Writers in the Storm

A blog about writing

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Sinking in the Sand

How Your Inbox is Holding Your Masterpiece Hostage

by Lisa Norman

We talk a lot about protecting our writing time. We close the office door, put on noise-canceling headphones, and warn our families that if the house isn't actively on fire, we are invisible.

But there’s a quiet, heavy burden sitting right on your desk, masked as a tool of the trade.

Your inbox.

Once upon a time, email was a digital mailbox—a nice place where readers sent fan mail, agents sent contracts, and colleagues sent ideas. Today, it feels more like a slow-moving swamp of quicksand. Every single day, a fresh layer of digital noise pours over us: sophisticated phishing scams, AI-generated pitches, and endless newsletters we signed up for years ago and never read.

Before you know it, you aren't managing your correspondence anymore. You’re just trying to keep your head above the sand.

The Quicksand Real-World Horror

Years ago, I had a client whose email address was harvested by a particularly nasty scam group. Within days, his inbox was flooded faster than he could physically hit the delete key. Fake invoices, urgent security alerts, and desperate pleas cascaded in by the thousands.

He tried to keep up. He spent hours every day frantically scanning the noise, terrified he’d miss a real customer contact, a valid invoice, or an important career link.

You know what happened? He lost the real contacts anyway. The digital quicksand completely swallowed them. The overwhelming noise paralyzed his business, drained his mental energy, and eventually forced him to do the unthinkable: delete the address entirely, abandon his established contacts, and start over from scratch, new business cards and all.

That was a decade ago. Today, the swamp is wider, and the quicksand pulls harder.

I recently talked to a brilliant author and editor who confessed she was staring at nearly 7,000 unread emails in her business account alone. She spends valuable time every single day just shoo-ing the digital vermin away, watching the junk pour in faster than she can clear it, while warnings pop up that her storage capacity is hitting the danger zone.

If that sounds familiar, you are not alone. When I’m working with authors and entrepreneurs, I often see accounts with 20 thousand or more unread emails.

This is not your fault.

But we have to talk about what that struggle is actually costing your creativity.

The Mental Weight of the Unread

When your unread count climbs into the hundreds—or the thousands—you aren't just letting data pile up. You’re carrying a massive cognitive load. Your brain is trying to survive the quicksand pull of those unmade decisions.

Our brains aren't built to process a chaotic crowd of strangers screaming for our attention all at once. Yet every time you open your email to look for a specific note from your editor, your brain has to process through that quicksand. You glance past a discount code for shoes, a pitch from a publicist you don't know, a fake notification claiming your streaming account is suspended, and three urgent-sounding requests for your time.

You might think you’re just ignoring them, but your brain is actively working to filter them out. It’s making micro-decisions with every scroll: Is this a scam? Is this real? Do I owe this person money? By the time you finally find the email you needed, your creative energy for the day is cut in half. Your focus has been pulled into a dozen different directions. The scammers and marketers didn't have to steal your identity to win. They just had to steal the best part of your attention.

As writers, our brains are our creative sanctuaries. We need deep, uninterrupted focus to build worlds, untangle plots, and understand our characters. When we leave our digital front door wide open to every salesman and random notification, we are telling our creative souls that their peace doesn't matter. We’re letting the sands of wasted time swirl around us, pulling us down.

Finding Solid Ground

You don't have to live in a state of constant digital overwhelm.

Getting your digital house in order isn't about being a corporate efficiency expert. It’s about building a safe harbor around your creativity. It’s about ensuring that when you sit down to write, your brain isn't secretly chewing on an unread message hyping an artificial crisis.

If you feel yourself sinking, here are three ways to stop struggling and find solid ground:

  • Separate the Rooms: Your fan mail, your industry newsletters, and your critical business or bank alerts don’t want to sit in the same inbox. When they all crowd into one space, the noise chokes out the important messages. Build digital walls so the vermin can't find your sacred creative space.
  • Declare Email Bankruptcy: If you are sitting on thousands of unread emails, accept the truth: you are never going to read them. Select them all and hit Archive—not delete. They are still searchable if an emergency arises, but they are out of your sight. Clear a path so you have a safe place to stand. By hitting Archive we leave behind the fear that we’ve missed out on something critical. It will be there if we need it.
  • Guard Your Access: Stop giving your email address away for free downloads you don't care about. And don't just substitute a throw-away address that piles up digital clutter elsewhere. Every time you fill out a form, you are giving a stranger explicit permission to interrupt your writing day. Be stingy with your access.

