Creative Nonfiction Funny Inspirational

Here we are in Reedsy, so why isn't this story titled, 'How to become an Author?' An author is a step up from being a writer. It means you have published something. So, if we have entered the competition to any prompt at all, approval to enter means we have been published. The definition of an author is having written a book (e.g. a novel), article, or play. Pat yourselves on the back. You are authors.

Most authors don't feel such a sense of accomplishment until they have had a book or novel published, and many do publish their own. This needn't detract from their quality. However, it is essential to have some clues about writing. And I don't mean knowledge of grammar and spelling, though this helps. Trust me, a good story poorly written ticks more boxes than a bad story written well. But who wants a fantastic tale described as 'a great premise'. . . but what happened after that? We all know that if we don't give our dream novel a good kick-start and self-edit, our editor will throw his hands up in despair and say, 'I don't know how to fix this!'

What if a writer doesn't know all this? I know what happens because I've been there. The key is to learn from our mistakes and keep moving forward.

First of all, don't try to write an adult novel if you are a child. I know because I tried it. Hundreds of pages of it, all handwritten. I hadn't learned to type. I didn't know enough about history or life to do a good job. I didn't even know what research was. For example, I didn't realise that the first Industrial Revolution happened after London burned in 1666. You can't write a story about both happening simultaneously. That attempt was trashed. Conclusion 1: Children can't write adult stories.

So I waited until I was a teen. Teenagers have lots of problems. Again, not a good time of life to write an adult novel. I kept it despite its being incomplete until I was an adult. The premise and story were good. I had learned when the Industrial Revolution happened. But my taste dictated otherwise. I decided I had two feet on the ground and no longer liked fantasy. Motherhood can do that. I considered writing a book about childcare. At least, I wrote anecdotal clips for a children's magazine and won prizes. My book, however, was consigned to the bin.

Years ago, my husband decided to go to America with my brother and a childhood friend. They purchased a red Cadillac to do Route 66 in the middle of Summer and set off to fulfil their dreams. Something they regretted after almost dissolving in Arizona. They discovered the hottest place was Needles. Their accommodation had no air conditioning. After sitting in the living room of their motel, they decided to flee without getting a refund. It was to stay and be cooked alive or leave quickly.

What we wives were warned about was something different. As the top of the convertible would be down (Summer and all that), it would be a bad hair day every day! I don't believe they wanted us along.

While the menfolk were away, it seemed an excellent opportunity to rewrite my fantasy story. A friend agreed to critique in stages. His feedback was invaluable. It made me think about a working title, a backstory to explain how the story started, and numerous other specifics. I developed a focused writing routine, without the usual demands and interruptions. I had learned to type and could spell. Research was easy with a PC. What could go wrong?

Within six weeks, I had written it and completed half of book 2. No writer's block encountered. I assigned caution to the winds. During the process, it occurred to me that it would be too long. I realised it would require a third book.

So, caution number 2: Don't start a three-book series before you have tackled something like a short story, or at least two. Don't even start with one book. Seriously. Start with something manageable, something that won't overwhelm you. It's all about building your skills and confidence, one step at a time.

But the book was already written. I trusted my friend when he told me that the story and writing improved as it progressed. Or, he grew accustomed to my writing just as I speak, because he already knew me so well. Trust me. Rule 3: Do not write a book in the same way you talk.

After finding out that the word 'that' proliferates in writing if you don't take care, and finding that 'that' had proliferated ad nauseam, I removed as many as possible.

I decided that there must be other words that repeat, multiply and inundate. What were they? My friend had been unduly kind to me in saying my book-length story was a good one.

If you look up the 100 most used words in the spoken English language, do not think that it doesn't matter to repeat them when writing. At best, it is repetitive and boring. At worst, it makes readers wade through 'glue'. An author friend I collaborated with first told me about glue. I thought, PVA? No. Look it up. It bogs down readers, creates distance between the reader and the story, and makes a book's length so much longer. As you pay a publisher per word and page, it adds up. Writing concisely is better and cheaper.

