete absolutely worth the price of admission. Slashing, spinning, juking, power-running, twisting, lunging, and whatever other contortions he needed to make to succeed on a football field. Over a 10-year career, […]
Case Status by W.C. Gordon
The following is an except from the novel The Detective Next Door. “On Tuesday, November 8th , 2016 at approximately 0720 hours, officers reported to 16 Hibiscus Dr. in reference to a report of a stolen vehicle. Contact was made with the victim who advised that his blue 2016 BMW 330i was stolen by an […]
Novel Malpractice: Coma by Ronda Wells
In all honesty, at times the use of coma (disorders of consciousness) in television and movies can be laughable. A character on a soap opera awakens dramatically after years in a deep coma and talks perfectly with no confusion. Right. You may know this, but Robin Cook’s second novel Coma is considered the genesis of […]
Exercise an Attitude of Gratitude by Bryan Robinson, Ph.D
I am grateful that I experienced many things … and that I have been able to write a dozen books, to receive innumerable letters from friends, colleagues, and readers. —Oliver Sacks The day-to-day annoyances we complain about are suddenly trivial when we face a major catastrophe. How many of us gripe and complain about minor […]
Part 3: Slave to rules: Write first. Worry later. by Angela K. Durden
A panda walks into a bar. He eats, shoots, and leaves. Or does he eat shoots and leaves? Yes, punctuation is powerful, changing meanings even in punchlines, suggesting titles for fun books on punctuation, and starting bar fights. For the newspaper business, technical papers, scientific journals, legal writs, etcetera, style manuals keep everybody understanding what […]
The Secret Formula by Dale T. Phillips
A few short stories and a novel or two (even if sold to a major publisher) is seldom enough for a career. Making the equivalent salary of a full-time job year after year is really hitting the lottery, and quite an achievement. Sales and writing income fluctuate wildly, and one must plan carefully if this […]
We Don’t Need Editors, Do We? by Philip Demetry
If you do a quick Google search on the benefits and costs of self-publishing versus a traditional route, you will most likely find one blog post after the other, one website after the other, claiming that self-publishing is the way to go. How many of those are in some form inserted into your feed by […]
Co-Writing a Book by Michael J. Tucker and Tom Wood
Michael J. Tucker There is plenty of good, practical advice out there for two authors interested in co-writing a book or short story — everything from constant communication to a shared vision for the project, from outlining the novel to who writes what, from being open to criticism to trusting each […]