Check out my new series of cozy mysteries, featuring a magical papillon dog. 
Uncover the secrets hidden 
within the walls of "Whispers in the Attic"! Join Sarah, Pixie, and the 
gang on a thrilling adventure filled with mystery, magic, and unexpected
 twists! 📚✨ 
 
 #WhispersInTheAttic  #Mystery  #Magic  #Adventure  #cozymystery  #cozymysterywithdog  #thinkingdogpublishing  #booktok  #papillonsoftiktok  #doglover  #cozydogmystery  #dogsoftiktok  #papillon  #papillondog 
 
  As writers, we’ve all asked ourselves that nagging question: “Is my book long enough? Too short? How long should  it be?” It’s easy to get caught up in the numbers, obsessing over whether our work fits neatly into arbitrary word count guidelines. But here’s the truth: Word count should never dictate the quality of your story. The heart of storytelling lies in the narrative itself, not in how many pages it spans.   The Pressure of Word Count   From NaNoWriMo goals to publishing industry standards, writers face constant reminders about “acceptable” word counts. A novel must be 80,000-100,000 words. A novella shouldn’t exceed 40,000. Short stories have their own limits. These guidelines are helpful, but they can also be stifling. We begin to pad scenes unnecessarily or trim meaningful moments just to conform to these benchmarks.   I’ve been there. I’ve wrestled with my manuscript, forcing it to stretch or condense to meet expectations. And you know what happened? The authenticity of the...


Comments
Post a Comment