Tuesday, January 27, 2026

The Author’s Gauntlet: 10 Writing Hurdles and How to Smash Them

Writing a novel is a major undertaking that can take months or even years of dedicated effort. Along the way, almost every author hits a wall that feels impossible to climb.

Here are ten of the most common difficulties with writing a novel and practical ways to move past them.

1. Managing Motivation It is easy to get stuck in a rut when you feel like you aren't making progress. Instead of looking at the whole mountain, try setting small, achievable goals for each session. Rewarding yourself for hitting these milestones can help keep the momentum going.

2. Breaking Through Writer's Block This usually happens when you are trying to edit while you write. To get through it, try taking a break to clear your head. Write down any ideas that come to mind, even the ones that seem unrelated to your story. Often, just getting some words on the page is enough to jumpstart your creativity.

3. Overcoming Procrastination It is tempting to put off writing when you are distracted by other tasks. The best fix is to set aside a specific time each day for writing and treat it like an appointment you can’t break. If you prepare your notes beforehand, you’ll have fewer excuses to stop once you start.

4. The Perfectionism Trap While striving for excellence is important, it can be harmful if it prevents you from moving forward. If you find yourself revising the same few pages over and over, give yourself a deadline to finish the chapter and move on. You can always refine the prose during the editing phase; for now, the goal is to finish the draft.

5. Handling the Fear of Judgment Worrying about what people will think can be paralyzing for an author. It helps to remember that you are writing for yourself first. Not every reader will connect with your work, and that is perfectly normal. Focus on satisfying your own creative vision.

6. Navigating Unfamiliar Genres Writing in a genre you don't know well can make the story feel inconsistent. The best way to overcome this is to read extensively in that field. Pay attention to the themes and tropes that define the genre so you can use them effectively in your own work.

7. Fixing an Unclear Plot It is hard to finish a story if you aren't sure where it is going. If you feel lost, try creating a high-level outline to map out your story arc. Scrivener is particularly helpful for this because it lets you view your research and plot notes side-by-side with your manuscript, making it much easier to stay organized.

8. Crafting a Satisfying Ending Many authors struggle to tie everything together in a way that feels right. To avoid a confusing finish, ensure the ending follows the logical progression of the characters' choices. A good ending should feel like the natural result of everything that came before it.

9. Filtering Too Many Ideas Having an abundance of ideas can be overwhelming and make it hard to focus. Try writing down every idea you have, then narrow them down to the one that is most essential to your current project. Save the others in a separate file for your next book.

10. Strengthening Character Development If your characters feel flat, your readers will have a hard time staying engaged. Spend some time writing down backstories, motivations, and personality traits for your main cast. When you understand your characters deeply, they will start to drive the story themselves.


Check out my sci-fi adventure mystery series, the "Cryptopunk Revolution."


Join the brilliant hacker Fae Luna and her companions as she battles an unknown foe of unimaginable power. Get ready for an electrifying journey filled with twists and turns,
where truth is elusive and nothing is as it seems. Available on 
Amazon

Monday, January 12, 2026

9 Ways to Write a Killer Sequel (Without Ruining the First Book)

Writing a sequel is often harder than writing the first book. You have the pressure of expectations and the difficulty of keeping the story fresh without repetitive plot points.

Whether you are plotting the second book of a trilogy or extending a standalone novel, these nine tips will help you expand your world without losing what made the first book special.

1. Create a "Series Bible" first Before you write a single word of the new draft, you need to organize your facts. You cannot rely on your memory of the first book. You need a dedicated document that lists every character's eye color, every location rule, and every timeline event from book one.

If you made a promise or set up a rule in the first book, you must stick to it here. Readers will notice if a character's backstory changes. If you are struggling to keep track of it all, tools like Scrivener are industry standard for a reason—they let you keep your research side-by-side with your draft.

2. Break your characters In the first book, your protagonist likely overcame a major flaw. In the sequel, you cannot just reset them to who they were at the start. You must explore the consequences of that victory. How has the trauma of the first book changed them? Are they more cynical? Are they overconfident? A sequel should test the new version of your hero.

3. Avoid the "Rehash" Trap A common mistake is simply repeating the plot of the first book with a bigger villain. This feels cheap. Instead of doing the same thing again, try to flip the genre or the goal. If the first book was about "getting the team together," make the second book about "the team falling apart." Give them a completely new type of problem to solve.

4. Deepen the themes If your first book was about "Loyalty," your sequel should challenge that theme. Show the dark side of loyalty. Show what happens when loyalty is betrayed. You don't need to invent brand new themes, but you should look at the original themes from a more complex angle.

5. Raise the personal stakes "Saving the world" is actually a boring stake because it is too big to visualize. To create suspense, you need to threaten something personal. Threaten the protagonist's relationship, their reputation, or their home base. The audience cares more about the character losing their best friend than they do about the character losing a generic war.

6. Plant seeds for the future If you are writing a trilogy, the second book is the bridge. You should use this story to drop hints and clues that won't pay off until book three. This rewards your loyal readers. When they get to the finale, they will look back at this book and realize you planned it all along.

7. Stuck? Use the "What If" Engine The middle book is often where writers hit the dreaded "Sagging Middle." This is where you need to throw a wrench in the gears. If you are staring at a blank page, try using a brainstorming tool like Sudowrite. You can feed it your current scene and ask it to generate five different plot twists. You don't have to use them, but they will almost always unstick your brain.

8. Expand the world We have already seen the locations from book one. Use the sequel to take us somewhere new. If the first book was set in the city, go to the wastelands. If it was set in the palace, go to the slums. Exploring new corners of your world keeps the sense of discovery alive.

9. The Polish Matters More Now In a first novel, readers might forgive a few clunky sentences if the story is good. In a sequel, they expect you to have leveled up. Before you publish, you need to ruthlessly edit your prose. I recommend running your manuscript through ProWritingAid to catch repetitive sentence structures and "glue words" that human eyes often miss.

Writing a sequel is a balancing act between the old and the new. If you focus on deepening your characters and challenging them in new ways, you will write a book that stands on its own.


Check out my sci-fi adventure mystery series, the "Cryptopunk Revolution."


Join the brilliant hacker Fae Luna and her companions as she battles an unknown foe of unimaginable power. Get ready for an electrifying journey filled with twists and turns,
where truth is elusive and nothing is as it seems. Available on 
Amazon