10 Inspiring Tools & Resources for Writers and Authors

by Scott Mathews

All good writers know that without inspiration, nothing can flow from the pen. However, if you are struggling with writer’s block, there are a large number of apps and tools available to help you find inspiration. 

The tools you could find not only help find inspiration, but they can help you through every step of the writing process, including researching and editing.

While many writers spend years slaving away at the same task, it is well-known that having the right tools at your disposal can ease the process. 

When you have the right tools at your disposal – be it a writing app, thesaurus, or a good pen – your writing process becomes more comfortable and enjoyable. An enjoyable writing experience helps ease the effect of writer’s block.

Pages

Pages is an Apple app for iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch, which uses iCloud storage to allow you access on all devices. Pages is a word processor that allows you to write, edit, and view documents even when you’re on-the-go. 

In addition to plain text documents, Pages offers a variety of templates that can be used for creating reports, letters, flyers, posters, and cards. The app also allows you to export documents in formats such as Pages, Microsoft Word, and PDF for easy sharing.

Pages is a great app for the Apple user who is always traveling. Giving you access to your work across a number of devices, you can create when inspiration strikes. You can also edit and publish on-the-go, making it easier to meet deadlines and maintain a schedule no matter where you are. 

Write

Write is an Android app designed for use on tablets, but many newer phones also support the app. While the app isn’t designed for word processing, it allows for journaling and note-taking which is a great way to jot down ideas on-the-go. 

Write documents can be exported to other apps like Microsoft Word for better editing and in-depth word processing needs. You can also easily export documents to email, blogs, and WordPress, making the publishing process simple. 

While you can’t use the app to write whole novels or blog posts on-the-go, it is a good way to keep track of thoughts and ideas you want to use later. With Write, losing ideas will be a thing of the past, as you can write down ideas when they happen.

Chapters

If you are a writer with multiple projects and ideas running at the same time, Chapters is the ideal app for you. The app not only lets you collect and separate information for various projects, but you can also search notes, back them up, export as PDF, and add photos.

While Chapters is not a word-processor, it can give you a whole new way of finding and maintaining inspiration. By adding photos and pictures, you are more likely to manage and trigger the ideas you had at the time when you made the notes. 

In addition, by allowing you to separate multiple projects, you are less likely to cross-over ideas, allowing your writing to stay on track more easily.

The Guardian Style Guide

The Guardian Style Guide is a great resource that helps writers understand grammar rules and correct word usage, along with good phrases and acronyms that can add to your writing. 

The Style Guide is compiled as a book and is regularly updated with the latest style and writing tips. Not only is the tool arranged alphabetically, you are also able to search for entries or jump to a rule through alphabetized hyperlinks.

The Style Guide is compiled by active and qualified journalists. This means you are likely given access to current, relevant information that aims to improve your writing. Since these journalists also refer to the guide when they are writing articles, you can rest assured that the information is accurate and useful.

Daily Writing Tips

If you are an established writer, it might not be necessary to access a style guide tool. Rather, Daily Writing Tips works much like a Word of the Day app in that you are provided with a new tip each day. Tips cover topics like grammar, spelling, and vocabulary, and the site is best suited to freelance writers.

The tips on the site are aimed towards digital and business contexts, with guidance on creating clear writing with tips on topics like writing for a particular audience or successful captioning. This makes it very popular among the essay writing services that provide uni assignment to college and university students. 

When you improve your writing, inspiration begins to flow. Writers often become comfortable in their style and sometimes this can make their writing dull. Trying new things by applying tips like these can revamp your style and motivate you to write more.

Kindle Spy and Kindle Rocket

Kindle Spy and Kindle Rocket are two very similar apps offered by Kindle. These apps are great for a writer who is stuck with a bit of writer’s block, since they help you find the best topic to write about. 

The apps make use of algorithms that scour popular titles and genres to establish what the best-selling topics are. They suggest these topics to you, and you are able to start writing about something that is popular and likely to sell.

