I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own.
Author W.L. Hawkin shares her own personal experiences that allow her to find new inspiration and a muse that keeps the creativity alive in us all in the book “Writing with your Muse: A Guide to Creative Inspiration”.
The Synopsis

Writing with your Muse offers techniques, strategies, tools, tips, and stories to help you tap into creative inspiration. You don’t have to be psychic to be successful with these techniques, although that natural ability exists in all of us, and these techniques will help you develop your sixth sense. There’s even science to back it up. This book will help you if you hear words or see images but find it difficult to get the text on the page, you’ve written and published but are searching for something fresh and different, you have ideas but don’t know how or where to begin, you want to write but have no ideas, or you’re suffering from a bad case of writer’s block.
The Review
This was a compelling and engaging nonfiction read. The author did an incredible job of infusing her unique sense of gentle humor and honesty into the book, tapping into her own personal experiences to showcase how she could continue driving new ideas and a renewed sense of creativity forward. The way the author could tap into the interactive part of this book was enthralling to see come to life as well, as readers are invited to put the practices of this book into their own work.
Yet the author’s balance between creative endeavors and an almost spiritual journey made this book sing. The book not only helps define what a muse is but showcases the common fears and beliefs that often hang over an author’s head and how brain waves and energy can impact the creative process if not processed correctly. The concept of writing being a creative and spiritual journey is such a unique idea, and the author thoroughly explores this in a way that draws readers and writers into the book more and more.
The Verdict
Remarkable, authentic, and enlightening author W.L. Hawkin’s “Writing with your Muse” is a must-read nonfiction book and self-help guide to writing. The heart and passion that drove this book are reflected beautifully in this narrative. The drive this book instills in the reader to put these practices into play in their own lives will keep readers coming back to this book repeatedly, very much in tune with other great books on writing like Stephen King’s “On Writing.” If you haven’t yet, be sure to grab your copy today!
Rating: 10/10
About the Author

W. L. Hawkin writes adventurous cross-genre fiction charged with “myth, magic, and mayhem” from her home in the Pacific Northwest.
Her urban fantasy series, the Hollystone Mysteries, features a coven of Vancouver witches who solve murders using their wits, ritual magic, and a little help from the gods. To Charm a Killer, To Sleep with Stones, To Render a Raven, To Kill a King, and To Dance with Destiny, follow stage magician and Wicca high priest, Estrada, as he endeavors to save his friends while working through his own personal issues.
Her standalone novel, Lure: Jesse & Hawk (2022) won a National Indie Excellence Award, a Gold Reader’s Choice award from Connections E-magazine, a Crowned Heart Review from InD’tale Magazine, and placed as a finalist in The UK Wishing Shelf Book Awards. Lure is a small-town romantic suspense story set on a Chippewa Reservation in the American Midwest near the fictional town of Lure River.
As an intuitive writer, Wendy captures what she sees and hears on the page and allows her muses to guide her through the creative process. In an upcoming book, Writing with your Muse: a Guide to Creative Inspiration, she explains her writing process and offers tips and techniques to help writers get their words on the page.
Wendy is a book reviewer and publisher with a background in Indigenous Studies and Humanities. Born in Toronto, Canada, she completed a BA in Indigenous Studies at Trent University, then moved to B.C. where she completed diplomas in Humanities at SFU and taught high school for several years.
She also spent a year as a relief lighthouse keeper, enjoying the rugged isolation of the West Coast, and blogging her adventures at http://lifeonthebclights.blogspot.com Her experiences color “To Render a Raven.”
An introvert, Wendy does most of her musing while walking her yellow lab through the forested trails of B.C. “I continue to explore my ancestry, often in my writing. I love nature, history, archaeology, myths and magic, and feel I was born in the wrong century. If I could, I’d travel back in time to experience cultures long since changed or vanished.”
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