Don't start me on adjectives. I used to think that the more I used them, the stronger the description would be. Less is more when it comes to adjectives. Use power words, use the strongest words you can for everything, and choose stronger verbs (instead of many adverbs). And delete as many adjectives as you can.

Using identical words too often can signal to readers that you're relying on ChatGPT or AI tools to write. There are at least 500 of these words or phrases. A lot of them are fancy ways to start sentences. Now I know we all want to start sentences with variety. But seriously, don't embellish. Don't become a Fancy Nancy writer. The sentence reads better without it. Not only that, a warning in Grammarly that your writing resembles an AI's writing may not mean your writing is good. Apparently, a judge here in Reedsy will review and disregard possible winners for this reason alone - assuming an AI has written the stories.

Rule number 4: Banish as many as you can - weak, repetitious words and phrases, filler words and filter words. (especially glue, adjectives and adverbs)

Like peeling an onion to its centre, each new thing I learned was implemented after the fact. And after I paid for a professional beta read, because I was too scared to ask anyone else to read my story. The embarrassment was at least private, not public. I re-read what he wrote about my incredible story sometimes and feel humbled. Suggestion 5: Don't be afraid of honest, succinct criticism. It may hurt, but it will tell you what needs to be done. Better still, learn how to write before you embark on a three-book series!

There is more to think about before you write your book. You would be correct to assume I never did any of it well. Oops.

Point of view has nothing to do with making a point. And to make a point in dialogue, there is no small talk. It is purposely constructed to propel the story forward and show characterisation. However, you need to pare it down to the bare essentials, while still maintaining naturalness.

Suggestion 6: No soapbox speeches unless you are trying to be Shakespeare.

I didn't understand why I wanted to write my book. I was never aware of genres or target audiences. I never started work on an email list. I did think about my plot and knew every part had to fit together, but I am not an outline person. My muse or subconscious came up with solutions to plot holes and problems that cropped up along the way. Like many authors, you know when you've got the story right. It already existed. But getting it down for others to read and enjoy is not easy at all. I rewrote the ending numerous times until readers liked it.

Anyone who has written an epistle has done exceptionally well. Don't trash it. If any steps have been forgotten, like the first ones before you start, and the ones in the middle that you use for ruthless revision and self-editing, never, ever give up. Perseverance and stamina are required. Dump those darlings, delete the trash, polish that prose, simplify your sentences, and eliminate weak writing.

Writers are all in great company. Suggestion 7. Write short stories here at Reedsy Prompts. I did this for a couple of years. It's a great routine to have. But do this before writing your book. The skills you learn and the friends you make will help you become the author you want to be. The result may surprise you.

THE END. No. I mean the continuation.

Posted Oct 09, 2025
Share:

You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.

27 likes 29 comments

01:27 Jan 02, 2026

This was a favorite funny one for the week it was entered. A surprise, as it was written to entertain, with no thought about if it actually would. Lol

Reply

Mental Intrigue
16:55 Nov 08, 2025

Stories like this one truly help me on my novice journey. I really enjoyed it, thank you. The Chat-GPT part got me thinking, and made me want to rant about my recent disappointment after listening to several audiobooks by a female author who, somehow, despite her very demanding profession that has nothing to do with writing, manages to write four books per year. When you read, you may not spot the redundancy of words, and the story may not quite be in line with how things happen, because someone didn't proofread their work. This is a pattern repeated in multiple of her books, and, as engaging as they were, my interest in them faded quickly. I'm not a writing expert, nor do I have an education in English. But even to me, the neophyte writer, a novice in crafting stories one letter at a time, I found it a little unnerving. This rant was written on an early morning, before the much-needed caffeine fueled my brain cells, so forgive my bluntness. Who am I to do so! I learned my English in my twenties by watching soap operas on television, and it only took me five years.

