Writing

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Writing
fromHarvard Gazette
12 hours ago

'Talent can be a great hindrance ... It's really about endurance' - Harvard Gazette

Voice develops throughout a writer's life; focusing on finding a fixed voice early can limit growth.
Writing
fromNature
1 day ago

Three tips for scientific writing: a guide for graduate students

Break large writing projects into specific, actionable tasks, use prompts, structure, and accountability to reduce blank-page dread and sustain progress.
#childhood
Writing
fromFuncheap
3 days ago

Saturday Write Fever: Insta-Plays Written & Performed | SF

EXIT Theatre hosts a free monthly event where writers create monologues in 30-minute sprints and crowd-cast actors perform them the same night.
#crosswords
fromwww.dw.com
3 days ago

Jack London felt 'Call of the Wild,' lived life of adventure DW 01/11/2026

Born in San Francisco as John Griffith Chaney on January 12, 1876, Jack London lived a life even more dramatic than those portrayed in many of his novels. His biological father never acknowledged paternity, shunning his mother while she was still pregnant. She would later marry Civil War veteran John London, who took him in as his stepson and gave him his surname. London grew up in severe financial hardship.
Writing
Writing
fromMission Local
3 days ago

Abuelitas de la Mision: Maria Alicia Catalan, a poet who's lived in the Mission 55 years

María Alicia Catalán, a Salvadoran immigrant, built a lifelong caregiving career in San Francisco, remains active at 87, and expresses herself through poetry and music.
fromwww.npr.org
4 days ago

Opinion: Remembering Renee Good

i want back my rocking chairs, solipsist sunsets, & coastal jungle sounds that are tercets from cicadas and pentameter from the hairy legs of cockroaches. i've donated bibles to thrift stores (mashed them in plastic trash bags with an acidic himalayan salt lamp the post-baptism bibles, the ones plucked from street corners from the meaty hands of zealots, the dumbed-down, easy-to-read, parasitic kind): remember more the slick rubber smell of high gloss biology textbook pictures;
Writing
#poetry
Writing
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

I fell in love with Taiwan on a layover. Six years later, I moved there.

Lifelong fascination with Asian cultures, languages, food, and missionary work led to relocation to Taipei and careers in teaching and entrepreneurship.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A Long Game by Elizabeth McCracken review here's how to really write your novel

Trope, POV, backstory, character arc. In the 30 years since I was a student of that benign, pipe-smoking, elbow-patched man of letters Malcolm Bradbury, the private language of creative writing workshops has taken over the world. What writers used to say to small circles of students in an attempt to help them improve their storytelling technique has become a familiar way, often parodic and self-knowing, of interpreting the grand and not-sogrand narratives of our time.
Writing
Writing
fromOpen Culture
1 week ago

Hear James Joyce Reads From Ulysses and Finnegans Wake In His Only Two Recordings (1924/1929)

Ulysses examines Dublin and language, portraying words as two-faced with immediate meaning and historical, mythic resonances within journalism and rhetorical performance.
Writing
fromESPN.com
1 week ago

Thompson: 'What if we are the people who win these games?' A new feeling at Ole Miss

Sports, food, and regional rituals reconnect people to family, memory, and communal identity during game-day gatherings in New Orleans.
#journaling
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago
Writing

The Power of Writing for Healing: An Embodied Approach - Tiny Buddha

Guided, body-aware journaling combined with therapy and structure can transform rumination into healing, foster self-awareness, and support meaningful personal change.
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago
Writing

Dear Pepper: Slaying the Self-Doubt Dragon

Frequent journaling can be both therapy and a legitimate path to memoir; questioning whether the work is self-serving or intended for readers is normal.
Writing
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

The delightful history behind serendipity suggests it's not mere luck

Serendipity is the capacity to find valuable, unanticipated things and can be cultivated as a skill rather than dismissed as pure luck.
Writing
fromPoynter
1 week ago

6 things you think are AP style rules that aren't actually AP style rules - Poynter

AP Style advises against following an organization's full name with a parenthetical abbreviation unless the abbreviation will be clear and useful on second reference.
Writing
fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

Poet 'flabbergasted' by London fireworks request

Spoken word poet Sonny Green's poem was broadcast during London's New Year's Eve fireworks, reaching millions and celebrating multicultural British identity.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

