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Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Just Starting? Need to Brush Up for a New Project?

Monday, June 16, 2025
Just A Couple More Weeks To Enter My Highest Recommended Contest
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Monday, April 07, 2025
WinningWriters Offers Free Poetry Anthology Opportunity
Winning Writers will publish a digital anthology of the selected poems.
Submit by April 30. No fee.
Submit an original poem that makes creative use of the words that the Trump administration is flagging on government websites and research papers. See the list (PDF). There is no fee to enter. Final judge: Jendi Reiter.
We strongly prefer unpublished work that was written for this anthology rather than older poems that happen to include some of the keywords.
Poems may be on any topic, but one or more of the keywords should play a significant role in the structure or contents (e.g., a sestina with six of the keywords as the repeating end-words). Satire is welcome.
No restriction on age or nationality of author. The primary language of the poem should be English. No AI-generated work.
Everyone who enters this contest will receive an electronic copy of the anthology on June 30, and it will be made available free to the public. There is no other compensation, just notoriety and justice.
If your submission is selected for publication, you agree to give Winning Writers a nonexclusive license to publish your work online with attribution (you may use a pen name). You retain all other rights. You are free, for example, to publish your work in print or online elsewhere, whether or not you are selected for publication in this anthology.
If you need help, please email info@winningwriters.com.
Friday, March 15, 2024
Life and Writers Motto: We’re All in This Together
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Sunday, November 05, 2023
Carolyn Celebrates #2 Birthday of the 3rd Edition of Her The Frugal Editor
To My SharingwithWriters Blog Subscribers and Visitors:
As this year of 2023 draws to a close, I am celebrating the first year anniversary of the release of the third edition of The Frugal Editor, the winningest book in my #HowToDoItFrugally Series of books for writers, and I don’t want to let the year pass without reaching out to even more readers of a book so plainly a huge helpmate for authors to matter where they are in their careers. My publisher says there is approximately 50% new material in this edition. It will have something new in it for anyone with a new book in the works.
My publisher (Modern History Press) also says, “We really overachieved on this book. There's nothing within a mile of it in terms of scope and depth.” One of the reasons for such praise is the inclusion of information on front matter that is as likely to assure a great first impression for a book as a great cover and one that books on editing or publishing rarely cover. So today’s blog post (see below) is what you need to know regardless of the publishing process you have chosen for your book.
The new Frugal Editor also covers the magical properties of back matter including increased readership and book sales, but that part is way too long for a blog post. Find the frugal e-copy of the book at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BTXQL27T/!)
An Excerpt from the Third Edition of The Frugal Editor
What Authors Need to Know to
Avoid Vital Front Matter Booboos
By Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning
HowToDoItFrugally Series of books for writers
Because I am a book marketer and an English Lit major, I love front matter where I often find unexpected information, but when I am reading for entertainment, I hardly notice it. Readers tend to pay little attention to front matter unless we have a reason to do so but industry gatekeepers are pickier. That includes the professional reviewers both authors and publishers want to impress.
Front matter mistakes or intentional deviation from the norm are not as readily forgiven as those in back matter. The easy way to make sure yours is in the realm of industry standards is to request Gorham Printing’s beautifully organized, free Guidebook: Adventures in Publishing, Explore Book Printing. Though I include a long list of both front- and back matter elements later in this chapter, Gorham gives you a basic (safe!) order for frontmatter fundamentals for paper books:
1. Title Page
2. Copyright Page (lefthand page)
3. Dedication
4. Contents (begins on the righthand page)
5. List of Figures or Tables. In my book, “The Frugal Editor’s Extras” list in the front matter is a cousin to these lists in an effort to make finding information easier for readers much like table or figure lists do. Use it as an example of a way to deviate with your own idea for “extras”in your book.
6. Foreword
7. Preface
8. Acknowledgements
9. Introduction
Note: Gorham’s list doesn’t mention a prologue. I like them when they come just before the first chapter in books of fiction, meaning nothing—absolutely nothing but a chapter title—should intervene!
Gorham’s book is a great tutorial that includes their printing costs for books from hardcover to spiral books (often used for the likes of cookbooks). You’ll find a couple more front matter considerations below.
No matter how you plan to publish, you may think of a good reason to deviate from what appears to be acceptable among publishers. If your research inspires an idea for front or back matter that might benefit readers or help to sell more books, you might negotiate with a traditional publisher to accommodate your idea rather than stick to their company-wide style guidelines. I remember a fine publisher had included a short paragraph highlighting their use of a font style that was especially appropriate for the topic of that specific book on one of its front matter pages.
If you are self-publishing, know what rules you are breaking. Ask yourself if doing so would be welcomed by your readers and if it might attract the ire of a publishing industry professional. Ask yourself if the pluses outweigh the negatives or if you would feel comfortable saving your creative idea for a time when you are so experienced and established that your idea is likely to be accepted and emulated regardless of how brazen it is.
Of course, you can always choose a few books from your library or browse newly released books from publishers you admire at your favorite bookstore, too. Be sure to look at some of the best known books in the same genre as yours. This little exercise might convince you that your title can accommodate a little daring-do!