Kindle Rocket is also great for the writer seeking tips for self-publishing, as you can use the app to publish and promote your book. In addition to helping you find a profitable niche, both apps are available with a once-off payment and lifetime subscription. 

While Kindle Rocket is a bit more expensive, having access to self-publishing tools might just make the price worth your while.

Hemingway

Once you have written your book or blog, you need to edit and proofread. While you could do it the old-fashioned way, it has since become much easier with sites and apps. Hemingway is a free tool aimed at making your writing clear. 

It has a word counter and offers an instant readability score, but its real value lies in its suggestions. It identifies and highlights areas of text that may be hard to read or hard to understand as well as finding instances of passive voice.

Jane Crowe, who works for the top essay writing serviceUK assignment help, finds it very handy when working on academic assignments. In her view, having a text editor that not only tells you there are errors but points them out as well is invaluable. While Hemingway does not offer clear suggestions on how to correct the errors, merely being able to identify them should be enough to help an experienced writer along the way.

Cliché Finder

Another useful and free text editor is Cliché Finder. Often, writers use metaphors and similes to make their writing more descriptive and interesting. While you may think you are drawing in readers, you might turn them away if you use too many clichés. 

Cliché Finder searches your writing for clichés and highlights them. This helps you identify them and make sure they add meaning rather than just take up space.

Using clichés is not always a bad thing, but if they are not adding meaning to your writing, the reader might feel bored or lose interest. As a result, being able to find and identify them might help improve your writing and attract more readers. 

Grammarly

One of the best online editors is Grammarly. It is not only available through their website, but also lays over programs as a plugin and extension for browsers 

You can have Grammarly checking as you write regardless of which apps you use, meaning that those typos in your emails will be gone forever. Grammarly also helps you improve your writing by offering alternative word suggestions that aim to simplify and strengthen your writing.

If you are hoping to avoid plagiarism, passive voice, and wordiness, you can also use the paid version of Grammarly. The monthly fee gives you access to plagiarism checkers that can help you avoid all kinds of legal trouble, as well as a fully comprehensive grammar and style checker.

Jerry Jenkins Writers Guild

If you are a beginner writer, or a skilled writer looking to improve, Jerry Jenkins Writers Guild offers a wide variety of writing courses and tips. While the courses are free, you need to apply for a place since space is limited. 

In addition to courses that aim to boost your confidence, write a good novel, and write inspirational texts, there are a range of articles available to help.

The Jerry Jenkins Writers Guild is a useful site that offers to help writers reach their fullest potential. If you are interested in more writing tools and blogs about writing, Jerry Jenkins has you covered. It is useful to read blogs and articles from experienced writers to help you improve your own work.

Conclusion

There are a wide variety of tools available online to help you improve your writing and maintain inspiration. From on-the-go journals and word processors to writing courses and style guides, the internet has it all. 

As a writer, you should aim to improve no matter how experienced you are. When you feel inspiration and motivation slipping away from you, use some of these tools to help spark it back up and get you into the groove once more.

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Scott Mathews works as a freelance academic writer for dissertation writing services that provide assignment help to Ph.D. students. He also works as a cover letter, LinkedIn profile and resume writer for a jobs and career website. In his free time, he loves to watch classic movies and work on DIY coffee tables.  

Sarah-Jane Stratford On Writing About The Hollywood Blacklist & The Red Scare

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Today's guest is Sarah Jane Stratford. Her first novel, Radio Girls, was based on the early days of the BBC and its pioneering talks producer, Hilda Matheson. Red Letter Days, her newest novel, continues that tradition by similarly highlighting a little known but influential woman in media set during the 19 fifties Red Scare and inspired by the real life TV producer Hannah Weinstein, Red Letter Days reveals the untold story of women who escaped the Hollywood blacklist. Sarah joined me today to talk about the inspiration for Red Letter Days and the research involved in writing about the Red Scare.

