Bridget McNulty

Contributor

Bridget McNulty is a published author, content strategist, writer, editor and speaker. She is the co-founder of two non-profits: Sweet Life Diabetes Community, South Africa's largest online diabetes community, and the Diabetes Alliance, a coalition of all the organisations working in diabetes in South Africa. She is also the co-founder of Now Novel: an online novel-writing course where she coaches aspiring writers to start - and finish! - their novels. Bridget believes in the power of storytelling to create meaningful change.

Biography:

Bridget completed her undergraduate studies in Creative Writing and Theatre at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, graduating in 2005.

Her first novel, Strange, Nervous Laughter, embodies elements of magical realism and was first published in South Africa by Oshun Books in September 2007.

In 2007, Bridget was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, an event that led to her involvement in diabetes advocacy. She co-founded both Now Novel and Sweet Life in 2012, with Sweet Life transitioning from a print magazine to the largest online diabetes community in South Africa, and an NGO that provides information and support to individuals with diabetes.

In 2009, her book Strange, Nervous Laughter was published in the United States by St. Martin’s Press. Her self-published book How to Live a Happy Life (with a Chronic Illness) in 2015 is an honest, heartfelt look at making the best of being chronically ill. In 2021, she published The Grief Handbook: A Guide Through the Worst Days of Your Life with Watkins Publishing in the UK, USA, and South Africa, prompted by her personal experiences of grief following the death of her mother in 2019.

She has worked for Real Simple Magazine South Africa and has been a regular contributor to many other newspapers, magazines and websites including The Oprah Magazine, Woman & Home, Mango Juice, Fresh Living, Fairlady, Cosmopolitan and ELLE. She was a book reviewer for the Sunday Times and interviewed authors for KZN Literary Tourism.

Her advocacy extends to television appearances, where she has discussed diabetes and its management on South African shows such as The Afternoon Express and The Expresso Show.

Find out more:

Recent posts

7 dialogue rules for writing fantastic conversations

  Dialogue rules aren't set in stone but help us create believable characters who have distinct, memorable voices. The best dialogue gives insights into characters and their motivations. Getting dialogue punctuation right is important, as is keeping dialogue entertaining. Here are 7...

September 26th, 2019

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Help with writing: 6 tips for getting critiques

There are many options for getting help with writing online. Here are 6 tips to get the maximum benefit from writing critiques: 1. Be brave, bold, and play In an in-person, 'live' writing group, you might feel daunted. Sometimes it's hard to write the bold lines and stories that ma...

February 7th, 2019

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Elements of setting: How to create a vivid world

The elements of setting - time, place, mood, social and cultural context - help to make a novel feel real and alive. This is an essential element of writing that helps anchor your writing within a specific place. Read more about using the ingredients of setting to make your story more vivid...

December 13th, 2018

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Writing villain characters who feel human: 7 tips

Fiction is full of villainous characters who readers love to hate (and, sometimes, hate to love). Learning how to write a villain that your readers can understand as a complex human being (as opposed to a cardboard cutout) can give your novel depth. How do you write a villain who feels huma...

October 25th, 2018

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Writing character backstory that feels real: 5 tips

Character backstory - the past events and formative experiences that shape who your characters are - is key to creating characters of breadth and depth. Here are tips to weave backstory into your story believably: First: What is a backstory? 'Backstory' is a literary device authors use to ...

October 18th, 2018

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Character voices: How to write persona using voice

Writing fiction, there are at least three ways we create character voices. The first is through viewpoint narration (narrative voice). The words a narrator uses create a distinct persona through elements such as style, subject matter and tone. The second way is written dialogue, showin...

October 11th, 2018

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