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Stranger Things

2020 is the year of strange, and as we enter the holiday season, that strangeness only intensifies. When this post goes live, many Americans will be recovering from the gluttonous feast we call Thanksgiving. And while I’m hopeful that most of us will have done the safe and right thing by staying home, I also understand how isolating and lonely doing the right thing might be when so many around you perhaps aren’t doing the same. So if you’re looking for a community to spend some time with, to work on your craft, to examine those plot holes, come hang out at the Coffeehouse this weekend! Because as Hopper might say, weekends are for coffee and contemplation.

~Arden

Welcome to Week #503

Here’s where you’ll find everything you need to get yourself ready to put pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard)! Use our prompts—or don’t—and share links to your essays, stories, and poems in the Coffeehouse.

 The Schedule

We will release a new prompt on our blog every Friday at 12pm Eastern.

Then it’s up to you! Write your response to the prompt on your own blog or website and share the link in the Coffeehouse. If you prefer to keep your work under wraps (and away from the eyes of potential publishers), you can still ask for beta readers in the Coffeehouse and share your work privately!

Every Monday, we’ll check in to see how you’re doing and what your writing goals are for the week.

Wednesdays are “Work-in-Progress Wednesdays.” Share a few sentences or even a paragraph or two in the Coffeehouse (no more than 250 words, please). Even if you’re not done writing, this could be the boost you need to stay motivated.

Did you publish a book? Do you have a story in a magazine? The First Friday of every month is for self-promotion, where you can share commercial links to your work for purchase. (You can always share the news that you’ve been accepted for publication, though!)

And of course, the entire community is here 24-7 to share your victories and setbacks, challenges and accomplishments. So come on in, pull up a chair, and say hello. We’re all writers here.

This Week’s Writing Prompt is:

Should I stay or should I go?

Your job, should you choose to accept it, is to answer this question. There are no word limits. You can write fiction or nonfiction; you may interpret the prompt any way you like. Share your response in the YeahWrite Coffeehouse by linking your blog post, Google Doc, or other file. Check out your fellow YeahWriters’ responses, and don’t forget to leave them some love in the comments!

Looking for our weekly grids? After nearly ten years, they’ve been retired. Read more about the latest changes to YeahWrite in the #500 Weekly Writing Challenge Kickoff Post.

Upcoming and Ongoing

Sign up for our email blast so you don’t miss out on any upcoming classes, workshops, or competitions. 

New Class: No More Puppets

Do your characters feel wooden? Do you have to jerk their strings pretty hard to get them to participate in the plot? Delve into motivation and how to keep your characters in character while convincing them that yes, they do need keep doing the things that advance the plot, in this one-day class taught by Rowan.

Get all the details and register now!

For more information or to inquire about other class topics, please email: editors@yeahwrite.me.

Ongoing: 20/20 Hindsight (Free Workshop)

For 2020 we’re looking back at stories. Didn’t get a chance to write one in January? That’s fine: jump in whenever you can.

In November we’re playing with how setting affects your characters. You’ll take the same ideas, motivations, and people, and move them to another location (or even another time!), making the changes you need to in their jobs and lives to fit them in. How would your coffee shop conversation go if it took place on the bridge of a starship under attack? What if your fight with your significant other happened in the Land of Oz? What if your Captain was actually a literature professor and the crew were her students? The sky isn’t the limit as we play with alternate universes.

Check out this month’s challenge and some suggestions for how to succeed right here.

Ongoing: Poetry Slam

Essayists aren’t the only writers who get to end on a zinger. Poets have been doing it for centuries. Whether you call it a tornada, volta, or just “that thing I did at the end of the sonnet,” there’s a technique that encourages you to make your reader re-evaluate everything they just read. That’s what we’re digging into for November’s slam. Check it out! And make it count: this is our last slam.

Super Challenge #18

Super Challenge #18 (microfiction) is officially underway! Good luck to all our participants as they anxiously await the results! 

Watch this space for news about Super Challenge #19 for creative nonfiction, which will open for registration later this winter. Make sure you also sign up for our email blast so you don’t miss out on any Super Challenge announcements.

About the author:

Arden Ruth is a paralegal by day, fantasy author by night. When she isn’t diving into worlds of magic and mythical creatures, you can find her eating her way through all the tacos in town. Arden joined YeahWrite in early 2014 as a contributing editor and social media manager, which later merged into the role of Executive Editor in 2020. Behind the scenes, Arden is currently working on the first novel of her Fated Paths trilogy. She also published a number of short stories and a fantasy anthology which can all be purchased on Amazon. Arden lives in Seattle, Washington with her husband and two rescue pups. To read more of her stories, visit her website.

arden@yeahwrite.me

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