Fiction Writer's Toolshed: Practical Tools for Authors

Tim Kearney, Fiction Writer / Teacher

Fiction Writer's Toolshed: Practical Tools for Authors is a hands-on training podcast that helps fiction writers of all skill levels build a repeatable skill set for finishing their work and writing consistently. The show provides a clear, easy-to-use, proven roadmap for turning ideas into completed fiction. Whether you're drafting your first short piece, revising a work in progress, or struggling to finish what you start, we can help. Each episode breaks down the writing tools, story techniques, and writer's troubleshooting skills fiction authors need to improve their craft, solve story problems, and build the habits required to write consistently. The goal is simple: help writers like you become productive authors. Are you an aspiring fiction writer ready to learn how to translate the vision in your mind and heart clearly onto the page, again and again? Are you a creative writer ready to stop fantasizing about stories and start finishing them? This is your moment. It's time to learn the tools and skills to craft the stories you were destined to write, and become the author you dream of being. Welcome to the Writer's Toolshed. This show is for you if you find yourself asking questions such as: How do I actually start writing fiction? Is my story idea good/original enough to be worth writing? (and what if someone else already did it?) Do I really have to write every day to be a 'real' writer? What does 'write what you know' really mean for fantasy / sci-fi? What does 'show, don't tell' actually mean—and when is it okay to tell? What software or tools should I use to write my novel? (Scrivener vs Word vs Google Docs vs longhand) How do I beat writer's block instead of just staring at the cursor? How do I write an entire novel without getting lost or giving up? (outlining vs pantsing, second-draft fixes, etc.) How should I name my characters (and avoid cringey names)? I finished my first draft! Now what the hell do I do with it? (cool-down period, big-picture edits, line edits) How do I get useful feedback or beta reads—without getting shredded or ignored? How do I actually get better as a writer? (beyond "read and write a lot.") How do I stay organized—notes, timelines, worldbuilding, drafts, all of it? How long should my book/short story be, and how do I handle word-count expectations? How do I correctly format a manuscript so agents/editors don't bin it on sight? (Shunn format, fonts, margins, etc.) Should I self-publish or go the traditional route? How do I get an agent for my novel, step by step? Where and how can I sell my self-published ebooks and print books? (KDP, Kobo, D2D, etc.) Is it realistically possible to make a living as a fiction writer? (And what other writing jobs exist) How do I know if my writing is any good—or if my novel is worth finishing? (Or "I'm writing my first novel and now I hate it, help") What exactly is fiction writing, and how is it different from other kinds of writing? What makes a character compelling instead of flat or cliché? How important is setting, and how do I make my world feel real without drowning readers in description? How do I come up with a strong plot instead of a bunch of random scenes? What's the role of conflict in fiction, and how much conflict is enough? How do I create suspense and tension without resorting to cheap tricks? What is a plot twist, and how do I write one that feels surprising but not random? How do I write realistic, interesting dialogue instead of wooden talking heads? How do I end a story in a way that feels satisfying and earned? What's a subplot and how do I weave subplots into the main story without losing focus? What's the difference between literary and genre fiction in terms of how I actually write the book? How long does it usually take to write a novel or short story (really)? How do I build a writing habit and stay motivated when life is busy? How do I overcome perfectionism and fear of failur

Episodes

  1. FEB 9

    004: The 6 Elemental Pieces of Mastering Fiction Writing - Part 2

    This episode is the diagnostic follow-up to the 6 Pillars framework, but can also be useful on its own. For each pillar, I share a few signs it may be underdeveloped– and one practical thing you can try to strengthen it. If you want clearer insight into why your writing gets stuck, this is where the framework turns into tools. In the previous episode, I laid out The 6 Elemental Pieces of Being a Fiction Writer– a framework for understanding writing mastery as a system of skills, not a single talent. In this episode, we get practical. This is the diagnostic half of the framework: for each pillar, I walk through a few common signs it may be underdeveloped– and one concrete, testable thing you can try to start strengthening it. The goal isn't self-judgment. It's clarity. When writers get stuck, it's often because they're trying to fix the wrong problem. This episode is about learning how to identify where friction is actually coming from, so effort turns into progress instead of frustration. In this episode, I cover: How to diagnose issues across craft, ideation, design, process, sustainment, and taste Simple signals that point to the real source of stalled projects One actionable exercise per pillar– designed to be tried, not believed Why exhaustion, resistance, and inconsistency are information, not failure How to treat your creative capacity as infrastructure, not a resource to burn If you've ever felt like you're working hard but not moving forward in a way that sticks, this episode gives you tools to figure out why– and where to focus next.   The Make Existian Toast -===============- May you slay false perfection, the old foe of done. May you make all you dream of, and let making be fun. And may you count who can make what you make– only one. Sláinte.

