Writing

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Writing
fromEsquire
10 hours ago

The Lost Art of Writing a Note by Hand

Handwritten letters have become rare due to digital communication, but writing them remains a meaningful way to express thoughtfulness and create lasting impressions.
Writing
fromForbes
22 hours ago

5 Techniques To Write A Strong Professional Bio For Career Advancement

Professional bios should authentically introduce you as a person while highlighting credentials, expertise, and professional identity to shape your personal brand and reputation.
Writing
fromDefector
2 days ago

What I Learned From My Annoyingly Long Correspondence With "Elena Ferrante" | Defector

An AI-generated scam email impersonating Elena Ferrante used phrases from published book descriptions to deceive an author, revealing how AI can convincingly mimic famous writers while containing telltale signs of fabrication upon scrutiny.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

I paid people with pints and chips': Georgina Duncan on the prize-winning play she tapped out on her phone

Sapling won the Women's playwriting prize; the Belfast-set drama examines teenage grief and the long, community-defining scars left by past violence.
Writing
fromVulture
4 days ago

The Horny Girls Who Walked So Heated Rivalry Could Run

M/M slash fanfiction, often written by women and known as BL in Asia, evolved through fandoms like Star Trek, enabling mainstream successes like Heated Rivalry.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

Two Portraits of My Father in a Tree

On a Christmas climb, companions tie coats to trees, relieve heat, then face darkness and cold as one climbs a pine seeking home.
Writing
fromwww.aljazeera.com
6 days ago

Where are the most endangered languages in the world?

Over 7,000 languages exist worldwide, with roughly 44 percent endangered and major languages like English and Mandarin dominating global use.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The 'Hopeless Labor' of Writing

AI chatbots and delivery robots threaten traditional writing by offering frictionless ease, undermining the pedagogical value of sustained effort and arduous composition.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Trip to the Moon by John Yorke review a storytelling handbook in dire need of an edit

Understanding five-act narrative structure helps craft commercially effective, emotionally compelling plot-driven stories that tap themes of healing, reinvention and political rhetoric.
Writing
fromEsquire
1 week ago

Tom Junod Finally Reckons with What It Means to Be a Man

Tom Junod contemplates personal ambiguity in the South while reflecting on a long career probing diverse, provocative subjects and confronting historical memory.
fromMetro Silicon Valley | Silicon Valley's Leading Weekly
1 week ago

Venita Blackburn in San Jose | Metro Silicon Valley | Silicon Valley's Leading Weekly

The Center for Literary Arts presents acclaimed author Venita Blackburn, Compton-born creative writing professor and founder of Live, Write, an organization offering free creative writing workshops.
Writing
Writing
fromHi-Fructose Magazine - The New Contemporary Art Magazine
1 week ago

Sometimes You Just Have To Hug That Walrus: The Humorously Surreal Paintings of Bruno Pontiroli Twist Our Relationship with the Animal World - Hi-Fructose Magazine

Pontiroli's paintings reuse recurring hybrid characters and animate inanimate motifs to create playful, surreal poem-images combining animals, humans, and flesh-like objects.
#crossword
Writing
fromMedium
1 week ago

Get behind me, AI writer

Write a full draft freely, then use ChatGPT to identify sources, correct citations, and preserve the writer's authentic voice while integrating proper references.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

The Myth of the Perfect Writer's Room

Creative work often arises in ordinary, cluttered, shared, or constrained spaces rather than in idealized secluded retreats.
Writing
fromwww.computer.org
2 weeks ago

Professional LinkedIn Profile Template

Optimize LinkedIn profiles with relevant keywords, updated content, clear contact details, and organized sections to maximize employer discoverability.
Writing
fromOpen Culture
2 weeks ago

Jack Kerouac Lists 9 Essentials for Writing Spontaneous Prose

Writing should be a rapid, breath-driven, associative outpouring that privileges rhythm, immediacy, and improvisation over revision and strict grammatical correctness.
fromHigh Country News
2 weeks ago

Cote - High Country News

I walk the fencerow with the men,blaze-orange vest draped like a gown.I am too young to have the gunin season when we are afield the string of pearls the wounds can make.
Writing
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

The End of Books Coverage at the Washington Post

Closing the Washington Post's books coverage diminishes serendipitous literary criticism and reduces diverse cultural engagement for general-interest newspaper readers.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 weeks ago

Steve Arndt, ambassador of Portland's literary community, dies at age 77 * Oregon ArtsWatch