Reply

19:01 Nov 08, 2025

Thanks, Mental intrigue. It is true that the more you read writing, and learn how to write, you become disenchanted with writing that doesn't follow set accepted norms or that isn't polished writing. That said, it is still very difficult to spot flaws in one's own writing. Even experts with a solid writing reputation need beta readers, for example, to spot the gaps between the story in their mind and the one on the page. Also, writing guidelines can be tweaked and changed (not willy, nilly) if you have an established career in writing. But, you play fast and loose with POV, proliferate the passives, not get the balance between dialogue, narrative, and description right, slip into telling and not showing, as a novice writer, and those things will be held against you. There was recently a first-time writer in Reedsy who won with a very profound story which was literally full of grammar and spelling errors. Reedsy are less concerned about quality and quantity, (I have been told this specifically) and will choose a story for its message. And having a takeover judge who has the first and final say, can leave loyal Reedsy Authors who write to a high standard, gobsmacked with the choice. I suppose the message is that anyone can win. But in fact, many who should, don't. In the end a good story written badly, can have as much chance as a good story written well. At least in Reedsy. There is my rant. I love your learning 'English . . . by watching soap operas on television, comment.

Reply

Anne Tanner
19:40 Oct 21, 2025

I very much enjoyed this story, Kaitlyn. I’m a research based writer mostly, for local schools or churches or individuals — but the ideas for stories and poems come from all sorts of things. I was enrolled in writing class in college — Center for Writers — and I did write short stories and poems for those. One of my professors told the Short Story class to “criticize the story, not the writer. Sage advice, yes?
The step by step process of learning how to transform an idea into a story is in my experience very much like you described it! Well done!
I read a lot anyway — besides being a reader I’m a word nerd also. I was also taught that when writing we have a “large stock of words to choose from” and subsequently a group of us put together a writing magazine I titled WORDSTOCK. It just happened to coincide with the famous “Woodstock” event of 1969. ( yes I’m old, haha). The right word in the right place at the right time …. Something you do well.
To me, there was a smiling “kid at heart” tone to your writing. So much fun to read. Thank you!!!

Reply

21:19 Oct 21, 2025

Aw, thanks, Anne. I'm glad you enjoyed. It was some free advertising for Reedsy at the same time. Too many authors come to Reedsy to win, and writing is about so much more than that. As you know! You have a lot of experience.
I've written some stories in here where the MC is young. Lynley and the Moon Project for one. And another, an earlier one called Lynley Strikes Again. Lynley is a hard case and lots of fun because she is so serious. The shortlisted one is a high school drama.

Reply

Heather Rogers
18:46 Oct 21, 2025

I love the “behind the scenes” thought process of writing. Dan Rogers never tells me any of this. I just wait until he’s done with his story to see what he has come up with. I shall be on the lookout for your book to add to my ever-growing TBR!

Reply

21:11 Oct 21, 2025

Thanks for that, Heather. I do enjoy Dan's stories.
The book is called Dynasty of the Damned

Reply

Harry Stuart
18:13 Oct 20, 2025

Sage advice and insights, Kaitlyn. Thanks for the pointers!

Reply

05:51 Oct 21, 2025

Haha. It wasn't meant as pointers exactly. A story about what I have learned, and writing has been a ritual for most of my life. Not in the same way as some of the other stories have portrayed rituals. Only when I can have my proper daily routine without other demands, is writing part of it in some shape or form. Then I can stick with it and accomplish much. Some have a routine of a Reedsy story every week or fortnight. I've slipped up badly lately. Thanks for the read and comment.

Reply

Nataly Pollock
14:53 Oct 16, 2025

I love this. It perfectly reflects how I've been feeling since I started my writing as I started only a year ago and I'm still a teen as well. You wrote this very well and incorporated it well into one of the prompts. And I'm glad that I could learn some very useful things as I read.

Reply

21:40 Oct 16, 2025

So glad I could both entertain and educate at the same time. LOL. All the best.

