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  • The Instrument Panel We Threw Away

    Why do we hate history? A young pilot's tragic VFR flight into clouds shows what happens when we lose our instruments—and our historical frame of reference.

  • The Great Fruitcake

    Discover the extremely factual origin myth of the Great Fruitcake; a creation story explaining why we pass around fruitcake each Christmas season.

  • Period of Divergence

    Alternate history needs more than one change. Learn why a 'period of divergence' creates more believable timelines than the traditional single-point approach.

  • Author Nation 2025 Recap

    Five years at Author Nation: navigating AI in publishing, the fellowship that matters, audiobook strategies, and learning new ways to build a community with readers.

  • White Waters and Using Artificial Intelligence.

    Learn how to assess AI use in writing with a whitewater rapids framework. This rubric helps authors evaluate risk levels from grammar tools to full AI generation, including production uses like translation, narration and book covers. Understand when AI helps vs. harms your creative work.

  • Why the Revolution Was Coming (With or Without Pontiac)

    What if Pontiac's War never happened? Exploring how one leader's choice to unite tribes changed history's timeline but not its outcome. Why the American Revolution was inevitable and what that means for writing historical fiction with compelling character decisions.

  • Pontiac's War and Why

    Pontiac's Rebellion (1763-1766) changed British colonial policy and set the stage for the Revolutionary War, yet most Americans have never heard of it. Complex characters, moral ambiguity and political consequences make this forgotten conflict perfect for historical fiction.

  • How much is too much world-building?

    World-building debate: Sanderson critics miss the point. How much lore do SF/F authors need? My rule: match your novel's word count in setting development.

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