Anytime an Oregon author, or any other prominent writer, gave a reading at Powell's Books, Steve Arndt would show up early, sometimes by a couple hours, and reserve front-row seats for his fellow writers. He wanted the writer giving the reading to know they had the support of Portland's literary community. His friends say that habit embodies Arndt's kindness, generosity, thoughtfulness, and the way he fostered and strengthened a sense of community in Portland's literary scene.
Writing
Writing
fromLos Angeles Times
2 weeks ago

The poet laureate with a bold plan to get Boyle Heights students into the woods - and on the stage

Feng Shui Poetry in the Parks uses poetry and feng shui principles to connect urban Los Angeles students with nature, fostering grounding and environmental appreciation.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
2 weeks ago

Literary Theory

Words carry multiple meanings; 'swallow' embodies both bird and ingestion, showing language's power to alter perception and emotional states.
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

7 things people do when telling stories that make others tune out immediately without realizing it - Silicon Canals

We've all been there. Someone starts telling a story, and within seconds, your mind starts wandering. Maybe you pull out your phone, suddenly remember an urgent email, or find yourself mentally reorganizing your weekend plans. The storyteller doesn't notice. They keep going, completely unaware that they've lost their audience. After interviewing over 200 people for various articles, I've noticed patterns in how people communicate their experiences. Some captivate you from the first word, while others lose you before they've even gotten to the point.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Are There Linguistic Conspiracy Theories?

The term "conspiracy theory" calls to mind a variety of dubious claims and controversies, like rumors about Area 51, claims that the Earth is flat, and the movement known as QAnon. At first blush, these phenomena would seem to have little in common with bogus word origins. But there are a variety of false etymologies that spread virally and refuse to go away, in much the same way that stories about chemtrails, black helicopters, and UFOs refuse to die.
Writing
Writing
fromThe Walrus
3 weeks ago

Two Poems | The Walrus

A widow keeps her late husband's underpants as haunting, domestic relics while a ghostly presence from him recedes as she starts intimacy with someone new.
Writing
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

J.K. Rowling's 12 rejections prove most people quit too early - Silicon Canals

Persistent effort through repeated rejection often leads to success; quitting early prevents potential breakthrough achievements.
Writing
fromUFC
3 weeks ago

Fight By Fight Preview | UFC Fight Night: Bautista vs Oliveira

Thomas Gerbasi teased the narrator about their enduring passion for the sport, its athletes, and the week-to-week excitement that never dimmed after a decade.
#childhood
fromABA Journal
1 month ago

Should the bottom line be up front? Only with context, Bryan Garner says

Many lawyers have eagerly adopted the buzzword "BLUF"-bottom line up front-as if invoking the acronym were synonymous with careful thinking. The catch is that almost no one stops to ask the important question: What exactly is meant by "bottom line"? The answer isn't obvious, and it shifts with context. In military writing, the "bottom line" is a concrete decision or action a commander must take-stated at the very start because the commander already knows the mission, the terrain and the stakes.
Writing
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

The Brilliance and the Badness of "The Sun Also Rises"

A narrative that outwardly endorses bravery, nature, and grace is fundamentally held together by hatred.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Why Shouldn't We Let Demons Do Homework?

A crack of thunder, a flash of light, and a sulfurous mist flooded my apartment. Marax, President of Hell, stood before me. Marax entered my summoning circle, eyes burning with unholy fire, and I gave him the stack of homework to flip through while I brushed my teeth. Marax marked up the papers and fleshed out my bullet points into thoughtful feedback before I even got to my molars. Then-three hours of my life, saved!-I banished him back to Hell.
Writing
Writing
fromMedium
1 month ago

What AI has done to me as a writer

Human imperfections in writing—typos, abbreviations, and idiosyncrasies—create authenticity and nuance that AI-generated text cannot truly replicate.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Do writing retreats actually work? Reader, I finished my novel in style

Retreats provide concentrated time, restorative environments, purposeful walking, and peer support that accelerate progress on creative projects and relieve blocks.
Writing
fromNature
1 month ago

Technology is changing how we write - and how we think about writing

Writing systems, tools, media and human factors interact with technology to shape the evolution and practice of writing, altering composition methods and cognitive skills.
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Forbearance

A little rice? A little soup? I'd rather die reading the early texts you sent about my breasts. I wouldn't take a picture- infidelity!- and so instead had conjured them with words, for which, with words, you gave me back a tongue we dragged across the skin of common thought. Such is our lot, our shared disease or gift. Like Bernini's angels propped somewhere in Rome
fromTechCrunch
1 month ago

