Skip to main content
Top of the Page

Get on the write path! Become an AWP member today.

The Writer's Chronicle logo


Header image: Illustration of a person lifting a cube into a grand wall of cubes, with the shadow of a person’s profile on the wall

I finished a draft of a novel in the winter of 2019 for my MFA thesis. My professor gave some kind notes about how I could work more on character arc and cultural nuances. Shortly after graduation, I gave birth to my second child. I shoved the manuscript away, burying myself deep into parenting. When the pandemic hit, I struggled to keep afloat with an infant and a toddler. When I realized my toddler was going to stay home longer than I wanted, I dusted off my manuscript and faced it again.

I worked sporadically for the next three years, reassuring myself I was close to the finished draft. In the summer of 2022, I emailed a mentor, saying I hoped to finish the revision in the next four months. She replied, “You’re planning to revise five to six chapters a week? You’re my mentor. You’re everybody’s mentor.”

I still hear her laughter in that email. It crushed me. Though I didn’t appreciate her choice of words, I discovered three summers later: She was right. I ended up rewriting the entire book.

April 2026


Romantasy 101

Where Magic Meets Love—and Someone Probably Has Wings


The Big Conversation

The Present and Future of Literary Magazines


Finding Home in the Long Middle


Finding Your Face

When Metaphor Becomes a Mask


Unsilencing History


The Art and Craft of the Substack Newsletter


From Isolation to Community


Oiling Your Armor

On Rejection and Remembering Why You Write

End of Free Preview

Association of Writers & Writing Programs dog-ear logo

The Writer’s Chronicle is the official publication of the 
Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP).

Join AWP today for full access

Back to Top