Your inbox can become a tool that serves your career, not a quicksand pit that swallows your time. Don't let digital quicksand stand between you and your next book.

How many unread emails are currently pulling at your attention? What is one small boundary you can set today to keep the digital noise out of your creative space?

About Lisa

head shot of smiling Lisa Norman

Lisa Norman's passion has been writing since she could hold a pencil. While that is a cliché, she is unique in that her first novel was written on gum wrappers. As a young woman, she learned to program and discovered she has a talent for helping people and computers learn to work together and play nice. When she's not hanging out with her family, writing, or teaching, she can be found wandering the local beaches.

Lisa writes as Deleyna Marr and is the owner of No Stress Writing Academy. She also runs Heart Ally Books, LLC, an indie publishing firm.

Interested in learning more from Lisa? Sign up for her newsletter or check out her school, No Stress Writing Academy, where she teaches social media, organization, technical skills, and marketing for authors! This post is based upon a lesson from her class, Digital Organization Skills for Authors.

Her most recent book, The Work of Joy is now available here.

Top image from depositphotos.

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Three Ways to Lose a Romance Reader

By Jenn Windrow

Recently I was working with an editing client on their third fantasy romance novel. We had worked together on the first two, so I was well invested in the love story between the hero and heroine. But this story, well it was, breaking almost every rule that traditional romances follow.

And yes, rules are meant to be broken, but when it comes to writing romance, there are a few that are non-negotiable.

You see, romance readers are some of the most loyal readers in publishing. They'll follow favorite authors across series, buy books on release day, and recommend stories they love to friends. But that loyalty comes with expectations.

Unlike many genres, romance has a clearly defined contract between author and reader. When someone picks up a romance novel, they're not just hoping for a love story. They're expecting specific emotional promises to be fulfilled. Break those promises, and readers won't simply dislike the book. They'll often feel betrayed by it.

So, I thought today would be a good day to go over the three rules that simply cannot be broken when writing romance.

Promise #1: The Story Ends with a Happily Ever After (HEA) or Happy For Now (HFN)

This is the big one.

That future can be forever, which gives readers a Happily Ever After. Or it can be a Happy For Now, where the couple has chosen each other and the relationship is moving forward, even if every challenge hasn't been solved.

Happily Ever After sign

A romance novel must end with the central couple together and committed to a future relationship.

What romance cannot do is separate the couple at the end, kill one of the love interests, or leave readers wondering if the relationship will survive.

Can those endings work in fiction? Absolutely. They just aren't romance endings.

Readers pick up a romance because they want emotional satisfaction. They want to believe that love wins. If the story doesn't deliver that payoff, it risks feeling like a broken promise regardless of how beautifully written it may be.

You can put your characters through the deeper depths of hell and back, but in the end, we need to see them together. Happy, or at least as happy as they can be. And love blossoming.

This is how you make your readers swoon and want more.

Promise #2: The Reader Must Never Doubt Who the Love Interest Is

One of the fastest ways to frustrate romance readers is to create uncertainty about the romantic pairing. This doesn't mean characters can't have past relationships. They can. It doesn't mean exes can't appear. They can. It doesn’t even mean another love interest can appear on the page. They can.

But it does mean that readers shouldn't spend the story wondering whether the hero or heroine is genuinely interested in someone else.

When readers see one of the main characters behaving romantically, sexually, or emotionally intimate with another potential partner, it creates doubt about the central relationship. It weakens the bond that the hero and heroine have for one another.

Of course, there are exceptions. Reverse harem, why choose, ménage, and other relationship structures establish different expectations from the beginning. Readers understand the romantic destination and buy the book accordingly. And this is fine, as long as it is clear from the start that the hero/heroine is going to be collecting partners like Pokémon.

For traditional romance, however, readers want to invest fully in the central couple. Every scene that suggests a competing romance weakens that investment.

The reader's heart should never be divided.

Promise #3: Put Your Couple on the Page Together

This sounds obvious, but it's surprisingly common.

Writers often become fascinated by worldbuilding, side characters, mysteries, political intrigue, magical systems, family drama, or external conflict. Before they know it, the hero and heroine are spending entire chapters apart.

