How to sell your books

After months of hard work including several copy-edit iterations, I finally published my book on Amazon and Createspace. To celebrate my accomplishment, I invited family and friends to a release party where I sold a few books. I sent out press releases, tweeted, and wrote about it on Facebook. Having cultivated an audience prior to…

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Busting the almighty book review myth

Have you just indie published your book and are now wondering how to go about getting reviews that might drive sales? After reading my last post on the Beginner writers’ biggest mistake: failure to consider the audience, are you now kicking yourself for not having cultivated an audience from the get-go that would be “clamoring”…

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Beginner writers’ biggest mistake: failure to consider the audience

You have decided to write your first book. You have had a great adventure or have thought up a great plot and can’t wait to get going. What should you do first? Start with an outline? A description of characters? Write frantically to get your thoughts down? As you think about it, you realize the…

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Dead Calm

I have been a fan of Adam Nathan for several months. His is one of those rare emails that I enjoy opening and then linking to his webpage. I love his engaging and soul-bearing writing style. The excerpts  from his upcoming book, Walking Backwards (A journey of a thousand miles on the Camino de Santiago) are…

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Using the author’s platform to sell—not your books, but yourself

Perhaps after reading Is an author’s platform necessary? Pros and Cons you decided to create an author’s platform. You spent countless hours creating a blog, joining various social media, and collecting emails addresses. You are proud to say, at last, that you have a presence on Facebook, Twitter, Google +, Amazon, Goodreads, Barnes and Noble, and…

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Content Editing: Plot, Pace and Clock— Part 2 of 2

When  fine-tuning the storyline, in addition to plot, you need to be aware of pace and clock.  In the first of this two-part series, guest blogger Lynn Perretta discussed content editing and the importance of plot. In the second part of the series, she discusses two other elements of editing: pace and clock. Last time…

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Is an author’s platform necessary? Pros and Cons

This week on the Books and Writers LinkedIn Forum, the discussion Is An Author’s Platform Now A Prerequisite? has stirred quite a bit of controversy. The author’s platform—a long-range career growth tool is a tool comprising of various of activities that you the author use to get readers to notice you and your work.  These…

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Content Editing: Plot, Pace and Clock— Part 1 of 2

Congratulations to you as you finally write –The End– on the first draft of your manuscript. You have a right to feel proud; it has been a lot of work. But before you hand off the book to beta readers, you need to fine-tune the storyline. This process is called content editing.  In the first…

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Writer’s block is an excuse for not writing

Last night at my Author’s Connections meeting, a local author spoke about writing and the importance of plot, character development and dialogue. During the Q and A, someone asked him if he ever suffered from writer’s block and if so, what did he do to overcome it. To my disbelief, this writer of six mysteries…

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Eight lessons learned while searching for my muse

Do you have a muse, someone who inspires your writing, brings enlightenment, helps you overcome writer’s block, and infuses you with a Can-Do attitude? I have struggled for years trying to find my muse; no one has come forward, though I have found a few lessons. For example, don’t ask your father for help. Trying…

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