Gail Anderson-Dargatz

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Gail Anderson-Dargatz

Resources for writers

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AlmostWife 002Fiction writers feel deeply. We often have an intense emotional landscape, are highly observant, and tend to be introverts. We may be somewhat comfortable on the stage but hate cocktail parties and talking on the phone is the worst. We like people, but socializing takes energy from us and we need a lot of time alone in order to recharge. So, we prefer to work alone and get overwhelmed by too much socializing or even too much noise and light. We’re wired a little differently.
 
And, yes, we’re anxious sorts. We can be worriers, afraid of, well, just about everything. We may be born this way, but our occupation can make our anxiety so much worse. Think about it: if we do our job, we spend our days coming up with the worst possible things that can happen to our characters. We spend our days catastrophizing.
 
These are vast generalizations, of course, and I do speak for myself. But after nearly twenty-five years of teaching and coaching other writers, I’ve got to say that this cliché of the writer personality type fits a great many of us. And, in fact, these are good traits for writers to have. We are keen observers and often have great empathy and understanding of others and the world around us. We use these talents and that intense emotional landscape to sculpt our fictional characters and worlds. 

The thing is, the personality traits that make us good writers can also stop us from developing our protagonist’s conflict, or even writing at all.

Writers tend to avoid conflict on the page for the same reasons we avoid it in real life: facing conflict directly makes us more than uncomfortable. It can wrench us apart.
 
BroomSpiderWe’ll do anything to avoid our character’s conflict, holding it at a comfortable arm’s length (in the past) in flashbacks or letters, or allowing our protagonist to walk out of the room or go on a trip, leaving the conflict behind. At other times, our protagonist talks to a side character about their problem, rather than facing their antagonist directly in what would be a much more powerful scene. Or our protagonists ruminate and fret over their problem alone, as we do, rather than directly engaging with their problem or the antagonist. We may have another character swoop in to save the day, not allowing our protagonist to find solutions to their own problems, to be active as, again, that would mean our protagonist would have to face their conflict head on. Or we might get our protagonist into trouble, only to resolve the issue too soon, or say that everything is okay after all, that really, it wasn’t the protagonist’s fault. In short, we don’t allow the protagonist to get themselves in real trouble.
 
So, why do we protect our protagonists from their conflict? Because putting the protagonist directly into his or her conflict, and writing scene that unravels in the now, in real time in front of the reader, forces us empathic, fearful, nervous wreck writers to experience that conflict first-hand, as if it were our own. And, of course, sometimes it is if we are writing from real life inspirations. We’ll do anything to avoid experiencing those intense emotions, emotions that can overwhelm us. So, we avoid writing the scene we need to write. Or we avoid putting our protagonists at the center of their conflicts. We allow them to run away, or wander or ruminate alone instead, as we do.
 
The result: the passive protagonist, who observes and reports on the conflicts of others, but is not fully engaged in her own. The story falls flat; narrative drive doesn’t get up and running.
 
The solution is to rethink situation so that we are putting the protagonist right into the centre, the heart of their conflict, and allow that conflict to play out fully in scene. But, of course, that’s easier said than done. 

The main challenge we face as fiction writers is to overcome our own fears and allow our characters to fully engage with their conflicts on the page rather than avoiding them at every turn.

But as we take on this challenge, we need to take care of ourselves and make sure we have support around us because in writing and rewriting those difficult, conflict-filled scenes, the empathic writer may well experience, feel, what the protagonist experiences, over and over. Within the writing process, we are there, in the scene, and we are there again each time we revisit the scene as we rewrite. It’s for this reason, and others, that I believe our lovely, introverted, empathic, emotionally intense, and anxious writers are also very brave and daring souls.
 
 
 
 

Testimonials

Leila Marshy

"I've been writing my whole life, but in the past two years I can say that Gail has pretty much taught me everything I now know. I am convinced that without Gail's ministrations, my novel The Philistine would not be enjoying its current success"

-- Leila Marshy, author of The Philistine and 2026 winner of TWUC's Danuta Gleed Literary Award for My Thievery of the People.

Leila Marshy

Christine Fischer Guy

"Gail’s model suited me right down to the ground, exactly the right combination of close reading, thoughtful feedback, and enough space to work these questions through in my own time. She’s an intelligent and experienced manuscript midwife with an uncanny ability to see to the heart of what I was trying to do. I appreciate her guidance immensely!"

-- Christine Fischer Guy author of The Umbrella Mender (2014) and The Instrument Must Not Matter (2026).

Christine Fischer Guy

Tara Gereaux

"Gail is an incredible editor. She has an innate ability to understand what I’m trying to do with my writing and to help me see what I need to do to get where I want. The best part about working with her is her supportive, encouraging approach. She’s a writer, she gets it – she knows how hard writing can be – but when I’m working with Gail, it always feels a little bit easier and a little more fun. Can’t recommend her highly enough."

-- Tara Gereaux has published two books of fiction and was the recipient of the Colleen Bailey Memorial Award from the Saskatchewan Foundation for the Arts, and a REVEAL Indigenous Art Award from the Hnatyshyn Foundation.

