Posts tagged ‘readers’

A Bit of Reader Research

Today I had a simple conversation between friends. We talked of birthdays, how time seems to be running from us and, of course, today’s latest news. In conversation, my friend brought up her latest trip to the local bookstore.

Her Situation: In search of a new read.

Her Debate: She stood back and began to examine the rows of book covers — quick images describing a story. Noting her personal preferences, she passed cover by cover until one caught her eye.

A Complaint: When reading the back cover of a book, and then another, within the specific genre of choice, frustration set in over the commonalities to the Harry Potter series.

Side Note: Now, she is almost thirty and has read and appreciated the entire Harry Potter series.

The Result: She jumped the ship of genres in search of a fresh story.

By now you may be thinking, what is the point of this blog post? And I assure you there is one.

The Point: Your cover’s purpose is to attract readers to your book while artistically reflecting a component of your story. Your story, however, needs to hold up its end of the deal. What I mean is this: Tell your story. Feel the freedom of writing. Where does your imagination take you?

This is an elementary lesson that affects your book in a BIG way. Don’t mimic a story already told. Appreciate the work of fellow authors and take from that what you will — except the basic concept. Form your story around your ideas, experiences, insight and perceptions.

Your writing, your ideas — that’s this voice thing we’re always talking about. Listen to the searchers—the ones looking for a new story to fall into. They will share with you the need for new and different. 

–Melissa

See you again tomorrow…

February 23, 2010 at 11:09 am Leave a comment

Staying Connected to Writers: Blerp, Twitter, Facebook & Other Social Networks

Because of their creative and overly romanticized pursuits, many now think that writers and authors lead solitary lives, disconnected from other writers, pecking away at their keyboards in some kind of tacit, no-holds-bar competition with each other, the phone off the hook, never once needing (or appealing) to others for a little inspiration.

Today, however, that’s hardly the case. Social networks like Facebook, Myspace, WritingRoom, not to mention applications like Blerp.com, Twitter, even text messaging, now allow writers to interact and maintain contact with each other from around the world. What does this mean for writers? Well, for starters, you can count on more support from fellow creative individuals to help motivate you when finishing your manuscript. Plus, you can always jump online for a break and comment on an interesting discussion thread that may just awaken the creative beast slumbering inside you.

Even now, as you’re reading this blog, you’re participating in the great connection between writers around the world, clicking through the communities that may turn out to be your saving grace in moments of writer’s block or research in forums where you can ask about any number of current events and topics for your book.

Be sure to check out the reading communities as well, such as Shelfari, goodreads and LibraryThing, where you can manage your personal book catalog and engage readers in your target audience. Finding out what readers look for in books within your genre can be incredibly useful and help guide you as you finish writing your own, incorporating their suggestions and their expectations into your own poetry or prose.

The Point: Writers and authors aren’t the hermit crabs we might think they are. Stay connected to your network for inspiration or support, and stay energized about writing your collections and manuscripts every day!

June 16, 2009 at 10:24 am 1 comment

Michael J. Fox Memoir Always Looking Up: Writing with Purpose

Everyone knows Michael J. Fox, and you’ve probably heard about the recent release of his newest memoir Always Looking Up: The Adventures of an Incurable Optimist. Actor turned activist turned author, Fox has stolen the hearts of television, movie and literature fans around the world, in no small part because of his passion and optimism to share his experiences as well as his positive spin on his illness.

That said, writers must always have passion! Without the ambition and drive to capture your stories and interpretation of life, you’ll never be able to instill your message or stir emotions in your readers.

Consider Fox’s devotion to revealing his message. While balancing his family life and his activism at The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research, he managed to dictate and help edit a book that had inspired (and continues to inspire) optimism in millions of people, whether they agree with his political views concerning stem cell research or not.

Writers are constantly faced with challenges; some deal with writer’s block; others map out crucial scenes over and over again until perfect; and still others pace the length of their office just like Fox, physically fighting to communicate his idealism and hope for the future. Watch the below Borders video in which Fox talks about his writing method and the challenges he faced writing Always Looking Up.

