Poe’s secret for inspiration is used by many writers today.
Poe scanned headlines, read newspaper stories, and gleaned ideas from the oddities. His
story Berenice is about a man who digs up his dead wife and takes her teeth. This is reportedly inspired by newstories of grave robbers, some of which left the body and took the teeth. Another story reportedly inspired by a news report was the Facts in the Case of Valdemar. At the time, there were reports of people who could speak to the dead; there were other stories of ways to prolong life. Poe, it seems, blended these and created a story in which Valdemar “survives” and “speaks” beyond his natural life. This short fiction was thought to be real. People believed it!
Inspiration, for me, has come from the odd news story. A human interest story in which a homeless man was selling stories on a New York street, inspired me to write $1.00 Stories.
Another story flickered to life when someone posted a handful of gold teeth and said she’d inherited them. How does someone come into the possession of teeth, not their own, and why would they will them to a family member? Hence, The Gold Tooth springs to life from my suspicious mind!
Scan the newspaper, and let your mind wander. We’re writers; we have the desire to understand, explain, and create.
Happy Writing! 


One reader contacted me convinced
life, and while that might be my fear, it is not me.
Readers make the best writers…. I think almost every professional writer I know, heard, and read has repeated this.
One writer wrote recently that they’d received some really nice reviews, but one reader sent an email blasting him for some part of his novel. He took this to heart and let it destroy his mood and his confidence in his writing.
more books than the few reviews that I have. It’s not write, or even ethical, to pay for reviews, although such services exist.
There’s a theory that we don’t fear failure, we fear success.


Many people are confused by semicolons; some people just hate them.
However, some of my editors have asked me to cut them down. One editor-friend said, “they do not appear in popular fiction.”


comma needs to be.

Does your character like her/his marshmallows burned and why?
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