Riley Adams's Blog, page 77

March 31, 2018

Twitterific Writing Links

Bluebird with beak open and 'Twitterific Writing Links' by ElizabethSCraig superimposed on the image


by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig


Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 45,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.


Have you visited the WKB lately?  Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox!  Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.    Happy Easter and Passover to all who celebrate!


New Stuff:


 


Thanks to Win Kelly Charles (@WinKellyCharles ) for our podcast interview on the Ask Win show! (Also on iTunes.)


 






Business / Miscellaneous


Just Say No to These 5 Freelance Writing Jobs: @newleafwriter @thewritelife


3 Truths About the Mindset of a Successful Authorpreneur: @lornafaith


How to Set and Reach Your Goals to Make a Living as a Writer: @lornafaith @jeffcarson


Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous


Quiz yourself on writing conferences: @AmandaJoyCabot


Key Rights Offers on Deck: Amazon Publishing Highlights Titles at Bologna and London Book Fairs: @Porter_Anderson


Top writing conferences for writers of color and LGBTQ writers: @MelissaMHart @TheWriterMag


The Rathbones Folio Prize Shortlist Is Announced, as ‘Evolved’ Booker Debate Flares Again: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Creativity and Inspiration / First Novels


Tips for Young Writers: @the_writing_pal



Creativity and Inspiration / Goal setting


Tips for better goal-setting: @bookmarketing @BwkrSelfPublish


3 Ways to Rock Your New Year’s Resolutions: @KelsieEngen


Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers


Is Spoiler-Free Pressure Ruining In-Depth Discussions About Books? @AuthorSAT


Creativity and Inspiration / Motivation


4 Lies That Are Keeping You From Writing a Book: @DavidHSafford @write_practice


Creativity and Inspiration / Success


3 Qualities of a Successful Author: @WriteToSell


Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life


If you want to write, write! And other infuriating advice: by Naomi Shafer


7 Tips to Manage Writing-Related Stress: @colleen_m_story


8 Ways to Find Author Mentors and Learn From Them: @lornafaith


5 Lessons To Combat Book Two Blues: @HouseRowena


25 Legendary Literary Feuds, Ranked: @knownemily @lithub


Genres / Fantasy


Creating Better Magic Systems (Blog Series): @davidfarland


The Dos and Don’ts of Fiction Inspired by Your RPG Campaign: @caitlynpaxson @tordotcom


Six Tips to Make Your Fantasy Setting More Immersive: by Oren Ashkenazi @mythcreants


Genres / Memoir


Exploring difficult scenes when writing a memoir: @BettyHafner @WomenWriters


Genres / Miscellaneous


Should You Write Time-slip? @writerashley


10 assumptions about writing radio drama: @foolisholly @scottishbktrust


What It’s Like to Be a Female Author Who Writes Transgressive Fiction: @losapala


Genres / Romance


How Medieval Storytellers Shape Our Understanding of Romance: by Marilyn Yalom @lithub


Writing Romance for the Skeptic: by Elizabeth Wong


Genres / Short Stories


On the Very Contemporary Art of Flash Fiction: by John Dufresne @lithub


Promo / Ads


How Authors Can Build An Indie Empire—How You Advertise Matters: @TraciTyneHilton on @EdieMelson


Promo / Blogging


How to Turn Your Blog into a Book: @drsanford77


5 Creative Blog Post Ideas for Authors: by Jo Golden @BookBub


How to Write A Blog Post When You Have Zero Time or Ideas: @_HannahHeath


Promo / Book Descriptions and Copywriting


Better Book Descriptions in 3 Easy Steps: @SueColetta1


Promo / Book Reviews


How To Get Book Reviews (in 5 Smart Steps): @ReedsyHQ


How to Get Book Reviews on Amazon: @WrittenWordM


Promo / Connecting with Readers


Assemble Your Street Team: How to Mobilize Your Fan Army to Promote Your Books: @TCKPublishing


Promo / Miscellaneous


Guide to book marketing (7 parts): by Nicholas Erik


11 Pitfalls Every Indie Author Must Avoid: @Bookgal @IndieReader


5 Ways to Sell More Books: @Bookgal


Promo / Platforms


Tips for Establishing an Author Platform: @TheIWSG


Promo / Pricing


Is 99¢ too cheap a price for your book? by Dana Isaacson @CareerAuthors


Promo / Social Media Tips


The Cure for Social Media Overwhelm: @DanBlank


Promo / Websites


Using https://t.co/BwfcNJUA3t for books (with examples): @HollowLandsBook


Publishing / Miscellaneous


Kindle Scout: A Guide for Authors: @WrittenWordM


Publishing / News / International Publishing


Four Festival Neue Literatur Writers on Belonging and Displacement: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Istanbul Festival Names 2018 Fellows; Beijing Announces Children’s Book Fair: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


February 2018 Bestseller Lists from China Include Classics from Jules Verne, Helen Keller, Charlotte Bronte: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Booknet Canada and Rakuten Kobo Award 2018 Ebook Coding Prize: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Norway’s Big Translation Rights Year: ‘An Increasing International Appeal’: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


‘Best Children’s Publishers of the Year’ Announced at Bologna Book Fair: @Porter_Anderson


At Bologna: The Very Latest ‘Wimpy Kid’ License: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Frankfurter Buchmesse Issues Global Illustration Award Call for Entries: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


‘Canada Reads’ Chooses Its Winner, as PBS Announces Its Own Books Show: @Porter_Anderson @meredithvieira


Publishing / Process / Book Design


How To Find And Work With A Book Cover Designer: @thecreativepenn


3 Ways to Get Book Covers on a Shoestring Budget: @jkcheney


Publishing / Process / Formatting


Use MS Word Styles to Format Your Manuscript: @JFbookman





Tips for better pen names: @Janet_Reid


Writing Craft / Beginnings


How Works of Fiction Can Be Boiled Down to Two Types of Plots: @peterselgin @JaneFriedman


Flog a Pro: would you pay to turn the first page of this bestseller? @RayRhamey @WriterUnboxed


