Base Your Story Structure on Principles, Not Systems | Jane Friedman
There’s no one-size-fits-all way to structure a story, so understanding the core principles will help you decide what’s right for yours.
Try searching for “how to structure a story” and you'll get a panoply of instructions for the “right” way to structure a story:
Hero’s Journey
Three-act structure
Save the Cat
Snowflake method
Freytag’s Pyramid
Fichtean Curve
What do you do with them? @tiffanyyatesmartin.bsky.social advises.
05.03.2026 12:48
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I Hired a Book Publicity Firm for £1,800. Here’s What Went Wrong. | Jane Friedman
One author reflects on how her desire to not just outsource marketing, but to outsource even thinking about it, led to regrettable results.
This case study in hiring a book publicity firm is both laugh-out-loud funny and highly informative. Few people share these poor experiences due to shame and embarrassment.
If you're thinking of hiring *anyone* to help you with book publicity, this is a must-read.
04.03.2026 12:56
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Embrace Quirky: 5 Benefits of Using Animal Point-of-View Characters | Jane Friedman
By observing our own species through the eyes of another, something new just might be revealed to us.
Be forewarned, if you write fiction involving animal characters, especially for adult readers, people will likely refer to your story as “quirky.”
Book coach Erin Radniecki advises on when animal POVs can benefit your story.
26.02.2026 14:43
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Literary Agents and the Book-to-Screen Pipeline: Q&A with Jillian Davis | Jane Friedman
I spoke with the head of the book department at LA-based Kaplan Stahler Literary Agency, which is most associated with adaptation deals.
Recently, the LA-based TV literary agency Kaplan Stahler brought on Jillian Davis to start their book department. She focuses on authors of YA, romance, and women’s fiction.
I’m grateful to Jillian for answering a few questions about the unique space she’s in.
25.02.2026 14:08
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What Is a Memoir’s Essential Question and Why Do You Need One? | Jane Friedman
The first question is often some version of “What happened to me?” Understanding it helps craft a story that speaks to your readers’ needs.
"Readers don’t care about what you’ve gone through. It’s not that they’re callous ... they need to know what’s in it for them."
@lisacooperellison.bsky.social explains how to identify a memoir's essential question.
19.02.2026 15:11
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11 Steps from Your Big Fat Mess to Your Next Draft | Jane Friedman
If you’re overwhelmed by the volume of accumulated words after months or years of generating new material, here’s how to tame and shape them.
If you view writing purely as process—a way to understand yourself—feel free to stop reading here.
If, however, you aim to shape your material into a work for others, then you need a follow-on practice.
Here's what to do, from @audreykalman.bsky.social.
18.02.2026 14:47
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If you're dealing with a company to create/run/host this kind of tool for you, the risk appears low unless that company's security were compromised (which, of course, happens).
17.02.2026 15:34
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What I Learned from Turning Myself Into an AI Chatbot | Jane Friedman
One book coach wondered whether an AI tool, trained on his own archive of advice, could answer authors’ questions as well as he could.
For authors in the consulting/scholarly/nonfiction space: (1) retain chatbot rights in your publishing contracts and (2) readers may come to expect these tools as part of your published work. Amazon is already using chatbot functionality in books w/o having the rights (of course they are).
17.02.2026 14:47
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If you can't make it live, the recording will be available this evening at my YouTube channel: youtube.com/@janefriedman
13.02.2026 14:21
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Why Your Story Keeps Stalling (and How to Get It Moving) | Jane Friedman
Stories are like trains: a connected chain of main events (railcars) and transitions (couplings), with very little stopping at platforms.
Every scene needs three things:
1. A Railcar (main event).
2. A Coupling (transition/consequence). The piece of logic that locks one scene to the next.
3. Subjectivity (the meaning & feeling).
Author Leslie Bradford-Scott deconstructs scenes by using the metaphor of trains.
12.02.2026 14:34
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Writing Beyond Ourselves | Jane Friedman
Writing outside our lived experience isn’t just about getting facts right—it’s also about learning who we are when we truly listen to others.
"How was a middle-aged male, a cop for that matter, supposed to write about a woman trying to make sense of her complicated life? More to the point, how do we write authentically when a character’s life experience is so different from our own?" —David Lane Williams
11.02.2026 13:56
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The Big Mistake That Keeps Writers From Finishing a Novel | Jane Friedman
One writer explains why you shouldn’t necessarily get feedback on your first draft—and what you should do instead.
Writers hear the advice to join a critique group and perhaps hope it will serve every need—motivation, accountability, encouragement, feedback, companionship. But it’s hard for one group to provide all those things to all members at the same time.
@zenaryder.bsky.social suggests what to do instead.
10.02.2026 15:03
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Finding the Right Tone for Your Memoir | Jane Friedman
Your story’s tone and content don’t have to match—and when they don’t, they can combine to create something greater than their sum.
