Don’t let common mistakes lose your readers!
Are you a fantasy writer …
… struggling to convert the vivid scenes of your fantasy novel from your imagination to the page?
… stuck in a loop where you constantly rewrite your opening pages?
… worried your story won’t resonate with your readers?
What if I could show you the exact steps week to week that would take you from brainstorming and drafting to revising and publication?
I specialize in developmental editing and book coaching for writers of fantasy novels—writers who value the craft of storytelling and wish to create stories that resonate.
Develop Your Ideas
I’ll let you in on a secret. All you need to succeed as a writer are three things:
A Roadmap: Illuminate your path with a step-by-step guide, ensuring you achieve your writing goals every week. From outlining to publishing, every stage of your journey is mapped out for success.
Mindset Mastery: Learn how your thoughts control your outcomes in your writing. Overcome self-doubt and unearth the confidence that will bring your unique ideas to life on the page.
Personalized Support: Prepare for comprehensive assistance, real-time accountability, and feedback tailored to your needs. From brainstorming sessions to final publication, you'll have a dedicated ally guiding you every step of the way.
With these three pillars, you'll unlock the potential to:
Craft a captivating story that enthralls readers from the first page to the last.
Develop complex characters and immersive worlds that resonate deeply with your audience.
Navigate the complexities of plot twists and pacing, keeping readers hooked until the final chapter.
Receive specific guidance on refining your scenes so that readers root for your protagonist.
Overcome writer's block and stay motivated throughout your writing journey, ensuring consistent progress.
Transform your rough draft into a polished, professional manuscript ready for publication.
Are you ready to turn your fantasy novel from a mere vision into a masterpiece that captures hearts and minds?
Join Fantasy Footsteps: Road to Publication and begin your author journey with everything you need to write a story that works.
Don't let your story remain trapped in your mind—bring it to life with me!
If you’re thinking, “Yes, please! Tell me what to do!” , I’d like to invite you to work one-to-one with me to finish your novel and write a story that works. Join my book coaching program designed specifically for fantasy writers—Fantasy Footsteps: Road to Publication.
Discover Helpful Tools
Here you will find some of my favorite resources for writers.
Add these books, podcasts, websites, and other resources to your writing toolbox to augment your writing at any stage.
Join My Free, Private Facebook Group
Finish My Fantasy Novel: Write & Revise My Best Book in 6 Months
In the group, I go live weekly with writing tips. The group is also a platform for writers to support each other and share their wins and progress.
Live training schedule:
1st Tuesday of the month: Free critique for someone in the group!
2nd Tuesday of the month: Writing sprint with fellow writers
3rd Tuesday of the month: Live training on a specific topic
4th Tuesday of the month: Interview with an author or marketing/business expert
Improve Your Craft
As a developmental editor and book coach, everything I post is designed to help you build your creativity, strengthen your prose, and explore new avenues in your writing. The opinions in each post are my own, but many are inspired by ideas from established authors and editors who excel in their fields.
Rely on my blog for clear and specific writing advice, motivational tips and grammatical aid, and interviews with experts!
I’m a Developmental
Editor & Book Coach for Fantasy Writers.
Like you, I'm a writer. I understand the mental and emotional ups and downs of storytelling. Don't let resistance win! Recognize the value of good advice plus hard work.
My approach to novel writing is multifaceted. For a deeper understanding of my process and style, take a look at some of my favorite craft-of-writing books in my Resources section.
What can I say about myself? I read, I write, I read about writing, and I write about reading. It never gets old to me.
“I’ve been stalling on my Islam-inspired sci-fantasy series for 10 years. But within 10 minutes of starting Nicole’s program, I started writing again."
“I can’t recommend Fantasy Footsteps enough to writers who are legitimately looking to polish their craft, write, and eventually publish their novel."
“I loved discussing my story with Nicole. She provided me with invaluable insights I never would have considered on my own."
I’m genuinely sorry if that disappoints you.
As a developmental editor & book coach, everything I post is designed to help you build your creativity, strengthen your prose, and explore new avenues in your writing. The opinions in each post are my own, but many are inspired by ideas from established authors and editors who excel in their fields.
Some of these tips might be just what you need to hear. Others might not work for you personally, and that’s okay.
Apply the tips that fit your personality and writing habits, and feel free to adapt or ignore the others. For further questions and comments, you can email me or reach me through my Contact page.
what happens when you wait for the muse’s return.
what happens when you don’t.
how to carry on with your story … with or without the muse.
Years ago, a writer told me he’d lost his muse—and he was downright frustrated about it.
He said that the loss of his muse was, in fact, the source of all his writing problems. “If only I had my muse back,” he grumbled, “I’d be fine. I’d be writing every day, moving forward, feeling creative and inspired.”
He shared with me snippets of his past in which he’d been living just such a life, one of passion and purpose. His nostalgia was so strong that it was all he could focus on.
Months went by, and the writer and I occasionally kept in touch. I asked him where he was with his writing, and his answer usually included a vigorous fist-shaking at that elusive muse, who still hadn’t chosen to return. He had other priorities too—his finances, his health. But overall, he blamed his lack of writing on his “friend” choosing to abandon him.
I found his story incredibly sad.
He had allowed the muse’s retreat to dictate his entire writing life. With that view, he would never be able to step back into his writing by himself.
He would always be waiting. Always hoping for the muse’s return.
I think the muse deserves a name, don’t you?
Let’s call her Clara.