Science fiction writers, Comic-Con say goodbye to AI | TechCrunch

Back in December, when SFWA announced that it was updating its rules for the Nebula Awards. Works written entirely by large language models would not be eligible, while authors who used LLMs "at any point during the writing process" had to disclose that use, allowing award voters to make their own decisions about whether that usage would affect their support.
Writing
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

I Hate To Break It To You, But There's A Huge Chance You've Been Saying Extremely Common Words And Phrases Wrong Your Entire Life

1. Tongue in cheek 2. Old wives' tales 3. Statute of limitations 4. To be specific 5. Nipped in the bud 6. Get down to brass tacks 7. Deep-seated hatred 8. All intents and purposes 9. Wheelbarrow 10. Champing at the bit 11. Jury-rigged 12. Ulterior motive 13. Bald-faced lie 14. Dog eat dog world 15. Chump change 16. Dime a dozen 17. Duct tape 18. Can't see the forest for the trees 19. Quote unquote 20. Could have 21. Chalk it up 22. Iced tea 23. Take for granted 24. Blessing in disguise 25. Bated breath
Writing
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

You See Your Crush. You Lock Eyes. You Hold Your Gaze. Then You Do the Most 2026 Thing Possible.

The English language is a marvelous thing. In just the past few years, we've been treated to the invention of words or terms that have captured new technologies or given voice to how it feels to be alive in 2026: rage bait, rizz, slop, hard pants, nepo baby, brain rot. But occasionally, new phrases arise that describe something much older-perhaps even ancient-to which no one has given a name.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

To say I was the favourite would imply I was liked': Mark Haddon on a loveless childhood

cardiganed grandmothers eating roadside picnics beside Morris Minors, pale men sunbathing in shoes and socks on stripy deckchairs, Raleigh Choppers and caged budgerigars and faux leather pouffes I feel a wave of what can't properly be called nostalgia, because the last thing I'd want is to return to that age and those places where I was often profoundly unhappy and from which I'd have been desperate to escape if escape had been a possibility.
Writing
Writing
fromFar Out Magazine
1 month ago

Is Substack being taken over by marketing?

Substack has shifted from a niche, text-focused haven into a broader platform attracting musicians and diverse creators, altering audience discovery and creator independence.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

Opinion: You can blame me for all those em dashes in AI-generated text

I'm one of those authors whose books AI ate for lunch a few years back. At some point I might get a check to pay me for a dozen years' work on the three books it stole, but really, there's no way to compensate for the fallout. AI seems to think no, it can't think, only shuffle what real people thought that a machine can write as well as a person can.
Writing
Writing
fromBig Think
1 month ago

Why "read more" may be the most underrated thinking advice we have

Extensive, wide-ranging reading is essential to develop the skills and raw materials needed to compose clear, effective prose; there is no shortcut.
Writing
fromDefector
1 month ago

Michael Connelly Should Stick To Fake Crime | Defector

A cold case consultant claimed to have solved both the Black Dahlia and Zodiac murders, identifying Marvin Merrill from the Zodiac's Z13 cipher.
Writing
fromPortland Monthly
1 month ago

The Open Mic Where Amateurs and Award-Winning Authors Hang Out

Community open-mic invites writers to read one page of work-in-progress, fostering vulnerability, permission, and peer support for creative growth.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

The Upside of Professional Rejection

Reframing professional rejection from final failure to provocation or opportunity can shorten hurt and energize renewed efforts.
Writing
fromThe Walrus
1 month ago

Harmonics | The Walrus

A caregiver comforts a dying loved one amid a surreal, glittering ambulance and ER, balancing narcotics, music, storytelling, and tender presence.
Writing
fromNature
1 month ago

The rich stopped buying yachts the year time went on sale

A parent uses subjective time-slowing technology to extend personal experience, causing prolonged absences that the child experiences as abandonment.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

The Writer's Secret Weapon

Swimming and physical exertion enhance creative thinking by muffling sensory input, boosting neurotransmitters, and enabling deeper, more original idea generation.
Writing
fromiRunFar
1 month ago

Returning: A Poem by Angie Funtanilla

Returning to the trail restores embodied joy, reconnecting breath, heart, muscles, and memory through movement, nature's touch, and deep, requited love.
Writing
fromPractical Ecommerce
1 month ago

Best Writing Tools for Business in 2026

AI-powered composition tools streamline creation, check grammar, support nonnative speakers and accessibility, and integrate across platforms with free and paid plans.
Writing
fromESPN.com
1 month ago

Could this be Djokovic's best shot at a record 25th major title?