January First

Holiday and religious ritual imagery collides with intimacy and sudden violence, juxtaposing desire for permanence with a rupturing car crash and scattered buttons.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A big bad bull whipped me down': cowboy poetry, old art form of the US west, lassos a new generation

Cowboy poetry is experiencing a revival, drawing younger, more diverse participants and expanding from rural gatherings into urban scenes like Los Angeles.
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Last Days of the Southern Drawl

My dad has always had a southern accent: His words fall out of his mouth the way molasses would sound if it could speak, thick and slow. But his "KFC voice," as my sisters and I call it, is country. It's watered-down on work calls and during debates with his West Coast relatives. But it comes out around fellow cattle farmers and old friends from Kentucky, where he grew up.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The hill I will die on: Fan fiction is real literature, whatever the snobs say | Urooj Ashfaq

Fan fiction is participatory, reparative literature that empowers readers to rewrite canon, challenge gatekeeping, and create emotional closure outside commercial publishing.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Dreaming of writing your novel this year? Rip up all the rules!

A first sentence should be idiosyncratic and arresting, delivering pleasure through beauty, mystery, humor, bluntness, or crypticness to demand further attention.
Writing
fromForbes
1 week ago

5 ChatGPT Prompts To Write Content With Soul

Writing with soul requires asking introspective questions, connecting personal truth to archetypal stories, and using AI to draw out, not replace, an authentic voice.
Writing
fromBattery Power
1 week ago

What content would you like to see in 2026?

Solicit audience preferences for 2026 content while acknowledging production limits and creators' own constraints on producing desired material.
fromFortune
1 week ago

Michigan college survey says '6-7' is lowkey cooked, put in on the 'Banished Words List' | Fortune

Respondents to an annual Michigan college survey of overused and misused words and phrases say " 6-7 " is "cooked" and should come to a massive full-stop heading into the new year.
Writing
Writing
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 week ago

Viral '6-7' tops 2025 list of overused words and phrases

The 50th Banished Words List labels "6-7" and other overused phrases as misused, highlighting social-media-driven slang and generational communication issues.
#journalism
Writing
fromPoynter
2 weeks ago

'Hit the pavement, talk to strangers, listen:' 5 lessons from great storytelling - Poynter

Traditional reporting fundamentals—shoe-leather reporting, listening, and source trust—combined with innovation in delivery produce impactful journalism driven by reporters' dedication and humanity.
Writing
fromOpen Culture
2 weeks ago

How to Jumpstart Your Creative Process with William S. Burroughs' Cut-Up Technique

The cut-up method dismantles habitual thought patterns and liberates creative expression from internal self-censorship.
#crossword
Writing
fromForbes
2 weeks ago

5 Side Jobs That Pay More Than Your Full-Time Job In 2026

High-paying side hustles outside the 9-5 significantly shape career trajectory and financial success more than the primary full-time job.
Writing
fromAnOther
3 weeks ago

Read: Heather McCalden's Short Story About an Encounter with a Magician

A sweltering, tense lunch with a world-famous magician exposes discomfort, celebrity eccentricity, and a recent on-set argument undermining the interview.
Writing
fromSlate Magazine
3 weeks ago

Why You Should Eschew the Word "Eschew"

Vocabulary, conversation, and voice shape English; careful word choice and avoidance of linguistic tics distinguish strong voice from self-parody.
Writing
fromBoston Condos For Sale Ford Realty
3 weeks ago

The Billion Dollar Dream Could These Be The Lucky Numbers? Boston Condos For Sale Ford Realty

A Powerball jackpot unites hopefuls nationwide around specific numbers — 3, 18, 36, 41, 54 and a red Powerball 7 — chasing fortune.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

The hill I will die on: Ignore the haters, TK Maxx is actually quite good | Hannah J Davies

TK Maxx offers affordable, eclectic, quality goods that provide small joyful treats despite occasional messiness.
Writing
fromBustle
3 weeks ago

The Author Of 'Hamnet' Once Got An Hour-Long Voice Note From Chloe Zhao

Maggie O'Farrell and Chloé Zhao condensed a 400-page novel into a 100-page screenplay, blending Zhao's voice-note-driven approach with O'Farrell's solitary, prose-focused sensibility.
fromAnildash
1 month ago

They have to be able to talk about us without us - Anil Dash

It's absolutely vital to be able to communicate effectively and efficiently to large groups of people. I've been lucky enough to get to refine and test my skills in communicating at scale for a few decades now, and the power of talking to communities is the one area where I'd most like to pass on what I've learned, because it's this set of skills that can have the biggest effect on deciding whether good ideas and good work can have their greatest impact.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago

Lawrence Wright on A. J. Liebling's "The Great State"

During the 1959 session of the Louisiana state legislature, Governor Earl Long, the less famous younger brother of Senator Huey Long, "went off his rocker," as the tickled writer A. J. Liebling recounted in this magazine, adding, "The papers reported that he had cursed and hollered at the legislators, saying things that so embarrassed his wife, Miz Blanche, and his relatives that they had packed him off to Texas in a National Guard plane to get his brains repaired in an asylum."
Writing
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
3 weeks ago

Theft

A family views a church nativity whose gold-painted figures appear awe-inspiring up close, but reveal chipping paint and an empty, powder-filled manger.
#creative-process
fromJezebel
3 weeks ago

The Best New Novels of 2025, According to an Expert (Me)

It wouldn't be mid-to-late December without a series of "best of" articles coming out from every outlet that covers culture-and who am I to buck that trend? I get to read dozens of books every year for Jezebel, and I'm here to put all that reading to use by doing one of my favorite things: recommending books. But there are too many books-and I am but one, part-time reader-for me to do a broader "best of" list,
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

What's the nicest thing a stranger has done for you? This year more than 50 people gave me their answer

Unexpected acts of generosity by strangers—from small practical help to life-changing interventions—leave enduring, vivid impressions on recipients.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago

The Entire New Yorker Archive Is Now Fully Digitized

New Yorker released a complete online archive, adding over 100,000 items including fiction, poems, profiles, and thousands of Talk of the Town and Reporter pieces.
Writing
fromwww.aljazeera.com
4 weeks ago

From A for algebra to T for tariffs: Arabic words used in English speech

Arabic has contributed hundreds to thousands of loanwords to many world languages, reflecting centuries of contact through trade, scholarship and cultural exchange.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Pens at the ready! A gen-Z trainee takes on the Guardian's scribbler-in-chief'

Switching end-of-year exams to onscreen could reduce hand fatigue and strain experienced by students during lengthy handwritten assessments.
Writing
fromDefector
1 month ago

The Crossword, Dec. 15: Out Of Court | Defector

A reliable Monday crossword by Matthew Stock highlights his publishing credentials and personal interests while Defector crosswords run weekly with submission guidelines available.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Andrew Martin on the Post-Lockdown Period

I think Malcolm is unreliable only in the sense that he's trapped in his own perspective and, partly as a result of his depression, not especially sensitive to the feelings of the other people around him (namely, the woman he's marrying). I think the clarity and the self-awareness with which he recounts the crisis, though, indicates that he's a fundamentally trustworthy narrator.
Writing
Writing
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

It's Your Chance to Write a Slate Crossword

Slate is accepting original 15x15 Sunday themeless crossword submissions through Jan. 31, 2026, pays $300, and prefers voicey, topical, clever entries.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The French Word You Need For the Holidays

Holiday gatherings blend repetitive social obligations, small talk, and logistical hassles, yet moments of sincere reconnection—retrouvailles—bring relief and renewed familiarity.
fromwww.nytimes.com
1 month ago

I Think This Poem Is Kind of Into You

A famous poet once observed that it is difficult to get the news from poems. The weather is a different story. April showers, summer sunshine and maybe especially the chill of winter provide an endless supply of moods and metaphors. Poets like to practice a double meteorology, looking out at the water and up at the sky for evidence of interior conditions of feeling. The inner and outer forecasts don't always match up.
Writing
Writing
fromIndependent
1 month ago

John Downing: From 'fon poca' to 'burrito' - new Irish dictionary is a milestone in revival of our native language

For the first time, anyone can find definitions of Irish words without relying on English dictionaries.
Writing
fromNature
1 month ago

But only just

Helis carries unresolved trauma from Daoud while continuing hazardous fieldwork and isolation, receiving quiet, imperfect support from Isla over many years.
Writing
fromVulture
1 month ago

Jeremy O. Harris Is Now in Japan By Choice

Jeremy O. Harris was released from custody in Japan on December 8 and remains in Japan without criminal charges while researching an upcoming project.
Writing
fromPR Daily
1 month ago