Writing Craft / Characters / Development


The Power of Big Boss Troublemaker Characters: @KristenLambTX


50 Character Archetypes: from Ellie Writes Stories


Show Your Characters’ Wounds: @ZoeMMcCarthy


Occupation Thesaurus Entry: Personal Assistant: @AngelaAckerman


7 Key Ways to Reveal Your Character’s Wound: @SloanTamar


Writing Craft / Diversity


6 Tips for Writing Genderqueer and Nonbinary Characters: @Young_E_H @scottishbktrust


Writing Craft / Endings


How to End a Story: @themaltesetiger


Writing Craft / Literary Devices


Theme Made Simple: @TSQWriting


How to Use Foreshadowing Like a Master Storyteller: @Magic_Violinist


Using Poetic Devices: by Chris Winkle @mythcreants


Developing a Theme: @themaltesetiger


Writing Craft / Miscellaneous


Writing Child Characters: @Kid_Lit


8 Elements of Tradecraft: Is Your Writing Plumb, Level, and Square? by Gordon Long @IndiesUnlimited


Writing Craft: Master List of Copy Editing Skills: @JamiGold


Creating Big Moments in Your Small Story: @patverducci


Writing Advice From Readers: @bethhararwrites


Self-Defense: The Predator is Exploiting You: from How to Fight Write


Writing Craft / POV


When to Use 3rd Person vs 1st Person: @HookedOnNoir


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting


Tips to Keep Your Readers Reading: @CindyDevoted


Pros and Cons of Pre-Plotting a Novel before Writing: @plotwhisperer


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Research


6 Ways to Enhance the Shooting Skills of Your Protagonists: @LeeLofland


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Story Beats


Night of the Living Dead Beat Sheet: @DonRoff @savethecat


Writing Craft / Punctuation and Grammar


3 Examples of Problems with Parallel Structure: @writing_tips


3 Types of Compound-Word Errors: @writing_tips


Writing Craft / Scenes


5 Essentials for Every Scene: @rsmonterusso @DIYMFA


Writing Craft / Settings and Description


Describing Characters: @AlisonPotoma @WritersRumpus


Writing Craft / Synopses


How to Write a Synopsis—Without Turning Homicidal: @SarahSallyHamer


Writing Craft / Word Crafting


The fictional sentence: @nevalalee


Writing Craft / World-Building


Want To Invent A Fictional Language? Here’s How To Do It: by Robert Wood @standoutbooks


Writing Tools / Resources


27 Handy Keyboard Shortcuts Every Writer Should Know: @TCKPublishing



The top writing links from last week are on Twitterific:
Click To Tweet



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Published on March 31, 2018 21:02

March 29, 2018

Other Things to Back Up (Besides Our Writing)

Red lego-themed USB flash drive.


by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig


It’s now time for my regularly scheduled reminder to back up your work.


This time I’ll make my post a little different by urging you to back up other files, too.  Although we’d likely be hardest hit by losing our manuscripts, there are other important writing-related things, too.


I’ll start with our newsletter subscriber list since I know folks who have inadvertently deleted portions of theirs (and, in one case, the entire list).  I use MailChimp and it’s fairly easy to back up.  In fact, you can back up all of your account data (including templates, campaigns, subscriber lists, campaign reports, etc.) in one fell swoop. Step by step guidance can be found here. 


If you’re like me and rely on your Google calendar for everything, you’ll want to back it up, too.   My calendar has everything from guest posts scheduled on my blog to cover design meetings to podcasts.  Backup Google calendar means exporting the calendar (then I usually will copy it to an external device of some kind, too).   Instructions can be found here. 


Book-related files are also important things to back up.  You may think that  backing up your current work in progress should be the main focus.  But there are many other types of book files that you’ll want to keep track of:


Cover files.   I back up my ebook, print, and audio book covers several different places.


Published book files.  You never know when a new retailer or format will come along.  It wouldn’t be fun to lose these old files.


Back matter.  To speed up the publishing process, I keep my back matter (including list of published books, where to find me online, etc.) in a document that I can update and quickly copy and past into the back of the next book.


List of ISBNs.  I keep track of all of the ISBNs for my different books (in all the different formats).  It would be time consuming to recreate.


Last, but certainly not least, our current manuscript.  If you don’t create backups because it’s a pain, think of other, easier ways to save your data.  Email yourself a copy, copy to a small thumb drive that you carry on a keychain,  use a cloud service like Carbonite.


What kinds of files do you back up? How often do you do it?  Is it automated or manual?




Writing-related files we should back up:
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Photo credit: Dolinski on Visualhunt.com / CC BY-NC-ND

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Published on March 29, 2018 21:02

March 26, 2018

Establishing an Author Platform–Even Before You Publish

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig


There has been a lot written about the importance of establishing an author platform.  But what’s the best way to go about this without stretching ourselves too thin?


I have some ideas for getting started with an author platform (even before you publish your first book) over at the Insecure Writer’s Support Group.   Hope you’ll  pop over.


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Published on March 26, 2018 03:01

March 24, 2018

Twitterific Writing Links

Bluebird with beak open and 'Twitterific Writing Links' by ElizabethSCraig superimposed on the image


by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig


Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 45,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.


Have you visited the WKB lately?  Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox!  Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.



Business / Miscellaneous


7 Business Models for Indie Authors: Which One Is Right For You? @OrnaRoss @IndieAuthorALLI


Tips for Writing with Another Author: @msheatherwebb


Invest in your business: @HollowLandsBook


Writing a book for easy money – a myth examined: @Roz_Morris


Business / Taxes


Tax tips for writers: @Dmacmeans @RomanceUniv


Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous


Milan’s Tempo di Libri 2018: Crowds Up, Rights Center Growing: @Porter_Anderson @2SeasAgency


4 Top Finalist Contenders for the 2018 Audie Awards from the Audio Publishers Association: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Wellcome Book Prize’s 2018 Shortlist: Five of Six Titles Are by Women @Porter_Anderson @wellcomebkprize


Republic of Consciousness Independent Publisher Award Goes to Influx Press and Author Eley Williams: @Porter_Anderson @Influxpress @PrizeRofc


Rewarding Content in the Industry: The ‘Nibbies’ Shortlist 42 Titles for Books of the Year: @Porter_Anderson @_JimField @renireni


Booksellers Without Borders Names 12 Book Fair Scholarship Winners: @Porter_Anderson @skylightbooks



Creativity and Inspiration / First Novels


What 1 writer learned from writing his first book: by Nils Ödlund @mythicscribes


Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration


Copying is how we learn: @austinkleon


5 Reasons Why Your Writer’s Intuition is Failing You: @colleen_m_story


5 Ways To Help Inspire Your Writing: @lornafaith


Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Quotes


Judy Blume’s Advice for Aspiring Writers: @knownemily @lithub


Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers


So You Want to Read English Gothic Literature: Here’s Where to Start: by Matt Staggs @unboundworlds


7 of the Most Evil Older Sisters in Fiction: by Natalee Cruz @ElectricLit


The 10 Most Famous Bookstores in the World: @knownemily


4 Ways for Writers to Become Better Readers: @KMWeiland


Crime Fiction: The Joys and Sorrows of Finishing a Series: @CrimeReads @gasagasagirl @prospkbks