Romance doesn't happen off page. Chemistry doesn't happen off page. Emotional connection doesn't happen off page. Readers fall in love with the relationship by watching the characters interact. By reading longing touches and lingering looks and sexy moments.

Every shared scene gives the couple opportunities to build attraction, reveal vulnerabilities, create tension, deepen trust, and strengthen emotional bonds.

If you're revising a romance manuscript, look closely at how much page time your couple actually spends together. Not thinking about each other. Not talking about each other. Actually together. Many romance novels become stronger simply by increasing those interactions and reducing scenes where the protagonists are separated.

One of the first things I do when editing a romance novel is track how many scenes the couple actually shares. Writers are often surprised to discover their love interests spend far less time together than they remembered.

The Question That Causes Endless Confusion

This is where many writers stumble. A book can contain a romance and still not be a romance novel.

The difference comes down to what story is driving the book.

If the primary plot is solving a murder, stopping a war, saving the kingdom, surviving a disaster, or finding a lost artifact, you're likely writing another genre with a romantic subplot. The romance may be important. Readers may adore it. It may even be the emotional heart of the story. But if the relationship isn't the central plot, it isn't a romance novel.

In a romance novel, the relationship is the story. The external plot exists to challenge, strengthen, or threaten that relationship. Take away the romance, and the entire story falls apart.

Take away the romance from a fantasy with a romantic subplot, however, and the main story can often continue. The kingdom can still be saved. The murderer can still be caught. The dragon can still be defeated.

Understanding this distinction matters because reader expectations change depending on the genre. Fantasy readers may accept a bittersweet ending. Mystery readers may be satisfied when the killer is caught. Women's fiction readers may embrace a journey of personal growth.

Romance readers expect the relationship to be the primary story, and they expect that relationship to end happily.

The problem usually isn't the quality of the writing. It's unmet expectations. Readers bought one type of emotional experience and received another. That's why reviews often mention feeling "tricked" or "misled" even when the book is objectively good. Here's the test. If you remove the romance and the story still functions, you're probably writing another genre with a romantic subplot. If removing the romance causes the entire story to collapse, you're writing a romance.

The Romance Reader's Contract

At its core, romance isn't defined by kisses, spice levels, tropes, or even genre setting.

You can write contemporary romance, historical romance, paranormal romance, fantasy romance, science fiction romance, sweet romance, or steamy romance.

What unites them all is the promise. The reader expects a central love story. The reader expects to know who the romantic partners are. The reader expects to spend time watching that relationship develop. And the reader expects that relationship to end happily.

Deliver on those promises, and readers will happily follow you anywhere. Because while every romance is different, the contract remains the same.

Readers want to live happily ever after through your characters.

What romance “rule” do you think writers break most often, and have you ever stopped reading a book because it violated your expectations as a romance reader?

About Jenn Windrow

Jenn Windrow once attempted to write a “normal” book—and promptly bored herself into a coma. So now she sticks to what she does best: writing snarky, kick-butt heroines, broody supernatural men, and more sexual tension than a vampire in a blood bank.

She’s the award-winning author of the Alexis Black novels and the Redeeming Cupid series, where the undead never sparkle and the drama is always delicious. Jenn moonlights as a developmental editor, helping other writers wrangle their wild plots and tangle-free prose.

When not arguing with her characters or muttering about Oxford commas, she can be found binge-watching trash TV, wrangling the slew of animals that live in her house (husband and teenagers included), or telling herself she’ll only have one more cookie.

You can find her at jennwindrow.com or lurking on social media where she pretends to be an extrovert.

Photo by m carty on Unsplash

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Want a Twist Readers Will Love? Make Your Protagonist Wrong.

By Janice Hardy

Twist so gracefully readers never see it coming.

My mother-in-law said she couldn’t have pork because her doctor wanted her to avoid red meat. This made me pause, because we all know pork is “the other white meat.” I’d heard that for years and years and firmly believed it, so I looked it up.

Turned out I was wrong.

Pork is red meat. “The other white meat” was a brilliant advertising campaign from the ’80s that lied to us all.

And while I was down that rabbit hole, I discovered carrots don’t help your eyesight, either. That was a propaganda campaign created by the Brits during World War II to hide the fact they had radar.

These are two “facts” I grew up believing and never doubted for an instant, until the truth blew my mind and changed my views. Neither of these facts were life-changing, but imagine how they could have shaken my world if they’d been truths more profound than food history.

