WriteWay Pro – Windows Alternative To Scrivener

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Inspired by a story about a writer who lost work while using Scrivener, I thought I would give a plug to the writing software I use, in case any of my readers are  thinking about getting writing software.  It’s called WriteWay Pro, and unfortunately for Mac users, is only available for Windows.

I got the trial version several years ago, and it only took me a few weeks to decide to purchase the pro version. It is easy to use, has lots of interesting pieces and parts that you don’t have to use (!) so you can keep it fairly simple & still get what you need from it. Having chapters and scenes has worked very well for me, instead of using my hard drive files to organize things. I use WriteWay for all my Liberty Hall flash stories, giving each one its own chapter, as if they were part of one book.  I put the crits I get for each story on notecards at the bottom. And then I can easily add scenes when I want to revise a particular flash story.

For novels, their acts/chapters/scenes work well. You can move things around easily in storyboard, you can have files for characters and research – and of course, you can have multiple books.

Upgrades are free and the latest one gives you the ability to export a file that works with Kindle & Nook. (you could always export as rtf file, but now can do pdf, word, etc). It even has back pages & front pages to add a dedication or cover art, or a table of contents.

You can import your work as well – I’ve imported rtf files, but now I see other formats are supported so I’m guessing those can also be imported.

I’m very pleased. I had some trouble with earlier versions and the help desk was extremely helpful – in fact, they rewrote the program to fix a bug I found and had me test it out. I have all my writing on it, and backups are easy, upgrades work as promised (data never lost), and my confidence in the software has only increased with time.

I’ve heard Scrivener is great but has a steep learning curve. This software is almost intuitive. You are up and running right away – some of the more detailed special options take a little time to figure out, but the basics are super fast to learn.

It’s available at their website or on Amazon.

What is the John W. Campbell Award?

A few weeks ago, I learned that I (along with many other authors) was eligible for an award given to new writers because of my publication in 2011.

The John W. Campbell Award is given to the best new science fiction or fantasy writer whose first work of science fiction or fantasy was published in a professional publication in the previous two years. For the 2013 award, which is presented at the World Science Fiction Convention (WorldCon), the qualifying work must have been published in 2011 or 2012.

There is a website where those eligible can list their work (and apparently, can continue to update for years afterward). My page is here: Lee Hallison Writertopia Page

978-1-938834-05-9In addition, a great editor, M. David Blake, put together an enormous volume of stories by most of the currently eligible authors – free until the voting closes. If you are interested, the stories are terrific.  Click on the cover photo to get the free download. Anyone attending WorldCon (or who attended last year) may vote.