Creativity and Inspiration / Motivation


5 Keys To Help You Finish Your Novel: @lornafaith


Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Fitting in Writing


5 Tips For Writing on a Tight Deadline: @MissyTippens


Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life


5 Reasons Why a Writer Should Move to Orange County: @poddar_namrata @lithub


The 12 Steps for Struggling Writers: @christophpaul_ @LitReactor


9 Things to Consider Before Giving Up on Your Book: @Bookgal @IndieReader


7 Stories Stephen King Refuses to Publish: by Jake Rossen @mentalfloss


Why Your Friend with a Creative Job Isn’t the Village Idiot: @StefanieFlaxman @copyblogger


What Should I Do If I’m Ashamed of My Published Work? @egabbert @ElectricLit


What’s Your Ideal Writing Life? @LifesizeLD @WritersDigest


Become a Better Writer by Avoiding These Childish Tendencies: @MeganNSharma


5 Writers, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers: @TeddyWayne1999 @lithub


Genres / Fantasy


Tips on creating creatures/animals for an alien/fantasy race: from Just a Writing Aid


Genres / Historical


Writing Tragedy in Historical Fiction: @SusanMeissner @SignatureReads


Genres / Miscellaneous


The Autobiographical Novel: @BarryFoxWriter @LiveWriteThrive


Genres / Mystery


Checklist for Writing Your Thriller: @HankPRyan


Crime fiction: when sleuths have to go back to the drawing board: @mkinberg


Crime fiction: when sleuths are pressured not to investigate: @mkinberg


Crime Writing: Simplified Guide to Toxicology: via@WritersDetctive


Ranking Shakespeare’s Plays as Crime Fiction: @DwyerMurphy @CrimeReads


Security guards as elements in crime fiction: @mkinberg


Genres / Picture Books


Creating Picture Books: Resources, including free picture book templates, from @inkyelbows:


Genres / Romance


Romance writers look for ways their work can make a statement: @jaimealyse @BuzzFeedNews


Genres / Science Fiction


How Netflix is Changing Science Fiction (Beyond Big Marketing Gimmicks): @AlasdairStuart @tordotcom


The Science in Your Science Fiction: Conventional Space Travel: @MelanieMarttila @DIYMFA


Promo / Ads


How to Lower Your Facebook Ad Costs and Get Better Results: by Amanda Bond @SMExaminer


Promo / Blogging


What Are SEO Stop Words And How Do You Stop Using Them? by Lisa Brown @justpublishing


Promo / Book Reviews


The Essential First Step for New Authors: Book Reviews, Not Sales: @Wogahn @JaneFriedman


How to Build a Review Team (Podcast): @cksyme @KrystalShannan


Promo / Connecting with Readers


Helping International Readers Find Your Book:


Considering Your Audience:


Promo / Miscellaneous


Five Marketing Tools for Authors Who Hate Marketing: @writersstation


Seven Ways to Market Your Self-Published Novel: @aliventures


Promo / Social Media Tips


Is FB marking your links to your books as Spam? Here is what you can do: @Naked_Determina


What Kurt Vonnegut Can Teach Us About Coping with the Internet: @jayasax


Promo / Video


5 Ways to Sell More Books with YouTube Marketing: @Bookgal


Promo / Websites


Is Your Author Website’s About Page Drop-Dead Boring? @JanalynVoigt


Publishing / Miscellaneous


American Publishers, Libraries Cheer Marrakesh Treaty’s US Congressional Introduction: @Porter_Anderson


Freelance Writing: Tracking Your Goals for Success: @rcarrington2004 @hopeclark


Is Offset Printing the Future for Indie Authors? @JFbookman


Publishing / News / International Publishing


A Children’s Publisher Changes Names; Estonian Literature Stages a Festival: @Porter_Anderson @davehenderson25


Publishing / Process / Book Design


When You Have to Kill the Perfect Book Cover: @woodsarawood @lithub


Publishing / Process / Formatting


How to Format a Textbook or Workbook for Kindle: @ChrisDMcMullen


Publishing / Process / Services to Avoid


5 Signs You Shouldn’t Submit Your Work to a Publication: @NathanielTower


Writing Craft / Beginnings


How an Editor Knows Your Book Isn’t Ready After the First Chapter: @MegLaTorre


First Page Critique: @ClareLangleyH @killzoneauthors


Writing Craft / Characters / Antagonists


Writing Engaging Antagonists: @DN_Bryn


Writing Craft / Characters / Development


Another way to think about character flaws: from Just a Writing Aid


Occupation Thesaurus Entry: Architect: @beccapuglisi


6 Tips for Writing Characters Who Captivate Readers: @Roz_Morris @IngramSpark


Archetypal Characters in Storytelling: @WritingForward


Writing Craft / Characters / Emotion


How To Write Emotion And Depth Of Character: @beccapuglisi @thecreativepenn


Writing Craft / Characters / Protagonists


3 Questions You Need to Answer About Your Main Character Before You Start Your Novel: @StephMorrill


10 ways to create a dynamic heroine: @diannmills @KillerNashville


Writing Craft / Common Mistakes


Top Ten Peeves of creative writing teachers: By Melodie Campbell @annerallen


Writing Craft / Dialogue


Writing Dialogue Between Multiple Characters: @nownovel


Writing Craft / Diversity


Writing with Color: Description Guide: Words for Skin Tone: from Tropes are Tools


Writing Craft / Drafts


5 Ways to Get Your Draft Written: @victoria_grif7


Writing Craft / Flashback and Back Story


Writing Back Story: @Lindasclare


Writing Craft / Hooks


How to Write an Effective Hook: by Mark Gottlieb @WriterUnboxed


Writing Craft / Lessons from Books and Film


Lessons about Writing from Bad Movies: @AlexJCavanaugh @TheIWSG


Writing Craft / Miscellaneous


Stuff That Takes Readers Out of a Story: @jamesscottbell @killzoneauthors


3 Writing “Rules” 1 Writer Breaks: @Julie_Glover


Using Mythology to Improve Your Writing: by Doug Lewars


10 Quotes Illustrating the Power of the Dream Sequence: @TomBlunt @SignatureReads


How to Write Introspection Well: Show “Just Enough”: @SeptCFawkes


How To Write a Fight Scene: 6 Hard-Hitting Rules for Violence in Fiction: @TCKPublishing


How to Write a Prologue for Your Novel (with Examples): @JerryBJenkins


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Outlining


A Novelist’s Dilemma: Outlining vs. Writing On the Fly: @bendolnickbooks @SignatureReads