5 ways to keep your writing human in an AI-heavy workplace - PR Daily

Communicators must strengthen writing and editing skills and integrate AI thoughtfully to preserve a distinct, trustworthy, and human brand voice while meeting business goals.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How Writing a Book Convinced Me I'm an Introvert

Writing a book revealed an introverted temperament through solitary work, focused routines, and preference for small-group interactions.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Mexico City Was Good for My Mental Health

An unplanned month in Mexico City provided healing, restored sanity, and immersion in present through local interactions, sensory experiences, and deliberate disengagement from distressing news.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Poem of the week: The Apology by Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea

A woman defends her right to practise poetry, claiming imagination and pleasure justify her poetic pursuits despite societal ridicule.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Camille Bordas on Other People's Beliefs

As is always the case when I write anything, I didn't know what problems the story would pose until it started posing them. I truly believed that "Understanding the Science" would focus on Maria, and that we would get to know more about her brush with death and get access to her wisdom (or her disappointment at not having gained more of it, maybe), but then her character kept resisting me.
Writing
#tom-stoppard
fromIndependent
1 month ago
Writing

'You couldn't have found an easier person to talk to, even though he was a genius' - Irish theatre colleagues pay tribute to Tom Stoppard

fromIndependent
1 month ago
Writing

'You couldn't have found an easier person to talk to, even though he was a genius' - Irish theatre colleagues pay tribute to Tom Stoppard

fromwww.npr.org
12 years ago

So Hard To Say Goodbye: Advice For Farewell Notes

I was also thinking - another event that happens a lot when people have to say goodbye are temporary gigs, like television or theater or putting together something like that, camp. And so it's an interesting challenge, because so often, the farewell cards you get are things like, it was great working with you. We'll see you again, you know, I'm looking forward to - but they all seemed to miss -
Writing
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Rage Bait Is a Brilliant Word of the Year

Rage bait denotes online content crafted to provoke anger and boost traffic, reflecting the attention economy and rapid internet-driven language change.
Writing
fromIndependent
1 month ago

'Sometimes it felt like a dream' - sister relives horror of Siobhan Hynes' murder as killer makes fresh bid for freedom

Áine Hynes remains haunted by memories of her sister Siobhán's brutal killing while the family marks 27 years since the traumatic loss.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Creative Writing as Play Therapy

Over the past year, we have been working closely with colleagues here at Boston College to develop a psychologically rich, humanities-informed Creative Writing Master's Program oriented toward professionals and clinicians who want to hone their craft as writers while deepening their understanding of the human psyche. The idea behind this undertaking is simple: Great writing and great thinking go hand in hand, and creative writing is a fundamentally psychological endeavor.
Writing
Writing
fromRemodelista
1 month ago

Holiday Gift Guide 2025: 11 Old-School Office Goods that Are Useful and Delightful - Remodelista

High-quality paper goods and desk tools are enjoying a renaissance and make ideal holiday gifts, from sustainable Stone Paper notebooks to Vestaboard-style analog messaging displays.
fromFast Company
1 month ago

The high-stakes politics of exclamation points

"So if you use them in January," LaMantia recalls being told, "you better hope there's nothing to exclaim for the rest of the year." The rule stuck. LaMantia still thinks about that rigid quota today. "I use exclamation points all the time in texts and emails. If you don't, the message sounds more stern," he says. "But I can't remember the last time I used one in a business article."
Writing
fromFortune
1 month ago

Dictionaries' words of the year are trying to tell us something about being online in 2025 | Fortune

This year's slate largely centers on digital life. But rather than reflecting the unbridled optimism about the internet of the early aughts - when words like " w00t," " blog," " tweet" and even " face with tears of joy " emoji (😂) were chosen - this year's selections reflect a growing unease over how the internet has become a hotbed of artifice, manipulation and fake relationships.
Writing
Writing
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

Slate Pears Game 111: Dec. 5, 2025

Pears Game 111 released; Game 110 longest word was OVERKEEN; OVERRIDEN removed as misspelling of OVERRIDDEN; full Pears archive now open.
fromTheoldguybicycleblog
1 month ago

The Road Writes Back: Cycling as a Form of Poetry

I didn't set out to be poetic. I set out to ride. But somewhere between mile 30 and mile 70, between sunrise and sunset, I started hearing the road differently. Not just as terrain, but as verse. The hum of my tires was meter. The climbs and descents, line breaks. The miles, stanzas. Sometimes the words come on the ride itself. Sometimes they come when I'm lying in my tent or sipping juice the next morning. But they always come. Because long rides strip the noise away. What's left is what matters.
Writing
Writing
fromThe Walrus
1 month ago

