Elizabeth Spann Craig's Blog, page 100
August 28, 2016
Checklist for a New Release
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Releases are always a lot more work than I think they are. That’s because of all the little things I have to do to prepare. It’s a lot. It would be more if I did a lot of promo work (blog tours, ads, etc.) for the release, but I usually just like to start working on the next book.
I thought I’d share a checklist of the types of tasks I do when a book is ready to release. Some of the things I can do while my editor has the book and I’m waiting to make corrections. Some of the things must be done when the book is ready to publish.
Checklist
Set up my newsletter to announce the new release when it’s time. I use MailChimp.
Write a personal author’s note for the back-matter section of the book and for that section on the Amazon product page that we access through Author Central (From the Author).
Update and review the rest of my book’s back-matter to make sure it’s accurate and complete (list of books by series where to find me online, how and where to sign up for my newsletter, a pitch to ask readers to review my book wherever they purchased it).
Begin loading book information/metadata into the different retail and distributor sites: Amazon, CreateSpace (print), IngramSpark (print), ACX (audiobook), Draft2Digital (distributor), Smashwords (distributor).
Use the same metadata descriptions consistently for my keywords, BISAC, series name, book description, author bio, etc.
Assign an ISBN for each format and note it on the list I keep to track my ISBNs ( Book designer Joel Friedlander has a handy logbook as a free download).
Upload the editorial reviews for the series to those sections on the sites (on Amazon, through Author Central).
Update my website to announce the release and to say what I’m working on now.
Ensure Goodreads has linked the new title to my series and my name.
Acquire affiliate links from Amazon and Apple to use on my website and for other promo.
Check that Amazon has added my book to the series list and that it’s linked to my Author Central page.
Update LinkedIn
Consider running a giveaway on Goodreads.
Set one of the previous books in the same series as free.
Announce the release on Facebook (once).
Send copies to people who have helped me produce the book in some way.
What have I forgotten? Does this look a lot like your own list?
A checklist for tasks surrounding a new release:
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August 27, 2016
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
A weekly roundup of the best writing links from around the web.
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 30,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
The ethics of ghost-writing: http://ow.ly/cq1c303iNu4 @Roz_Morris
Madeleine L’Engle on the 3 Most Important Things for Writers: http://ow.ly/cu4W303iNxk @WriterJoMalby
Podcasting and Indie Authors: Is Podcasting Right for You? http://ow.ly/JjsO303iNEt @CaballoFrances
Creating Realistic Cultures in Worldbuilding: http://ow.ly/BzLM303iNSy by Chris Winkle @mythcreants
Canada’s Shelfie Partners with Germany’s De Gruyter in Ebook Bundling: http://ow.ly/oFAM303DFLk @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
From Jane Austen to George RR Martin, the novella is making a comeback: http://ow.ly/fQQO303iOhE @Holly_bops @Independent
Tips for writing what you know: http://ow.ly/TOzc303iO4E by Suzanne Lieurance
Reader Audiences and Analytics: What Do They Really Reveal? http://ow.ly/Sd30303iNOg @CaballoFrances
Trust Your Creative Process: http://ow.ly/3oMC303iNLY @AuthorAthenaM
What Makes a Good Ghost Story? http://ow.ly/ymZS303iOdv @FinishedPages
Clothes in Books and Ways to go Wrong: http://ow.ly/yOgY303iOrd @rosalyster @The_Millions
6 Tips to Grow Your Readership & Manage Your Content: http://ow.ly/xNmc303iNWv by Deborah Lyn Stanley
How To Give Your Readers A Book Hangover in 3 Easy Steps: http://ow.ly/FqoM303jy0E @sacha_black
Finding the Balance Between Hooking Readers and Setting up the Story: http://ow.ly/ame0303jxMK @Janice_Hardy
When Is Your Writing Done? http://ow.ly/LKeK303jxa1 @Lindasclare
Starting a New Author’s’ Group: http://ow.ly/LXXs303jxIu @MairiNorris
Writing Your Story Clothesline: http://ow.ly/26nO303jx86 @Lindasclare
How To Write And Market Romance: http://ow.ly/7J53303iN2f @JAHuss @thecreativepenn
The 10 most Influential Poets in History: http://ow.ly/hHUc303Dg6E @My_poetic_side
Why It’s Crucial to “Write Ugly”: http://ow.ly/URvY303e80q @LisaCron
WritingPrompts on @reddit : http://ow.ly/ZMUz303D2DI
Crime fiction featuring historical figures as sleuths: http://ow.ly/51zn303sq4i @mkinberg
How to Create a Morning Routine for Writers: http://ow.ly/s2qg303e7oH @SukhiJutla
Have You Seen These Social Media Tweaks? http://ow.ly/7YYy303iNHA @CaballoFrances
10 Incorrect Assumptions About Writers: http://ow.ly/ksPh303e7nf @NatePhilbrick
Tips for writing during busy times: http://ow.ly/n5hE303BZHw
6 Questions to Make Sure Your Story Has Stakes: http://ow.ly/uaj5303e85g @HeatherJacksonW
Character Archetypes: S for Sidekick: http://ow.ly/YPUR303e7fP @HunterEmkay
Where to Begin Your Book: How to Choose the Best Opening: http://ow.ly/qsBN303e7Eb @writeabook
5 Books With Unlikely Heroes: http://ow.ly/DjOx303e7OT @tordotcom by Brian Hastings
Making the Switch from Traditional to Indie Author: http://ow.ly/e5My303e7kc @leighrduncan
12 Grammar and Writing Tips from Archer: http://ow.ly/ZXyt303e7Nu @WritersCramp1
5 Reasons Your Protagonist Deserves To Die: http://ow.ly/prxG303e7Jl @Chris_Kokoski
Query Letters: The Pitch: http://ow.ly/Ich2303e83T @AnnieNeugebauer
In Defense of Trash Lit: http://ow.ly/Vl8W303AJvI by Lisa Levy @lithub
The Writing Tricks We’d Be Naked Without: http://ow.ly/yB6G303dzqv @jesslourey @sbakerwriter
How did children’s lit evolve from prim morality tales to Captain Underpants? http://ow.ly/JjAE303dyTU @xwaldie @Slate
The danger of being an observant character in a crime fiction novel: http://ow.ly/2Yh1303A4ZN @mkinberg
Can the Academic Write? http://ow.ly/RLxQ303cDUP @Jo_Livingstone
Workplace novels exploring the dystopic and surreal: http://ow.ly/d60u303cDTb @lithub @TobiasCarroll
How To Write A Product Review: http://ow.ly/Vjmj303b5iN @woodwardkaren
The Hot Sheet: industry newsletter for authors (30 day free trial): from @Porter_Anderson & @JaneFriedman: http://ow.ly/FvZs303zn3j
