I happen to be blessed (or cursed) with the sort of imagination that enables me to create a vivid interior world inspired by words. I Read More...
The prolific Hollywood wiseguy wrote some of the most quotable films of all time and also authored a number of novels and memoirs. He became a sought-after “script doctor,” a hired gun who burnishes a struggling screenplay, because he understood cinematic storytelling as well as the importance of a character’s perspective.
But it was his 1983 book, “Adventures in the Screen Trade,” that had Tinseltown buzzing by explaining that there were no easy answers in show business, readily entering a well-worn catchphrase in the film world’s lexicon.
“Nobody knows anything,” Goldman wrote. “Not one person in the entire motion picture field knows for a certainty what’s going to work. Every time out it’s a guess — and, if you’re lucky, an educated one.”
At the moment, all my screenwriters are busy but the work requests keep flowing in. One new client needs a writer capable of creating a Read More...
I found this in the August 2nd, 2019, New York Times. Fun reading…if you’re not suffering from reader’s block: Read More...
On Friday, May 17th, 2019, I lost my balance on a concrete step in my garage, fell and fractured my left leg, near the hip. I spent Read More...
It’s a page on this website, located here. I’ve been collecting informative and witty comments from writers for years. Read More...
Today, I spoke with a potential client who has a fictional story he wanted to turn into both a novel and a screenplay. He and I chatted Read More...
We’ve been pretty busy at Ghostwriters Central. Someone asked the other day about what’s happening here. We always have a Read More...
So many great writers, so many I’ve not heard of. One of those was William Least Heat-Moon. I saw his 1982 book mentioned Read More...
The call came in from an attorney. He was due to give a motivational speech in several days and he needed a speechwriter who could Read More...
So for a few weeks I had been replying to emails from clients, writers and friends without response, which I thought was odd. Read More...