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Writing with your Muse: A guide to creative inspiration
W.L. Hawkin, author
Writing with your Muse offers techniques, strategies, tools, tips, and stories to help you tap into creative inspiration. You don’t have to be psychic to be successful with these techniques, although that natural ability exists in all of us, and these techniques will help you develop your sixth sense. There’s even science to back it up. This book will help you if you hear words or see images but find it difficult to get the text on the page, you’ve written and published but are searching for something fresh and different, you have ideas but don’t know how or where to begin, you want to write but have no ideas, or you’re suffering from a bad case of writer's block.
Reviews
Digging deeply into the concept of the muse, including its spiritual aspects, and exploring techniques to help writers ignite their own spark, Hawkin, author of the Hollystone Mysteries urban fantasy series and a former part time lighthouse keeper, lays out a path for embracing creativity, finding inspiration, and not over-thinking one’s writing. “Remember,” she writes, in a passage about meditative techniques, “the goal is to stop thinking and start connecting.” To that end, Hawkin invites readers on a journey through art, literature and encounters with the spiritual world, plus a history of the “muse” as developed by the ancient Greeks and celebrated for its ability to inspire us to reach our creative peak.

Describing writers as “luminaries” who “envision” words that get “taken into our reader’s or listener’s brain and stimulate a private pyrotechnic show,” Hawkin builds on the muse tradition, citing several of her own out-of-body experiences as well as contact with other teachers and artists and the impact such “spirit guides” have had on her personal creative output. Writing with Your Muse blends exploratory spiritualism, including movement meditation and connecting with the “divine source”—or getting into “the zone, a place of intuition”—with pragmatic writing tips and techniques tackling such issues as conquering fear, getting started, developing plots, characters, and imagery. Along the way she explores the “Celtic-Shamanic Journey,” writing to heal, and dispelling fear.

While the mix of personal anecdotes, practical advice, and spiritual musings at times can feel circuitous, Hawkin serves hearty doses of inspiration and imagination while frequently drawing on giants of literature and philosophy. She writes a rousing explanation of the motivation behind characters in Jaws before segueing into a brief chapter on writing sex scenes with one’s muse, where she urges writers to “Shed your moral cap and stop worrying about your mother”—vital advice for the tale spinner in each of us.

Takeaway: Encouraging and spiritual guide for writers seeking connection to the muse.

Comparable Titles:Priscilla Long’s Minding the Muse, Jill Harris’s The Writing State of Mind.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A

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