


I always tell aspiring writers, as I was told way back when, to be open to criticism and to figure out the best way to make yourself a better writer. What’s the best advice you’ve ever received (or given a fellow writer)? “In my opinion, it is critical to listen to constructive advice and to take your ego out of the equation.”ġ2.You’re very pro-writer, and you offer a lot of advice on your blog, Ask Allison. I think that’s the most we can ask of ourselves. So, I like to examine how these characters can accept the compromises they’ve made while still living a fully fleshed out life. As women, we’re pulled in so many different directions that we often feel like we’ve compromised across the board.
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I very much enjoy taking women who aren’t living their lives to their maximum potential and figuring out how to help them do that.because I think so many of us can relate to that dilemma these days. Yes, that’s it exactly and along with that, I enjoy challenging myself in the same way as I’m writing. (“What if we could go back in time and make some different decisions, as Jillian does in Time of My Life?”) What is it about those types of scenarios that appeals to you? Are you looking to challenge your readers to think about some decisions they’ve made? From there, I broke into magazines and made my living from that for half a decade.ġ1.You’ve written two other novels besides Time of My Life, and all three of your books tend to ask those “What if?” questions. At the time, I was also getting married and since I wanted to break into magazine writing, I began pitching wedding-related story ideas.Īs luck would have it, The Knot was looking for someone with ghostwriting experience to pen a book for them.and they ended up hiring me. After we sold the company, a lot of our partners asked if they could retain me for similar purposes and from there, I was hired by a big PR firm to ghostwrite for celebrities.

I ended up being really interested in her idea and moved back to New York City to help her-I wrote the web copy for the site, wrote a bunch of articles/content for it, and did the press releases. I was out in Los Angeles, shooting commercials and what not, when a friend from college called and started picking my brain on some marketing and PR questions for a start-up she was trying to launch. After college, I went into PR but yes, did quit my job to see if I had the chops to make it in acting.

In theory, I’d have like to have been an actress, but that wasn’t something that I banked on, so to speak.
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WOW ! is excited to talk with Allison and learn more about the film project, her books, and living the writing life.Ħ.Your professional background is very interesting-you’d originally planned to be an actress. Though confused at first, she quickly recognizes this opportunity for what it is-a second chance to right some wrongs and see how her life would be different had she made some different choices. One morning, she wakes up seven years in the past. The book focuses on Jillian Westfield, a young wife and mother who seems to have it all. In a remarkable stroke of luck, Allison recently landed a deal that would have any writer green with envy-her novel, Time of My Life, is currently being developed into a film. She regularly offers advice to writers of all levels and shares her struggles and successes with her own writing projects on her popular blog, Ask Allison. Although her focus is on fiction these days, Allison built a solid reputation as a freelancer for several well-known publications before making the switch to full-time fiction novelist. Her third book, The One That I Want, hits the shelves in June 2010. Allison Winn Scotch is the New York Times best-selling author of The Department of Lost and Found and Time of My Life.
