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7 Characters From the Harry Potter Universe Who Deserve More Words

When JK Rowling approached the end of the tales of Harry Potter, and announced it was truly the end and to not be continued, I wasn’t fazed. By all means, end it! But this isn’t the say that we should depart from this world entirely. After all, Rowling crafted such a rich one, and it’s frankly criminal that our playtime ends with the conclusion of Harry’s adventures. I am, of course, arguing the point that Rowling and fans could come to a win-win agreement over the subject easily: give us some spin-offs and side stories based on characters who aren’t Harry Potter.

Here are some of my ideas—seven(ish) characters for seven books dedicated to Harry Potter’s story—free of charge.

Posted by Kristina Pino

The Little Luxuries of Roughing It: How to Camp with Good Taste

(image via flickr)

It’s funny how most of my favorite camping memories are about food. Like the time, two days into a camping trip in Big Sur, friends pulled profiteroles from deep inside their cooler like a magician pulling a rabbit from a hat. They warmed rich, creamy chocolate sauce on the fire and drizzled it over the ice-cream-filled pastry puffs. We devoured the unexpected treat around the campfire, licking every last bit of gooey, rich chocolate goodness from our fingers. Decadent, delicious, unforgettable.

Posted by Robin Donovan

Keep Cool this National Ice Cream Month with Book-Inspired Flavors!

Image by StockSnap from Pixabay

It’s National Ice Cream Month! It’s also July, and it’s also very, very hot. And while we love all the regular kinds of ice cream just fine (you can pry Chubby Hubby from our still-warm, heatstroke-dead hands), we wondered what would happen if worlds collided and books became ice cream (not literally, though, because that would be gross). Get your hybrid freezer/bookshelves ready, because here are six tasty samples!

Posted by Quirk Books Staff

Let’s write a novel in a month: Part 4—Slow Death

Posted by Rick Chillot

6 Literary Characters You Wish Were in Your High School

Some of the best books are the ones chock-full of characters we wish we could know in real life. Here’s a few of our favorites we’d be happy to call classmates. HAGS and KIT, guys!

Posted by Veronica Altimari

Dispatch from Camp NaNoWriMo: The Best Editing Books for Fiction Writers

(Image via flickr)

If Camp NaNoWriMo were an actual camp, this would be the week of Color Wars, final bonfires, and tearful goodbyes. We’d all be wrapping friendship bracelets around each others’ wrists and promising to keep in touch during the school year. But as bittersweet as the end of the session may be, Camp NaNo has a considerable perk that normal camps don’t: a manuscript draft!

Yes, your wonky little Word doc now qualifies as a manuscript draft! It’s a momentous occasion that many would-be writers never reach, and one that deserves a little end-o-camp Jamboree. But when the embers have died down (and you’ve taken a good long break to give yourself some fresh perspective) your next quest, should you choose to accept it, is revising. A first draft is wonderful and pure and (if my experience holds) kind of a mess. It needs some TLC before it can become a book.

There’s no Camp Revision-a-wassa to see you through the process, but there are great books to help you shape your manuscript into a story that’s worth a whole arm’s worth of friendship bracelets (yes, even the cool kind with beads and feathers woven in). Here are my favorite picks—read them, let the ideas stew for a few weeks, and then plunge back in to your book.

Posted by Blair Thornburgh