Showing posts with label Writing Craft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing Craft. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 August 2025

How long before AI writes a Bestseller? A Literary Thought Experiment

How Long Before AI Writes a Bestseller? A Literary Thought ExperimentHow long before AI writes a New York Times bestseller?

It’s a question that lingers like a subplot, unresolved, faintly unsettling, impossible to ignore. Earlier this year, a publishing data analyst sparked headlines by predicting that an AI-written book could top bestseller charts by 2030. 

Emily Henry and the craft of commercial fiction

An exploration of Emily Henry’s rise from YA author to bestselling romantic fiction powerhouse. Discover what makes her novels so rereadable, emotionally resonant and structurally smart — and what writers can learn from her craft.
It’s not just that Emily Henry writes bestsellers. It’s that she writes the kind of commercial fiction people want to reread, smart, emotionally layered romantic comedies that balance character, structure and warmth in just the right proportions. 

As a reader and a fan, I’ve marvelled at how her novels manage to feel both comfortably familiar and quietly profound.

Monday, 28 July 2025

Writing with machines, owning your voice, and where the ethical lines are drawn

An AI created image of a woman writing a novel

We’ve crossed a threshold. What used to be the stuff of speculative fiction is now a line item in the writing process: AI is here, and it’s shaping how we write, revise and even brainstorm.

But with the rise of tools like ChatGPT, Sudowrite and Claude, a wave of questions has followed. If a machine helped shape a chapter, is it still your voice? If it tightened your prose or fed you metaphors, do you owe your reader an explanation? And most fundamentally—how much help is too much?

Tuesday, 1 April 2025

Joan Didion and the art of emotional precision: What writers can learn from her style


Joan Didion never wasted a word. Her prose was as spare as it was surgical. It was a style that she forged as a journalist and later honed in her essays and fiction that cut to the heart of American life. For writers and readers alike, there's so much to learn from her technique, especially in a cultural moment saturated with overstatement and noise. If there was one takeaway from Didion’s writing, it’s that less is more.