Article By Jami Gold

Minutes Read Time

Overstuffed bookshelves with text: What Are Your Favorite Writing-Related Resources?

As I mentioned in my post last week, I’ve been a huge fan of Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi’s work for years. In addition to their helpful blog, they’re the genius duo behind the Thesaurus books and the One Stop for Writers website.

So to celebrate the 10th anniversary of their blog (and to improve my mega-posts listing every writing craft skill I could think of for story development, line editing, and copy editing), I held a giveaway contest over the past week for everyone suggesting improvements to those Writing Craft Master Lists. The winner will get $40 to spend on Angela and Becca’s super-helpful Thesaurus books.

6 Thesaurus books

Today, I’m announcing the winner, but first I thought we could share our favorite writing-related books and resources. Scroll down to add your suggestions. *smile*

My Favorite Writing-Related Books

The Emotion Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Character Expression

Emotion Thesaurus coverThis book has been my #1 Go-To Writing Help book ever since it released. With 2 full pages of ideas about how to show character emotions for each of the 75 different entries, we can learn endless options for the physical signs, internal thoughts, and internal sensations (visceral reactions) for every emotion, whether the character is the point-of-view character or not.

I could go on for pages and gush about the awesomeness of this book. *grin* Instead I’ll just point you to my post about how we can use this resource to improve our writing.

The Positive Trait Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Character Attributes and The Negative Trait Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Character Flaws

Positive Trait Thesaurus coverNegative Trait Thesaurus coverFinding the perfect mix of strengths and weaknesses for our characters can be difficult. We need to choose the right blend of strengths that make them admirable and worth rooting for—without making it too easy for them to succeed—and we need to figure out which flaws best fit our characters.

These books, cousins to the Emotion Thesaurus above, are great tools for creating three-dimensional characters. Check out the guest post by Becca (one of the co-authors) for more about how these books can be used in our writing.

The Emotional Wound Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Psychological Trauma

Readers connect to characters with depth, ones who have experienced life’s ups and downs. Of all the formative experiences in a character’s past, none are more destructive than emotional wounds. With 36 pages of introductory material explaining the psychology behind character wounds and 2 pages of details for each wound, we’ll learn how our character’s wound affects their needs, false beliefs, fears, reactions, personality traits, and triggers, as well as how they might overcome their wound.

This book is another cousin to the Emotion Thesaurus above and is another great tool for creating three-dimensional characters, including a section on developing a wound for our villain too.

Internal Dialogue (Busy Writer’s Guides Book 7)

Internal Dialogue coverInternal dialogue is one of the most powerful tools in a fiction writer’s arsenal. It’s also one of the least understood and most often mismanaged elements of the writing craft.

The techniques for how to properly use internal dialogue are critical for developing character arcs and motivations. This is advanced stuff that helps a writer go from technically proficient to a fantastic storyteller.

This is a must-read book for writers ready for more than the basics. See more about this book and my thoughts in Marcy’s guest post (and all of Marcy’s books in this series are great).

Self-Editing for Fiction Writers, Second Edition: How to Edit Yourself into Print

Self-edit Book CoverIn this book, two editors step us through the process of editing our own work. They cover most of the major issues all writers—and newer writers especially—tend to struggle with in the pursuit of better writing.

No matter how we plan to publish, we should strive for a cleaner manuscript. If we’re taking the traditional publishing path, quality writing craft makes it more likely an agent will request our pages. If we plan to self-publish, I wouldn’t recommend relying only on our own editing abilities and skipping an outside edit, but improving our prose the best we can on our own ensures that a freelance editor will be able to focus on the issues we can’t fix ourselves.

The Power Of Point Of View: Make Your Story Come To Life

Point of View Book CoverMany writers struggle to understand the differences between distant and close third person point of view, or when first person might work better than a close third (or vice versa). This book will make us a POV expert. Learn about the different styles of point of view, from omniscient third person to close first person—and everything in between.

This book is perfect for those of us unsure about the differences between point-of-view styles or those who wonder which style is right for our story. Most of what I learned about POV started with this book.

