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Stephanie Churchill

author of historical-feeling fantasy

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Uncategorized, Writing Inspiration

In the Land of Fire and Ashes: Progress Report

I’ve been silent about my current work-in-progress for a very, very long time. I apologize for that. It won’t surprise anyone when I say the last 18 months have been…

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December 4, 2021
Publishing, Writing

Discovery Writing vs Outlining: Is One Better?

Have you heard of pantsing? No, not the physical act of taking off your pants, but rather a writing technique known as “pantsing.” I and many other authors prefer to…

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February 22, 2023
Writing Inspiration, Research

Enheduanna as Priestess

“The compiler of the tablets was Enheduanna. My king, something has been created that no one has created before.” The Temple Hymns 543-544 A man whose birth story is lost…

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February 23, 2022
Uncategorized, Writing Inspiration

THE MIGHTY KINGMAKER—Traitor or Misunderstood?

Guest Post by J.P. Reedman Richard Neville, popularly known as Warwick the Kingmaker, was one of the movers and shakers of the 15th century. During the earlier part of the…

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July 22, 2021
  • Uncategorized

    ARCHIVE: Elizabeth’s Side of the Story, a guest post by Samantha Wilcoxson

    January 23, 2020 / No Comments

    I am often asked why I choose to write about the women in my books. In the case of Elizabeth Woodville, protagonist of Once a Queen, I felt the need to tell her side of the story. You see, in the first book in my Plantagenet Embers series, Elizabeth comes across just as harsh and scheming as many expect her to be. It is difficult to shine in comparison to her daughter, Elizabeth of York. After finishing the trilogy, I felt like it was time to return to the beginning and give voice to a few secondary characters, including Margaret Beaufort, Elizabeth Woodville, and Reginald Pole. In Plantagenet Princess, Tudor…

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    The Year the Swans Came

    June 11, 2021

    Low Fantasy: A Genre That Goes Beyond Magic and Dragons

    February 9, 2023

    Thoughts on Writing The King’s Daughter

    January 23, 2020
  • Uncategorized

    ARCHIVE: Why I write Historical fiction set in the Middle Ages, a guest post by Elizabeth Chadwick

    January 23, 2020 / No Comments

    There are two reasons that I write historical fiction set in the Middle Ages. One goes back to Childhood and the other to my teenage years. If neither had happened I might still have been a writer, but who knows what my chosen subject would have been. To begin at the beginning I need to tell you how I came to be a writer in the first place. I told myself stories throughout my childhood, but they were verbal – I never wrote anything down, and I didn’t tell them to other people; they were just for me. My earliest memory of telling stories goes back to being three years…

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    What is fantasy and where do my books fit in?

    October 20, 2021

    Exploring Genre: Fantasy Fiction

    January 30, 2023

    Here’s why you need to read more…

    January 16, 2023
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Recent Posts

  • Discovery Writing vs Outlining: Is One Better?
  • Speculative Fiction: An Exploration of a Literary Genre
  • Low Fantasy: A Genre That Goes Beyond Magic and Dragons
  • Book Review: In the Shadows of Castles, by G.K. Holloway
  • Exploring Genre: Fantasy Fiction

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