Some of us are sitting around waiting for Clara to reenter our lives. (Can you picture it? You’re alone, nursing a glass of wine, when Clara pushes open saloon doors, her hair and scarves blowing in the wind. She strides across the room and throws her arms around you after years of silence.)
If this is you, waiting for just such a moment, I have good news: You don’t need Clara.
Your brain might think you do. Your brain might tell you that to accomplish your very best writing, you need to feel that sense of wonder and excitement that comes from fleshing out a new idea, something truly magnificent.
But your brain tells you lots of things that aren’t true. Have you ever noticed that?
It makes perfect sense. After all, your brain’s job is to keep you safe. It wants you to seek out pleasure and avoid risk. The “avoid risk” part works well when you spot a bear in the woods—when there’s actual danger creeping up on you.
But it doesn’t work so well when you’re tempted to stay exactly where you are on your writing journey. When your brain tells you that it’s fine to wait and maintain the status quo. When it whispers in your ear, "You should let the fields lie fallow for a bit."
We can’t always take our brain’s advice as law, especially in cases where the story our brain is telling us contrasts where we say we want to go. For example, if you say you want to finish your novel, and your brain is saying that the best way to do that is to just relax and wait for inspiration, I would question that advice.
Here’s the simple way I recommend making life decisions: Choose actions that align with your overall goal.
So if your goal is to finish your draft, will waiting and not writing take you there?
Spoiler alert: It won’t.
So to finish your draft and write something decent, you don’t need Clara.
Let me tell you about a recent conversation I had with another writer, a former client of mine who was having trouble wrapping up all the threads around her main character at the end of her story. She told me in retrospect, “For the life of me, I couldn’t see how I was going to pull it all off.”
But she did pull it off. And because she was so excited, and she knew I would understand, she immediately messaged me and told me the story of how she managed to weave the threads into place.
“I wrote a scene,” she told me, “that I ended up deleting because it wasn’t right. Then, just as I was there, something clicked. It was so perfect, like every question that I still had about certain things that had come up throughout the series—all of it makes total sense.”
I knew the feeling she was talking about—that “eureka” moment that you’re desperately hoping will come to you so you can tie things together. It’s exactly what every writer hopes for when they run into this type of problem.
But did you notice her exact words?
She wrote a scene that wasn’t right. Then, “just as I was there, something clicked.”
She didn’t say she brainstormed for days on end about how to wrap everything up. She didn’t sit and stare at her computer, waiting for inspiration to strike.
She was in the middle of actually writing when inspiration came.
Anyone who’s a member of my Facebook group for fantasy writers might already be familiar with the Louis L’Amour quote in my cover photo: “Start writing no matter what. The water does not flow until the faucet is turned on.”
If you sit around waiting for inspiration, you might wait forever.
(Now, if you're unsure what to write and would like to uncover the specific reason you're "not feeling" your story, I recommend taking a look at this previous post of mine that will help you identify what's really going on and provide some specific strategies to help.)
Taking action and writing is the exact path toward summoning inspiration. I’ve heard it time and time again from my clients. The moment they stop worrying whether they’ll ever fix their current plot problem, or what’s going to happen at the end of their story, and they write through it, the problem tends to resolve itself.
Not through hope and inaction, but through the (dare we say magical?) act of writing.
I’m a huge fan of goals (mostly because I’ve seen the effects of them), and until you set a specific writing goal you’re trying to accomplish, you’re likely to wander aimlessly in the dark. So ask yourself, “Is it my current goal to move forward in my story? Do I want to make progress in my draft?”
If that’s your priority, and you love your reasons for it, jot down the actions you’re currently taking that lead you in the direction you claim you want to go. Some helpful questions you can ask to get started include …
Have I set aside specific time to write that’s separate from all other tasks?
Do I have a place to write that’s devoid of distractions?
What specific writing goal am I pursuing? Do I want to flesh out a basic outline? Write Chapter 1?
Once you give your brain the exact goal you’re moving toward (and it can help to get super visual here—picture yourself sitting down at the keyboard, typing words, drinking a sip of coffee, celebrating when you finish your chapter), take action in the direction of that goal.
Don’t wait. Just do it. (Hey there, Nike!)
Remember—an object in motion stays in motion. You don’t need the muse to create your own momentum.
(Speaking of momentum, if you're looking for extra tips, I wrote a post around that topic. You can read it here.)
Start writing on your own. Maybe Clara will show up. Maybe she won’t. But you’ll no longer be waiting on her to burst through the door and bless you with her presence. Whether she appears right away or not, you’ll be writing your story instead of waiting for one.
I’d love to know how the writing muse affects your own life. Do you feel that your writing is dictated by the appearance or disappearance of the muse? Do you take action even on days when you don’t feel like it? Email me anytime at [email protected] and let me know!
Do you want to learn how to write a story that makes your target readers stand up and cheer? If you’d like support from A to Z (from brainstorming to drafting to revising to publication), book a Discovery Call with me to see if you’re a good fit to join my book coaching program, Fantasy Footsteps: Road to Publication. And if you haven’t done so already, grab your Free Guide on how to hook readers from your story’s start!
Are you worried you've failed to establish a bond between readers and characters in your first chapter? Do you wonder if you've bogged readers down with your worldbuilding? Do you sometimes overlook essential conflicts? Many readers will put your book down if it doesn't grab their attention right away, so it's vital to evoke powerful emotions from readers as early as possible.
Don't let these common mistakes rob your story of its magic and momentum. Save your precious time and energy by ensuring you hook readers from the start. Grab your guide now and check your opening against these common missteps!
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