Editing

What Serial Fiction Can Teach Writers

Most writers think of serial fiction as a publishing format. Mark Posey argues it is something even more valuable: a practical lesson in storytelling craft. Because every installment must earn a reader’s return, serial fiction exposes weaknesses in pacing, structure, and chapter endings that can hide inside a completed novel. The skills it teaches—curiosity, momentum, and reader engagement—strengthen every form of storytelling.

The Most Valuable Reader You Will Ever Have

Discovery matters. Visibility matters. But the most valuable reader you’ll ever have isn’t the one who finds your book. It’s the one who chooses to stay connected after they do. Direct sales aren’t just about revenue—they’re about building relationships that can outlast platforms, algorithms, and marketplace changes.

The Story Beneath the Story

Every story has a plot. A detective solves a murder. A spaceship crew saves a colony. A retired man plants tomatoes. But the stories readers remember long after the last page are rarely about those events alone. Beneath the plot lies a deeper story—the emotional truth, the question being explored, the reason the story resonates. As an editor, one of the most important questions I can ask is: What is this story really about?

The Draft You Never See

Every published novel has a hidden history. Behind every finished book are deleted scenes, rewritten chapters, abandoned plot lines, and countless small decisions that readers never see. The first draft may discover the story, but revision is where the story reveals what it was trying to become all along.

Readers Can Feel the Difference

Readers are becoming more selective—and that may be very good news for skilled storytellers. In a marketplace flooded with rushed and disposable content, craftsmanship matters more than ever. Readers aren’t just consuming words. They’re investing trust. And trust is earned one sentence, one scene, and one book at a time.

Introspective Narration: Brilliant Storytelling or Brake Pedal?

There’s a fine line between emotional depth and narrative quicksand. Introspective narration can elevate a story into something unforgettable—or bring the pacing to a grinding halt. The difference usually comes down to one question: is the reflection adding something the scene itself cannot? When done well, introspection deepens character and theme. When overused, it turns into literary speed bumps disguised as wisdom.

The Three Writing Books I Return To Again and Again (And Why You Should, Too)

Writers collect craft books the way other people collect unread classics and half-finished notebooks: with tremendous optimism and the vague sense that owning them counts as progress. But a few books earn their place beside the desk because they’re not just inspiring—they’re useful. In the first of this series, Mark looks at why The Story Grid has become one of the writing books he returns to again and again: because when a manuscript goes sideways, this is the book that explains why.

The Comfortable Manuscript Problem

There’s a point in many manuscripts where the story quietly pulls back. The conflict softens, the dialogue becomes safer, and characters make the reasonable choice instead of the revealing one. The result is a manuscript that is technically good—but often forgettable. The moments readers remember are rarely the comfortable ones.

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