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting


How to Develop Story Ideas Into Amazing Stories: @weems503


Five Novels With Strong Throughlines: by Oren Ashkenazi @mythcreants


How to Create Binge-Worthy Content That Keeps People Engaged (podcast): @kikimojo


Handling multiple subplots: from Just a Writing Aid


Tips for subplots: @Wordstrumpet


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Research


Dealing with a Tricky Technique: Research Hills to Die On: @AusmaZehanat


Writing Craft / Revision


Why You Should Make Time To Write While Editing/Revising: @AuthorSAT


Tips on Self Editing: @annkroeker


Writing Craft / Series


Why Writing In a Series Will Make You More Money: @thecreativepenn


Series Writing 101: Resources for planning and writing a series: @LisaPoisso


Writing Craft / Settings and Description


Three Ways The Setting Can Steer Your Story’s Plot: @AngelaAckerman


Writing Craft / Tropes


On Star Wars and Mary Sues: by Tropes are Tools


Writing Tools / Miscellaneous


1 Writer’s Favorite Tools: @Julie_Klassen



The top writing links from last week are on Twitterific:
Click To Tweet



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Published on March 24, 2018 21:02

March 22, 2018

Considering Your Audience

Crowd of people in an audience looking toward a speaker or stage.


by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig 


When I was a kid, there was one part of Cinderella that baffled me.


The clock struck midnight and Cinderella, in a panic, cries out that it’s late and that she must leave.


The handsome prince responds, “But it’s not late; it’s only midnight.”


Only midnight.  To a four or five year old me, this pulled me right out of the story.  I’d never even witnessed midnight.  To someone who turned in at eight o’clock, this seemed like an outlandish thing for the handsome prince to have said.


I frequently read on blogs that considering our readers is very important.  But how do we know who our audience is?  And what does it mean to keep them in mind as we’re writing?


Who is your audience?

At first, I’d consider other books in your genre.  What part of the reader segment is the writer or publisher pursuing?  The cover can be a good clue.  Does the cover show an action scene?  A romantic scene?  What are the ages of the characters on the cover, if there are people depicted there?  In terms of the content,  you could ask the same questions.  What’s the focus and pace of the story?  How much profanity is used?


If you can’t tell from the cover and content of books similar to yours, take a look at the authors’ followers online.


It’s also helpful to ask yourself who your ideal reader is. Who are you specifically writing for?


And, as you take notes on books that are similar to yours, it’s good to have a grasp on the genre and subgenre that you’re writing in.


Connecting with readers

It’s important to have ways for readers to contact you.  Of course you want to have your email address available for them, but it’s also helpful to have some sort of means for them to connect with you online.  You don’t have to be on all the social media platforms (in fact, being on all of them is probably a bad idea….it’s just nearly impossible to keep up with), but there needs to be one at least for them to follow you on. As you write more books and have more followers on social media, you can actually see who your reader is…their ages and gender.


Writing for your audience

Once you know who your reader is, it gets a lot easier to write for them.  That’s because readers will have certain expectations for the types of books that you write.  If you aren’t sure of those expectations, just read more books in your genre.


For further reading, see  Angela Quarles’ post at Fiction University, “Finding Your Audience” and Dan Blank’s post at Writer Unboxed, “Do You Know Who Your Reader Is? No, Really: Do You?


What do you know about your audience?  How do you keep them in mind as you write?



Considering Our Audience, as Writers:
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Photo credit: TEDxAmsterdamED on VisualHunt / CC BY


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Published on March 22, 2018 21:02

March 18, 2018

Helping International Readers Find Your Book

A man holds a cell phone against a world map.


by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig


Recently, I went through and updated all of my individual book pages on my website… a very tedious process, but it was a rainy day and a worthwhile endeavor.


I’ve known for some time about Draft2Digital‘s Universal Links, but for some reason hadn’t put it to use on my website.


Sometimes I’ll get emails or messages on Facebook asking how to order one of my books on Apple iBookstore or Amazon…in another country.  This  means that I spend some time trying to locate it myself (even though I’m automatically redirected to the US site in many instances).


I especially want to get my individual book pages on my website right, because I link to the pages in each book’s back matter and on Facebook when I have a release. Plus, if you look up any of my book titles, my website usually comes in first for results (occasionally Amazon does).


One thing about Draft2Digital’s approach is that it’s one universal link and the reader is automatically directed to their home country’s retail site.  Another is that you could simply use this one link instead of linking to all the stores (domestic and international) where your book is for sale.  I know that my book is listed in at least twenty stores, counting all the retailers that my aggregators are distributing to.  Some of these online stores go out of business, but if you click the ‘rescan’ button at D2D, it automatically repopulates and removes expired links.  In fact, I recommend clicking ‘rescan’ a couple of times, anyway, to make sure all of the links are populated.


Even if you are a Kindle Unlimited (KU) author who exclusively distributes through Amazon, this is useful.  As D2D explains: “But lest you think UBLs aren’t for you—as a KU author the advantage you get from using UBLs is globalization—which is a fancy way of saying that we’ll find your book in every Amazon marketplace, worldwide! So you can paste the URL from, say, your product page at Amazon.com, and Books2Read will find all instances of the book on Amazon.de, Amazon.co.uk, and Amazon.everywhere-else-you-can-think-of! This allows readers to go to the Amazon store that matches their region, without the need to create a separate link.


You don’t even have to be a Draft2Digital author to use the service.  As they put it: “In fact, you don’t even have to be a Draft2Digital author to use it (though we’d really love to have you). All you have to do is visit Books2Read.com and paste your link to get started. If you want to edit your link, you can create a B2R account, or log in with an existing Draft2Digital account.” 


For the UBL button on my website, I chose the text to read “international” since I had the US links and retailers listed on my page already.


Do you use UBLs? How do you help international readers find your books?



How to Help International Readers Find Your Book:
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Photo on Visualhunt.com


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Published on March 18, 2018 21:02

March 17, 2018

Twitterific Writing Links

Bluebird with beak open and 'Twitterific Writing Links' by ElizabethSCraig superimposed on the image


by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig


Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 45,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.


Have you visited the WKB lately?  Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox!  Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.


News and New Stuff

I have an interview (podcast with transcript) on Simon Villeneuve’s BookWorthy site about making time for writing. 


