Saturday, February 21, 2026

The Art of Critiquing


For February, our topic is Critique. Are you part of a critique group or do you have a critique partner? If so, how does this support and help you with your writing?

Oh, that dreaded word, critique. I well remember finishing my first book, His Dark Enchantress, with a sense of doom hovering over my head. This was my baby. My first Regency romance, after carefully nursing it through the process from a barely formed premise to writing The End, now had to run the gauntlet of another pair of eyes before I could consider submitting it anywhere.

My hesitation to pass it on stemmed from a one-off experience in a critique class – one in which the presenter showed no interest in reining in two women who jumped on everyone’s work and shredded it. One person in the class walked out, and another emailed the organizer to say they would not be back. Stubbornly, I hung on, determined to learn what not to do and to be as supportive as I could to the rest of the class, even to the two naysayers.

For a while, I belonged to a largely oversubscribed critique group. The program required everyone to write a short story each week, which was then critiqued during the meeting. The time frame was impossible to work with, given the numbers, so we started bi-weekly meetings, which only marginally solved the time problem. What I took away from those two experiences was that some authors were incredibly thin-skinned, while others thought they had carte blanche to strip another’s work to the bones.

I entrusted my baby to two author friends, one who wrote Regency romance and the other, at the time, who was writing western historical romance. I breathed a sigh of relief when those first critiques came back to me. They both had many comments, and where their comments aligned, I knew I had work to do. One picked me up on some of my Regency accuracy. At the same time, the other asked questions about the era's terminology and customs, quickly eroding my blithe supposition that everyone would understand it. I wanted my readers (if there were any) to enjoy what they were reading without being tripped up by either situation, and I quickly learned that writing The End was, in fact, only the beginning.

Since then, I have worked with a handful of writer friends to critique my work. The choice of reader depends on the genre I’m writing in. If it’s a historical novel, I ask someone who writes contemporary fiction to give me a critique, as well as someone who writes historicals. Thankfully, I have that mix in my close critique group. We know each other well enough that none of us takes umbrage at the results.

When I am asked to give a critique, I’m looking for rounded characters and well-thought-out plots. If I come across awkwardly worded sentences, I will suggest an alternative – this is not for the author to use unless they feel it's warranted within their work – more to give them an idea of how to frame that sentence in their own voice. I will pick up on word choice, repetition, misplaced modifiers, and run-on sentences.

That first draft is essential to commit the story to the page in the first place. Subsequent drafts are for improvement all around, and I know I couldn’t do that without input from my ‘Dream Team.’ Personally, I read my manuscript aloud when I think it is finished and still catch problems, usually with syntax, which a text-to-speech program would likely miss. Once that is done, I put it aside for a few days, read it again, and if I’m happy with it, I submit it to my publisher.

As much as writing is a skill, so is critiquing. It is not helpful to a budding or a seasoned author to give their work to a family member or friend who will probably say they love it and haven’t you done well to write a whole book! An author needs another author, or a very perceptive reader’s critical eye, to see a problem, address it constructively, and together build a better book.

Now to see what my Round Robin colleagues might have to say on the topic.

 

Sally Odgers Behind Sally's Books Mark 2

Anne Stenhouse http://annestenhousenovelist.wordpress.com (Graham)

Diane Bator https://escapewithawriter.wordpress.com/

Dr. Bob Rich   http://wp.me/P3Xihq-1

Skye Taylor http://www.skye-writer.com/blogging_by_the_sea

 

 

 


 

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Beer Festival Fun


 Hello 2026! Research is for some just one of the less-than-fun parts of writing and for others, an adventure. So, for January, our Round Robin bloggers have been asked to share their most fun or eye-opening research experience, and here is mine. 

Journalism is a very different beast from novel writing, but I’m game to try my hand at pretty much anything if it stretches my writerly mind. Many years ago, and with an upcoming trip to the UK, I pitched an article on beer festivals to the travel department of the Calgary Herald. The upshot was that my idea was accepted, and I was asked to submit a 300-word article.

What started as a ‘what if’ quickly became ‘now what?’ Part of me was excited, part was scared, but having got this far, I decided to approach the British Tourist Board to see if they would fund my enterprise. Much to my surprise, they thought it was a great idea, especially as I was writing for a Canadian newspaper, and provided a rental car for one week.

That was more than enough to take me to a few local breweries in preparation for the Uley Beer Festival. My children and I attended on Friday evening, just to have fun and, well, drink. Quite apart from the beer, ale, and cider available, there were also wines from all around the world. You bought your drink tickets at the main entrance and then used them for whatever beverage took your fancy.

The strongest beer available was from the Scottish Caledonian Brewery, closely followed by a local brew from the privately owned Uley Brewery. I managed to get an invitation to this brewery, where the beer was fermented in barrels, which takes a different kind of expertise than brewing in a vat.

Uley Brewery, Old Brewery, Uley - Gloucestershire Pubs

Image from gloucestershirepubs.co.uk 

Having had fun on Friday night, I returned on Saturday to interview brewers, vendors, and festivalgoers. I was surprised to find how far afield many of them had come, but as one young man from the north of England explained, it was well worth the trek not only for the beer but for the atmosphere.

I am pleased to say that not only was my article published, but one of my photographs was selected to illustrate it, and it came in just under the requested word count at 299 words. All in all, the whole experience was very worthwhile. Besides having this piece published, I have also had articles published in the magazines Dogs All, CreaturesAll, and West. Sadly, over the interim years, each of these magazines is now defunct.

Now I’m looking forward to reading what my fellow bloggers have to say on the subject.

Anne Stenhouse http://annestenhousenovelist.wordpress.com 

Connie Vines http://mizging.blogspot.com/

Diane Bator https://escapewithawriter.wordpress.com/

Helena Fairfax http://www.helenafairfax.com/blog

Dr Bob Rich  http://wp.me/P3Xihq-1

Sally Odgers Behind Sally's Books Mark 2

Skye Taylor http://www.skye-writer.com/blogging_by_the_sea