How The Maltese Falcon Illuminates Cozies: http://ow.ly/2l0I303b58e @JeffCohenwriter
Augmented Reality Reveals the Magic Hidden in Book Retail Spaces: http://ow.ly/i37Q303dyWc @theindiepubmag
Pitches To Drive an Editor Batty: http://ow.ly/5L0A303dzgQ @behlerpublish
How to Write a Classic: 7 Key Elements: http://ow.ly/F9Tu303dyXb @nownovel
Creating tension with theme: http://ow.ly/y6BZ303dyZ2 @mythicscribes by Brian DeLeonard
On sidekicks: http://ow.ly/rGyh303dyXD @p2p_editor
First Impressions Matter: Utilizing Point of View: http://ow.ly/pCHU303dzv0 @LisaEBetz
Pros and Cons of Getting Inside a Villain’s Mind: http://ow.ly/iyqv303cDHL @Alexlakeauthor @lithub
Distribution, explained by an editor: http://ow.ly/usiQ303b50z @TerriBischoff
Aaron Sorkin On How To Write A Gripping Monologue: http://ow.ly/Rfgi303b4W5 @woodwardkaren
Kenyan Publishers Call for Zero VAT on Books: http://ow.ly/NQDc303uPUP @DennisAbrams2 @pubperspectives @David_Waweru
Examples of good vs bad storytelling: http://ow.ly/rMpy303cDst @rxena77
5 Crime Fiction Blunders To Avoid: http://ow.ly/A4V0303cDDR @LucyVHayAuthor
How do you write legal fiction when no one finds the body? http://ow.ly/p2cv303cDn2 @stephenwoodfin
5 Tips for Editing Dialogue: http://ow.ly/Rhn1303cDrw @robertleebrewer
6 Things Alfred Hitchcock Can Teach You About Writing: http://ow.ly/hm13303cDly @Writers_Write
Treatment vs. Healing and the Portrayal of Mental Illness in Fiction: http://ow.ly/RfOW303cDM1 @JennaTKahn @asfmag
Why You Need to Create Visuals Now: http://ow.ly/Cfnz303cDqw @BadRedheadMedia
Emotional Wound Entry: Being So Beautiful It’s All People See: http://ow.ly/fv8m303cDo6 @AngelaAckerman
Internal Dialogue: The Greatest Tool for Gaining Reader Confidence: http://ow.ly/Dvaz303a0Po @ESimsAuthor @JaneFriedman
‘Credit the Artist Who Created That Artwork’: Illustrations Matter in a Book’s Success: http://ow.ly/Llae303uPEq @pressfuturist @jabberworks
Charismatic Characters in Crime Fiction http://ow.ly/Ay4A303spYF @mkinberg
International Notes: Beijing Book Fair, Japan’s Mobile Games, Scotland’s Indie Publishers: http://ow.ly/zzmM303uQ2X @Porter_Anderson
Antagonists, Villains, and Antiheroes: http://ow.ly/MCiA303a0lz @PollyIyer
5 Ways to Make a Sentence More Concise: http://ow.ly/CDsh303a09Q @writing_tips
Keep Readers by Using Variable Rewards: http://ow.ly/IBwZ303a0sY @artofstoriesAB
8 Ways to Use Your Superpower to Market Your Self-Published Book: http://ow.ly/oQgr303a0KK @chandraclarke
Breaking Grammar Rules in Poetry Writing: http://ow.ly/i0ZO303a0ck @WritingForward
7 Ways To Make Your Own Luck: http://ow.ly/4FJ1303a04O @paulawhyman @WritersDigest
How to Write for Multiple Demographics at Once: http://ow.ly/jmYc303a0qn @TimothyCarter
Crime and Facebook for Writers: http://ow.ly/86Jv303a0eP @LeslieBudewitz
7 excuses writers use to avoid exercise: http://ow.ly/EyvE303a0ix @colleen_m_story
Pop Culture References and Dating a Book: http://ow.ly/CLyN303a0nR @dianapfrancis
After Losing A Family Member: Can Writing A Novel Be Cathartic? http://ow.ly/wz00303a0CN @PBRWriter @colleen_m_story
5 Emerging Women Authors Intimately Explore Place: http://ow.ly/quzp303a0wc @KristenRadtke @ElectricLit
How to Write a Detective Story: 7 Keys: http://ow.ly/gdsk3038AfN @nownovel
Tips for Creating Voice in Your Writing: http://ow.ly/DBx63038A9U @bethklewis
Print Books: Why They’re A Secret Self-Publishing Weapon: http://ow.ly/e3ee3038A0m @JennyBravoBooks
How to Write a Romantic Novel for All Genre Lovers: http://ow.ly/wjTE3038AiC @nownovel
The Limitlessness of International Literature: http://ow.ly/HEQt3038AAF @lizastjames @GuernicaMag @adamzlevy
Poetry: The lines and lyrics that stick in our minds: http://ow.ly/qrjy3038AmO @FluentMundo @lithub
Free Instruction for Authors: http://ow.ly/cJeK3036fL4 @JFbookman
5 Important Skills for the Indie Writer: http://ow.ly/tNSt303snrI @TheIWSG by J.L. Campbell
5 Tips for Going on an Offline Book Tour: http://ow.ly/EFJI3036g3G @Book_Arch
Harry Potter Ebooks Released in South Korea: http://ow.ly/oHma303snJ6 @Porter_Anderson @trajectory @pubperspectives
12 Ambient Noise Generators for Creative Work: http://ow.ly/dWuQ3038A7r @KaylaRMinguez
The horror of female adolescence and how to write about it: http://ow.ly/dXYs3038Auj @BerryFLW @GuardianBooks
Pre-writing techniques to help you tackle the blank page: http://ow.ly/7GDL3038Acg @RobTobin
How To Make Multiple Antagonists Shine In Your Story: http://ow.ly/HwB73038A1S @standoutbooks
5 Essential Writing Habits Learned While Ghost-Writing Bestsellers: http://ow.ly/sfY3303iNld @Roz_Morris @WriterJoMalby
Options for putting our books in print and costs of doing so: http://ow.ly/fn9k303snfx
7 Things To Know to Master Your Genre’s Book Cover: http://ow.ly/20Ai3036fqG @sacha_black
Canada’s @wattpad Rolls Out In-Story Advertising Revenue for Writers: http://ow.ly/y6d9303r84k @Porter_Anderson
Links I shared last week: http://ow.ly/23KN303r1hE .Every link I’ve ever shared (30K+,free and searchable): writerskb.com @Hiveword
What to say about someone’s art when you have nothing nice to say: http://ow.ly/vMDd303qCdz @austinkleon
Is Your Character Considering Suicide? Info for Writers: http://ow.ly/Rhvd3034dYH @FionaQuinnBooks
Are You Botching Your Dialogue? http://ow.ly/Y9i83036fhW @KristenLambTX
How to be a Fearless Writer: http://ow.ly/xjYZ3036gGz @SukhiJutla
4 Truths and 4 Myths That Every New Novelist Should Know: http://ow.ly/Ylfb3036fNy @FlorenceOsmund
The Literature of Pregnancy and New Motherhood: http://ow.ly/M2c93036h1Q by Lily Gurton-Wachter @latimesbooks
Stress & Burnout: How to Get Your Creative Mojo Back: http://ow.ly/T6e63036fmB @KristenLambTX
How To Set Up A Book Tour: http://ow.ly/N10p3036fRl @Book_Arch @WhereWritersWin
The top writing links from last week are on Twitterific:
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August 25, 2016
Writing in Busy Times
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Usually I think of summer as a lazier time when I can leisurely get peripheral writing-related chores completed. I’d put all kinds of things on my calendar to do this summer: Facebook ad experiments, slideshows for LinkedIn, website stuff. There was no time to do any of the extras I wanted to try. I did write a book, though, and promoted one that came out in May. There was a lot of writing on the go.
So what do we do during frantically busy times to stay on track with our writing goals? I’ve got a few tips:
Revisit your goals. Are you trying to knock out a NaNoWriMo-esque word count? It may be better to dial back your goal to something so manageable that you don’t have to worry at all. To stay motivated, it may be better to have a string of daily successes than to rack up a huge word count.
Be flexible with setbacks and with when and where you write. One of the most helpful things that I did was to learn how to write in public places and to be able to pick up my story in odd pockets of the day when I had dead time…waiting for my car to have its oil changed, waiting in a doctor’s office, waiting in a carpool line. Be sure to upload your story and outline to the cloud so that you can access it on the go (this can be as simple as emailing it to yourself).
Make the most of a quick writing session. I write a lot faster when I know what I’m writing that day. If you’re not a fan of outlines, at least sketch out a sentence or two at the end of the previous writing session to indicate what you plan on writing the next time.
Even if you have no time to write, use lists. You can still make progress on that manuscript, even on the worst days. I’ve found it’s helpful to have headers of lists to fill out: “5 ways to describe my protagonist,” “7 ways to describe the main setting,” “5 potential subplots involving secondary characters,” “5 possible endings for this book,” “7 ways my protagonist can grow,” “5 things my protagonist fears more than anything,” “my protagonist’s biggest goals,” etc.
Tips specifically for busy parents:
For me, this was more about squeezing writing in to a packed schedule without feeling as if I were being a distant parent. My tips are geared to that goal:
Share what you’re doing. I found it helped to loop my kids into what I was doing, especially when they were younger. When they see us on a laptop, to them we could be doing anything. We could be on social media or playing a game. I’d tell them a little about my story and what I was working on that day to help them feel part of the process.
Don’t stare at the laptop when they’re talking. I’m so guilty of this one, but I find that 90% of the time now I’m cognizant enough to give family members (kids and my husband) all of my attention when they’re trying to talk to me.
On the other hand, I think it’s vital to tell them you need 15/30/45 minutes of uninterrupted time for your writing so that they can understand/respect it. Maybe later, when they’re adults with their own dreams, they’ll remember that we respected our art and invested time in it. For toddlers, I put a timer out and told them when it dinged they could come in (and, yes, this was for just 5-7 minutes). For the especially little guys, I’d recommend keeping them in a safe place like a crib and giving them board books so they can read while we write.
I always did something fun with my children as a reward for their cooperation: we played cards together or drew a picture or read a story, etc.
And don’t forget:
Take care of yourself. Exercise more, sleep more. There’s no way you can run on empty for very long. And, if you’re really burned out? Just put the manuscript away. But I’d recommend putting the exact date on your calendar that you plan on picking it back up again.
How do you handle writing during the busiest times?
Tips for writing during busy times:
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August 21, 2016
Print is Still Important
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
I’ve found that, bottom-line, readers are still interested in purchasing and reading books in print. My print income remains a stable monthly source of revenue. If there is any lag in putting a new release into print format, I do immediately hear from print-loving readers. Now I start putting a new release through the uploading process for print (which does take a bit longer to go live) before uploading the digital format to retail sites. I’d recommend that everyone offer their books in this format.
A little more information about print options and costs:
Options for the self-publishing writer: CreateSpace (Amazon) and IngramSpark
CreateSpace: “We make it simple to distribute your books, music, and video through Internet retail outlets, your own website, and other bookstores, retailers, libraries, and academic institutions. Get started today! CreateSpace is a DBA of On-Demand Publishing LLC, part of the Amazon group of companies.”
IngramSpark: “IngramSpark is a new Publish On DemandSM platform. It’s an easy-to-use, online publishing tool that provides publishers with simple, cost-effective access to Ingram’s global distribution network for print titles and e-book content.”
What I’m doing: I’ve got my print formats in both CreateSpace and Ingram. I have CreateSpace for US distribution, not expanded distribution (these will all basically be Amazon.com sales of printed books) and Ingram (for US and worldwide bookstores and worldwide book orders…it’s cheaper for non-US readers through Ingram than CS because of cheaper shipping costs). If a reader asks a bookstore to order my book for them, it will be less expensive for the store and the reader to get it through IngramSpark.
Worldwide distribution: As Giacomo Giammateo wrote for ALLi (you should read this entire article):
“Ingram has an edge on shipping internationally. It is fast, easy, and far less expensive. The reason is simple. Ingram has printing facilities in the UK, AU, and partner agreements in Germany and other countries. I can ship a book to a customer in Australia almost as inexpensively as I can other parts of the US using Ingram. Ingram does charge a $1.50 surcharge per order for shipping though, and CS doesn’t.”
About those ISBNs:
I recently received an email from a writer who had picked up on part of an issue, but didn’t get the full picture. She believed she shouldn’t make her books available through Amazon’s CreateSpace because they would be listed as the publisher on record and she’d specifically purchased ISBNs from Bowker so that she could be the publisher on record.
However, there’s an option on CreateSpace to list your own ISBNs or to use their free ones. Using their free ones would mean that CreateSpace was listed as the publisher. This also holds true for other formats (for Smashwords, for example, if you use their free ISBNs).
At IngramSpark, there’s no choice–you must list your own ISBNs. Be prepared to visit Bowker‘s site if you choose to go in this direction. Although…personally speaking…I’ve purchased my own ISBNs from the very start and feel it’s important that my sales are both counted via ISBN and that I have complete ownership in every way of my work.
About costs:
Design costs: You will need to have a PDF of the front and back cover and spine. You could go back to your original cover designer and provide them with your back cover copy, etc. You could also (if you have the rights to your design), take the cover image you have to a place like Fiverr to get a full cover. Author J.P. Medved wrote about his experience there for Lindsay Buroker’s blog. You end up with something that looks like this (this is from my book designer, Karri Klawiter who does all my covers in all formats):
Formatting: You will need to upload a PDF of your book that matches the print size you’ve chosen on CreateSpace and/or IngramSpark. There are formatters who can do this for you, including mine, Rik Hall. You could also use a free online conversion service (Reedsy, for instance). If you use Draft2Digital to distribute your books, you can upload your Word doc to their site and they will allow you to download a PDF).
ISBN: I buy these in bulk so the cost is minimized. As I mentioned above, you can use the free ISBNs with CreateSpace if cost is prohibitive. If you use IngramSpark, you’ll need to add the cost of an ISBN.
Production costs: With CreateSpace, there is no production cost involved. IngramSpark has a $49 fee for each new title.
Print-on-demand is inventory-free. Readers or bookstores order books and they are printed as they’re ordered. There are no stacks of books in our garages or closets. In fact, it’s so inventory-free that I would urge everyone to make sure we do actually have a few, fresh copies of our books in case an event pops up so that we don’t have to pay for rush delivery for a signing.
Are your books in print? What service do you use? Thought on print or anything that I left out?
Options for putting our books in print and costs of doing so:
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August 20, 2016
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
A weekly roundup of the best writing links from around the web.
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 30,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
Revising for Pacing: http://ow.ly/T8C53034ebt @p2p_editor
Communication in our story world: http://ow.ly/H3Po3034dSI by A.D. Shrum
10 Tricks for Getting Your Book Reviewed by a Book Blogger: http://ow.ly/bipZ3034e1i @sugarbeatbc @annerallen
3 Cases of Complicated Parenthetical Punctuation: http://ow.ly/Cy4Z3034dBX @writing_tips
12 Stages of Physical Intimacy: Info for Writers http://ow.ly/P7ih3034e82 @FionaQuinnBooks
Is Your Character Considering Suicide? Info for Writers: http://ow.ly/Rhvd3034dYH @FionaQuinnBooks
A Look at Plot Twists and Smoking Guns: http://ow.ly/MBh83036fvv @CSLakin
Common Structural Problems in Manuscripts: http://ow.ly/PJQU3036g7d @Book_Arch
3 Ways to Build a Better Plot: http://ow.ly/QaZA3036gKg @Janice_Hardy
Dealing in uncertainty, the essay may be the perfect form for our time: http://ow.ly/90HR3036gST @colindickey @latimesbooks
Sister act: female friendship in fiction from Woolf to Ferrante and Zadie Smith: http://ow.ly/HFPj3031Kcj @AlexClark3 @GuardianBooks
The Geek Writer: Using Technology to Self-Publish Your Novel: http://ow.ly/8idE3031KAb @ProWritingAid
9 Essential Social Media Platforms: http://ow.ly/ggTv3034dEs @Writers_Write
The Character/Plot Connection: http://ow.ly/NYky3034ee9 by Art Holcomb @storyfix
How to Run a Contest on Your Blog: http://ow.ly/eEzu3034dKu @DebraEckerling
Content Marketing Examples for Authors: Fiction & Nonfiction: http://ow.ly/MRI33034ekp @iconiContent @WritetoDone
How to Succeed as a Female Writer in TV & Film: http://ow.ly/NeW03031LpV @RosanneWelch @WritersDigest
Ted Hughes and Simon Armitage: How to get teenagers reading poetry: http://ow.ly/pC0h3031L3U @GuardianBooks
8 Tips on Writing Dual-Time Mysteries: http://ow.ly/raTp303o0Au @MKTodAuthor
5 things 1st-time authors should have in place on launch day: http://ow.ly/ZKgn303nZyT @stephfaris @MasonCanyon
The Benefits of Talking Through Your Scenes: http://ow.ly/Qdyr3031Lyf @Janice_Hardy
20 Comics to Read at the Beach This Summer: http://ow.ly/2wfY3031KXp @abrahamjoseph @vulture
10 Writers Who Did Quit Their Day Jobs: http://ow.ly/ZCuV3031KvQ @TheBookMaven @lithub
8 Ways to Make Your Story Boring: http://ow.ly/guvW3031KV8 @ProWritingAid
In Praise of Minor Literature: http://ow.ly/oY8V3031LgW by Matthew St. Ville Hunte @parisreview
5 Guerilla Tactics for Promoting Your Debut Novel: http://ow.ly/bZ0g3031Lv7 @manzanitafire
Of Thee I Read: The United States in Literature: http://ow.ly/sdkQ3031KrV @jennymedina @nytimesbooks
Warning Signs that You Landed a Bad Agent: http://ow.ly/TBH13031KD6 @katrinschumann @GrubWriters
What do readers want in a good, old-fashioned whodunnit? http://ow.ly/ido93031KRK @CalebPirtle
4 Classic Writing Techniques That Belong in the Past: http://ow.ly/bis23031KJR @DBlakeAuthor @mythcreants
Criticism in YA Can Come From Within: http://ow.ly/MzVZ302ZAuX @KimSabatini
Heists as elements of crime fiction: http://ow.ly/7fKs303jxwY @mkinberg
Sharjah Pub. aiming to form ‘a bridge between Arab cultures and with the rest of the world’: http://ow.ly/SWsQ303jyyZ @Porter_Anderson
3 Painless Ways to Exercise Your Writing Skills: http://ow.ly/rZTz302ZAZe @sarahvmusgrove
Affect Versus Effect: Quick and Dirty Tips: http://ow.ly/Se0C302ZAs1 @GrammarGirl
10 Steps to a Successful Book Launch: http://ow.ly/QfoX302ZB46 @msheatherwebb
How To Get into the ‘Flow State’ and Be a Productive Writer: http://ow.ly/CbdF302ZAzg @SukhiJutla
Social media: what to put ‘out there’: http://ow.ly/Mx8E302ZAQ1 @jodimeadows
How to create an effective website: http://ow.ly/z1YK302ZL9t @DanBlank
Adding wonder into your manuscript: http://ow.ly/aP9K302ZAK4 @DonMaass
7 Forms of Emphasis in Writing: http://ow.ly/3M0p302ZAql @writing_tips
5 Ways to Make People Hate a Hero: http://ow.ly/XvaQ302ZAwG @mythcreants by Chris Winkle
How Spotify Can Make You a Better Writer: http://ow.ly/5y72302ZAi3 @MahinWriter
Adding Subtext with Dialogue Cues: http://ow.ly/gkTc302ZB5a @MargieLawson
Authors on Short Stories, Novellas, and Write for Hire: http://ow.ly/8N3G302ZANB
After Years of Contention, Israel’s National Library Gains Kafka Collection: http://ow.ly/7fCm303jytk @DennisAbrams2 @pubperspectives
Creating Believable Characters: http://ow.ly/BpKE303jxrz @jerdipego @annerallen
Revive a scene with verbs: http://ow.ly/WF3r302Zsfg @NovelEditor
You’ve Published Your First Story in a Pro Magazine…Now What? http://ow.ly/R4AO302Zse0 @chris_shultz81
Decoding Brazil’s Beleaguered Publishing Market: http://ow.ly/WH5L303jyjQ @Porter_Anderson @sextante @pubperspectives
5 Steps to a Killer Book Talk: http://ow.ly/IFxE302Zsoi @katrap40
Theme As the Engine Of Plot: http://ow.ly/CbzB302ZsiJ @AnthonyEhlers
How to Write a Romantic Novel for All Genre Lovers: http://ow.ly/vh0E302ZsKS @nownovel
Narrative Distance and Deep POV: http://ow.ly/JcCt302ZshJ @NovelEditor
Heroes, Heroines, and Anti-ones: Too http://ow.ly/wRa0302Zsqm @Margo_L_Dill
Why You Should Stop Selling Your Book (and Do Something Better): http://ow.ly/XVGQ302Zstd @AP_Fuchs
10 Steps to an Unputdownable Book: http://ow.ly/GDxh302ZsHj @nownovel
12 Questions to Ask Your Character about the Setting She Is In: http://ow.ly/f1Kf302Zsni @CSLakin
Blog to Book: What You Should Consider: http://ow.ly/sBWY302ZsIZ @ZoeMMcCarthy
Exercise on Character and Story Development: http://ow.ly/kWsE303iNgO @Roz_Morris
“When Are You Going To Write for Adults?” http://ow.ly/CKy2302Zsks @joypreble
Rejection isn’t Failure: http://ow.ly/K7WK302XkOk @tamsinsilver
10 eye-opening tips to add impact to your storytelling: http://ow.ly/yXgQ303iNcr @Roz_Morris
Learning The Ropes As A Hybrid Author: http://ow.ly/ozUL302XjX2 @katieorourke78 @WomenWriters
The Fading ‘Romance of Publishing’: http://ow.ly/xQUj303eYgQ @pressfuturist @leenanorms @pubperspectives
What Makes Zombie Stories So Popular: http://ow.ly/aD3r302Xkoq @DBlakeAuthor
How to Use a Photo Shoot for Character Development: http://ow.ly/SjyS302XfhF @hodgeswriter
Burn after Reading: On Writerly Self-Immolation: http://ow.ly/Yr2S302Xfpu @nickripatrazone @The_Millions
Story Structure Case Study of “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets”: http://ow.ly/fX4A302XkqW @kylieday0
The Difference Between Character Habits And Quirks: http://ow.ly/c8rO302Xf2M @paulawynne
How to Tap into Your Passion Every Time You Write: http://ow.ly/kNdr302XkTb @CSLakin
128 Words Writers Can Use Instead of ‘Very’ : http://ow.ly/M1fw302Xf88 @WhereWritersWin
Dialogue and Subtext: The Spoken and the Unspoken: http://ow.ly/MX7O302XjMM @WomenWriters by Joni M. Fisher
10 medical SF/F novels: http://ow.ly/ysgm302Xk8L @tordotcom by Stubby the Rocket
How to Find and Reach Influencers to Promote Your Book: http://ow.ly/DhvX302UWUH @AngelaAckerman
President Obama’s Summer Reading List: http://ow.ly/QdXV303gsb8 @SCBegley @TIME
Poland’s Sonia Draga on the short shelf life of Polish books and 3 other points of concern: http://ow.ly/hDJM303eY4J @Porter_Anderson
Creating Sizzling Conflict Between Hero and Heroine: http://ow.ly/foZx302UWMc @lansi26
How to Create a Website That Works in 10 Easy Steps: http://ow.ly/Or8E302UUxt @Bookgal @BookWorksNYC
Does Fiction Actually Make Us More Empathetic? http://ow.ly/DFbf302UTUk by Miguel Conde @lithub
#Wordmongering and How it Made One Writing Career Possible: http://ow.ly/zwSv303f3eu @MonicaMarieV for @allieburkebooks
10 steps to writing a book: 100 writing tips: http://ow.ly/fqpp302UUMS @nownovel
Nuns who leave convents behind as an element in crime fiction: http://ow.ly/p9x5303eXAU @mkinberg
1 Writer’s Reasons for Self-Publishing http://ow.ly/3pvJ302UURt @lucindafwhitney
Writing For Digital Publication: The 3 Things You Need To Know: http://ow.ly/e51n302UUIG @standoutbooks
6 Easy Steps to Planning Out Your Novel: http://ow.ly/QmQB302UXxr @LMacNaughton
Poetry in contemporary art: http://ow.ly/f6Pf302UTOV @newinquiry @dwpenny
Use Pinterest to Boost Your Website’s SEO: http://ow.ly/DuFA302UUsB @CaballoFrances @BookWorksNYC
Delay the Gratification of Launching Your Book: http://ow.ly/7HkI302UUuO from Fix My Story
115 words for ‘walks’ and 90 words for ‘looks’: http://ow.ly/UQFg302UX8R @GoIntoTheStory
The Process of Editing: 4 Versions of a Paragraph: http://ow.ly/wydp303eWVj @Book_Arch @TheIWSG
10 Low-Cost Ways To Market Your Book: http://ow.ly/j2uo302RAO9 @jckunzjr
Indie Success M. Louisa Locke With Tips for Writers: http://ow.ly/Qmm5303dGBV @mlouisalocke @IndieAuthorALLI
Getting a Big Name to Write Your Book’s Foreword: http://ow.ly/2JS4302RARd @jckunzjr
Let Go of Perfectionism: http://ow.ly/M3zR303b4PD @woodwardkaren
International Publishing Notes: Canada, Turkey, UK, USA: http://ow.ly/1dhV303aWyv @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
3 Things a Writer Stopped Doing That Got Him Writing Again: http://ow.ly/EJbb302RB24 @J_ToddScott @writersdigest
4 Places to Find Your Best Story Conflict: http://ow.ly/3GLP302RAM5 @KMWeiland
Book Cover Redesign as Marketing Tool: http://ow.ly/igut302RAK6 @AlexandervonNes
5 Top Benefits Of Being An Older Writer: http://ow.ly/bAPN302RBll @RobinStorey1
4 Truths and 4 Myths That Every New Novelist Should Know: http://ow.ly/xnY9302RAYK @FlorenceOsmund
The best writing links of last week are on Twitterific:
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August 18, 2016
8 Tips on Writing Dual-Time Mysteries
What do The Ashford Affair by Lauren Willig, The Labyrinth by Kate Mosse, The Light in the Ruins by Chris Bohjalian, The Muralist by B.A. Shapiro, and The Lost Sisterhood by Anne Fortier have in common? Answer: they are all dual-time mysteries. I love reading stories like these. But writing one proved to be a significant challenge and demanded a different approach from my previous historical novels.
So what did I learn? Below are eight tips for crafting this type of story.
Are you telling two stories or one? You need to be clear on whether you are telling two stories or one. In other words, the links between each timeline, the character arcs, and essence of the mystery need to integrate seamlessly into one satisfying read. Each timeline must enhance the other. If you conclude that you are telling two stories, you really should write two books.
Both timelines have to engage the readers – finding the balance is critical. I once read only the present day portion of a novel because the historical portion was confusing and added almost nothing to the story. In another instance, my review suggested that the present day story was very thin and could have been eliminated.
Whether separated by fifty years or five hundred, your novel will have two protagonists, one for each time period. Readers must care deeply about both of them. Furthermore, the present day character should be more than merely a narrator for a story set in the past.
Each protagonist must have a distinct voice. Your readers should never be confused about who is in charge of the story at any given point. The thinking, inner dialogue, and perspective of each protagonist should set them apart.
Beyond the distinct voices of your protagonists, readers must be clear about which era they’re in at any point in the novel. This requires careful attention to setting, dialogue, behaviours, events of the time period, possessions, attitudes, and other elements that alert a reader to the era.
Plotting a dual-time mystery is even more complicated than a regular mystery. Clues will emerge from each time period. I developed a table to track every clue regardless of time period and its relevance to the overall mystery. And if you want your readers to puzzle out the mystery as they read, be careful that the earlier storyline doesn’t reveal too much of the mystery too soon.
Avoid jumping back and forth too frequently. Readers need to engage sufficiently in each story before you change the characters and time period. This piece of advice is particularly important in the early chapters when you are establishing characters and setting, creating hooks, and revealing the central questions the story will answer.
The rules of excellent historical fiction still apply. In a 2013 reader survey I conducted, readers said that the top three reasons they read historical fiction are: to bring the past to life, because it’s a great story, and to understand and learn without reading non-fiction. To augment that data, in 2015 readers chose immersed in time and place, superb writing, characters both heroic and human, authentic and educational, and the dramatic arc of history as the top 5 factors in favourite historical fiction. (You can find more survey insights on www.awriterofhistory.com.)
Mysteries are a favourite for fans of historical fiction; 40% of participants in a 2015 survey chose mysteries as one of their top three types of stories to read. Write your dual-time mystery well and it will appeal to mystery lovers as well as lovers of historical fiction.
M.K. Tod writes historical fiction and blogs about all aspects of the genre at
A Writer of
History
. Her latest novel,
TIME AND REGRET
will be published by Lake Union on August 16, 2016. Mary’s other novels, LIES TOLD IN SILENCE and UNRAVELLED are available from
Amazon
,
Nook
,
Kobo
,
Google Play
and
iTunes
. She can be contacted on
Facebook
,
Twitter
and
Goodreads
or on her website
www.mktod.com
.
8 Tips on Writing Dual-Time Mysteries from @MKTodAuthor
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August 14, 2016
Pre-orders: An Update
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
As I wrote in this post in April 2015 (a post which landed me immediately on a couple of different podcasts to elaborate), I have not been much of a fan of pre-orders.
Why I originally set-up a pre-order
I started a pre-order experiment last October. At the time, I had every reason to expect that the experiment would be a success. I’d heard good things about setting up pre-orders on podcasts and from distributors like Mark Coker at Smashwords and Draft2Digital.
Problems during my pre-order
However, I’ve learned I’m apparently too high-strung to have a ten-month pre-order. I fretted over delivering the book on time during an unusually busy 10 month period (and as I wrote two other books to keep on schedule). Plus, I was receiving very little income during the pre-order period, despite having a lower price on the release as a pre-release.
It also bothered me that readers seemed confused by the pre-order. I received emails from readers who didn’t understand why they couldn’t yet read the book and why it wasn’t available for pre-order on Amazon.
The reason, FYI, that it wasn’t available on Amazon is because they mark each sale toward the title’s ranking that day instead of allowing the pre-order sales to accumulate and positively impact visibility/ranking on the release day.
The pre-order directly before the release
I never know exactly how long it will take me to write a book, but for some reason it took me very little time to write Cruising for Murder. It was done in slightly over two months. And, as I suspected, I immediately became antsy once the betas and freelance editor were finished with the manuscript; I was ready to release it.
That was on August 6th. The release date was set for August 20th. I wasn’t sure if I could set the release earlier on Draft2Digital. I was delighted to discover that I could. I immediately changed the release to August 11th. I got urgent notices that they needed the final copy right away, so I quickly uploaded the manuscript and back matter.
I abruptly decided to try to set up a pre-order on Amazon for that same five day period. I figured that whatever sales I made in that short pre-order period wouldn’t be enough to mess up my ranking for the first day.
But I wasn’t sure I even could set up a pre-order on Amazon in such a short amount of time. The final version, according to Amazon, must be uploaded ten days before publication: “Your final version must be uploaded and republished at least 10 days before the release date you set, with the last day for upload starting at midnight, U.S. Eastern time. For example, if you were releasing a book on September 20, you would need to upload and republish it by 11:59 PM Eastern time on September 9 (4:59 AM UTC the following day).”
However, when I pulled up the window for arranging the pre-order, it allowed me to set the 11th as long as I went ahead and immediately uploaded the final manuscript.
Sales
At Draft2Digital in the week leading up to the release, I had zero sales until the 10th (the day before the launch), when I saw 16 sales. The next day I had 43 more (these are non-Amazon retailers…Nook, iBooks, etc.)
At Amazon, it was a similar story. Zero sales until the 10th, when I had 33 and then I had 121 on the release day.
So…do readers procrastinate? Would they rather buy a book when they can actually read it? I can’t blame them because I think I’m that type of reader, myself.
The good things I can say about pre-orders:
Everything was in place on release day. The retailers were simultaneously ready to sell. Once I upload the final manuscript, I have time to do all the other pre-launch things that I need to do.
When the book released on Amazon, the ‘also-boughts,’ the list of recommended reads that Amazon provides readers populated immediately. So my book was showing up as a suggestion right away.
I had 3 reviews within 3 days of release. I think that may speak to the fact that the books were delivered on launch day which may have given my most avid readers the chance to read it right away.
Additional notes:
If I had to do it again, I’d make the pre-order period much shorter.
I’d set it about a week out and I’d upload it to both Amazon and Draft2Digital/Smashwords. Then I’d announce the pre-order in my newsletter.
Not only that, but I’d upload the book to both PODs CreateSpace and Ingram the week before the release and allow them to (usually slowly) go through pre-production approval and become available for order, even prior to the release of the digital copies.
Have you tried pre-orders? How did they work for you?
An update on how pre-orders worked for one author:
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August 13, 2016
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
A weekly roundup of the best writing links from around the web.
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 30,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
The Fastest-Growing Format in Publishing: Audiobooks: http://ow.ly/tzrX302QUaY @maloneyfiles
3 Book Marketing Shots in the Dark: http://ow.ly/lapU302QRJY @DebbieYoungBN @IndieAuthorALLI
Pros and cons of Smashwords: http://ow.ly/sYce302QUkk @LaurieBoris
Taking the Misery Out of Book Marketing: http://ow.ly/xEvp303cDvQ @rxena77
A Hobbit’s Guide to Launching Your Book: http://ow.ly/vr3E302QRdG @DanBlank @WriterUnboxed
Women Crime Writers Are Not a Fad: http://ow.ly/agGn302QULq @lithub @RealLiveCritic
Reading Burroughs’ (Tarzan author’s) Biography as a Writer: http://ow.ly/5feJ302QRR4 @DerekKunsken @BlackGateDotCom
7 Questions Authors Need to Ask About Copyright: http://ow.ly/6XAV302QUfr @AshKrafton
5 Tips to Master the Perfect Character Arc: http://ow.ly/Nzzf302QU41 @sacha_black
NetGalley Book Review Program: A Case Study: http://ow.ly/kdCO302QRo5 @dkudler
How to Use Facebook to Reach Niche Readers: http://ow.ly/SQKW302QR1u @BarbMorgenroth for @annerallen
Global Reach for Self-published Books: http://ow.ly/c7UR302QRx2 @HollowLandsBook @IndieAuthorALLI
Resting Your Writing: http://ow.ly/VXo1302RAWR @Lindasclare
International Publishing Notes: Canada, Turkey, UK, USA: http://ow.ly/1dhV303aWyv @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
The Holiday Season Is Looming. Will Your Book Be Ready? http://ow.ly/4QBr302RBtk @BookWorksNYC @rcutlerSpark
What Should We Write Next? http://ow.ly/TtfD302RAVD @JamiGold
Let Go of Perfectionism: http://ow.ly/M3zR303b4PD @woodwardkaren
The benefits of aspirational goal-setting: http://ow.ly/CJZx302RB8c @zara_quentin
Use Calibre to Create EPUB & MOBI Versions of Your Book: http://ow.ly/Oqm7302RASd @carlaking
Getting a Big Name to Write Your Book’s Foreword: http://ow.ly/2JS4302RARd @jckunzjr
Poland: Bookstores Struggle to Survive: http://ow.ly/wvTa303aWkY @Porter_Anderson @Polishrights
Publicity stunts as an element in crime fiction: http://ow.ly/ElI0302Vaue @mkinberg
15 Princess Bride Quotes That Explain A Writer’s Life: http://ow.ly/CNEF302QPYN @LZMarieAuthor
Tips for pitching at conferences: http://ow.ly/6wxe303aVsg @TerriBischoff
Tips for long-term blogging: http://ow.ly/4Fqt303b4zt
Sisters in Crime on Diversity in Publishing: http://ow.ly/wA2h303aW9m @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Creativity has its seasons: http://ow.ly/nm3K303aV6u @austinkleon
Symbols & Context: http://ow.ly/wJic302QPTg @LZMarieAuthor
10 ways to fall back in love with your art: http://ow.ly/MLIj302QPOA @gigirosenberg
Addressing the Unanswerable Questions About Writing A Novel: http://ow.ly/twXd302QQ2y @storyfix
Power-up your writing in 5 steps: http://ow.ly/vLgM302QPDM from Write Track
5 Signs Your Character Is Fully Developed: http://ow.ly/ZNXC302QPnm @mythcreants by Chris Winkle
On Reading, Imagination, and Pokemon Go: http://ow.ly/FwNf302QPiI @p2p_editor
A Guide to Sparkly Storytelling: http://ow.ly/AkOb302QPxp by Sheila Wisz Ellayn @mythicscribes
7 Tips for Better Book Swag: http://ow.ly/6Qui302QQbz @RobinRWrites
6 1/2 Harsh Truths About Publishing: http://ow.ly/Z09F302QPkP @p2p_editor
5 Essential Elements Every Fantasy Novel Needs: http://ow.ly/cEcd302QQ6g @ClaireABradshaw @WritersEdit
Pinterest for Authors: http://ow.ly/a9zs302QPs5 @WhereWritersWin
How To Get Rid Of Books: the Life-Changing Magic of Thinning the Herd: http://ow.ly/oqvo302QWvo by Nell Beram
Flashbacks: When They’re Not Appropriate and Tips for When They Are: http://ow.ly/upKj302QWrj @ZoeMMcCarthy
The Difference Between Beta Readers and ARC Readers: http://ow.ly/qJ4V302QWlP @MelissaFlicks @BadRedheadMedia
Getting Good Feedback From Beta Readers: http://ow.ly/q5bG302QW6w @BookBaby @fiedawn
Self-Publishing Companies Through a Legal Lens: http://ow.ly/luhF302QVPJ @HelenSedwick @BookWorksNYC
Are blog hops worthwhile? http://ow.ly/I58K302QVJB @HelenHollick @IndieAuthorALLI
The Office Politics of Workplace Fiction by Women: http://ow.ly/b6Kp302QVvP @lydiakiesling @pageturner @The_Millions
The Role of Short Private Print Runs: http://ow.ly/jTZ6302QVcG @DebbieYoungBN @IndieAuthorALLI
When you don’t have a story to work on: http://ow.ly/MSmC302GSFB @OrlyKonig
5 Easy Ways to Fight Writer’s Block in Your Second Language: http://ow.ly/zURK302GSBh @ESLWriteAway
Creativity Vs Consumption: http://ow.ly/1sM0302GSxx @SukhiJutla
Tips for story conflict: http://ow.ly/Xqsl3032BEQ @p2p_editor
Remembering the Worst Book Signing Ever: http://ow.ly/PoFt302De7g @lorijakiela @lithub
5 Tips for Writing Dialogue: http://ow.ly/38aK302Dbin @Margo_L_Dill
Parasites: A Primer for Writers: http://ow.ly/tyK0302DaYU by Codey Amprim @mythicscribes
Shelters featured in crime fiction: http://ow.ly/Veie302VakE @mkinberg
Story Structure in Harry Potter Results in a Satisfying Ending: http://ow.ly/lNv0302DcPD @RiteLikeRowling
Do Ebook Preorders Work? http://ow.ly/Apds302DcYe @jakonrath
12 Memorable Closing Lines: http://ow.ly/M4k1302DbxU @TomBlunt
Writers: 6 Red Flags Telling You To Stop And Take Care Of Your Wellness: http://ow.ly/7kph302Db62 @eahaltomauthor @colleen_m_story
What Should Fiction Do? The Limits of Cinematic Storytelling: http://ow.ly/FnST302DdKw @bonnienadzam @lithub
5 Books In Which Superpowers Have Unfortunate Side Effects: http://ow.ly/RIFQ302Ddrl @finesarah @tordotcom
Rewriting the 7 Rules of Dialogue: http://ow.ly/mxxV302Ddwi @readstevenjames
Cliches 101: Links and Resources: http://ow.ly/XHcY302Dd5z @ceciliaedits
Enhancing Argument Scenes: http://ow.ly/q9sF302DdAl @RayneHall
The Gothic Secrets Every Steampunk Writer Should Know: http://ow.ly/cdwQ302DbfU @standoutbooks
How Genre Categories Can Make or Break Your Book: http://ow.ly/yBFU302DcE2 @RiteLikeRowling
How To Succeed as an Author: the Secret You Already Know: http://ow.ly/IzGV302C2W7 @BadRedheadMedia
Why Perfectionism Is Holding You Back and How to Fix It: http://ow.ly/vW2Y302C3AX @SukhiJutla
On the Scarcity of Apocalyptic Fiction in Chinese Literature: http://ow.ly/qLWG302VboB @DennisAbrams2 @pubperspectives
Filtering: HD for your writing: http://ow.ly/tWCw302y6Ze @emma_darwin
11 Essential Ingredients Every Blog Post Needs [Infographic]: http://ow.ly/clsX302C3fG @demianfarnworth
13 Questions to Ask Before Submitting to a Literary Journal : http://ow.ly/Cgyo302C3Eu @erikadreifus @lithub
Making your Character Shine From Page One: http://ow.ly/3JiM302C2hZ @winellroad
3 Writing Lessons Learned from Hamilton the Musical: http://ow.ly/G8ck302C38y @JennyBravoBooks
5 factors to consider when choosing your primary social media channels for promo: http://ow.ly/CYAf302C2KV @cksyme
How to Write a Binge-Worthy Book Series: http://ow.ly/RP5v302C2Zu @JennyBravoBooks
Regionalisms in Writing: http://ow.ly/4Nid302C3qH @lisajlickel
Violence 101 and How it Differs for Men and Women: http://ow.ly/Cd8j302C2HC @FionaQuinnBooks with Rory Miller
The 5 Key Turning Points in Your Novel: http://ow.ly/mP8n302C3yd @CSLakin
6 Steps to Build the Opening Scenes of Your Romance Novel: http://ow.ly/VLY53033esz @lornafaith
Brazil as featured in crime fiction stories: http://ow.ly/EBWh302Vaak @mkinberg
Telephones as elements in crime fiction: http://ow.ly/965o3031FfD @mkinberg
The Arab and Latin American Connection: A Trade Delegation Prepares: http://ow.ly/g1Oe302VaR9 @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
4 Steps To Get More Social Media Engagement On Fewer Channels: http://ow.ly/GR2f302B03Z @cksyme
Writing the First Chapter of a Novel: Tips and Fixes: http://ow.ly/r3eQ302B26o @RuthHarrisBooks
The subtle art of translating foreign fiction: http://ow.ly/oeLc302B2sb @MsRachelCooke
Revising for Pacing: http://ow.ly/hOOi302B0jw @p2p_editor
How to Use Fear to Beat Resistance: http://ow.ly/BxMB302B1iv @timgrahl
On Gendered Book Covers and Being a Woman Designer: http://ow.ly/UoZF302B2IN @JenHeuer @lithub
Coming to Grips with Subtext: http://ow.ly/YmHt302B08X @AJHumpage
4 Resources to Help You Brainstorm Your Next Blog Post: http://ow.ly/Srjh302B0rJ @TheCoolestCool
Facing the Harsh Truths About Publishing: http://ow.ly/W0Tm302B0ha @p2p_editor
7 Tips for Paranormal Writers: http://ow.ly/uGvO302B0e8 @WordDreams
An Experiment in Fostering Creative Flow: http://ow.ly/ybDw302B1qY @barbaraoneal
The Fastest-Growing Format in Publishing: Audiobooks: http://ow.ly/A8ps302B2CU @maloneyfiles @WSJ
New Universal Links from Draft2Digital: http://ow.ly/e9Bn302Uaj4 @IndieAuthorALLI @Draft2Digital @DanWoodOk
Too Distracted to Write? Here’s Your Next Step: http://ow.ly/D9rv302yxXG @RosanneBane
Making a living from writing books: what works, what doesn’t: http://ow.ly/ly4l302y6Xa @emma_darwin
Chasing the Clouds of Rights Issues: Ixxus’ Steve Odart http://ow.ly/auhm302SouK @steveodart @Porter_Anderson
The Difference Between Trying and Doing: http://ow.ly/pALb302yy7D @MichaelHyatt
Making the Black Moment in a Novel Even Blacker: http://ow.ly/3CED302yxQI @RayneHall
3 Painless Ways to Patch Plot Holes: http://ow.ly/mu4n302yy6d by Chris Winkle @mythcreants
10 Writing Ideas to Help You Get Creative: http://ow.ly/EEqq302yxTs @jesslaw
Before You Try to Write a Book, Complete These 3 Tasks: http://ow.ly/qt9A302yy94 @JerryJenkins
How to DIY Your MFA: http://ow.ly/tUMq302yy4z @WritersDigest @DIYMFA
Don’t Wait to Build Your Potential Book-Buying Audience: http://ow.ly/UwIJ302yxZ1 @crystallyn
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August 11, 2016
Long-Term Blogging, Part II
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
In part one of this series, I covered setting up a blog and maintaining a blogging schedule. But that’s only part of the process. Today I’ve got ideas for post content (since our writing is the most important part of our blog) and finding/connecting with an audience (since no one wants to blog to thin air).
Tips for content:
Comments on your blog posts can inspire other posts. Many times my blog commenters have either asked questions or suggested future posts.
Expand on topics other bloggers have covered (giving credit to the original source). Sometimes I’ll run across interesting posts that inspire me to experiment with a writing or promo approach. I post on my results and how they might have differed from the original writer’s.
Update older posts (with an eye to not wrecking your SEO). For those of us with years of posted content on our blogs, there’s always the option of updating older posts with fresh content. Since it’s not a good idea to repost blogs from an SEO standpoint, it’s probably best to use the older content as the basis for a mostly-new post.
Break longer content into shorter posts. This approach certainly helps fill up a blog’s editorial calendar. I’ve gone back and forth on this through the years, but now my posts are usually pretty short. If there’s a complex topic, breaking it down into a couple of different parts can help. I keep reading that most blog readers prefer short posts since they’re skimming on their phones. I don’t mind long posts, myself … what’s your own preference?
Blog to themes. Personally, I don’t do this, but many of the blogs I follow have themed days: something on the writing craft one day out of the week, a link roundup on another, and something promo-related on a 3rd. Sort of like Taco Tuesdays or Meatless Mondays for blogs. I think this likely helps with blog planning.
Respond to industry news. If you follow the publishing business (and we all really should), the rapidly changing industry provides much to comment on.
Share resources. This is a favorite of mine, as a blog reader. I love to hear about the newest apps that are helpful for writers, free courses, and interesting articles.
Readability. While not related to the content itself, the formatting of posts can impact how widely they’re read and shared. Many blog readers have tight schedules and are skimming articles on their phones. It’s important to make posts easy to read by using plenty of white space, bold lettering, and/or headers.
Engagement:
Share online. You can reach a wider audience if you share your posts on Facebook, Google Plus, or Twitter
Respond to your comments. Responding to comments creates a discussion group and can lend almost a forum-feel to a blog. I try to respond to every comment as soon as I can. I’ve set up the blog so that readers can be notified of replies to their comments.
Visit the blogs of those who comment on your posts. This is especially important when building a readership, but is vital later on, too—when we’ve established relationships with our blog readers.
End your posts with questions. This is a well-known tactic to increase engagement on a post, but I’ve found it’s a great way to learn from others’ methods.
Finally, benefits to blogging:
Is it worth it? For me it is. Blogging has helped me share ideas with other writers and establish online friendships. It’s also given me a chance to thoughtfully consider my own writing and promo approaches and what’s worked and what hasn’t. Blogging also provides discipline and a nice writing warm up. It brings in traffic to my website, raising the site’s ranking on search engines. What’s more, it’s given me a platform from which I get public speaking opportunities.
What have you learned about creating better blog content or engagement? What do you see as the benefits to blogging?
And, as a note to my readers, I did have a release yesterday. :) Book ten in the Myrtle Clover series, Cruising for Murder , launched.
More tips for long-term blogging:
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August 7, 2016
Long-Term Blogging, Part I
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
My first post on this blog (which started out at Blogger) was on August 9, 2008. Tomorrow marks 8 years of blogging.
When I first started blogging, I don’t think I really had in mind how long I would be blogging. Mostly, blogging was something that my publisher had indicated that I should be doing.
At the beginning, I was blogging with my readers in mind. That almost immediately shifted since I felt more comfortable writing to writers. Also, I was trying to work out my writing process as I worked on book three, and talking it out was helpful to me.
In the last eight years, I’ve seen a lot of blogs come and go. I’ve missed bloggers who have passed away and I’ve missed the ones who stopped blogging.
I’ve picked up tips along the way…practices that were helpful to me, mistakes I made that I needed to correct, and tips from other bloggers. Today I’ll share tips for setting up a blog or making a blog serve its purpose better, and tips for maintaining a blogging schedule. On Friday, I’m covering tips for content and engagement and benefits to blogging.
Tips for setting up your blog:
Host the blog on your website as a page. This was something I didn’t completely understand the importance of eight years ago. When we write strong content, we’re bringing in readers. Why send those readers somewhere other than our website? I’m pretty sure cost probably played a role in my original decision (I can be frugal), but the yearly cost of this website isn’t cost-prohibitive.
Use your own name in the blog/site domain name. It builds SEO (helps search engines like Google locate us and our content and books).
Similarly, make it obvious whose blog it is. I visit many blogs that list only the author’s first name. I understand wanting to be private, but if we need to promote the name we plan on writing under.
Share your posts on social media (automation can assist in this). You can set up your blog so that it posts automatically on your Facebook page or sends a tweet on Twitter.
Think hard about blog post titles. Using titles that accurately reflect the content of the post pull in readers who are searching for posts on that topic. It’s a great way to find new blog readers.
Make it easy for readers to share your posts. There are many plug-ins that can help blog readers to share our posts easily on social media. Click to Tweet is one of the ones that I use.
Don’t obsess over the design. I’ve noticed an odd phenomenan over the years where bloggers who overhaul their blogs, implementing sophisticated design elements sometimes stop blogging altogether soon after. I’ve often wondered if that’s a result of their feeling as if their content needs to be as good as their design. The most important thing is the writing on the blog.
Tips for maintaining a blogging schedule:
Editorial calendars can really help with keeping up with our blogs. If we know what we plan to write about, that’s half the battle.
Having an emergency post in our drafts section is also a good idea. Life always throws curve balls.
It’s a good idea to have some quick, go-to sources for blog images. Finding an image to accompany the blog post can be time-consuming. It’s nice to have a bunch of copyright-free stock images in our media library that we can quickly access. Kirsten Oliphant recently listed good sources for images in her post on Jane Friedman’s blog.
Blogging breaks are fine. I usually take two breaks a year and the occasional odd day off when my schedule gets hectic near deadlines. But I think it’s good if we can say exactly when we plan on returning. Consistency is important in blogging…probably even more than our frequency.
What have you learned about successfully setting up a blog or maintaining a blogging practice?
Tips for long-term blogging:
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