Business / Miscellaneous


Launching Your Second Book and Beyond: 4 Questions to Ask: @Andrea_Dunlop @JaneFriedman


The ‘Profits From Publishing’ Controversy: Do Authors Get Paid Enough? @Porter_Anderson @lizzykremer


Keep the information on your business proprietary: @KristineRusch


Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous


Writers’ Conference Secrets for Success: @FrugalBookPromo @TheIWSG


How To Be A Success At A Book Event: @wandalu64


National Book Awards Open 2018 Submissions and Name Judging Panels: @Porter_Anderson @nationalbook


Lithuania’s ‘Day of the Book Smugglers’ Comes to the UK Ahead of London Book Fair: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration


How to Break Free from Your Writing Rut: @BeingTheWriter @womenonwriting



Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers


Five YA Series with Geeky Heroes: by Brooke Johnson @tordotcom


15 Novels That Subvert Traditional Gender Roles: @knownemily @lithub


17 Literary Podcasts to Ease Your Commute: by Jo Lou @ElectricLit


Reading to Write: @SueBEdwards


Creativity and Inspiration / Miscellaneous


3 Ways “Hustle” May be Hurting Your Creativity: @emi1y_morgan


Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Fitting in Writing


Tips for making time for writing your book: @savilleneuve


Write Four Books A Year As A Juggling Author: @lornafaith @JugglingAuthor


Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Writer’s Block


3 Reasons You Have Writer’s Block—and How to Cure it: @RDCwrites


Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life


How to Be a Confident Writer: @the_writing_pal


Avoiding Burnout With Strategic Breaks: @jamesscottbell


Confessions of a Typewriter Addict: by Anthony Casillo @lithub


Want To Be An Organized Writer? Start With An Effective Life: @10MinNovelists


Bullet Journal Update: Can They Help Your Writing Career? @Jenn_Mattern


How to Tell if Your Writing is Good: @HeatherJacksonW


Three Things You Have In Common With All Writers: by Art Holcomb @storyfix


What if a Standing Desk is Too Big for Your Writing Space? @colleen_m_story


5 Ways Curiosity Can Ruin Your Writing: @annkroeker


6 Types of Writer Pain and How To Resolve Them: @Beth_Barany


Simplifying Your Writer’s Life: @KelsieEngen


Making Friends with Your Inner Editor: by Christine Hennebury @10MinNovelists


Conquer Writer’s Angst: @sallyjenkinsuk


15 Ways to Strengthen Writer Courage: @diannmills


Getting pitched, getting hitched: A literary marriage proposal: @MelissaMHart @TheWriterMag


Genres / Fantasy


Why Read Fantasy Literature? @AGHackney


Reality checks for fantasy: from Just a Writing Aid


Genres / Horror


Women in Horror: 10 Authors to Read: by Wordy Nerd Bird


Why the Horror Trope of the Hard-Boiled Detective Protagonist Needs to End: @ShotgunZen @BDisgusting


Genres / Memoir


Writing Memoir: The Perils of Research: @writingthrulife


Genres / Mystery


Writing a Cozy Mystery: The Murder: @LauraDiSilverio


Search Warrants: What the Officer Should be Able to Tell a Judge: @LeeLofland


Crime Writing: Developing Latent Prints on Difficult Surfaces: @LeeLofland


Genres / Non-Fiction


5 Tips for Writing a Self-Help Book That’s Better Than Tom Brady’s: @UselessEty @WritersDigest


Genres / Romance


7 Interesting Romance Fiction Trends from the Past 10 Years: @EmmanuelNataf


Genres / Science Fiction


Time Loops in SFF: by Stubby the Rocket @tordotcom


Space Opera vs Science Fiction (podcast): @mythcreants


Promo / Ads


How to Boost Your Chances of Getting a BookBub Featured Deal: @DianaUrban @BookBub


Promo / Blogging


Blogging isn’t Dead 8 Reasons to Start an Author Blog: @annerallen


Promo / Metadata


British Industry Slams Wrongful Use of Metadata Fields for Book Promotion: @Porter_Anderson @KarinaLuke


Promo / Miscellaneous


The Art of Publicity: How Indie Publicists Work With Writers: by Tess Taylor @poetswritersinc


Complete Guide to Interview Strategies: @TCKPublishing


5 Terrible Ways to Launch Your Book: @Draft2Digital


Your One-Sentence Book Marketing Plan: @GlennJMiller


Promo / Newsletters


How to use Mailchimp – A Basic Mailchimp Tutorial: @pjrvs


Promo / Websites


How to Build a Website (For Authors): @RuthanneReid


Publishing / Miscellaneous


London Book Fair Lifetime Achievement Nod Will Go to Sara Miller McCune at Intl. Excellence Awards: @Porter_Anderson @SAGE_News


Publishing / News / International Publishing


‘Radical Publishing House’ Verso Wins IPG’s Frankfurter Buchmesse Trade Publisher of the Year: @Porter_Anderson


Future!Publish Program at Leipzig; Greystone Sending 15 to London: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


The Golden Phone Call: Eight Writers Handed US$165,000 Each by Windham-Campbell: @Porter_Anderson @pblossomhwy


A new Pop Up Project announced today in London (March 12) celebrates art and internationalism: @Porter_Anderson


Open Road Acquires US Graham Greene Ebook Rights; Unicorn Announces Ali Cavanaugh Book: @chgreig @Porter_Anderson


BookNet Canada’s 2017 Sales Performance Report Shows Online Buying, Younger Readers, and Big Poetry: @Porter_Anderson @BookNet_Canada


Three Ways PEN’s New Report Says China Is Compromising Free Expression: @Porter_Anderson


Publishing / Options / Self-Publishing


Tips for successful self-publishing: @IndieAuthorALLI


Comparing Print-On-Demand vs Offset Printing (Pros & Cons): @ReedsyHQ


Publishing / Options / Traditional Publishing


7 Questions for Writers to Ask While Researching a Small Press (via @JaneFriedman ):


Publishing / Process / Book Design


7 Best Book Cover Trends to Stay Current in 2018: by Calvin Emerson @JFbookman


Publishing / Process / Translation


Man Booker International Prize 2018 Longlist Spotlights Books Translated From 10 Languages: @Porter_Anderson


France’s 2018 Literature in Translation: The 10 Shortlisted Titles From the French-American Foundation: @Porter_Anderson @HowardCurtis49 @EmKateRam


A Translator’s Diary: @EmKateRam @vee_ess_eee


Writing Craft / Beginnings


A Lesson in Deep POV — First Page Critique: @SueColetta1 @killzoneauthors


Tips for character intros: from Just a Writing Aid


Avoid Nagging False Suspense Questions in Your Story Opening: @peterselgin @JaneFriedman


Tips for beginning your novel: @Margo_L_Dill


Writing Craft / Characters / Antagonists


How to Write Memorable Villains: @evans_writer @RMFWriters


Writing Craft / Characters / Development


Write Fictional Characters as Complex & Realistic as You Are: MBTI for Writers (blog series): @MandyCorine