Whether the obstacles in the path of your writing career are large or small, remember that your passion for writing and your interesting experiences will fuel the completion of your manuscript. Though you may waver on occasion and neglect your writing schedule, never forget that you started writing for a reason, maybe personal, political or creative. Seeing your sentences move from chapters to a full manuscript to a publication that’s read by your target audience will definitely be a rewarding testament to your artistic achievement.

The Point: Like Fox, writers have unique insights and inspiring stories, and though you may struggle distilling your thoughts and experiences into a manuscript, ultimately the reward of sharing your story will be measured in the hope and revelation it instills in readers.

June 2, 2009 at 1:28 pm Leave a comment

Self-Branding: What Your Web Site Says about You and Your Book

Authors, and perhaps especially self-published authors, can have a difficult run after production of their books is complete, mostly because, just when you thought you were done, then comes the necessary marketing.

Simply put, in order to sell books, you have to sell yourself. Just like a book cover can catch a reader’s eye, so too, your Web site can attract new fans and audiences to your work, but what kind of Web site is going to attract the right people? It’s a good question, and one that has no easy answer, but the truth of the matter is: without a creative and straightforward Web site with compelling content, your book might go unnoticed for a time in various Internet circles.

There are, however, a few questions you can ask yourself when designing your own Web site (or hiring a third party to design one for you) that may help:

What type of book are you marketing? Fiction? Poetry? Inspirational? Christian? Perhaps a children’s book? Whatever type of book you’ve publish, the genre and content of it will definitely affect how you market and subsequently how you build your Web site. For that matter, you need to reveal the specifics of your book on your site right away–on the homepage–not only to keep visitors interested, but to increase your keywords for Internet searches as well.

What is the primary thrust of your marketing plan? Are you approaching the media with press release and follow-up calls? Are you planning a book tour in the near future? Are you selling your book in local or regional bookstores? Whatever the main push of your marketing strategy is, you’ll want to reflect its importance on the main page of your Web site.

What information do people need to know? Obviously, people coming to your site are interested in the content of your book; but if you’ve only posted vague information about the formats, prices or materials within your book, you might not convert a reader into a customer. Hence, the importance of drafting compelling copy that tells your visitors exactly why your book is so valuable and worthy of being purchased beyond all doubts.

How can readers get your book? Okay, so maybe you’ve convinced them to buy your book, but you still have to make the process of actually ordering a copy quick and easy for them. If ordering a book is too complicated or buried in other material, a potential customer may be dissuaded and leave your site. So be sure to post links to your Book Ordering page, or offer visitors a simple way to order your book on your site.

Long story short, your Web site is an important aspect of your marketing campaign, and as such, it requires a great deal of forethought and planning when developing if you’re looking to keep target readers interested and convert them into customers.

This is Justin, blogcasting from Wordclay, signing off.

April 28, 2009 at 10:49 am Leave a comment

Art Imitates Life: Five Common Criteria for What Makes an Interesting Character

Curious about why certain characters steal our hearts? Got a character in mind for your next story or novel, but is something missing from their personality and need a fresh perspective? Luckily, our experienced bloggers and writers have drafted the five most common criteria for interesting characters, which may be helpful to authors and writers when thinking about the direction of their new stories.

1) Details: As readers, we want to know everything, and we hope the content isn’t something we’ve already read. We want the odd, real and fresh details about a character that really help define who he or she truly is, as an individual. Everything and anything relevant about people in life, we want to know about characters as well. What does this character do for money? How do they feel about their job and coworkers? What does their family think? What’s the character’s sexual orientation? Are they married? Divorced? What nuggets of psychology lay forever embedded in their past, and what dreams do they secretly or overtly pursue despite that past, despite their current situation? Even if you don’t use all of these details in the story you begin writing, they’ll undoubted help you conceive of a well-rounded character with real emotions and visceral reactions that will definitely affect your readers.

