Hi there!
(FIRSTLY -- IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR MY ENTRY IN MADDY'S NOVEL FILM BLOGFEST, IT IS THE NEXT POST...thanks!)
(FIRSTLY -- IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR MY ENTRY IN MADDY'S NOVEL FILM BLOGFEST, IT IS THE NEXT POST...thanks!)
Thanks to Alex J Cavanaugh for the IWSG every first Wednesday of every month. Also, thanks to his team of helpers who assist him in running this outrageously-popular meme.
As a blogger, you probably discover that as time passes, your blog changes. When you first started blogging, you blogged about whatever took your fancy. Then you started reading blog posts which can offer both positive or negative points of view regarding what to blog about. Makes you question yourself and your objectives.
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I don't adhere to any particular point of view regarding blogging -- I think our blog is our voice, and whatever we want to use it for, no one should criticise us.
If there's a drop off in comments, perhaps we need to look at what the reason might be. But lately, with google's dreadful Captcha Codes, Google+ Profiles and now Google+ comments, along with difficult-to-negotiate WordPress comment systems, Blogger not allowing some WordPress bloggers to comment, trying to comment on smart phones...blah, blah blah -- it may not be anything to do with what you post about -- maybe your prospective commenters cannot comment or give up the third time the Captcha Codes don't work. Have you noticed a spike in page views, and a drop in comments? Well, that's another post...
Recently I came across some ideas on what to blog about/what not to blog about on Anne R Allen's blog. I usually share her posts on Google +, twitter and wherever.
Before I get into the dot point list, I'll say:
to IWSG -- 2 years and still going strong!
Before I get into the dot point list, I'll say:
to IWSG -- 2 years and still going strong!
I've used Anne's format, but have written my own take on the dot points :
Do Blog
About...
- Interviews and Profiles: Authors, prospective authors,
debut authors, cover artists, editors, experts who work in the field you
write about (a cop if you're a crime writer, for example.)
- Informative pieces: Maybe an interesting info dump from all that
research for your new novel that doesn't belong in your novel.
- Reviews and spotlights of books in your genre: If you are an aspiring author,
don't turn your site into a full-on book review site. In the future you
may have to say something negative about a book and that's hard! It may be
reciprocated! But book reviews are interesting and may even influence
someone to buy the book you recommend.
- Info about other media in your genre. Alex J. Cavanaugh's blog is
a great example of how to do this. Alex has grown a hugely-successful
blogging community, party due to his love of film and music and his ninja
superpower of being able to visit everyone in the blogosphere regularly!
- Comic or inspirational vignettes about your life. This can be
almost anything, as long as it's entertaining, has a point, and doesn't
turn into a pity party. Anne recommends rom-com author Tawna Fenske. I
think of Talli Roland. She doesn't say much at
times, but she is always entertaining in the way she says it.
- Stuff about your pets. I was surprised at this one, but Anne says not to underestimate the power of a cute puppy or grumpy cat to draw
hits. Catherine
Ryan Hyde posted photos and videos showing the progress of
her new cat and old dog learning to get along: a lesson in diplomacy. It
got so popular, the dog and cat—now best of friends—have their own
Facebook page. (Well, my dog has her own fb page, but that's
another story!)
- Opinions (but don't polarize people) Any opinion piece about
publishing news will probably get a lot of readers in the bookish
community. How do you feel about such things as fan fiction? What
about the latest doings of Amazon? Does Goodreads get your goat? Maybe
others feel like you do about your topic or at the very least, you give
them a chance to air an opinion.
- History and nostalgia pieces: Anything about an historical
era will be of interest to many readers. Writing a book of military
history? Share your own experiences. If you lived through an interesting
period of history, readers want to know about it. A blog is the perfect
place to share. Look at Hilary Melton-Butcher at Positive
Letters...Inspirational Stories. A massive following for
her impeccably-researched articles with a British flavour. (Long articles
full of links for further research.)
- Travel pieces about the settings of your books. Post about the places you've set
your novel. I love doing this. Hopefully you have your own photographs. If
not, be careful of copyrighted images. I wrote at length on Image Copyright with the names of
sites where you can find images to use without the risk of copyright
infringement.
- How-to's and recipes. Crafty things like knitting patterns
if your character is a knitter, for example. I adore those books by Kate Jacobs, set in NYC which revolve around
a yarn store. How cleverly she characterises and weaves her tale around a knitting club. She made the protagonist's apartment in NYC so realistic I want
to visit if I ever get to New York and I want a sandwich from Marty's deli
downstairs!
- Almost anything of general interest. Anything that might make a good
magazine article will make a good blogpost—especially a magazine your
ideal reader is likely to buy. I've blogged travel articles I've submitted
to magazines.
- A series of articles or vignettes you hope to make into
a book. For
nonfiction, blogging your book is usually OK. (Check with your publisher).
For fiction, if you decide to write a series of posts and turn them into a
saleable story later (it has been done!) make sure you check before
submitting your novella/novel. You'll usually find if you've made many
changes to your story since blogging it, there will be no problem. At
times this "previously published" card is overplayed to scare
bloggers into not publishing online. Many publishers have come round -- if
30 people read it on your blog there's not a lot of competition going on!
Don't Blog
About...
·
Daily word count. Nobody cares. (Unless it's during NaNoWriMo or some such.) Today's blogs are
"other" oriented rather than "self" oriented. Do write
interesting stuff for people.
·
Rejection sorrows, personal woes and writer's block. These belong in your private
journal. The one with the lock on it. Although at times I understand an
author's rant and feel his/her pain! "Occasionally" is the word.
·
Teachy-Preachy stuff. Especially if you're not an expert. Don’t
lecture people on how to get published if you’re not. (But a writer's journey
TO publication is always interesting, especially if told with humour.)
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Books being unloaded for the Brisbane Writers' Festival at the State Library of Queensland - starts today! |
·
Apologies for not blogging. People will thank you as
it means one less favourite blog to visit temporarily. (This is not to say you
couldn't put a sign on your blog.) I'm not someone who takes any notice of:
"I blog Monday's and Friday's and occasionally Saturday, but if the spirit
moves me, maybe I'll blog Sunday." I have a blogroll for new posts!
·
Your Fiction WIP. Don't expect editors to be trawling the
internet to discover you. I follow literary agent Scott Eagan and
he always have interesting stuff like this about agents/editors and writer's
misconceptions of their world.
Some writers ARE able to attract a blog following by posting some short fiction or poetry, but I don't recommend you do it exclusively. You might be giving away first rights if it is a publishable work, so consider what you post. There is always Wattpad which is password-protected and therefore not "publishing" if you're concerned about first rights.
Some writers ARE able to attract a blog following by posting some short fiction or poetry, but I don't recommend you do it exclusively. You might be giving away first rights if it is a publishable work, so consider what you post. There is always Wattpad which is password-protected and therefore not "publishing" if you're concerned about first rights.
- My 'down-home' blogging
advice. Write considered posts in which you've invested time and energy.
If you're genuine, it'll show and hopefully, readers will read and
comment.
- The new linky for Write...Edit...Publish's
September bloghop is now up. Please consider joining us this month for
MOVING ON. You can post: flash fiction, non-fiction, playscript excerpts,
(all up to 1,000 words), photography, artwork.