@NofisatReads Any constructive criticism. I also would like to hear as a reader what grabs you so I know what to follow up on a little more or what to pull back on
@NofisatReads awesome, dm me to join the group, also please be aware i will never offer payment for beta reading, I've had a few people try to drop that on me
@NofisatReads Thank you so much! I outline before drafting but I still find the structure always ends up needing a bit of extra help. My biggest revision was honestly for tone. I added chapters and rewrote some to add more humor and cozy vibes to the heist structure!
@GreenleafBookGr Exactly. A good book still needs visibility to find its audience. Marketing can feel uncomfortable for a lot of writers, but if people never discover the story, they never get the chance to connect with it.
@DantePens Honestly, A broken battlefield under a starry sky has a lot of emotional weight, especially if it ties into the ending. Sometimes covers come easier because they capture a feeling. Are there any recurring symbols, lines, or themes in the book that could inspire the title?
@NofisatReads So not to spoil to much but the end of my book ends at a broken, rocky battlefield with a starry night sky so I thought that that’d be a good picture for the book cover. The title tho…no clue lol
#writing
‘What’s on your mind?’
Me: wondering which manuscript I’m about to obsess over, annotate endlessly, and give detailed feedback on. Because beta reading is never just reading—it’s understanding what makes a story work.”
@RW_Blackwood That’s usually where the strongest growth shows up
new genres, new instincts. It often brings out layers in the writing you didn’t know were there. I’d be interested to see how this turns out.
Writing in a different genre than my usual is a massive challenge, but a surprisingly fun one. It’s forcing me to flex muscles I didn’t know I had. ✍️
Turns out, stepping out of your comfort zone is where the best ideas live.