Tara Gereaux

Matthew Hooton

"Gail's developmental edits were superb. Her attention to the manuscript's structure, to themes and emotional resonances, and to the character creation were at once challenging, sophisticated and encouraging. And she draws on a range of excellent resources. I've not seen anything quite like it in twenty-five years in the industry."

-- Dr. Matthew Hooton, author of Deloume Road, Typhoon Kingdom, and Everything Lost, Everything Found, longlisted for the ARA Historical Novel Prize 2025. Dr. Hooton is a lecturer at the University of Adelaide.

Matthew Hooton

Jessica Waite

"Gail is the total package: brilliant writer, keen-eyed editor, ace story architect, and warm genuine human. The structural foundation she taught saved me years of floundering in the dark. Thank you Gail!"

-- Jessica Waite, author of the Widow's Guide to Dead Bastards,  one of The Globe and Mail's best 100 books of 2024.

Jessica Waite

Darcy Friesen Hossack

"By the end of the first draft, I'd rediscovered colour in a world that had faded to black and white. I can not thank Gail enough."

-- Darcy Friesen Hossack, Danuta Gleed runner-up and Commonwealth Prize-shortlisted author of Mennonites Don't Dance  and Stillwater.

Darcy Friesen Hossack

Kelly S. Thompson

"Not only did Gail help me to polish my prose, but she also showed my how to believe in my own work, how to play, how to explore language with the writer's tools. What a gift, to have someone champion your work in a way that makes you, the writer, feel seen."

-- Kelly S. Thompson, national bestselling author of Girls Need Not Apply: Field Notes from the Forces.

Kelly S. Thompson

Lise Mayne

"Time Enough became the novel I longed to create thanks to Gail’s expert advice and encouragement. Gail helps writers find the heart of their own story, the mark of the very best teachers. I highly recommend her as a professional mentor and a sincere guide."

-- Lise Mayne, author of Time Enough.

Lise Mayne

Elle Wild

"Gails fiction course was the best class I have ever taken. Full stop. Her notes and analysis were invaluable and I still use the creative exercises she shared with us."

-- Elle Wild. #1 bestselling author of Strange Things Done and winner of the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Unpublished First Crime Novel.

Elle Wild

Maia Caron

"Perhaps there's no greater proof of a manuscript editor's work than when the writer they mentor gets a publishing contract, but what I found most valuable was applying Gail's insightful comments when I began to plot a new book."

-- Maia Caron, author of Song of Batoche

Maia Caron

Daniel Griffin

"Gail has been a great help to me for many years, reading my novels and stories and providing practical, clear and meaningful feedback. Her focus on the structure of a story, its arc, the conflict that drives it and the development of characters and their transformation has been invaluable."

-- Daniel Griffin is the author of Stopping for Strangers and Two Roads Home.

Daniel Griffin

Nerys Parry

"(Gail's) greatest gift is her passion. She truly loves the craft and throws her heart into her work as not only a teacher but also as a coach and inspiration to aspiring writers. She always knows just how far to push you without breaking you, and if you let her, she can help you become a far better writer than you ever imagined..."

-- Nerys Parry, author of Man & Other Natural Disasters, a finalist for the Colophon Prize and tied for seventh in the Giller Prize Reader’s Choice Awards.

Nerys Parry

Jennifer Manuel

"Gail has a firm grasp on what effective mentorship looks like: supportive, challenging, fully engaged. Immediately Gail got to the heart of my novel’s problem and then worked with me to find possible solutions, pushing my craft to a higher level and deepening my understanding of narrative structure. It was nothing short of a shattering breakthrough.”

-- Jennifer Manuel, author of The Heaviness of Things That Float

Jennifer Manuel

Liisa Kovala

"Working with Gail during an early stage of my historical fiction manuscript was like taking a masterclass. Both my novel and my skills as a writer improved through her guidance. Best of all, Gail is not only knowledgeable about everything to do with writing, she is also delightful to work with."

-- Liisa Kovala, author of Surviving Stutthof: My Father's Memories Behind the Death Gate and Sisu's Winter War.

Liisa Kovala

Emily De Angelis

"Gail was knowledgeable, thoughtful, and kind as she coached me through the process. Her feedback validated my journey and help me to move forward with my story in countless meaningful ways..."

-- Emily De Angelis, author of The Stones of Burren Bay.

Emily De Angelis

Maggi Feehan

"Gail is nothing short of an editing genius. She has the rare ability to give feedback laced with compassion, appreciation and respect... that will inspire you to go back to the page and transform your narrative, words and characters in truly remarkable ways."

-- Maggi Feehan, author of The Serpent's Veil

Maggi Feehan

Kimmy Beach

"I'm so happy I chose Gail as my first foray into the world of hiring an outside eye. I've loved her work for ages, and hoped her insight would take my new project where it needed to go. I'm overwhelmed with gratitude (and work!). Thank you, Gail. You 'get' me."

-- Kimmy Beach, author of The Last Temptation of Bond.

Kimmy Beach

Chris Tarry

"Working with Gail has become the measure by which I rate every workshop I've taken, or will ever take. And she has set the bar impossibly high. To study with Gail is to understand the plight of the Apprentice Writer, to take solace in her direction, and to witness one's growth in virtually real time."

-- Chris Tarry, four-time Juno Award winner and author of How to Carry a Bigfoot Home.

Chris Tarry