Characters As Mirrors: @beccapuglisi


Character Development Questions: Building Character Arcs: @nownovel


Writing Craft / Characters / Protagonists


Have You Chosen the Right Main Character to Tell Your Story? @kristen_kieffer


How To Write A Character Who Can Carry A Series: by Rebecca Langley @standoutbooks


Writing Craft / Common Mistakes


Avoid Common Writing Mistakes: by Natalie Hanemann @RachelleGardner


Writing Craft / Dialogue


Do Your Characters Talk too Much? When to Use Indirect Dialogue: @annerallen


Writing Craft / Diversity


Description: Making Representation Obvious: from Tropes are Tools


Writing Craft / Endings


Epilogues and How To Write an Effective One: @ReedsyHQ


Writing Craft / Flashback and Back Story


Avoiding Info Dumps: from Just a Writing Aid


Writing Craft / Lessons from Books and Film


5 Writing Lessons from Groundhog Day: @JennyHansenCA


4 Lessons Writers Can Learn from ‘The Good Place’: by Karen Krumpak @WritersDigest


6 Ways Mark Twain Can Help You Improve Your Writing: @FredBobJohn


Writing Craft / Miscellaneous


9 Tips to Improve Your Writing: @katy239


4 Tips for Writing to the Right Audience: @KMWeiland


7 Ways to Bring More Artistry to Your Writing: @soniasimone


The Question Your Novel Answers: @NancyJAuthor @WriterUnboxed


How To Write About the Body in Creative Nonfiction: @kayladeanwrites @DIYMFA


Should You Write What You Know? 31 Authors Weigh In: @knownemily @lithub


What is sticky writing?  @pubcoach


Writing Craft / Plot Holes


The Magic Fix-it Scene: @ml_keller


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting


Elevate Your Story – Push Your Hero Off a Cliff: @jeannevb @WritersDigest


The Art of The Plot Twist (Video): @12BPSeries


A Simple Tip to Help Get Rid of Saggy Middles: @FaeRowen


Writing Craft / Punctuation and Grammar


A Review of Clauses and Conjunctions: @LiveWriteThrive


Writing Craft / Revision


The Author’s Survival Guide to Track Changes: @LisaPoisso


Ten Reasons Why You Need an Editor: @carolcram @WomenWriters


Hedge Words and Inflation Words: Prune Them From Your Writing: @JRHwords @JaneFriedman


Breaking Writing Rules Right: Don’t Use Filter Words: @SeptCFawkes


Writing Craft / Revisions / Critiques


How to Create a Critique Group that Works: @WriteNowCoach


An editor takes on a submitted second chapter: @kcraftwriter


Writing Craft / Special Needs


Building The Disabled World: @WriterOdell @sfwa


Writing Craft / Synopses


How to Write A Synopsis: @editoreditorial @IndieAuthorALLI


Writing Craft / Voice


Masterful Voice in Novels: @LiveWriteThrive


Reading Your Way to Great Writing Voice: @Kid_Lit


Writing Craft / World-Building


7 Tips for Creating Believable Fantasy or Science Fiction Worlds: @Janice_Hardy


Creating a Fantasy Race : by Aaron Miles @FantasyFaction


Stop World Building and Start Writing: @12BPSeries


Writing Tools / Apps


5 Powerful Upgrades to Your Writing Software: @DaveChesson


Uncategorized


Family businesses as an element in crime fiction: @mkinberg



The top writing links from last week are on Twitterific:
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Published on March 17, 2018 21:01

March 15, 2018

Small Presses: 7 Questions to Ask While Researching Them

The Business of Being a Writer by Jane Friedmanby Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig (with content from @JaneFriedman


I receive one or two emails a month from new writers asking for information and help in either publishing or promoting their book.


It’s happened enough that I have a detailed ‘canned response’ email that I’ve written to give details and resources to these writers.  The main resource that I reference is Jane Friedman’s blog, in particular her collection of articles titled “Start Here.”  One is Start Here: How to Self-Publish Your Book and  another is  Start Here: How to Get Your Book Published. 


So when I was offered a complimentary ARC of Jane’s new book (publishing today, March 16), The Business of Being a Writer, I eagerly accepted it.  As expected, it’s jam-packed with savvy information for writers.  One common issue I notice in  writers is a certain amount of business insecurity, a fear of making a mistake.  This is a reference to help  keep writers of all levels of experience from making a mistake.


One important note is that this book, unlike many others that I’m familiar with on the market, encompasses the writing business in its entirety.  It doesn’t stop with writing books.  This is also an excellent resource for anyone interested in supplementing their novel-writing or nonfiction income with freelancing in its different forms. There’s also an entire section on ways for writers to make money, including grants, contests, affiliate income, and teaching and online education.


I was fascinated reading Jane’s section overview on understanding the publishing industry: trade book publishing, magazine publishing, online and digital media, and 21st century literary publishing.


The book offers help with finding a traditional publisher (small and large), pursuing self-publishing, and promoting published books.


Here is an excerpted piece from Jane’s book on researching small presses.  She recommends seven questions for writers to ask  (with more detail offered in the book):


Where are the books distributed?


Does the publisher invest in a print run or use print-on-demand only?


For digital-only publishers, what value do they provide that you need?


What’s the publisher’s editing process like? Will you be assigned an editor?


What marketing and promotion do their titles receive?


How can you terminate the deal?


Can you speak to recent authors?


Obviously, Jane Friedman is a go-to resource for me and her blog is the place I send new writers to the most.  What resources do you depend on?  Read any helpful books for writers recently?


The Business of Being a Writer:
Available at:


Amazon
Barnes and Noble
IndieBound



7 questions for writers to ask while researching a small press (via @JaneFriedman ):
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Published on March 15, 2018 21:01

March 11, 2018

5 Powerful Upgrades to Your Writing Software

desktop showing keyboard and monitor.


by Dave Chesson@DaveChesson


For every challenge a writer faces, there is a helping hand available in the form of a tool or app.


While no tool is a replacement for talent or creativity, there are plenty of options available to make your writing process smoother and more productive.


From comprehensive writing suites packed with powerful pro features, to smaller scale solutions to a single specific problem, there is software available for every need.


We’ll now take a look at five of the best writing tools available, and explore exactly how they can benefit your personal writing process.


Scrivener

Have you ever been frustrated by the limitations of standard writing software like Microsoft Word or Google Docs?


While these tools can be suitable for simple writing projects, they are often far from ideal for longer works, such as full-length books.