Story Engineering: Master the 6 Core Competencies of Successful Writing

Story Engineering coverYes, this book has a strong anti-pantser (writing by the seat of our pants) bias, and I’ve pointed out before that story failures are more often a symptom of not understanding story structure than with pantsing methodologies. Pantsing and plotting strategies can both fail or succeed, and in either case, those who understand story structure will be more likely to come out with a coherent story.

Pantsers able to ignore that naysaying, or those who plot in advance, will find a great discussion of story structure within these pages. Don’t miss my post or worksheet to help writers of any length stories use this structure.

Save The Cat! The Last Book on Screenwriting You’ll Ever Need

Cover image of Blake Snyder's "Save the Cat"This book isn’t my favorite for learning story structure (and it’s geared toward screenwriters rather than novelists), but it is a classic that literally “wrote the book” on many story structure ideas and strategies (like the concept of beats and beat sheets).

It reveals audience (or in our case, reader) reasons for why stories are structured the way they are, and that’s good for every writer to understand. Don’t miss my post about how writers of any length stories can use this structure.

Hooked: Write Fiction That Grabs Readers at Page One & Never Lets Them Go

Hooked Book CoverWe’ve discussed the importance of story openings many times here before, from how to avoid first-page clichés to what makes readers close a book. Grabbing readers’ attention is an important skill because if our story has a bad beginning, no one will keep reading. Period. The end.

Whether we traditionally publish or self-publish, a great beginning is a necessity. This book covers the elements inherent to any great beginning and can help us overcome weak openings.

Other Books I’m Checking Out…

What are your favorite writing-related resources? Click To TweetMy list of recommendations is always a work in progress, especially as I’ve been slow to read new craft books. I’ve been keeping an eye on Janice Hardy’s books on conflict, showing vs. telling, and how to plan, plot, and revise our stories. Other books in the to-be-read pile by my desk include Wired for Story, My Story Can Beat Up Your Story, and Writing for Emotional Impact.

Other Favorite Writing-Related Resources

In addition to books, here are some of my favorite writing-related resources:

  • One Stop for Writers by Angela and Becca, the same team as above
    For many years, I kept the fantastic Emotion Thesaurus, open as a PDF on my computer while drafting, but now I keep a browser tab open to One Stop because this online version of all their thesaurus collections and tools is so much more complete.
  • Writers Helping Writers by Angela and Becca
    Their blog always offers something new, from their own posts, posts by their Resident Writing Coaches (including yours truly), and posts of samples for whatever new thesaurus they have in the works (their newest addition is the Occupation Thesaurus)
  • Writer’s Knowledge Base by author/link-collector Elizabeth Spann Craig
    Elizabeth’s Twitter account shares fantastic resources for writers that she finds all over the web, like a one-woman news source, and the WKB pulls all those resources together into one searchable database. Think Google for writers.
  • Scrivener: Writing tool for planning, drafting, and ebook formatting. I mostly use this for drafting, but the possibilities are endless. (For Windows and Mac)
  • OneNote: A free, full-featured application for saving research notes, planning our story, capturing photos and ideas, etc. And everything is searchable. Squee!
  • Dropbox: Never lose your writing again. Internet-based, password-secure storage to access your work from any connected device (computer, phone, tablet). Ta-da! Instant backups. *smile*

A few years ago, Angela shared her recommended resources for drafting our story, so check out her guest post as well.

Now, the Giveaway Winner!

As part of the giveaway, you all helped me out with great suggestions to add to the Writing Craft Master Lists I’m creating for us. Thank you so much!

So the contest was a wonderful success, and the winner of the $40 giveaway for the Thesaurus books is:

Shelley O’Rourke!!!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Yay! Congratulations, Shelley! I’ll be in touch so you can let me know the book format you prefer. *smile*

Do you have any of the resources on this list? Do you second any of these recommendations? Do you avoid any like the plague or use a different resource you think is superior? What books or other resources are on your go-to recommendation list?

Originally Posted on March 1, 2018
Categories: Writing Stuff

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