Rachel’s Recommendations

Recommended Reads:

Emotional examinations of mental health and grief

Emotional examinations of mental health and grief

1. Reading (MG): “How it’s not my brain being messed up, but more my heart being hurt, and how sometimes we think we’re okay, we think we’ve moved on, but then our hearts crack open months or even years later and it’s important to stop, be kind to ourselves, and ask...

You fight and you fall and you get up and fight some more

You fight and you fall and you get up and fight some more

Here are 5 (or 6) things worth sharing this month: 1. Reading: I recently finished the lovely middle grade novel, Ruby Lost and Found, by Christina Li. It’s about a girl who’s been sentenced by her parents to spend the summer with her grandmother, visiting a...

Just keep going

Just keep going

Here are six things worth sharing this month: 1. Reading: “I think standing up for yourself always makes a difference.” I just finished reading Ali Standish’s latest middle grade book, The Mending Summer. It was lovely and hard and sweet and infused with magic...

Writing resources

On Story

On Writing (general)

  • Wired for Story, by Lisa Cron
    Great book on the science of the brain and how to craft well-told stories that will appeal to the storytelling side of the brain. I got this book years ago but still pull it out every now and then to refresh my memory.
  • Steering the Craft, by Ursula Le Guin
    This one’s not so much a technique kind of book as it is a book reminding writers of their obligation to their readers. Some of her ideas are a bit old-fashioned, but most of them are still valuable today.
  • The Fire in Fiction, by Donald Maass
    Another great one on creating books that appeal to readers. Again, I always read these kinds with a grain of salt–because my goals are a bit different, but we all want readers, so I think we can always find value in the suggestions offered, even if we don’t become hardcore users of them.