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Ever Wanted to Tell Your Story? But Don’t Know How?

Ever wanted to tell your story?

Not the polite version you tell people when they ask how life is going.
Not the edited version you share online.
The real one. The one that stays with you when everything is quiet.

Most people carry a story like that.

Very few ever write it.

They convince themselves their story is not interesting enough.
That it is too small.
That someone else has lived it better.
That it is already too late.

That belief stops more books from being written than lack of talent ever will.

If you have ever thought, “one day I should write this down,” then you already understand something important. You know stories matter. You just do not know how to start or how to keep going once doubt shows up.

That is where most people get stuck.

They wait for confidence.
They wait for motivation.
They wait for the perfect moment.

That moment never arrives.

What actually works is having a clear method you can rely on even when you do not feel creative. A way to move forward that does not depend on mood or inspiration.

That is why I put my writing process into a practical guide.

I did not create it as theory. I created it because I kept meeting people who wanted to write a book and had no structure. They had ideas scattered across notebooks and notes apps. They had strong emotions and no clear direction. They started chapters and never finished them.

This guide shows you how I actually write books from beginning to end.

You start with inspiration, but you do not stay there.

You learn how to turn an idea into a working title.
You learn how to build characters that stay consistent.
You learn how to map a story without killing creativity.
You learn how to write forward instead of rewriting the same chapter forever.
You learn how to finish.

The guide includes worksheets that force clarity. Not vague prompts. Real questions that make you define your story and your characters, so you stop drifting halfway through.

One of the core ideas I teach is allowing yourself to write into difficult corners. Real stories are not neat. They create problems that force decisions. That is where voice and honesty appear.

Most people quit right before that point.

You do not need permission to tell your story. You do not need validation. You need a method that keeps you moving when doubt shows up.

Doubt always shows up.

The difference between writers and everyone else is not talent. It is finishing.

If you are tired of thinking about writing a book and ready to actually write one, this guide will help you do it.

Read what is inside. Look at the structure. Imagine where you could be if you stopped waiting and started writing.

Your story does not need to be perfect. It needs to exist.

And you are the only one who can write it.

Zsolt Zsemba

Zsolt Zsemba has worn many different hats. He has been an entrepreneur, and businessman for over 30 years. Living abroad has given him many amazing experiences in life and also sparked his imagination for writing. After moving to Canada from Hungary at the age of 10 and working in a family business for a large part of his life. The switch from manufacturing to writing came surprisingly easily for him. His passion for writing began at age 12, mostly writing poetry and short stories. In 1999, the chance came to write scripts. Zsolt took some time off from his family business to write in Jakarta Indonesia for MD Entertainment. Having written dozens of soap operas and made for TV movies, in 2003 Zsolt returned to the family business once more. In 2018, he had the chance to head back to Asia once again. He took on the challenge to be the COO for MD Pictures and get back into the entertainment business. The entertainment business opened up the desire to write once more and the words began to flow onto the pages again. He decided to rewrite a book he began years ago. Organ House was reborn and is a fiction suspense novel while Scars is a young adult drama focused on life’s challenges. After the first two books, his desire to write not only became more challenging but enjoyable as well. After having several books completed he was convinced to publish them for your enjoyment. Zsolt does not tend to stay in one specific genre but tends to lean towards strong female leads and horror. Though he also has a few human interest books, he tends to write about whatever brews in his brain for a while.

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