Witches of Workshop
Use code WOW10 for 10% off the Brick! https://www.getbrick.com/WOW10 [https://www.getbrick.com/WOW10] Also, we'd love to critique your pages! We review genres of all kinds. Please send 1-10 pages and a synopsis of what the chapter/read is about to mailto:witchesofworkshop@gmail.com [witchesofworkshop@gmail.com] We start with some everyday chaos (a slightly unhinged morning and fashion decisions that may or may not have made sense in the moment), then somehow end up talking about Saved by the Bell, reading burnout, and what it feels like to constantly try to keep up with books everyone says you “should” be reading. From there, we shift into writing craft—specifically a short story critique where we break down what actually makes fiction work on the page. We get into POV, tension, pacing, word economy, narrative clarity, and how stories either hold a reader or slowly lose them without you noticing. A big part of the conversation is about why stories lose momentum and what creates that feeling of “I stopped believing this,” even if you can’t always explain why. We also talk about satire and intent, especially how hard it is to write humor or critique something well when you don’t fully understand it—and why familiarity with your subject can make or break the work. Overall, this episode is really about the gap between intention and execution in storytelling: what we think we’re writing versus what a reader actually experiences. If you’re into writing fiction, storytelling craft, short story analysis, POV, tension, or reader immersion, this one goes deep into the messy, practical side of how stories actually hold together.
16 Episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til å kommentere
Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Witches of Workshop sitt community!