ATTENTION WRITERS: A Service For Every Budget

Writer’s Relief helps writers of every budget prepare and target their submissions to agents and editors. Here’s how we can help YOU:

FREE: Our Writers’ Newsflash—Sent via e-mail once a month. No purchase required, EVER. Hot leads, contests, tips, and techniques to get you published.

$100: A La Carte Service—We will target your work to the 25+ best markets for your specific topic, style, and writing goals.

$200 - $250: A La Carte PLUS Service—Just like A La Carte, but with 25+ cover or query letters. We will compose, proofread, address, and print all your letters. Save tons of time!

$339 - $399 (per cycle): Full Service—We rescue you from ALL the tedious submission legwork—preparing, proofreading, formatting, targeting, and tracking your submissions. All you have to do is write! Our BEST service with our HIGHEST ACCEPTANCE RATE. By Review Board, invitation only.

Introducing Our Newest E-book! Insider's Secrets: A Step-By-Step Guide To Proper Proofreading in the Creative Writing Industry

Tuesday, 26 May 2009 06:55 by Writer's Relief Staff

We’re so excited to tell you about our newest E-book, Insider’s Secrets: A Step-by-Step Guide To Proper Proofreading in the Creative Writing Industry! Our E-book will tell you everything you need to know to start or expand a professional proofreading business. If you’ve thought about starting your own freelance proofreading business, or if you want to hone your own proofreading skills, this E-book is for you.

If you’ve asked yourself:

  • How do I start my own freelance proofreading business?
  • Where do I find proofreading jobs?
  • How do I expand my freelance proofreading or editing business to include creative writers, such as poets, novelists, and short story writers?
  • What do I need to know to proofread my own writing?
  • How do I become a better proofreader?
  • Where can I learn to proofread specifically for creative writers?
  • What are proofreaders’ marks (proofreading symbols)?

We have the solution for you. We know you don’t have a lot of time, so our E-book cuts through the “filler” and gets right to the point. Improve your proofreading skills and your freelance business.

Click here to learn more: http://www.WritersRelief.com/proofreading-manual-for-creative-writing-and-publishing-industry.aspx.

Properly Format Your Tantalizing Titles

Thursday, 13 March 2008 13:09 by Writer's Relief Staff

Formatting titles gives some writers a headache. There is so much to remember (and so many exceptions) in the English language . . . titles aren't really that difficult. When you're trying to remember if you're supposed to use underlining or italics or quotation marks, here are a few simple rules. Remember that people used to type their work or write it longhand. When titles needed to be italicized, those italics were represented by underlining. With the age of computers, we can choose to do one or the other.

1) Underlining and italics serve the same purpose. Never do both. Do NOT use quotation marks, underline, or italics together.

2) For any work that stands on its own, you should use italics or underline. (Stories or chapters from within a book are considered PARTS of the book.)

3) A work that is part of a larger work goes in quotation marks.

4) No quotation marks around titles of your own composition. 

Books: Italics or Underline

CDs: Italics or Underline

Articles (Newspaper or Magazine): Quotation Marks

Chapter Titles (not chapter numbers): Quotation Marks

Magazines, Newspapers, Journals: Italics or Underline

Names of Ships, Trains, Airplanes, Spacecraft: Italics

Poems: Quotation Marks

Poems (Long): Underlined or Italics

Plays: Italics

Short Stories: Quotation Marks

Song Titles: Quotation Marks

Special Phrases ("let them eat cake"), Words, or Sentences: Quotation Marks

Television Shows and Movies: Italics

Television and Radio Episode Titles: Quotation Marks