2) Foils: Other characters, other locations, other inanimate objects even, whether symbolic or not, can also help reveal the identity of a character. For example, a slovenly brother may act as a great foil as a responsible, cleanly sister, the two butting heads, revealing closeness despite their differences. Similarly, an ongoing storm can easily mirror a character’s inner turmoil and conflict, thereby acting as a foil as well. In a very practical sense, no character can achieve a level of interest without reacting and adapting to the things and people around them, so you’ll need appropriate foils to capture the essence of any character as a result.

3) Conflict: You’ll never hear about the story that takes place in heaven housing characters without problems or worries to cloud their current situation, mainly because no reader will be interested enough to finish that story. As readers, we thrive on conflict. A rich character is presented with a unique problem that probably involves his or her backstory in some important way, and this is what makes the story come to life, this is what makes the story interesting. There needs to be risk involved when your character proceeds forward, whether that risk is emotional or physical (or both), or else your readers, like all people, will lose interest and turn to something else entirely. Think about it. Why create rich, potentially powerful characters if nothing is at stake for them? As the old maxim goes, nothing ventured, nothing gain, and the same holds true for characters. That said, the conflict that confronts your characters as a result of their personal choices will undoubtedly reveal even more of their identity, testing their individuality and ability to change (or at least accept defeat) in the end.

4) Natural: You can’t force a character to act or grow, just like you can’t force a person to change who they are. For that reason, characters need to act like themselves. The story needs to flow organically and naturally from one scene to the next, without unbelievable twists that somehow magically affect the character. The character always needs motivation; the character always needs desire; the character always needs to remain believable and real, just as though the reader could bump into this person on the subway or in the elevator. For example, a homophobic character wouldn’t just waltz into a drag show, but on the other hand, that same homophobic character may try to slip into the drag show if his estranged brother is performing that night. Whatever the actions and decisions of your character, make sure they’re properly encouraged to step into the next scene, instead of just forcibly moving them into the next section, thereby locating them in a place and situation in which they would never willingly appear.

5) Contradictions: Nobody’s perfect, and many times, people (just like characters) react unexpectedly, revealing deep emotions and thoughts about which they themselves may not have been aware. Thing is, we’re all walking contradictions. Obviously, the agoraphobic person really wants to venture out of the house, and the small town guy with big city dreams wants to relocate, but in most cases, these characters are not willing to confront their desires, leaving them in a miserable state of contradiction, which consequently makes for a quite interesting story and character development. Like our characters, human beings are a soup of mixed emotion, one that can be incredibly difficult (if not impossible at times) to reconcile. Of course your characters need to act naturally, but giving a character contradictory desires doesn’t necessarily mean unnatural. In fact, these contradictions can become vital to the believability and grace that many captivating characters possess. Just take any of the characters for James Joyce’s The Dead, each trying desperately to achieve some measure of immortality, establishing celebrity, considering children, immortality that none of them can ever practically possess. Think about your characters and how their most intrinsic desires conflict with each other, and you’ll definitely have the measure of an interesting personality.

Have questions about one of the previous criteria? Or have your own criteria for characters? Feel free to post your insights and writing rituals as comments, and the bloggers will definitely respond as soon as possible. Obviously, there’s no definitive rule to divining the perfect character (especially because there’s no such thing as the perfect person), but through our discussion here, we may be able to reveal even more methods of keeping our readers interested well into the future.

March 3, 2009 at 10:25 am Leave a comment

Self Publishing Blog 2.0: We’re Back & Better than Ever…

Loyal subscribers and readers, as you may have noticed, our self-publishing blog dropped off the radar for a week or so during our redesign, but we’re here to announce the launch of our newly designed writing blog: freeselfpublishingblog.com.

 

Of course, our bloggers will continue to post the latest publishing news as well as information that may be of interest to authors and emerging writers within the publishing industry, but we also wanted to update you on our newest development.

 

In addition to the weekly writing tips and prompts (located on the sidebar), we’re now implementing a creative (and hopefully quite fun) weekly assignment, at which time writers and authors will be challenged to head out into the world and perform a mission.

