Pitch with Pride: book a critique and help fundraise this Pride month!

Pitch with Pride: Book a query, pitch or blurb critique this Pride month (1–30 June). 50% goes to the Small Trans Library, 50% goes into a pay-it-forward pot for marginalised writers, and you get valuable feedback so you can pitch your novel with confidence!

Hello and happy Pride!

I’m very excited to let you know about the Pitch with Pride fundraiser that I’m running this month.

It works like this:

If you book a query letter critique, a blurb critique or a short pitch critique with me this month (1–30 June 2023):

  • half the proceeds will go to the Small Trans Library,
  • the other half goes into a pay-it-forward fund for marginalised writers,
  • …and you’ll be getting valuable feedback so that you can pitch your novel with confidence—whether you are marketing your book to readers, looking for beta readers online, querying literary agents, or even writing a pitch for yourself as a planning or revision tool.

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Craft book review: Brain Games for Blocked Writers by Yoon Ha Lee

Craft book review: Brain Games for Blocked Writers by Yoon Ha Lee

Yoon Ha Lee is one of my absolute favourite authors—his Machineries of Empire trilogy is among the best science fiction I’ve ever read, and I’ve yet to come across a novel or short story of his that I haven’t loved. So when I found out that Lee had published a book about writing, I snapped at the chance to read it.

Brain Games for Blocked Writers: 81 Tips to Get You Unstuck is not your typical ‘how to write a novel’–type book. It’s a collection of suggested activities for finding inspiration, boosting your creativity, and coming at your writing from angles you might not have considered before.

Lee says in his introduction that these tips are for people “whose brains are not orderly and analytical”, i.e. people for whom working through a checklist of logical solutions is not effective in helping them overcome blocks in their writing. But I’m willing to bet that among the eighty-one suggestions in the book, there is at least one thing that would prompt new ways of thinking in every writer, regardless of the type of brain they have.

The book contains prompts around the act of writing itself—e.g. tools to use, ways to shake your writing process up, word games, and ways to play with genre and form. But a large chunk of suggestions stem from other areas of creativity, too. Lee is evidently a big fan of interactive fiction and narrative-rich games (such as TTRPGs) and this inspires many of the prompts, from thinking about what playing style your characters might have, to writing a ‘video game vision statement’ for your novel. Other prompts draw from art, fashion, music, technology, tarot, sports, and even perfume. My personal favourites might be the prompts that involve cats!

These hugely varied tips are not just one-line ideas or terse instructions: they each come with anecdotes from Lee’s life and personal examples about how he has tried each approach out with his own writing. The result is a conversational and personality-filled read—it almost feels like you’re sat opposite Yoon Ha Lee in a café, listening to him talk about his writing process, his favourite games and anything else that takes his fancy. It lends a whimsical and playful air to what, in someone else’s hands, could have ended up as a dry book of exercises.

So, in short: If writing your novel is feeling like a grind, plenty of the ideas in Brain Games for Blocked Writers will help you to step back and look at things differently—and it might be the prompts that you least expect. Yoon Ha Lee’s suggestions ultimately encourage you to reclaim the fun in writing and, in doing so, to find a new way forward for your story.


You can find details on where to get hold of Brain Games for Blocked Writers: 81 Tips to Get You Unstuck on Yoon Ha Lee’s website (link opens in a new tab).

Do you have any unusual ways to kickstart your creativity? Let me know in the comments, or get in touch another way. I’d love to hear from you!

While you’re here, why not check out my blog post about the three-gender system in Yoon Ha Lee’s novel Phoenix Extravagant?

Queer SFF Spotlight round-up: SFF books with asexual representation

Queer SFF Spotlight: SFF books with asexual representation

To celebrate Ace Week (23–29 October), here’s a bonus Queer SFF Spotlight blog post! This is a round-up of all the brilliant science fiction and fantasy books with asexual representation that have featured on the blog before. Enjoy!

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