Listen to the Episode Now

The Saturday Slash

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Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.

I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.

If the Saturday Slash has been helpful to you in the past, or if you’d like for me to take a look at your query please consider making a donation, if you are able.

If you’re ready to take the next step, I also offer editing services.

The first line of a query letter is so important, it sets the tone for everything else, because of that I want to thank you for setting aside any time of your day to read this. I have put a lot of love and effort into it and I made sure that it can appeal to a wide demographic of people from all walks of life. My passion comes from the need to deliver a well-crafted and honed story that will stir up emotions long since forgotten in the masses. I hope you enjoy. I don't suggest starting out this way. You're right - the first line sets the tone. Right now your tone is polite, but also has nothing to do with your story. You're not telling the agent anything they don't already know - that the first line matters, that they set aside time to read queries, that your book is important to you. They already know these things. They read queries looking to find a book that grabs their interest. Do that.

“KINETIC: THE FIRST ALLIANCE” is the first book in a Sci-fi, Young Adult series and is complete at 81,300 words. Its pace and theme will appeal to the readers of such books as Pittacus Lore’s “I AM NUMBER FOUR” and “STEELHEART” by Brandon Sanderson. I know some people suggest opening with your data - title, word count, and comp tites. I've always suggested hitting them with your hook first. Every book has a title and word count. Give them something distinctive to your book as soon as they start reading. Also, do your best to present this as a stand alone with series potential. YA is very crowded right now and SF can be a hard sell for non-established names. Don't ask them to take a chance on a series if you can get your foot in the door with a standalone.

Alex Carter is a pathological fantasist, naïve idealist, and the poster child for histrionic personality disorder, but he would just tell you he’s “misunderstood.” Big words for a hook for a young adult novel. I happen to know what histrionic personaltiy disorder is, but only becuase I dated one. I think it would be best to assume the person reading this query would be better served to have character traits explained rather then send them Googling for the answer... becuase they won't. One night, his life takes a turn for the chaotic when he is confronted by Shyra—a brash, deadly alien from a far off world—who warns of the inevitable invasion by the expanding Zenakuu Empire.

Shyra unlocks a dormant power Alex never knew he had inside him— the latent ability to manipulate electricity. She informs him he must use this power to guard Earth from the same global annihilation her world barely escaped. She tricks Alex into believing the best way to protect his home from eradication is to go with her and fight in the war. So, she tricks him? Is she not a trustowrthy character? Does he know he's been tricked?

They traverse the nation to recruit four more kinetics, each with a different ability, to fight the upcoming interplanetary battle to the death. With Shyra’s guidance, the impromptu team of kinetics have just one year to train their bodies and minds in a remote location in the U.S. in hopes of stopping the Zenakuu from wiping out the human race and claiming Earth as their new home. Nice, it's fun so far. What I don't have is any feeling of who Alex is, and how he feels about this.

When war infiltrates Earth, the fate of humanity lies in the hands of a teenager who is only sure that he’s impossibly unsure, but Alex will either succeed as the hero Earth needs, or sacrifice everything in an effort to save the ones he’s grown to love. So he grows to love his team? Is there a romance here? Is he finding himself with these other kinetics? That's the kind of thing we need here. The plot is pretty straightforward, so give us some more character insight and emotion.

I have been a writer for over ten years now, and have had non-fiction articles featured in magazines such as Steppin' Out and Jersey Beat. I’ve also hosted creative writing seminars at some local bookstores. My other credentials lie in my degree in the physical sciences. I have studied modern physics, and minored in astronomy. “Kinetic” is fiction, but based on easy to follow real science.

Good bio! You've done a good job of showing that you know what you're talking about on the science end, but that you are also a writer at heart.

As I said, get more emotion into this. Maybe tell us about the other three kinetics and the team (briefly). Tell us more about who Alex is without giving us a DSM diagnosis.