 

For example, one mission for authors may be to submit a photograph of their book in a tree. One picture would then be selected and posted on the blog along with your book information and a link to order it (or to your Web site or blog). Don’t worry, it’s all good, clean fun, and you may just get a snazzy book plug out of the brief adventure.

 

Should you yourself have an idea for the blog or a suggestion for a future post you would like to read, feel free to leave a friendly comment below that details your proposal, and I’m sure our bloggers will be happy to implement or write on your topic of interest.

 

Thanks for bearing with us during this development, and we hope you’ll submit your challenges (as well as ideas for future challenges) to our bloggers in the near future!

 

This is Justin, blogcasting from Wordclay, signing out.

February 27, 2009 at 3:20 pm Leave a comment

Announcing Contest for Authors & Readers Hosted by BookRix.com

Win as an author…
…and as a reader!

“Web Your Book” Award

BookRix.com is proud to present readers and writers with their first official writing competition, called “Web Your Book.” Authors as well as readers can enter the competition and win attractive prices.

Visit BookRix.com for Complete Guidelines>>

Timelines and Deadlines
The submission period of the competition runs for eight weeks starting December 9, 2008, which means that authors still have enough time to register one of their BookRix books for the competition. The deadline for entry is February 1st 2009, 6 p.m. (EST). Authors are completely free in the genre: short stories, poems and everything else is welcome. The only requirement is that the book be longer than 20 BookRix pages.

Readers are able to vote for their favorite books on December 9, 2008 and February 15, 2009 the. This vote will ascertain the winners of the competition. The authors who are ranked number one to five the competition charts on February 15, 2009 at 6 p.m. (EST) will win the listed prizes.

Prices for Authors:
First Prize: $2000.00
Second Prize: $1000.00
3rd – 5th Prize: Amazon Kindle E-Book-Reader

Prizes for Readers:
$100.00 each will be given to three readers following a raffle.

About BookRix.com:
BookRix.com provides users with a platform to:

  • find other readers and authors
  • share thoughts about interests in groups
  • discuss books and projects
  • join author fan clubs
  • participate in writing competitions
  • Connect within a literary network
  • write book reviews
  • send your books to friends and family
  • find top-rated and new books

Read about BookRix.com for more information>>

January 27, 2009 at 11:02 am Leave a comment

Free Book Promotions: Generate Book Buzz with Giveaways & Incentive Offers

Free stuff, sign me up. Truth is, everyone loves a chance to get a book for free, especially if the book in question might be one these folks actually like or use. The more honest and accessible your content, the more tempted Internet surfers will become by your book. And it don’t get much better than free!

For that matter, asking for an e-mail address to send them information or even suggesting they subscribe to your blog is usually safe. What’s the worst that could happen? They simply unsubscribe? But that won’t happen if you keep them interested with new content and previews of your book that actually keep their attention. Running promotions and distributing free copies of your book are both great strategies for luring new readers to your site and ensuring they stick around to see what you’re all about.

You can run an annual giveaway for your book, or you might want to invest time and money into a monthly contest, to cull even more readers within your target audience. The choice is yours. One things for certain, limiting the risk and investment to readers will not only keep them interested in your book, but increase the likelihood they’ll discuss the book online within forums or offline with friends.

Plus, free book giveaways are quite simple to implement. Say you maintain an author Web site, you can easily promise a free ebook or perhaps a PDF of chapter 1 to all those who subscribe to your newsletter or mailing list. Then, hold a monthly drawing, and send a free copy of your book to whomever you select from the pool of e-mails.

Even if a subscriber only gets your first chapter of your book, that may be enough to pique their interest and buy your book, or talk about the content with friend, which can only help your promotion. Once people get talking, it’s only a matter of time before your subscription base grows, and you can start sending info about discounts you’re offering on books. The possibilities are endless.

The Point: Remember, people love free stuff, and subscribers are less hesitant to invest an e-mail address for a chance to get some free, quality information. Giveaways not only keep you in touch with your target audience, but provide an opportunity to intrigue new readers and generate book buzz both online and beyond.