"Divorcing your tone from your content does not strip your memoir of its authenticity—in fact, it deepens it. There’s more to your book than just what happens in the story. Pairing content and tone can give you access to meaning beyond merely the scope of the plot." —Stephanie Mitchell
05.02.2026 19:15
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How I Navigated My Way to a Memoir Deal from a Small Publisher | Jane Friedman
Learning from others and practicing patience while navigating the publishing industry led to a bright light at the end of the tunnel.
"Every small publishing house led to another small publishing house I had never heard of before. So, despite my starting out with a short list of publishers, the list of possibilities for unagented submissions just kept growing."
—Audrey Ship (@audreyshipp.bsky.social)
04.02.2026 15:07
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The Glimmers You Find While Chasing the Whale | Jane Friedman
While in pursuit of our writing goals, the serendipitous experiences along the way might be just as meaningful as landing the big fish.
"I was introduced to glimmers during a workshop facilitated by author Pam Houston at the Breadloaf Conference in 2023. She spoke of experiences that stay with you because they make life sharper, sweeter, and meaningful."
Why author Sheila Myers continues despite her 1099s looking poor.
03.02.2026 15:18
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Publishing for Minnesota
Silent auction 'Publishing for Minnesota' hosted online at 32auctions.
A great opportunity here to help yourself and do some good for others at the same time. Publishing auction ends tonight.
30.01.2026 15:20
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How NOT to Confuse Your Readers | Jane Friedman
A successful story unfurls in a way that both keeps readers grounded and keeps them guessing—so withhold information, but not context.
Withholding information is an important storytelling skill. But you shouldn’t withhold any old information; you should hold back information that matters to the character.
Insight from writer and editor @erinhalden.bsky.social.
29.01.2026 14:47
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Honored to run it, thank you for giving me the opportunity.
28.01.2026 16:45
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Writing at the Intersection of Fear, Politics and Responsibility | Jane Friedman
Writing is an act of exposure, especially when it’s about something personal, political, and dangerous. But we write anyway.
"[Writers will] be misunderstood. We’ll be criticized by strangers. Sometimes even by people we love. Writing is an act of exposure, and writing about something this personal, this political, and this dangerous feels like standing in a blizzard naked." —@rebeccamakkai.bsky.social
28.01.2026 15:20
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What Improv Comedy Taught Me About Writing Novels | Jane Friedman
Improv is about being in the moment, and showed one author how to let go, listen better, take risks, and move on when something doesn’t work.
"Improv clarified something important for me about writing. When I hedge in my novels ... it’s the same impulse at work: self-protection. But just like onstage, hesitation drains momentum. A bold choice, even an imperfect one, gives the story something to push against." —Kyla Zhao
27.01.2026 15:08
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The Art of Connective Tissue: What Raymond Carver Teaches Us About Building Character and Showing | Jane Friedman
Small bits of action—descending the stairs, cleaning off the car—might not be insignificant if they tell something about a character’s world.
Most writing advice tells you to cut ruthlessly.
But what if some of the most powerful writing happens in the spaces between your “important” scenes?
Author Seth Harwood offers powerful insight into storytelling using Raymond Carver as an example.
22.01.2026 15:05
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A bar chart showing the electricity use of several daily activities with the subtitle "The 'typical query' is not a useful way to think about coding agents' energy use." The bar for a 'typical ChatGPT query' is not even visible. My median Claude Code session is somewhere between the average US household per minute and toasting bread for three minutes. My median day with Claude Code is something like running a dishwasher.
Whenever I read discourse on AI energy/water use that focuses on the "median query," I can't help but feel misled. Coding agents like Claude Code send hundreds of longer-than-median queries every session, and I run dozens of sessions a day.
On my blog: www.simonpcouch.com/blog/2026-01...
20.01.2026 14:38
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Please don't abstain—I don't! 🤓
20.01.2026 16:07
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The Pros and Cons of Launching a Book Without a Publicist | Jane Friedman
A publicist can be an invaluable part of your launch team when your book is published, but it’s also possible to do it on your own.
Should you hire a book publicist? There's no one right answer for all. I tell every author: don't expect the investment to come back to you in the form of sales. But it can be a worthwhile investment that delivers a career-long boost.
@heathersweeney.bsky.social offers pros & cons.
20.01.2026 16:07
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Later this month: I'll be speaking at the IBPA and BookLife Boot Camp, where author @russellnohelty.com and I will discuss how authors can control their own destiny, leverage their intellectual property, and build their audiences.
Learn more: www.ibpa-online.org/store/viewpr...
19.01.2026 15:43
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YouTube: youtube.com/@janefriedman
16.01.2026 16:29
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When Women Ignore Their Instincts (and Why I Wrote a Novel About It) | Jane Friedman
One writer explores how women will rationalize away feelings of unease for the sake of pleasing others, and how we express that on the page.
We’ve all seen it before in movies. The female character who gets into a car with a stranger or walks into a house when the door is ajar and looks like it’s been broken into. WHAT ARE YOU DOING?
Author Courtney Psak discusses this phenomenon in storytelling and how it underlies her latest novel.
15.01.2026 15:00
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