Scrivener is a powerful writing application absolutely packed with features. Some of the key benefits offered by Scrivener include –



The ability to store and access your research within the same environment you write in
An easy to use outlining mode to have a ‘big picture’ overview of your book
Free community created resources, such as Scrivener templates
Powerful editing and revision options for longer works

Scrivener is one of the most comprehensive and fully featured book writing software applications on the market. You can also enjoy a fully featured 30 day free trial and a range of Scrivener discounts if you decide the software is right for you.


Hemingway

While there is no substitution for a talented human editor to polish and perfect your writing into the best form possible, Hemingway is probably the closest thing.


Using Hemingway allows you to –



Objectively assess the readability of your text
Identifies your use of the passive voice and whether it’s excessive
Highlights hard to read sentences
Shows which of your phrases have simpler alternatives

 


Hemingway is an excellent middleground between self-editing and using the services of a professional. No matter whether you’re writing a lengthy book, or a simple blog post, Hemingway will make your work closer to the concise prose of its namesake.


Self Control

One of the biggest problems for many modern writers is distraction.


We live in an age of constant information overload. It’s never been easier to procrastinate and lose focus on our writing.


This problem is compounded by the fact that we often write on internet connected devices. This is often necessary for cloud collaboration or research during writing.


If you sometimes struggle to stay focused, help is at hand. Self Control is a simple tool which allows you to –



Specify a list of websites or other online destinations you wish to block your access to
Set a period of time where you won’t be able to physically access these distractions
Take your willpower out of the equation. Even if you delete Self Control, you still won’t be able to access the specified distractions for the specified duration.

If you struggle with staying on task during your writing sessions, a tool like Self Control may be the enforced focus you need.


Write Or Die

If you struggle to hit your word count targets, or find a lack of motivation holds you back from achieving your writing goals, Write Or Die is one of the most unique solutions available.


The software offers a simple writing environment which allows you to set targets such as a period of time to write for or a desired word count.


Where Write Or Die makes things interesting is the way it motivates you to achieve your aims. For example, you can set Write Or Die to –



Reward you with a pleasing image, such as a cute kitten, when you hit your target
Punish you with a negative image, such as a spider, if you fall behind your target
Kamikaze mode. This actually begins to delete your work if you fail to keep pace

Not every writer will enjoy or benefit from the extreme approach to motivation taken by Write Or Die. However, if you ever struggle with productivity, it’s an out of the box approach worth exploring.


Quora

Quora offers a wide range of benefits for writers of every type. It’s an excellent tool for both research and promotional purposes.


By using Quora, you can –



Receive expert answers to any question you have. This can provide valuable factual info for your writing, or allow you to get a real human perspective on any experience imaginable, to add richness and depth to your characters.
Answer questions you have knowledge on. As a writer, you are certain to have valuable insight into a wide range of topics. By answering questions on Quora, you not only help others, but also promote yourself and your work at the same time. A genuine win/win.

If you spend some time browsing through Quora, you’ll soon see the wealth of information available. It’s a great place to find inspiration for your writing while benefiting in a positive and helpful community.


Writing Software Summary

The world of writing software is packed with options for every need and taste.


You can use –



Scrivener for powerful writing organization, research and formatting
Hemingway for concise and impactful text
Self Control to eliminate distraction and stay focused
Write Or Die to provide an extreme injection of motivation
Quora for information, inspiration and value-giving promotion

I’m always on the lookout for new writing tools, so if you have a favorite you think other writers would love, please feel free to share in the comments.


Dave Chesson teaches authors advanced book marketing tactics at Kindlepreneur.com. He likes sharing in-depth, actionable guides, such as his recent guide to effective book cover design. His free time is spent in Tennessee with his wife and children.



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Published on March 11, 2018 21:01

March 10, 2018

Twitterific Writing Links

Bluebird with beak open and 'Twitterific Writing Links' by ElizabethSCraig superimposed on the image


by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig


Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 45,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.


Have you visited the WKB lately?  Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox!  Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.


New Stuff: 

The 8th annual online Nonfiction Writers Conference, May 2-4The opening session features a conversation with Gretchen Rubin, New York Times bestselling author of The Four Tendencies, Better Than Before, and The Happiness Project. Additional sessions cover how to write, publish, promote and profit with nonfiction books.   There is a fee for attending the conference, but here is a discount code for 33% off for my blog readers: ElizabethSpannCraig35 


Picture book resources: This was something cool that I stumbled across this week: free picture book templates and other resources from the talented Debbie Ridpath Ohi (@inkyelbows).


I have a post up today on the Alliance of Independent Authors blog for their Sunday Self-Publishing Success stories.


Business / Miscellaneous


Your Author Career Strategy (Podcast): @DIYMFA @katmartinauthor


The Writer’s Guide to Avoiding Side-Hustle Burnout: @CordeliaCallsIt @thewritelife


The Risks and Rewards of Bringing Your Spouse or Partner Into Your Business: @dorcas_ct @JaneFriedman


What Actually Matters to Your Audience? @cathyyardley


Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous


New UK MFest: A Focus in April on ‘Bringing Muslims and Non-Muslims Together’: @tufyal @MFestUK @Porter_Anderson


Hay Festival to Identify 100 noteworthy books by women in last 100 years: @Porter_Anderson @hayfestival


Helen Bernstein Book Award Finalists for Excellence in Journalism Books: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives



Creativity and Inspiration / First Novels


Writing Fiction: This Is How You Write A Story: @mbcollings @thecreativepenn


Creativity and Inspiration / Goal setting


Confessions of a Reluctant Goal Setter: @GailHyatt


Using Gretchen Rubin’s 4 Tendencies to Meet Writing Goals: @jillkemerer


Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration


Encouraging Words for Writers: 3 Essential Reminders for Struggling Writers: @Jffelkins


5 Keys To Help You Finish Your Novel: @lornafaith


Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers


5 Tips for Reading (and Finishing) Challenging Books: by Laura Sackton @BookRiot


How to Become a Reading Writer: @WriteNowCoach


Five Books in Which Magic Has Consequences: @mimi_albert @tordotcom


Five Magical Weapons You Don’t Want Your Enemy to Bring to a Fight: @MarcJTurner @tordotcom


Creativity and Inspiration / Motivation


Why You Need to Finish Things: @ErinMFeldman


Creativity and Inspiration / Perfectionism


Kill Perfectionism With This One Practice: @_KimWriteEdit_ @write_practice


Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Fitting in Writing


How To Find And Capture Ideas For Your Novel: @thecreativepenn


Nobody Beats The Triangle, But You Can Be Prepared For It: by Robert Wood @standoutbooks


Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Writing Quickly


How To Write Fast Like A Pro: @Bang2write


How a Writing Calendar Can Help You Succeed (Podcast): @cksyme


Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life


Nothing is Ever Wasted for Writers: @LisaLisax31


13 Writers Who Grew to Hate Their Own Books: @knownemily@lithub


How to Stop Your Computer from Hurting Your Shoulders : @colleen_m_story


From 2000 to 300—Why You’re Writing Too Much: @readstevenjames @WriterUnboxed


How to Banish Interruptions from Your Writing Time: @colleen_m_story @AngelaAckerman


“10 Things The Gym Taught Me About Writing”: @Gabino_Iglesias @LitReactor


The Baby, the Book, and the Bathwater: @heatherkabel @parisreview


Navigating Creative Burnout: Rebecca Green with @DanBlank (podcast):


Writer James Mullen on finding inspiration (and taking notes) on the go:


How let go of the ‘sorry cycle’ and begin again: @pubcoach


Genres / Memoir


The Secret of Great Memoir: The Mature Self: @CSLakin


“3 Reasons I Could Stop Writing Memoir But Won’t” : @PlankRonit @brevity


Genres / Mystery


4 tips for writing about cops: @LeeLofland


An Unusual Take on Cozy Mysteries: By Glenn Nilson


Horses as elements in crime fiction: @mkinberg


Genres / Non-Fiction


5 Reasons Why Nonfiction Authors Need Career Plans: @NinaAmir


Genres / Romance


A writer’s struggles with sex scenes: @judithLavezzi @RMFWriters


Genres / Screenwriting


5 Reasons Why You Should Write a Screenplay: @jehunter5811


Promo / Book Descriptions and Copywriting


Top Ingredients to Include in Your Book Description: @mweidenbenner1


Promo / Book Reviews


Making the Most of Book Reviews:


Promo / Connecting with Readers


4 Tips for Engaging International Readers: @ShanaGray_


10 ways to get people to try your book: @StacyClaflin @RomanceUniv


Promo / Miscellaneous


6 Proven Methods for Selling More Books & Reaching More Readers: @ThisIsWriterMom


Tips for selling more books: @Bookgal @CaballoFrances


Promo / Newsletters


What to Put in Your Author Newsletter: @GlennJMiller


Promo / Social Media Tips


How to Create a Facebook Group for Your Community: @kikimojo


Publishing / Miscellaneous


5 Viewpoints on Creating Readers of Tomorrow: Literacy, Digital, and Children’s Books: @Porter_Anderson @Bodour @pubperspectives


Women’s Prize for Fiction, Formerly the Baileys, Announces Trio of Sponsors: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Scholastic News Kids Press Corps Opens 2018-2019 Applications: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


How Do I Know When I’m Done? Five Stages of Writing a Book: @writeabook


Publishing / News / International Publishing


Domestic Fiction Leads Slovakia’s Book Market Growth and Bestsellers: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Kids Can Press Partners with General Mills on ‘Bring Back the Bees’ : @joseebis @porter_anderson @pubperspectives


Three Former Midas PR Players Form Colour PR, a New Agency in London: @Porter_Anderson @dafreeman @PRincolour


Publishing / Options / Self-Publishing


Successful Self-Publishing Tips: @thecreativepenn @SpatzSteven


Publishing / Options / Traditional Publishing / Querying


Steps for Approaching an Agent: @RachelleGardner


Agent Spotlight Interview with @literarycarrie from @LDLiteraryhttp @NatalieIAguirre


How to Find, Research and Evaluate Literary Agents: @ReedsyHQ @AuthorsPublish


Publishing / Options / Traditional Publishing / Rejections


Why Failure Can Help You Become a Better Writer: @4amWriter


Publishing / Process / Book Design


Can You (Should You) Typeset Your Own Book? @ariellelle @ReedsyHQ


Publishing / Process / Translation


A Japanese novel published 18 years ago finds new audience in English in time of Trump: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives


Writing Craft / Beginnings


How to Write an Exciting First Chapter: @A_K_Perry @DIYMFA


2 Techniques Novelists Can Borrow from Film When Writing Opening Scenes: @kestrester @WritersDigest


Writing Craft / Characters / Antagonists


Give Your Villain a Great Villain Speech: @SPressfield


Writing Craft / Characters / Development


4 key moments for a great driving relationship: @WriteToSell


The Role Of Emotional Wounds Within Character Arc: @AngelaAckerman


Discovering Your Cast of Characters: @ShanDitty


Writing Craft / Characters / Protagonists


Infographic: Hero vs Anti-Hero: @wvancamp


Writing Craft / Conflict


How to increase conflict in your novel: @jasonbougger


Writing Craft / Drafts


First drafts are always bad. Is it true? @Peter_Rey_


Writing Craft / Miscellaneous


How to Write Realistic Fight Scenes: @JMRobison


Your Novel’s Best Reading Level: @SnowflakeGuy


Channeling Your Childhood Heroes: @jamesscottbell


What Do I Write Next? Experiment and Expand Your Repertoire: @annkroeker


Your Writing’s Driver: @Lindasclare


Do You Know Where Your Pinch Points Are? @SueColetta1


Writing Craft / Pacing


7 Tips to Improve Your Novel’s Pacing: @danamarton


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting


7 Steps How to Plot Your Novel and Your Personal Goals: @plotwhisperer


Is Your Novel All Premise and No Plot? @Janice_Hardy


Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Research


How To Effectively And Efficiently Do Research for Your Historical Novel: @StephMorrill


Writing Craft / Punctuation and Grammar


3 Types of Unnecessary Hyphenation: @writing_tips


Writing Craft / Revision


10 Ways to Stay Sane During the Book Editing Process: @batwood


Proofreading – How to Slow Your Brain’s Auto-correct: @MidGradeMafia


Cutting back our story: from Edittorent


Writing Craft / Revisions / Critiques


Why It’s So Hard for an INFJ (or INFP) Writer to Show Anyone Else Our Writing: @losapala


Writing Craft / Settings and Description


Layering Description: from Tropes are Tools


Writing Craft / Word Crafting


300+ Ways to Describe Noses: A Word List for Writers: @KathySteinemann


Master List of Ways to Describe Anger: @BrynDonovan


Writing Tools / Resources


Pre-Writing Worksheet: @MarchMcCarron


Finding Your Mentor: @LynnHBlackburn @KillerNashville


Resources For Writing Sketchy Topics: from Tropes are Tools


Uncategorized


Fighting and Gender: @WriterNancyJane @sfwa


Author Jennifer Egan Named President of the Newly Combined PEN America: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives




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Published on March 10, 2018 21:01