November 11, 2008 at 2:15 pm 1 comment

Goodreads: Managing & Sharing Your Online Bookshelf

Just published a book? Looking for an online community where you can mention your new publication?

The good people at Goodreads.com may have your answer. Register as a member for free, engage other readers and writers about books, and get some buzz started about your new publications.

Visit them their homepage and take the tour. Read all about their groups by genre, how their community works, and even peruse a brief letter from the founder that says:

One afternoon while I was scanning a friend’s bookshelf for my next great read, it struck me. When I want to know what books to read, I’d rather turn to a friend than any random person, bestseller list or algorithm. So I thought I’d build a website — a website where I could see my friends’ bookshelves and learn about what they thought of all their books.

Goodreads
Goodreads is a community of friends who enjoy reading and sharing their opinions about books. To improve the process of reading and learning throughout the world, Goodreads allows for the creation of personalized bookshelves, where you can organize what you’ve read, what you want to read and spread the word about good books. Review a title and get comments from other members. For new authors, goodreads is prime real estate to explore for marketing and sheer entertainment.

The Point: Getting involved with online communities that specialize in books is not only a rewarding, enriching experience, but also an opportunity to mention your recent release.

This is Justin, blogcasting from Wordclay, signing off.

September 18, 2008 at 10:02 am 1 comment

Poetry Contest: WritingRoom Calls Poets to Submit in September

Greetings, Earthlings,

As the writing community that allows writers to connect with other writers and readers, WritingRoom is now calling for poetry submissions for their September Poetry Contest.

One Grand Prize Winner will receive:

(1) $50.00 cash
(2) A featured spot in the Anthology of the September ’08 contest entries
(3) A printed and bound copy of the published Anthology
(4) Entry into the yearly contest, and a chance to win $1000.00

One Runner Up will receive:
(1) A printed and bound copy of the published Anthology

All participants will receive:
(1) A certificate of achievement and publication in an Anthology

The deadline for poetry submissions is Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2008.

All styles of poems are eligible, with a maximum of three individual poems, each poem must be 50 lines or fewer. Be sure to list your name and screen-name on each page of your submission.

To enter, simply create your profile at WritingRoom, and e-mail your selected poem(s) to contest@WritingRoom.com, with the subject line “September Poetry Contest.” Include your full name, phone number, WritingRoom screen-name, title of poem(s) and e-mail address within your e-mail.

Visit WritingRoom’s Contest Page for more information.

Wordbot upload complete. Transmission ended.

September 16, 2008 at 1:08 pm 1 comment

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Weekly Writing Prompt

Imagine a setting or situation in which you would be an outsider. Say it’s your first day learning karate and the rest of your class are black belts. Or perhaps you find yourself smack dab in the middle of an NRA conference and you adamantly oppose firearms. How would you react? How would you feel? Being an outsider can often provide the perfect springboard into your character’s mentalities as well as an objective viewpoint that can be used to describe settings more naturally. (2/4/11)

Weekly Writing Tip

When it comes to writing, seeing isn’t always believing. Next time you find yourself in front of your keyboard about to begin another piece, try closing your eyes and typing. Imagine the setting, characters, thoughts and emotions you’re trying to capture and start writing without opening your eyes. Just the look of a sentence can often disrupt your flow or rhythm, and rereading what you’ve already written will not only slow you down, but upset your train of thought as well. (2/4/11)

Last Week’s Writing Prompt

Remember, not all stories have resolutions. Think about a conflict that’s online, where the characters simply exist within the tension. Perhaps an archeological search for some relic, or maybe a neighborly feud that gone on for years. Now, write a story or poem that attempts to capture this conflict, without reaching for a clean, fair or ironic resolution.

Last Week’s Writing Tip

Read the reviews. See how readers and critics think. Don’t fall into the same juvenile traps the books with bad reviews often do. Learn from their mistakes and shape your manuscript into a publication worthy of rave reviews.

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