What Is Sex? Ask a Boomer, a Millennial, and a Gen Z and They'll All Say Something Different | The Walrus

A woman decides she is done with penetrative sex, prompting reflection on generational sexual experiences, personal agency, and how sex is defined.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Country diary: A broken leg and singing crossbills am I having a strange dream? | Nicola Chester

It was nobody's fault, but here I am, lying on the damp floor of a wood, half a mile from the road. Drifting down with the falling leaves are the voices of two women, too easily accepting of blame. I reassure them and try to sit up, but the high singing in my ears turns to static, the edges of the wood begin to pixelate, and I lie down again before I faint.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Am I Even Good at This?

When I started grad school, I didn't realize how quickly self-doubt could take root in a room full of writers. Everyone seemed so certain of their talent, so fluent in the language of ambition. I, on the other hand, was still figuring out what I even wanted my voice to sound like. Every workshop felt like an audition for something I wasn't sure I wanted.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

"Blue Baby"

Blue baby, of the first generationwhose hole in the heart could be closed in an operating theatrewhere the show must and did go on, you thought yourself lucky as a sicklychild, who got to spend whole days reading long books in bed.An early obsession with Louis Seize and the costume drama of Versaillesmade you the director you were, blocking actors in your head.Or so we believed; you told good stories.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Mansplaining' was once a contender for word of the year. Here's why we should stop using it

Rage bait is an online tactic that provokes anger, deepens social divisions, and corrodes institutional trust and public reason.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Joan Silber on Friendship in a Fractured World

Two childhood friends' diverging lives intersect around historical displacement, comedy as contrast, and a narrator's deliberate cultural distance.
Writing
fromHer Campus
1 month ago

How Content Creation Helped Me Build Confidence and Connections

Anyone can start creating content with a phone camera and willingness, leading to opportunities like PR, personal growth, confidence building, and documenting life.
Writing
fromBig Think
1 month ago

R.F. Kuang writes through doubt to find her strongest stories

Rebecca F. Kuang achieved early, sustained bestselling success by integrating academic research into fiction while maintaining disciplined, adaptable creative routines.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

After 10 years talking to knights, squires and wizards, I understand why ren fairs are booming

Medieval re-enactment and live-action roleplay provide physical camaraderie, identity exploration, and emotional escape, helping participants build community and cope with loneliness.
fromPoynter
1 month ago

What the iconic writers of New Journalism can teach us in the AI era - Poynter

When Gay Talese's landmark profile, "Frank Sinatra Has a Cold," appeared in Esquire in April 1966, it marked a pivotal moment in the evolution of journalism. This was the birth of what came to be known as New Journalism - a narrative-driven style that blended rigorous reporting with literary techniques, placing the reporter's voice and observations at the heart of the story.
Writing
fromwww.amny.com
1 month ago

A reckoning in color: Faith Ringgold's fierce legacy shakes the walls at Jack Shainman Gallery | amNewYork

Faith Ringgold did not simply paint historyshe broke it open. She reached into the marrow of America's most violent foundations, pulled forth the bones, and demanded that we look. Her Slave Rape Seriesraw, spiritual, brutal, and incandescentremains one of the most courageous achievements in American art, a portal through which the full seismic force of her career becomes legible. Through these paintings, she forged a new language for Black womanhood, a new architecture for Black truth, and an entirely new horizon for artistic liberation.
Writing
Writing
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

My Dad Disappeared When I Was A Kid. Years Later, I Got A Letter That Changed Both Our Lives.

A father's consistent letters, encouragement, and financial support healed emotional gaps and enabled his child's education and early writing career.
fromNature
1 month ago

The singular proposition of trees

For me, it is a presence. A nudge. A gentle hand slowly turning my chin towards the windows, where their white trunks reach skywards and their golden leaves glow in the three-sun dawn. I find myself pressing my fingers to the tempered glass when I'm supposed to be conducting experiments or tidying up the mess hall. My feet work their way into the airlock without conscious reason.
Writing
Writing
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Mispronounced words that infuriate Brits - do YOU say them correctly?

Two Irish names (Niamh and Saoirse) and several food words rank among the UK's most searched-for mispronunciations, with Niamh topping the list.
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