Novak Djokovic, at 38, remains a dominant force with 24 majors, elite form, and ambition to add more despite rising stars Sinner and Alcaraz.
#memory
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago
Writing

Why Stepping Away Makes Writing Come Alive Again

Long pauses and distance renew memory and imagination, allowing ideas to reorganize and prevent repetitive production while rhythm, not constant output, sustains creative development.
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago
Writing

I am here in the evening light

An enduring presence promises return through nature, offers land and comfort, and reframes endings as ongoing continuity amid memory and quiet dusk.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Where Loneliness Really Begins

Every hero's journey begins in an ordinary world that feels ordered yet hides an essential absence, prompting a quest for repair and return.
Writing
fromThe Oaklandside
1 month ago

Who will be Oakland's next youth poet laureate?

Oakland invites teen writers to apply for a yearlong youth poet laureate program representing the city through performances, workshops, and a laureate project.
#letter-writing
fromFortune
1 month ago
Writing

Meet a 28-year-old Canadian woman who turned her pen-pal side hustle into a subscription side hustle with over 1,000 members | Fortune

Retro writing practices like letter writing and calligraphy offer deliberate, tactile ways to reduce screen time, encourage reflection, and build deeper social connections.
fromFortune
1 month ago
Writing

Gen Zers and millennials go analog with letter writing, typewriter clubs and calligraphy to take a break from screen time | Fortune

People are reconnecting through retro tactile communication methods like letter writing, calligraphy and typewriting to slow down, reduce digital use, and build meaningful relationships.
fromFortune
1 month ago
Writing

Meet a 28-year-old Canadian woman who turned her pen-pal side hustle into a subscription side hustle with over 1,000 members | Fortune

fromFortune
1 month ago
Writing

Gen Zers and millennials go analog with letter writing, typewriter clubs and calligraphy to take a break from screen time | Fortune

Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Joseph O'Neill on Why a Story Should Be Like a Poem

People conceal shameful deeds and also quietly perform unrecognized good acts; withholding specifics preserves mystery and influences how others perceive moral character.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

"Light Secrets," by Joseph O'Neill

Hidden rumors and secrets complicate a lunch between friends, revealing humor, vulnerability, and a belief that everyone has concealed darkness and hidden goodness.
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

Slate Pears Game 155: Jan. 18, 2026

New Pears every day at noon! This is Pears Game 155. The longest words in Game 154 were DISTILLS, LITTLISH, and TITLISTS.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Sunday Puzzle: It takes two

Wordplay puzzle: insert two letters into eight-letter words to form ten-letter words; additional challenges use syllable shifts and anagram name puzzles with a submission deadline.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Taking the Internet Novel Offline

Depicting internet-mediated life requires new narrative strategies that ground online behavior in familiar forms like family drama to keep readers engaged.
Writing
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
1 month ago

Meet Berkeley's new poet laureates a kindergarten teacher and 2 high school freshmen

Hanan Masri named Berkeley's third poet laureate; Nolawit Ketema and Rachel Dunn named youth poet laureates, with city duties, mentorship, and a $5,000 honorarium.
#poetry
fromAbove the Law
1 month ago

Writing Like A Lawyer Without Sounding Like A Lawyer - Above the Law

Here's the good news: writing isn't a talent. It's a skill. And skills respond to the same cure as every other skill: reps. Not glamorous reps. Not the kind that gets applause. The kind you do in small rooms, when no one is watching, when you're a little uncomfortable, when you want to quit halfway through because the sentence you just wrote feels like wet cardboard. That's the work.
Writing
Writing
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month 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 month 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.
Writing
fromFuncheap
1 month 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.
Writing
fromDefector
1 month ago

The Crossword, Jan. 12: Shuffle Along | Defector

Jonathan Raksin constructed the Monday crossword edited by Hoang-Kim Vu; Defector crosswords run every Monday in partnership with AVCX, with submission guidelines available.
fromwww.dw.com
1 month 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
1 month 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
1 month 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
Writing
fromBusiness Insider
1 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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.
fromTiny Buddha
1 month ago

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

When I was studying writing in college, my personal essay class was my favorite. I'd already been journaling for almost a decade, so I understood the power of exploring life experiences through the written word. Journaling wasn't immediately helpful for me. In my younger years, I often wrote to ruminate, beat myself up, count calories, or otherwise reinforce patterns that didn't support me. But as I worked through childhood trauma in therapy and through other approaches, my writing gradually became healthier.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.npr.org
1 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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 month 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.
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