Fiction to Die For

Posted on Saturday, December 23, 2006 at 10:35PM by Registered CommenterEditor | CommentsPost a Comment

Navigate Deadly Prose

Welcome to the Deadly Prose Community of Novelists and Readers. Click an icon to jump to our sections, or navigate with the menu.


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Deadly Prose Magazine
Deadly ProseTM Magazine, with writers in six countries—working, published novelists, publishers, editors, professional reviewers—continues to be the only magazine exclusively focused on commercial fiction. And don't miss the professional reviews, syndicated from Films and Books Magazine. Our How-Tos for beginning to advanced writers are popular with many subscribers. Read the current issue... 


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Deadly Prose Forums
Our community is for both writers and readers, novelists and their fans. Announce, critique, praise, ask for help, share writing tips, improve your query and synopsis, share your reviews, ask about agents and publishers.


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Deadly Prose Critique Group
For many years, Deadly Prose has worked with members who have completed novels, critiquing each other's full manuscripts for exchanged credits in a private forum—with an awesome track record of achieving publication for members. This group does require you prove your critiquing skills with a sample chapter critique and your writing skill with sample chapter. If you do not have a full manuscript, visit our forums instead. Find out more... 


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Deadly Prose How-Tos
Our members share their how-tos. Published novelists share their features. Syndicated columnists contribute. Here, beginners to advance writers will find tips, full-blown how-tos and feature articles offering help on writing, drafting, plotting, characterization, finding an agent or publisher, writing queries and more...


womanoncomputer.jpgDeadly Prose Community
Deadly Prose remains unique in its unique pursuit of growing a social community of novelists and their readers. In the Deadly Prose Community novelists work with other novelists in our private critiques. Our international magazine connects readers, reviewers, publishers, agents and their novelists. We focus exclusively on commercial. Navigate the links below...

A magazine with a unique focus on commercial novels and speaking to all novel fans: authors, readers, fans, agents, publishers, reviewers.
Novelists working with other novelists: expert authors critiquing fellow authors in exchange for goodwill, support and community
Novelists working with their readers: what do readers want to read next, what interests them? Here, our novel members listen.
Readers meeting readers: the next big read, what's hip and controversial and provocative.
Full novel critiques in total privacy for exchanged credits with other novelists who are either published or ready-to-be-published.
• Novelists meeting agents and publishers in a forum environment.
Readers, novelists, agents and publishers writing peer reviews.
Blogs and profiles of our critique members to help them connect with readers, agents, publishers and reviewers 

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Enjoy Deadly Prose

Our members include published novelists, readers, reviewers, editors of other magazines, editors of book publishing companies, publishers, agents. Deadly Prose is where it all comes together. 

Fiction to die for. TM

 

 

Deadly Prose Magazine News

Posted on Friday, November 2, 2007 at 05:55PM by Registered CommenterEditor | CommentsPost a Comment

News Flash — Courtesy of Films & Books Magazine

The 12,000 members of the Writer's Guild of America will go on strike Monday morning in an action against the networks and studios. Although the strike is nearly a certainty, there is room for more talks.

The Writer's Guild spokesperson emphasized they will negotiate with the companies through the weekend provided the companies will not insist that residuals for DVDs not increase. Effectively, the clock is ticking down with 48 hours to go. "We do not want to strike," said WGA negotiating chairman John Bowman.

It now seems that talks are doubtful and the companies are not considering negotiation, based on Nick Counter's statement, "We are very disappointed with their press conference and the action they took. Their press conference was full of falsehoods, misstatements and inaccuracies..."

All writing covered under WGA, which is the majority of  projects, would cease when a stirke begins. Only projects with final scripts would be able to proceed to development. Production companies have been on the clock for some time, racing to finalize scripts before the deadline.