    20 min
  2. FEB 9

    003: The 6 Elemental Pieces of Mastering Fiction Writing - Part 1

    Craft matters– but it's not the whole picture. This episode introduces The 6 Elemental Pieces of Being a Fiction Writer, a framework for understanding why writers stall, burn out, or struggle to finish work– even when their craft is solid. If you want a clearer map of what actually governs writing progress, start here. Most writing advice focuses on craft. And craft matters. A lot. But it's only one part of why writers finish work– or don't. In this episode, I lay out a framework I call The 6 Elemental Pieces of Being a Fiction Writer. It's a way of looking at writing mastery not as a single skill, but as a set of distinct, improvable competencies that work together over time. The problem isn't that craft advice is wrong. It's that it's incomplete. When we try to solve every writing problem with craft alone, we miss other invisible factors that quietly stall projects, drain momentum, or cause burnout. This episode is about making those factors visible– so they can actually be worked on. In this episode, I cover: Why writing mastery isn't one skill, but a system of skills The six pillars that govern how writers actually finish work How blind spots– not lack of talent– cause most stalls Why many "craft problems" are actually design, process, or sustainment problems How to think about mastery as a reusable map, not a checklist This episode sets up a practical diagnostic framework we'll use going forward. If you've ever felt like you're working hard but not progressing in a way that sticks, this gives you a clearer map of why.   The Make Existian Toast -===============- May you slay false perfection, the old foe of done. May you make all you dream of, and let making be fun. And may you count who can make what you make– only one. Sláinte.

    17 min
  3. FEB 9

    002: Choosing What to Write (Stop Being Paralyzed) - The Mosaic Method

    Feeling paralyzed by what to write next?  This episode introduces the Mosaic Method– a practical way to lower the stakes, keep writing, and make progress without committing to the "one perfect project." If choosing feels harder than writing, this tool is for you. Choosing what to write shouldn't feel like a branding decision– but for a lot of writers, it does. When your body of work is small, every project can feel like it has to represent all of you. That pressure creates paralysis: fear of choosing wrong, fear of losing readers, fear of starting with the "wrong" idea. In this episode, I walk through a tool I use to break that paralysis: the Mosaic Method. Instead of treating any single piece of writing as the door to your career, the Mosaic Method reframes your work as a growing body of tiles– small, finished pieces that eventually form something larger. You'll learn how to shrink the emotional stakes of starting, keep multiple projects alive without burning out, and make real progress without waiting for "the right idea." This episode covers: Why "what should I write first?" is often the wrong question How small, finished pieces build momentum better than big commitments A practical way to keep writing when novels feel overwhelming Why dedicated, focused time matters more than constant note-taking A simple voice-memo workflow that turns speech into usable draft material If you're stuck choosing between ideas– or stuck because choosing feels impossible– this episode gives you a tool you can try today.   The Make Existian Toast -===============- May you slay false perfection, the old foe of done. May you make all you dream of, and let making be fun. And may you count who can make what you make– only one. Sláinte.

    18 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Fiction Writer's Toolshed: Practical Tools for Authors is a hands-on training podcast that helps fiction writers of all skill levels build a repeatable skill set for finishing their work and writing consistently. The show provides a clear, easy-to-use, proven roadmap for turning ideas into completed fiction. Whether you're drafting your first short piece, revising a work in progress, or struggling to finish what you start, we can help. Each episode breaks down the writing tools, story techniques, and writer's troubleshooting skills fiction authors need to improve their craft, solve story problems, and build the habits required to write consistently. The goal is simple: help writers like you become productive authors. Are you an aspiring fiction writer ready to learn how to translate the vision in your mind and heart clearly onto the page, again and again? Are you a creative writer ready to stop fantasizing about stories and start finishing them? This is your moment. It's time to learn the tools and skills to craft the stories you were destined to write, and become the author you dream of being. Welcome to the Writer's Toolshed. This show is for you if you find yourself asking questions such as: How do I actually start writing fiction? Is my story idea good/original enough to be worth writing? (and what if someone else already did it?) Do I really have to write every day to be a 'real' writer? What does 'write what you know' really mean for fantasy / sci-fi? What does 'show, don't tell' actually mean—and when is it okay to tell? What software or tools should I use to write my novel? (Scrivener vs Word vs Google Docs vs longhand) How do I beat writer's block instead of just staring at the cursor? How do I write an entire novel without getting lost or giving up? (outlining vs pantsing, second-draft fixes, etc.) How should I name my characters (and avoid cringey names)? I finished my first draft! Now what the hell do I do with it? (cool-down period, big-picture edits, line edits) How do I get useful feedback or beta reads—without getting shredded or ignored? How do I actually get better as a writer? (beyond "read and write a lot.") How do I stay organized—notes, timelines, worldbuilding, drafts, all of it? How long should my book/short story be, and how do I handle word-count expectations? How do I correctly format a manuscript so agents/editors don't bin it on sight? (Shunn format, fonts, margins, etc.) Should I self-publish or go the traditional route? How do I get an agent for my novel, step by step? Where and how can I sell my self-published ebooks and print books? (KDP, Kobo, D2D, etc.) Is it realistically possible to make a living as a fiction writer? (And what other writing jobs exist) How do I know if my writing is any good—or if my novel is worth finishing? (Or "I'm writing my first novel and now I hate it, help") What exactly is fiction writing, and how is it different from other kinds of writing? What makes a character compelling instead of flat or cliché? How important is setting, and how do I make my world feel real without drowning readers in description? How do I come up with a strong plot instead of a bunch of random scenes? What's the role of conflict in fiction, and how much conflict is enough? How do I create suspense and tension without resorting to cheap tricks? What is a plot twist, and how do I write one that feels surprising but not random? How do I write realistic, interesting dialogue instead of wooden talking heads? How do I end a story in a way that feels satisfying and earned? What's a subplot and how do I weave subplots into the main story without losing focus? What's the difference between literary and genre fiction in terms of how I actually write the book? How long does it usually take to write a novel or short story (really)? How do I build a writing habit and stay motivated when life is busy? How do I overcome perfectionism and fear of failur