Skip to content

WRITING FROM THE PEAK

Inner Child Lost and Found

by Jen Wolf It is just a few days after PPWC25, and I have finally caught up on my sleep. Once again, the conference provided an incredible, rarefied atmosphere in which each one of us was encouraged to be our true selves. At Friday evening’s BarCon, I talked with a […]

Audiobooks: A Chat with Sandra Murphy

An Interview by Deborah L. Brewer Though books have been read aloud since the beginning of books, the first audiobook recording was made in 1932. The American Foundation for the Blind published Shakespeare’s plays, the Constitution, and popular novels on vinyl records. By the 1970s, libraries were lending books on […]

Writerly Community: A Chat with Torie Fox-Phillips

An Interview by Deborah L. Brewer One of the best things about writing is the long hours of solitude in our minds. But sooner or later, one needs some advice, or another set of eyes, or a boost of confidence. That’s where a writerly community comes in—other folks, your special […]

A Little Post About Blogs

By Deborah Brewer Blog, Blog, Blog… The idea behind the word “blog” is “web log.” It’s an online journal—information and experiences shared through a personal lens and in conversational tones. A decade or so ago, it seemed every writer was urged to start a blog and post three times a […]

Volunteering is All-Pro, No Con

By Bowen Gillings I have never attended a Pikes Peak Writers Conference. Oh, I have been to every PPWC since 2016. Even co-created our 2020 virtual experience, the Colorado Writers Collaborative, in partnership with Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers and Northern Colorado Writers (now Writing Heights Writers Association). And yet I […]

Exploring Children’s Literature

Part 2 – A Chat with Darby Karchut Welcome back, dear readers. In January, I began my “Exploring Literature with Children” blog series. Today, I will continue it as we delve into the world of Middle Grade (MG) fiction.  Several beloved titles come to mind when I think of the […]

Setting Up Your Story for Success

By Trista Herring Baughman You have a great story idea. Or you’ve started a book, but you’re stuck. Now what? How can you go from a seedling of a story to a fully branched, deeply rooted one? If you’re a panster, you’ll likely begin by sitting down to write. If […]

What Are You Reading?

by Deborah Brewer Why are people like Stephen King so sure writers need to be readers too? He said, “If you want to be a writer, you must do two things above all others: Read a lot and write a lot.” But life is busy, so busy that for many […]

A Note from the Editor

Well, dear wordsmiths, January seemed like a long year, yet super fast in some aspects. It’s already February! Can you believe it? PPW’s Conference is coming up in May. Get ready for 2.5 days of amazing workshops and keynote speakers! Join us for Write Drunk, Edit Sober, get a snazzy […]

Embracing Mistakes; Writing without Fear

by Deborah L. Brewer It’s January again, and like many of you, I’m planning for a productive writing year. Part of that planning is to consider what might impede my progress and strategize ahead of it. A lack of time? Schedule writing on the calendar. A lack of energy? Cut […]

Exploring Children’s Literature

Part 1 – A Chat with Aaron Reynolds Children’s literature is a genre that is dear to my heart, as I’m sure it is to many of yours. It’s a varied genre, including books, magazines, poems, and stories created especially for children. Modern kid-lit is classified by either genre or […]

Teaching Writing —with Bowen Gillings

An Interview by Deborah L. Brewer Have you wondered about teaching a writing class or workshop? There are well over 100 recurring writers’ conferences in the United States alone. And that doesn’t include public library programming, or even PPW’s regular Write Brain events. What are the benefits of teaching a […]

Writing While Traveling

By AJ Metzger The Journey There and Back Writing while traveling is not the same as travel writing, although the two aren’t mutually exclusive. Writing while traveling is just that, I spend 2-4 months a year traveling for work while trying to complete a novel and maintain my day-to-day existence. […]

Villains and More—with Barbara Nickless

An Interview by Deborah L. Brewer Every story, if it is to be a compelling read, needs conflict and obstacles for its protagonists to overcome on their heroic journeys. Enter, the villain, to a chorus of boos and hisses. Villains are the characters readers love to fear and hate. But […]

NaNoWriMo Alternatives

By AJ Metzger I’ll admit I planned for the past 3 years to participate in NaNoWriMo and each year I started strongish but all the things interfered. Mainly for me, November is a crazy busy month for planning and organizing the upcoming year for both work and home, and trying […]

How Horror Has Made Me a Better Writer

By Monique Bos I’ll never forget the first Stephen King book I read: Pet Sematary.  I was sixteen, and at the religious high school I attended, horror was neither part of the canon taught in class nor approved extracurricular reading. But other kids talked about how terrifying his books were, […]

A Mystery Guest Interview

By Trista Herring Baughman Hello, Dear Readers,  Spooky Season is my favorite season–the (sometimes) cooler weather, the fresh, crisp air, the smell of bonfires and funnel cakes and roasted corn at the fair, barn sales, pumpkin patches, and reading my favorite horror books. If I’m being honest, I read and […]

Writerly Tools

Hello, Dear Readers, I’ve taken several writing classes recently. A lot of them cover the same topics in similar ways. But just when I think I’ve learned all the writing tips and tricks, I find something new. Out of all the tools I’ve come across, some have made a huge […]

A Chat with Maria Kelson – The Debut Novel and More

An Interview by Deborah L. Brewer A debut novel, like other firsts, requires the mastery of various skills along a steep learning curve, including language, story mechanics, and professionalism. Like climbing Mt. Everest, publishing may be a profound personal accomplishment, but neither is achieved alone. There are other achievers along […]

On Writing Humor

By Laura Hayden “To appreciate nonsense requires a serious interest in life.” Gelett Burgess (1866-1951) Webster defines humor as “that which is comical or amusing.”  It’s a flat definition for a concept that has many dimensions. But the challenge to humor isn’t defining it but recognizing and learning how to […]

Murder Your Darlings with Style

By Deborah L Brewer “…kill your darlings, kill your darlings, even when it breaks your egocentric little scribbler’s heart, kill your darlings.” Thus, Stephen King famously paraphrased the words of a novelist from an earlier generation. That novelist was Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, an Edwardian-era, Cambridge Professor of English Literature […]

The Delight is in the Details

By Monique Bos One of my fiction teachers observed a strict “rule of three” about descriptions. Writers, he believed, should provide three—no more and no less—descriptive details about each main character in their stories. And each detail had to convey an essential insight into the individual. He didn’t need to […]

PPWC 2024 – Highlights

By Catherine Dilts Gems I gleaned from workshops I attended at the 2024 Pikes Peak Writers Conference. It’s impossible to capture all I learned at PPWC 2024 in a few words, but here are some favorite quotes and nuggets of information. There was so much more!  Najla Mamou – Editor, […]

A Chat with Catherine Dilts

An Interview by Deborah L. Brewer When I think of cozy mysteries, I often think of bookshops, tea time, quaint towns, and cats. But cozies, as these gentle, escapist novels are sometimes called, range from quirky and humorous, to historic and romantic, to realistic, contemporary tales that merely leave out […]

Need More? Check out the Archive!