Book Review & Analysis

How Internal Conflict Drives Stories

How Internal Conflict Drives Stories

Internal conflict is the force that motivates a character’s actions. Read on to understand how to identify and to use internal conflict to write better stories.

Why You Still Need a Clear Protagonist with Multiple Narrators

Why You Still Need a Clear Protagonist with Multiple Narrators

When used properly, multiple narrators are very effective in storytelling; however, it is still important that authors know whose story they’re telling (i.e., have a clear protagonist).

What Makes The Husband's Secret So Good?

What Makes The Husband's Secret So Good?

In a literary analysis of Liane Moriarty’s The Husband’s Secret, we find plot and a compelling underlying question drive the book to be the success that it is

Anatomy of a Good Book Cover

Anatomy of a Good Book Cover

Why does a good book cover matter? The cover is an important marketing tool for your book, which is why you should leave book cover design to the pros.

How to Know if You Should Write a Series

How to Know if You Should Write a Series

Knowing if you should write a series comes down to having enough story ideas, to building a strong enough character arc, and to establishing a big enough audience.

The Importance of Place in Your Story: An Analysis of Setting in JP Delaney’s The Girl Before

The Importance of Place in Your Story: An Analysis of Setting in JP Delaney’s The Girl Before

Setting is as important a part of your story as the characters. Setting reveals tone, theme, and character, and can maximize the climax of your novel’s plot.

Creating Killer Characters: An Analysis of Lily Kintner in Peter Swanson’s The Kind Worth Killing

Creating Killer Characters: An Analysis of Lily Kintner in Peter Swanson’s The Kind Worth Killing

By analyzing Peter Swanson's sociopathic protagonist Lily Kintner, writers gain insight on how to create a "killer" character readers can't get enough of.