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Susan Schmid on Patience, Perseverance, and Publishing Children’s Books

It's a joy to have children's book author Susan Maupin Schmid by for an interview. Susan is the author of the 100 Dresses series from Random House, an avid seamstress, and a Mentor Mom for MOMSnext (a division of MOPS International). She considers her inner 10-year-old her greatest asset as a writer and mentor (except when said inner child wants to stay up late or play Animal Crossing).

Bonnie Clark on Literary Agents, Picture Books, and Traditional Publishing

Picture book author Bonnie Clark joined me to discuss her debut children's book, TASTE YOUR WORDS, working with literary agent Adria Goetz, balancing writing with parenting, overcoming rejection, and navigating the traditional publishing process. Whether you're pursuing traditional publishing or simply trying to finish your next manuscript, her journey offers valuable lessons on persistence, creativity, and long-term growth.

6 Essential Writing Fundamentals Every Author Should Master

Strong stories are rarely the result of a single breakthrough technique. More often, they emerge from consistently applying a handful of fundamental writing principles. Whether you're writing novels, picture books, short stories, or articles, the same core elements tend to separate engaging writing from forgettable writing. Strong openings capture attention. Meaningful characters create emotional investment. Well-structured plots maintain momentum. Careful revision strengthens everything else. Mastering these fundamentals won't guarantee success, but neglecting them almost always leads to weaker stories. The six writing fundamentals below can help you create more compelling work and become a stronger writer over time.

The Publishing Trend That Never Changes

Every year authors are told to pay attention to trends. Which genres are growing? Which categories are declining? Which books are selling? While understanding the publishing industry has value, many aspiring authors make the same mistake. They spend more time studying trends than creating books. The truth is that most publishing trends come and go. But one publishing principle has remained unchanged for decades: readers return to authors who consistently create work they love.

Stop Perfecting Every Sentence – Just Share Your Story

It's been said every sentence is a persuasive argument that succeeds or fails in convincing the reader to read the next. Agree or disagree?

Frankly, I don't agree (completely) because the reader is complex, having a multi-dimensional purpose for reading. One aspect may be truly that each good sentence does cause the reader to continue on. But at the same time, the reader, once personally invested through time, money, promise, or any other act of will may continue reading not for that purposes alone. I listen to audio books during my commute. I have literally finished books only to be able to say I finished them, not because they provided some revolutionary insight or emotional experience. I simply wanted to finish what I started.

R.J. Batla on Writing Fantasy, Self-Publishing, and Creative Growth

R.J. Batla was one of the first authors I connected with while building my own author platform. Over the years, he has been a genuine encouragement and friend throughout the publishing journey. A lifelong fan of fantasy, worldbuilding, and storytelling, R.J. writes epic fantasy inspired by imagination, family, faith, and adventure. In this interview, we discuss creative growth, self-publishing, writing discipline, and what aspiring authors can learn from the long road of becoming a writer.

Why Authors Are Not Really Competitors

You’ll often hear writers say authors are not really in competition with one another. At first glance, that can sound naïve. Bookstores have limited shelf space, search engines have limited visibility, and readers only have so much money and attention to give. But readers are rarely satisfied with just one book, one genre, or one author for very long.