Reply

Martin Ross
00:37 Oct 16, 2025

Excellent treatise! Conversational, relatable, and humorously helpful. After our recent discussion, I think I may have hit on a past story I could expand to novel-length, and you have some solid tips for me to think or rethink about. Thanks for the prod and the counsel. BTW, just Kindled Dynasty — look forward to reading!

Reply

04:40 Oct 16, 2025

Thanks, Martin. Glad you enjoyed. And feel free to critique after you have read but please do a kind review. All the best with your expansions.

Reply

Victoria West
23:40 Oct 14, 2025

Wow, this is really helpful, I am writing a book of my own right now... I'm afraid it isn't very good. 😅 Though I really started writing it just for fun. I'll definitely refer back to these tips when coming across a sentence I hate in my writing. Thank you!

Reply

00:23 Oct 15, 2025

Thanks for the read, Victoria. All the best with your writing project.xx

Reply

Jessie Laverton
18:19 Oct 12, 2025

Haha great use of the prompt. Entertaining but also hugely useful. And humble and personal too.

Reply

22:16 Oct 12, 2025

Thanks, Jessie. It was fun to write.

Reply

Shirley Medhurst
12:48 Oct 12, 2025

Very inspirational whilst being light-hearted and amusing.

You certainly provide some astute and useful top-tips too. I particularly liked 'Don't start a three-book series before you have tackled something like a short story, or at least two.' Haha....

Reply

22:17 Oct 12, 2025

Thanks, Shirley. It was fun to write.

Reply

Helen A Howard
07:50 Oct 12, 2025

Hi Kaitlyn,
Some great advice and useful tips here. Of course, there is something ritualistic about writing whether it be a short story or long story. Like you, I went about everything back to front when I wrote a self-published novel. Like you, I’d also made attempts at different points in my life when I wasn’t mature enough. Result? Half-finished story - if that.
For me, to try to write a long story again, I need to have the time. It was easier to write at length in lockdown. I discovered I love the short story form which surprised me.
“Dump those darlings” great advice.
I enjoyed reading this. Congratulations on your publication.

Reply

09:32 Oct 12, 2025

Thanks, Helen. I'll check out one of your stories soon. I also love writing short stories. Who would have thought! Writing longer works is better done without interruptions. So short stories are great if you have too many other demands made of your time.

Reply

Helen A Howard
10:07 Oct 12, 2025

They still take me hours lol. I’m a very slow writer, but I have to do it. 😂

Reply

05:52 Oct 21, 2025

Slow or fast, a lot of time goes into a short story!

Reply

Mary Bendickson
14:50 Oct 11, 2025

Thanks for the tips and congrats on your publication.🤗

Reply

19:58 Oct 11, 2025

Thanks, Mary. I got the idea because I had a comment-conversation with Howard Hassall about its genre, and as a friend did a market analysis report for me which mentioned a sub-genre that super surprised me (gothic) I mentioned I could probably write a story about how not to write a novel because I did so many things back to front. Genre is supposed to be nailed before you write the story - so many other aspects are as well.

Reply

Jim LaFleur
08:05 Oct 11, 2025

Brutally honest and hilariously spot-on!

Reply

11:46 Oct 11, 2025

Haha. Thanks, Jim.

Reply

Miri Liadon
01:34 Oct 10, 2025

This was genuinely insightful, and I think it's worthy of note that I came to Reedsy specifically to work my way up to writing novels. I also think this was a very interesting interpretation of the prompt.

Reply

02:34 Oct 10, 2025

Thanks, Miri. You are on the right track. It's also why I am so busy. Doing the stuff, I should have thought about earlier, now that it's been published. LOL I already learned the art of writing and applied those things, at least.

Reply

Reedsy | Default — Editors with Marker | 2024-05

Bring your publishing dreams to life

The world's best editors, designers, and marketers are on Reedsy. Come meet them.