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  • Technology How-To's | Writing Skills

    How to Register a Copyright for Your Work

    ByDebra 7 May, 201330 June, 2014

    There are a number of businesses that offer to help you obtain your copyright registration—for a fee, of course, and often an exorbitant one. The process is not difficult, not costly, and generally not that time consuming either. You can accomplish it either online (costs $35) or by submitting paper forms (costs $65). Here’s how:…

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  • Writing Skills

    What is the Fair Use Doctrine?

    ByDebra 30 April, 201325 July, 2022

    The Fair Use Doctrine relates to copyright law and is a limitation on an author’s copyright that allows for the limited use of copyrighted material without the author’s permission. There are no set guidelines—no specific word count or lines that may be used—and the distinction between what is fair use and what is infringement isn’t…

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  • Writing Skills

    Copyrights, Part 1

    ByDebra 23 April, 201315 May, 2026

    So you want to use part of someone else’s book/music/art/poem in your book. You’ve just entered the realm of copyright law. Was that work published before 1923? If so, it has entered the realm of public domain. It can be freely used, but you must cite the original source. Some works published between 1923 and…

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  • Writing Skills

    How Do Plot and Scene Work Together? Series Conclusion

    ByDebra 20 February, 20137 April, 2014

    Let’s connect the pieces of plot, scene, and sequel. Plot at its most basic level is your lead character’s goal and the journey to reach that goal. That journey is played out in the scenes and sequels of your story. Scenes show the reader the individual steps your character takes to reach his or her…

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  • Writing Skills

    Dealing with Time in Sequels, Part 5 of our series

    ByDebra 13 February, 20137 April, 2014

    Unlike the scene, which happens moment by moment, the passage of time in a sequel is flexible. Here you can move quickly through hours or days (even months) in your story. What took 158 words as a scene can be written in much fewer words. I’ll take our last example, a scene, and make it…

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  • Writing Skills

    Dealing with Time in Scenes, Part 4 of our series

    ByDebra 5 February, 201328 May, 2026

    Time is a story element with which many beginning writers struggle. Whether your novel occurs over a period of days or years, you must lead us through that time. In scenes, time passes moment by moment. This means we see the action as it happens. Let’s pick up the action where Friday’s sequel left off…

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  • Writing Skills

    Are You Writing a Strong Query Letter?

    ByDebra 3 January, 201318 March, 2020

    As editor for CrossRiver Media Group, I receive submission queries that run the gamut from professional to spam. All too often, writers submit emails that don’t contain even the skeleton of a real query letter. Their email simply reads “here is XYZ for your review.” Sometimes I responded to them, but often I don’t. Increase…

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