![]() Sometimes, she imagines a scene that acts as a seed, giving birth to a setting, characters, the plot, and more. Her manuscripts do not start the same way. She uses those ideas to create fictional characters. The author is always concocting new scenarios about the lives real people could have lived if they had made different decisions. She gets her ideas from everything, not just books and newspapers but the people she talks to and the observations she makes. The author enjoys what she does because storytelling comes easily to her. She still remembers the excitement she felt the day her medical romance was accepted. It came with several positive comments that pushed the author to give writing another shot.Įven though her second attempt ended in failure, Morgan wrote a third manuscript, a medical romance that finally gave her the break she needed. Fortunately, the rejection was encouraging. She would have loved to secure a publishing deal on her first try. She felt a great deal of pride after writing ‘The End’ on the last page. Morgan was stuck at home with her first child when she decided to finish her manuscript. Instead, she took a detour, spending a few years as a nurse. Morgan was just as likely to pen a thriller as she was a children’s book.īut life had no interest in creating a direct path for the author to follow on her journey to publishing success. ![]() ![]() She did not limit herself to a particular genre. ![]() The author was constantly scribbling her ideas down on whatever blank piece of paper she came across. ![]()
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