Here are some other less frequently used front matter components I promised you including the use of two title pages. What, you never noticed a second title page? They can be handy for keeping a nice, open layout with all the sections that should be on the left page where they belong. They are called the title page and the half-title page. Old-timers call title pages other than the first bastard title pages. In those pre politically-correct days, they were abbreviated versions of the title page that could be torn out before the book was bound. One defense for the keeping the practice is that authors can sign and personalize one page and the book still has one left untouched. Another is that an additional title page can separate the book’s text from long and complex frontmatter. The setup of a book’s frontmatter might be part of your publisher’s style guidelines and be nonnegotiable. If the frontmatter is quite long, there may even be a third title page just before the body of the book begins.
Note: An excellent example of a book that departs from frontmatter standards in ways that benefit both book and reader is Behind the Bears Ears: Exploring the Cultural and Natural Histories of a Sacred Landscape by R. E. Burillo (Torrey House Press, 2020). It includes a map of Bears Ears National Monument (US), an anthropologic timeline, and probably breaks some norms for the length of its introduction. This 407-page book also uses back matter effectively.
Warning: Don’t neglect your acknowledgements page. There are ways it can be used effectively for both pre-promotion and general marketing. It is spelled Acknowledgements. With a d, please. Even very good editors can overlook a misspelling of this word, at least in part because they don’t bother to peruse front and back matter. “Foreword” is often misspelled, too. Don’t leave the e out! Your spellchecker may not catch it!
Carolyn Howard-Johnson started what she considers her “real writing” career when most are thinking of retiring. She brings her experience as publicist, journalist, marketer, editor, retailer, and the author of those books published almost every way possible including traditionally, to the advice she gives in her HowToDoItFrugally Series of books for writers and the many classes she taught for nearly a decade as instructor for UCLA Extension’s world-renown Writers’ Program. She blogs at https://thenewbookreview.blogspot.com and https://sharingwithwriters.blogspot.com.
“Careers that are not fed die as readily as any living
organism given no sustenance.”
Tuesday, March 07, 2023
C. Hope Clark Advises "Let the Writing Be Its Own Reward"
I have been following C. Hope Clark for her newsletter, Funds for Writers, for ages. That recognition of her expertise grew with time. Her advocacy for authors is astonishing. This particular post of hers struck a note for me. In these times when I am seeing more and more ageism being expressed in the media, it seems especially valuable. But I also relate to it because as each day passes (and each health issue must be dealt with), I find myself grateful that I write. It is almost impossible to picture a day when it won't be one of the most pleasurable activities I encounter. When I saw this I found myself grateful to Hope for saying this so well.
Message from Hope
By C. Hope Clark, with permission
Someone recently told me she was too old to try to write. I reminded her she was still breathing, which was all the reason she needed to put pen to paper.
I get it. Sometimes we see technology over the writing. All the talk about AI, writing to SEO, white-papers on topics we do not understand, the need to promote via podcasts, TikTok, and Instagram. It can feel daunting that not only do we not understand a lot of the topics that need writing about out there, but if we write for ourselves, the publishing of it scares us away.
Take a breath.
Just write. Write your story. Enjoy using all your word tiles and creating beautiful sentences with them. Let the writing be its own reward.
A neighbor of mine is 90 years old. He has had an incredible life as a self-made man. Over ten years ago, he decided his life needed to be recorded, so he'd stay up each night and write. I could see his light on across the cove from me as he scribbled in his notebooks. Finally, he decided he'd reached the end and got someone to type up the manuscript. They he had it formatted and published it locally, for no one other than his family.
There are many writers out there working into their 70s and even 80s. They aren't writing technical manuals. They are writing history, mystery, children's stories, short stories, horror stories, slice-of-life vignettes, and more. And when they decide to publish, they either pitch to agents or publishers, or they hire someone to put the book together and self-publish.
It's very doable, friends. Chin up. You can always write. That's what I love about the craft is that it's always an option for just about anyone.
MORE ABOUT TODAY'S GUEST BLOGGER
Hope also practices what she preaches in her newsletters. She is a regular contributor to Writer's Digest products (magazine, podcast, blog, newsletter, online courses) and other freelance venues. But she is also known for her award-winning mysteries, especially the Edisto Island Mysteries. She has published 16 mysteries with Bell Bridge Books with another coming out in June and a contract for three more, one in each of her three series.
She writes for income, for fun, and because she loves it. Barely a day goes by that she isn't penning a feature, blog post, editorial, or chapter of a novel. It's what she does, and she loves giving back to other writers through FundsforWriters. Her readers have watched her grow from novice to seasoned, having experienced many of her trips, obstacles, downfalls, awards, and successes, both as a writer and personally. She calls it like she sees it in the industry which makes her top-of-the-newsletter editorials quite popular.
The FundsforWriters newsletter is available at www.fundsforwriters.com and is a free, weekly (on Fridays) delivery. Find out more about Hope at www.chopeclark.com and even more here in her e-mail signature:
The Carolina Slade Mysteries
The Edisto Island Mysteries
The Craven County Mysteries
www.chopeclark.com
Editor, FundsforWriters
www.fundsforwriters.com
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