wordsmithsix.com
Natalie Bright | Wordsmith Six
https://wordsmithsix.com/46-2
Six writers who love words and who read, write and critique together. Skip to primary content. Rory C. Keel. Facebook: Natalie Bright Author. 3 thoughts on “ Natalie Bright. August 1, 2011 at 11:38 PM. Pingback: WHAT’S IN A NAME? Pingback: WHAT’S IN A NAME? Leave us a word Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email.
panhandleprowriters.org
Member Links - panhandleprowriters
http://www.panhandleprowriters.org/member-links
A Contest for Writers. A Home for Writers. Our members have varied interests and specialties. You can find out more about them here. Articles and Events: natalie@nataliebright.com. Blogging Mondays: wordsmithsix.wordpress.com. Sharon T. Hinton. Rory C. Keel. Blogging Tuesdays: wordsmithsix.wordpress.com. DeWanna E. Pace. Wordsmith Six (group blog).
womenwritingthewest.blogspot.com
Women Writing the West®: September 2014
http://womenwritingthewest.blogspot.com/2014_09_01_archive.html
Sunday, September 14, 2014. More releases and awards for our wonderful members! Shanna Hatfield, Wrestlin'Christmas. Heidi Thomas, Cowgirl Up! AHistory of Rodeo Women. We can never get enough about Cowgirls. History of rodeo and the first women involved publicly from the late 1800s to the first half of the twentieth century, framed in the context of the earliest days of the first wave of the women’s movement, emphasizing the word-champion cowgirls of Montana. A sweet contemporary romance). In 1858 Edward...
womenwritingthewest.blogspot.com
Women Writing the West®: April 2015
http://womenwritingthewest.blogspot.com/2015_04_01_archive.html
Wednesday, April 22, 2015. Down in the Skillet. In the olden days, the Texas Panhandle was down in the skillet. On the cattle drive, the chuck wagon cook, or dough-wrangler, might whip up a batch of sour-doughs with sop (biscuits and gravy), along with a boggy top for dessert (a pie with only a bottom crust). After work, a cowboy might dig around in his war-bag. These types of conversations are gold to a writer’s ear. I heard a cowboy mention that his horse was smoked. One simple word can say a lot.
womenwritingthewest.org
Women Writing the West - Membership Index
http://www.womenwritingthewest.org/membershipIndex.html
Members Write the West. Current WWW Conference Info. Register for Current Conference. WILLA Guidelines and Application. LAURA SHORT FICTION AWARD. CATALOG OF MEMBERS' BOOKS. Catalog Information and Applications. This is a listing of our members' web sites. If you are a WWW member and would like to have your web site url added, please see the link in the Members Only. Area of the web site, and click on Add or Update Your Member Link. Auker, Amy Hale www.amyhaleauker.com. Brew, Jo www.Jo-Brew.com. Devlin, ...
phylissmiranda.com
Links
http://www.phylissmiranda.com/Links.html
The "Code of the West" lives! The word "tumbleweed" is a dry, free-roaming name for the plant Russian Thistle. What ranch is featured in. Give me a Cowboy ,. The Troubled Texan, and. The Tycoon and the Texan? FUN FACT: This ranch will also be a part of my upcoming release. Out of a Texas Night! The first correct answer receives your choice of. The Tycoon and the Texan and. The Troubled Texan sent directly to your Kindle or tablet via Amazon or Barnes and Noble. Submit your contest answers here! Another o...
womenwritingthewest.blogspot.com
Women Writing the West®: January 2015
http://womenwritingthewest.blogspot.com/2015_01_01_archive.html
Wednesday, January 28, 2015. How to Get the Most From Critique Groups. I love, and that is not an exaggeration, my critique group. Having a group of people to read what I write and then help me make it better is almost as important to me as my thesaurus. I have no idea who is following my blog at this point, but if you are a writer, I highly recommend you either join an existing critique group or create one of your own. Identify your needs clearly: "Do you feel my character's emotion? Respect other style...
SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT