Memoir Authors discussion
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Deanna
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Jun 06, 2014 10:20AM

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I just now purchased your first memoir "Ghost no more" and I'll be leaving a review on Amazon and I'll be tweeting about it. Anything to help a fellow memoirist :)
Dahlia

*hugs*



I'm in the same boat too and have just started marketing my book. The platform of your book should be a website/blog. Wordpress is the easiest to set up and there are a heap of tutorials online to help you get started. Once you've done that start commenting on other blogs similar to yours so that you gain exposure.
You also need to set up Facebook, Twitter and other social media outlets that you wish to use.
Check out this guide http://bookmarketingtools.com/freeguide
I hope that helps
Dahlia :)


If you use Wordpress you are able to add a Copywrite notice to your blog so that no one steals your work http://youtu.be/mpvata7cHT0
You might want to check out this site to help you get started http://www.theblogbuilders.com starting a blog can be pretty stressful but this guy makes the process very easy.
As for Facebook, it depends on whether you're planning to write more books in the future, in which case I'd do a fan page promoting yourself and your book, and you can add more books later on. If you only plan on writing one book then a fan page for your book would be the way to go. I hope I'm not confusing you!
http://www.thecreativepenn.com/2010/1...
Good luck and let me know how you go
Dahlia :)



I had a very upsetting (for the reader for sure) 2 1/2 yrs in a foster home that I'll be writing about. I can talk about it here if you like, even post bits, but otherwise I can't prove I'm writing one.
Is this a problem?
I do have a short first draft of the first (of many) segments I can post, if there's a thread for that.
I've shown one person, who is a new online friend, who assures me it's a story that needs to be told. So I'm writing it, whether it ever gets published or not.
It's all true. It'll be shocking in its truth, and hard to read because of the content (I won't be making it that way for sensationalism), and it will expose Ohio's Children's Services lack of services in the early 60s.




Looking for a Kiss: A Chronicle of Downtown Heartbreak and Healing, Heliotrope Books. Have several book events
lined up in NYC in June. for more info: www.katewalter.com

Best wishes,
Gladys

Congratulations on your newly published memoir. Best wishes for much success.
And please excuse me. I was writing to two people and sent you a note that belongs to meran. Maybe you need to know about her effort as well.
Gladys!



Save what you edit out. In fact, save versions of your work. Call it "mother in law approved" or some such ;)
--------
I've been thinking of covers. I want to use the old black and white photos, not generic or copyright free images. Any thoughts?

(Joined this group recently...)

My book is "memoirish" because it is a fictionalized recounting of actual events. I'm struggling with the "genre" issue - how do you identify something that's a very personal story, but also (technically) a novel (or "novelization"?).
There was a thread about this issue a couple of years ago, and it pointed to an interesting post by Judith Hannan. I'd like to ask if anyone has any more recent thoughts about this? I suspect it's a pretty common problem.

My book is "memoirish" because it is a fictionalized..." I believe memoirs is the correct genre when using SOME biographical events in a fictitious novel. Auto biography is more the complete story in chronological order. I hope so anyway.
http://www.writersdigest.com/online-e...

If it's more than 50% fictional, is it really a memoire? Is it a memoire novel? Fictional memoire? Novel based on actual events?
Genres are less forgiving than these approximations. Anyone else have a suggestion?

Mark, if what you've written about is "mostly" real, but not entirely so, and you've changed names and places to avoid ready identification, one could say that your work is fiction based upon true events, or inspired by true events, depending on how much fiction content you have in there.
I have been told the genre that fits an entirely factual work with names etc. changed is Narrative Nonfiction. And, despite a pseudonym and other changed names, it falls under the Memoir genre as well, especially if it is written in the first person.
Hope this helps...

I like the "Narrative Nonfiction" genre, but alas, it doesn't fit into the Amazon categories. The first decision has to be "Literature and Fiction" vs. "BIography and Memoir." Tough choice if it's a novel based on events.
Thanks!

It's tentatively called Lessons From the Afterlife. About the radical transformation I've been through in the last three years since my 22 year old daughter suddenly dropped dead from a medically unexplainable cardiac arrest. She was studying to be a healer -- and so has healed me of many issues by 'speaking to me' through various means, including the iPod in my car (she was a pro blues singer.) Kind of crazy, I know, but hey ... this wouldn't be the only spiritual memoir of this type out there.
My sense is that if I check in here periodically it will be keep me accountable ... Thanks for listening. All encouragement appreciated!
Suzanne Falter

Susanne, there is nothing more hopeful, more endearing, and poignant, than a deep filial connection that endures long after...for some, mothers especially, the connection never ends. My mother speaks often of her youngest, my little sister, lost when young in a traffic accident that eventually led to my father's passing on three years hence. She is lucky - for she talks to her in dreams often, something I've had happen only once.
I'd say your memoir takes precedence... :-)

Suzanne

So our hands are tied.
By the way, I did find that what success I had with my first book was because the book had a leitmotif running through it of a particular subject.I'll have to see what happens with the second one that isn't so subject oriented.


I think your book will offer a lot of comfort to others and it is certainly the type of book that is very popular. I for one would love to read it when you have finished it.


Agreed -- I'd say 'Adult' is for steamy sex scenes, not clinical. SVF

I've had some experience with this as I did a book with a big 5 publisher that was a novel about a particular town (name changed) but had a reference to a real person who was disfigured. It was simply an observation, but I was severely called to task for it at the time by local people. Then I was 25 and learning about life. Now I regret that I did that -- it would have been so easy to change the details so no one was hurt. But at the time I thought I was Hemmingway. Which I no longer do. ;-) Which means now I can relax and be a little more sensitive. (Not saying YOU think you're Hemmingway ... that was just my experience. SVF

Hope you've had a fantastic Thanksgiving. There are many things we can be grateful for, and one is the ability to write about our journey. I'm sure we've seen the dark side of life, but we're here in this forum and made it through. That speaks to the miracles of what our Maker can do.
Suzanne, I too am so sorry to hear about your loss. It's been said that parents should never have to bury their children. But when we do, it can be one of the most unthinkable acts. Life can be so precious; especially, for our little Angels that God gifted us with.
I agree (with Wendy), I feel your book will offer comfort too many. For those that have walked that journey, there's comfort in knowing "you're not alone."
I'm always interested in reader genres of the category.

Thanks for your kind w

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