ProWritingAid’s manuscript analysis – a review
Where I breakdown for you my experience of using ProWritingAid’s new (ish) manuscript analysis tool.
Where I breakdown for you my experience of using ProWritingAid’s new (ish) manuscript analysis tool.
Ah, January. The month of new beginnings, fresh starts, and the crushing realisation that my writing resolutions might as well
Ah, another year looms, full of opportunity, possibility and—if the past is anything to go by—several ill-advised distractions. But not
Well, here we are, folks—another year nearly in the bag, and I’m still here, clinging to the ever-slippery slope of
1,060 downloads. £44.76 in royalties. A respectable 2,500 words written… and then lost because I trusted a Kindle app. Throw in some TikTok videos so awkward they should come with a warning, and you’ve got the perfect recipe for my November highlights reel.
If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to just keep flopping, I’ve got the play-by-play for you. Spoiler: it involves a lot of Diet Coke, a little swearing, and a pinch of stubborn optimism.
[Read the full story here.]
Ah, the elusive platform. A sturdy, gleaming foundation from which an author can rise to the heights of success, book deals raining down like confetti.
The flop fiction chronicles. When success looks like 300 free downloads and a romantasy held together by sheer willpower
In October, a self-published author, Emma, experienced moderate success with 156 book downloads, mostly free copies, earning nearly £45. Despite boosting her Pinterest views, she struggled on TikTok and faced rejection from Wattpad for her pitch. Undeterred, she continues promoting her work and shares her journey with humor.
Ah, the loneliness of writing and all the mistakes I’ve made on my self-publishing journey
Gin, Fizz & Tonic is out now… My latest novel is a romcom meets quit lit book, where our heroine