Last week I posted about the writing course I’m taking, Holly Lisle’s How to Think Sideways.
For this week only, signups are available for the second session, which begins, I believe, in February. Looks like I’m not the only one struggling a bit to keep the pace as one of the options will be for lessons every second week, thus stretching the course to a full year rather than the six months that the first session will be completed in.
(**edited to say: The current signup is for a course that starts right away, so your first payment and first lesson would be within 24 hours. Or you can put yourself on a waiting list for later, if you prefer.)
Doesn’t mean, of course, that I’ll be done all the work for the course in six months. Folks are welcome to work at their own rate, just download each lesson as it becomes available and then read it (and work on it!) as you (I) get caught up.
I mentioned in the other post that I didn’t expect the course to be so challenging right out the starting gate. I have a very practical mindset and wasn’t expecting to get so much out of the mind-mapping aspects of early lessons. Instead, I’ve come to a better understanding of my brain (never a bad thing!) and am using clustering for a wider variety of problem-solving than the course even calls for. I’m really excited about the ideas I’m working with now and look forward to learning how to think sideways to include plot twists that the reader won’t see coming–but still be logical.
All I can say is that it’s worth every penny I’m paying for it (roughly $300 total–I pay in Canadian funds so the monthly amount varies a bit month by month.) The 12-month course will cost the same, just be spread out more.
If you’d like to kick your writing up a notch and learn new ways to create and plan projects, click through and read Holly’s write up. I don’t think you’ll be sorry you did.
The course is touted as A Survival Guide for Career Novelists. Some folks in my session have never completed a novel. Several have been multi-published. Doesn’t matter, as there are many things writers of all abilities can use.