Ink & Insight
A journal of stories, craft, and illustration
Welcome to Ink & Insight, a quiet corner of my creative studio where words, art, and story craft meet. This is where I share the things that shape my work as an editor, writer, and illustrator, the small discoveries, the questions that spark new ideas, and the moments of clarity that arrive when I’m deep in a manuscript or sketchbook.
Here you’ll find gentle craft notes, behind‑the‑scenes glimpses of my own writing and world‑building, and the occasional graphite illustration that helps me understand a character more fully. My hope is that these reflections offer encouragement, inspiration, and a sense of companionship on your own creative path.
Whether you’re here as a writer seeking guidance, a fellow fantasy lover, or simply someone who enjoys peeking into another artist’s process, I’m glad you’re here.
Wound, Fear, Want, Need: The Emotional Core of Your Character
Every unforgettable character is shaped by four forces: the wound that hurt them, the fear that protects them, the want that drives them, and the need that ultimately transforms them. Understanding these elements gives your story emotional inevitability.
6 Questions That Reveal Your Character’s Emotional Core
Every unforgettable character is shaped by a wound, a fear, a longing, and a need. These six questions help you uncover the emotional engine that drives their arc.
Plot Structure for MG Writers: A Gentle Guide to Building Momentum Without Losing Heart
Plot structure isn’t just about beats and pacing — it’s about shaping a story that feels emotionally true. In middle grade fiction, structure becomes the quiet architecture that holds everything together: theme, conflict, character arc, and the reader’s sense of momentum. This post offers a gentle, practical guide to building that structure with clarity and heart.
Character Arcs in Middle Grade: How Your Protagonist’s Emotional Journey Reveals Theme
Character arcs give middle grade stories their emotional heartbeat. In this post, I explore how a protagonist’s internal journey reveals theme, how emotional shifts shape the story’s meaning, and how visual storytelling (like animated films) can help writers see arcs in action. This is where transformation begins.
Internal Conflict: The Quiet Engine of Middle Grade Stories
Internal conflict is the quiet heartbeat of a middle grade novel, the tug-of-war between fear and hope, old beliefs and emerging truths. In this post, I explore how internal conflict connects to theme and character arc, and how our own lived experience can help us write it with emotional honesty. For writers (especially introverts), this is where our inner world becomes a gift.
Why small, quiet moments matter in fantasy and how they anchor the magic
Quiet moments reveal character, deepen your world, and give your magic contrast. When you use stillness with intention, your fantasy scenes gain emotional depth and resonance.
What Editing Taught Me About Treating My Writer Self with Kindness
Editing taught me something I didn’t expect: I was speaking to myself in ways I would never speak to another writer. Learning to shift that inner voice changed my writing life and my creative heart.