Introducing Writing Resources: Practical Help for Better Stories
Every writer eventually runs into the same problem: you know something is not working, but you are not sure what to fix.
Maybe the middle of the story feels slow. Maybe the romance is not landing. Maybe the characters are doing things, but the scenes still feel flat. Maybe the title, description, or tags are not helping the right readers find the story.
That is why we are launching Writing Resources on Gay Authors.
This new section is a growing library of practical writing articles built around one goal: helping authors make better stories one useful idea at a time.
These are not long lectures. They are focused craft tools. Each article is designed to answer a specific writing problem and give you something you can try in your own work.
You will find articles on:
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story structure
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character motivation
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dialogue and voice
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romance and relationships
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tropes
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genre craft
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serial fiction
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editing and revision
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publishing on Gay Authors
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community and reader engagement
Some articles will help you shape a new story. Some will help you revise a story that is already written. Some will help you make better use of titles, descriptions, tags, and posting choices so the right readers can find your work.
We are starting with a few articles and will continue adding more at a steady pace.
The first spotlighted resources include practical trope articles such as Enemies To Lovers Works Best When Both Characters Are Right and Friends To Lovers: Change The Meaning Of Familiarity. These are examples of what the section is meant to do: take a familiar writing idea and show one clear way to make it stronger.
The best use of Writing Resources is simple:
Pick one article.
Try one idea.
Apply it to one scene, chapter, description, or character.
You do not need to overhaul your whole writing process. Start with one useful fix.
If you are working on a romance, try a relationship article. If your story feels slow, look for structure or serial fiction advice. If readers are not finding your story, start with the publishing articles. If you love familiar patterns like friends-to-lovers, enemies-to-lovers, found family, or coming of age, the trope and genre sections will help you use those patterns with more purpose.
This library is also meant to grow with the community. If there is a writing problem you want covered, tell us. If there is a trope, genre, or craft issue you think many authors struggle with, suggest it. If an article helps you rethink a scene, join the discussion and share what changed.
Writing Resources is not here to tell every author to write the same way.
It is here to give authors more tools.
Read an article. Try the exercise. Join the discussion. And tell us what writing problem you want us to tackle next.
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