That feeling of everything you thought you knew re-sorting itself at once? That’s the feeling a great plot twist gives your reader.

And one of my favorite ways to create an unforgettable twist, is to make your protagonist absolutely sure of something—and be completely wrong.

Not only does revealing the truth shock the protagonist, it also shocks the reader. It can send the story sideways and into new territory and shake up everything the characters thought they knew.

A great example of this is Bruce Willis’s character in The Sixth Sense.

(Spoiler alert, but the movie is twenty-five years old, so…)

Child psychologist Malcolm Crowe spends the entire film certain of a few things: he survived being shot, his marriage is just going through a cold spell, and he's helping a frightened boy named Cole who sees ghosts.

None of it is true.

He didn't survive. His wife is grieving him. And Cole is the only person who can see him.

Every choice Malcolm makes flows logically from something he's dead certain about and utterly wrong about. He behaves the way a man in his situation would—it’s just not the situation he thinks it is.

The reveal that Malcolm’s been dead the whole time forces viewers to reconsider every scene in the movie, searching for the clues of what was really going on (and they’re there if you look for them).

  • Nobody but Cole ever actually speaks to him.
  • The door to his study stays shut.
  • His wife never responds.
  • There’s a subtle hint with the color red.

You’re shown the truth the whole time, but you see it the same way Malcolm does, because you believe “his” truth.

That's the difference between a twist that delights and a twist that infuriates. The clues are there, we just don’t pick up on them.

The bigger the belief, the bigger the twist can be, too. A small wrong assumption, like a detective who’s positive the witness is lying when she isn't, makes for a fun surprise. But shattering a character’s core belief might be the shocker the whole novel was secretly building toward. ("I see dead people!")

Discovering that a long-held truth is really a lie can be devastating—especially if the truth is revealed at the worst possible time. Which is why a false belief is perfect for your All Is Lost moment at the end of Act Two.

Finding out they were wrong about something they were certain of rattles your protagonist to the core, and the fallout of that while they sit in their emotional wreckage and try to come to terms with this new worldview is story gold. Do they cling to the comfortable old belief, or accept the hard new truth?

That choice determines how the rest of the story will unfold.

Here's the catch, though. There's a world of difference between surprising your reader and tricking them.

A surprise makes readers feel entertained. A trick makes them feel lied to—and a reader who feels lied to closes the book and never picks up your next one.

The line between the two is how you drop in the clues. When you reveal that your protagonist (and your reader) had it wrong all along, the reader should be able to flip back through the book and see where the truth was hiding in plain sight the whole time. If there's not a single hint, the reveal will at best feel contrived, at worst look like bad plotting.

Crafting a twist can be challenging, but if you look at how it’s intertwined with the rest of the story, it becomes a lot easier to create. 

If you want a twist that blows minds, examine the thing your character is most sure of, and ask:

What does my protagonist believe so deeply they'd never think to question it? If you can't name it, you're sitting on a missed opportunity. Brainstorm ways to give them a conviction that’s totally wrong.

When's the worst possible moment for them to find out they're wrong? Major turning points are good options, or choose the All Is Lost moment for maximum emotional damage.

If a reader flipped back through the book, would they find the clues? If not, you don't have a twist yet. Go plant the hints so the truth was there all along.

Great twists come from readers and characters being wrong.

So plant those breadcrumbs. Let readers draw the wrong conclusion on their own, fair and square, from information that was never actually a lie.

That way, when the twist arrives and the truth comes out, it’ll feel inevitable, and not like you got it wrong.

What are your characters absolutely wrong about in your story?

Want more on craft sent directly to your inbox? Then join my email list here. As a welcome gift, you’ll get my 25 Ways to Strengthen Your Writing Right Now PDF free.

Janice Hardy

Janice Hardy is the award-winning author of the teen fantasy trilogy The Healing Wars, including The Shifter, Blue Fire, and Darkfall from Balzer+Bray/Harper Collins. and the chapter books Who's Haunting Who? and The Haunting of Cabin 13 for Lerner Publishing. For adults, she writes the Grace Harper urban fantasy series under the name, J.T. Hardy. When she's not writing fiction, she runs the popular writing site Fiction University, and has written multiple books on writing, including Understanding Show, Don't Tell (And Really Getting It), Plotting Your Novel: Ideas and Structure, and the Revising Your Novel: First Draft to Finished Draft series.

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Header photo by Tanja Tepavac on Unsplash

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