Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Writers.
Writing About Writing: The Rainbow Trap. Top Story - February 2026.
The good thing about living in modern times is that LGBTQ representation in media is increasing. Not just in niche and Independant media, either, but also in mainstream media. Books, movies, TV shows, comics... they're finally catching on that LGBTQ+ people form a significant part of their audience, and deserve to see themselves on screen and in fiction, not just as victims in documentaries and true crime shows.
By Natasja Rose4 days ago in Writers
When USCIS Questions a Degree in an Immigration Case
For many employment based immigration applicants, education is a central part of eligibility. When U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services issues a Request for Evidence related to a degree, it can feel like the foundation of the case is being challenged. In most situations, however, the issue is not the degree itself, but how it is understood within a U.S. framework.
By Sheila Danzig4 days ago in Writers
Common Mistakes in Healthcare Data Analytics
Healthcare organizations invest heavily in analytics, yet many fail to realize its full value. The issue is rarely the lack of data — it’s how data analytics is implemented, interpreted, and operationalized. Avoiding common mistakes is critical for turning insights into real clinical and business impact.
By Lilly Scott4 days ago in Writers
Why Writing in Public Feels Like You’re Faking It (And Why You Should Do It Anyway)
I published an article yesterday about building a writing habit. I wrote it like I have this all figured out, like I'm some authority on consistency, showing up, and doing the work.
By Ellen Frances4 days ago in Writers
QLD Contract Conditions (Plain English). Content Warning. AI-Generated.
Buying or selling a place should be exciting, right? New chapter. Fresh start. Maybe a bit of reno daydreaming. Then the contract lands in the inbox and suddenly it’s… clauses, dates, “subject to”, and a bunch of deadlines that feel like they were invented purely to cause stress.
By Dan Toombs5 days ago in Writers
One Story Below Is True
Anne Bernays and Pamela Painter — What If? Writing Exercise for Fiction Writers prompts The Exercise — In two or three sentences, write down three unusual, startling, or amusing things you did or that happened to you. One thing must be true; the other two must be lies. Use details. Read them to a group, and they may ask questions to help them guess which one is and which ones are not. The Objective - To understand how we can exaggerate events in our lives, appropriate the lives of others - friends, enemies, strangers - or just plain out and out lie. All these are ways of using what we see and experience to produce fiction.
By Denise E Lindquist5 days ago in Writers
A Day in the Life of a Sports Journalist. AI-Generated.
For Sam McKewon, covering Nebraska sports is less about game nights and more about everything that happens between them. As a longtime Nebraska football writer and columnist, his days are shaped by preparation, context, and the constant responsibility of explaining a program that carries outsized meaning for an entire state.
By Joe Candor5 days ago in Writers










