Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Writers.
My Dear Henry
My Dear Henry, I write this heavy with the full weight of what we have become. You once thought of me as a liberation, a key opening the lock of your own restraint. I quickened your pulse, unshackled you from your conscience. And I will not pretend I did not revel in it–I reveled!
By Tina D. Lopez3 days ago in Writers
Inside The Mind Of The Writers
Writing as a hobby becomes something more. It can become an infectious disease, without a cure. As it happens, it came to me during an infectious disease outbreak, and initially, there was no cure. Hell, there was no vaccine, there was no answer, and the world literally fell to pieces that year.
By The Man Behind The Mask3 days ago in Writers
Late March 2026: 5 Goals Accomplished
To me, it's funny, the nature of publishing your work. The way I do it is, anyway. I send out TONS of stories to TONS of publications all the time. I'm pretty sure I have 57 pending right now... and I have 4 more that I will be sending this week. I'm constantly sending more, getting turned down by places, waiting, writing, sending more, getting turned down more... and then every once in a while... you get the acceptance.
By Stephen Kramer Avitabile3 days ago in Writers
Grounded Flights, Empty Rooms, and a Nation in Limbo: Why the Shutdown Is Strangling America’s Hospitality and Travel Industry
By any measure, the current U.S. government shutdown is no longer just a political standoff in Washington. It is an economic chokehold on one of the country’s most vital industries. From airport terminals stretched to their limits to hotel lobbies growing quieter by the day, the damage to hospitality and travel is immediate, visible, and worsening. If lawmakers fail to act now, the consequences will outlast the shutdown itself.
By George Dfouni3 days ago in Writers
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central Implementation: Step-by-Step Guide
ERP implementations don’t fail because of software—they fail because of misalignment between the system and the business. If your processes aren’t clearly defined, even the most powerful ERP will underperform.
By Lilly Scott3 days ago in Writers
Text and Subtext
Haiku of Now challenge results were released on Friday. Haiku challenges are easy winners’ page reads, but good grief, the judges had to slog through over 1300, minus the ones that were disqualified for not adhering. A couple of mine probably fell into that pile—if you read beyond the blurb, it was a very specific challenge—no past, no reflection, no past tense, no interpretation—just a lived-in moment. Some of mine reflected or interpreted, may have even had a past tense verb somewhere.
By Harper Lewis3 days ago in Writers
The 47th who can't count.
The marchers marched, yelling vehement, disapproving and terrible invectives at the 47th. He stood high above at the window, grinning - waving as if pleased with the demonstration, which to everyone sensible looking on, was clearly against him.
By Novel Allen4 days ago in Writers
Have you ever grieved someone who's still alive?
I recently had a falling out with my high school best friend of 15+ years. To be honest I already felt like I was grieving for someone I hadn’t quite lost yet. The days, weeks, months had gone by with no communication or check ins, I knew something was up. They eventually told me they think we are on different paths in life. I know people can outgrow each other; I understand that completely. I think it’s actually realistic to believe not everyone you went to school with or knew when you were younger is going to be in your life in your 20s, 30s and beyond. Though that thought doesn’t make the healing easier.
By soft static4 days ago in Writers







