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Publishing News Roundup Series: How to Stimulate Writer Creativity

As Technology Takes Over the Writer World, How Does One Get Noticed?

Creativity is essential to writing success.

It is needed in all aspects of writing, from the actual manuscript to marketing your book. With new agencies available online, it is making it much easier for writers to reach out to readers in new and interesting ways. So how can a writer get through all that noise?

 

For Sale; Creativity



With the screenwriters on strike from their agents, there has been a shuffle in Hollywood surrounding how projects get writers attached. Some interesting developments… Word of mouth, writers lifting up other writers, and some innovative websites that have sprung up have resulted in studios suddenly seeing more and varied kinds of projects. Will it last? Should the agencies be worried?


Ruth Harris writing on Anne R Allen’s blog recently had an interesting blog post on creativity. How do you go from a mediocre idea to a brilliant one? There is new research out that says all you need is a little frustration.


Many authors use Patreon to reward their fans. The idea is a good one… A monthly ongoing payment to support the writers’ work. However, Kris Rusch looked at the small print and saw a rights grab in the first sentence. So… what do we do when we love the service but it has a fish hook? This is a great post on understanding copyright and what is your own bottom line.


I was interested to read that Findaway, the new kid on the Audio block disrupting Audible, is introducing hardware. They have developed the Wonderbook. A Playaway audio player designed for the school and library market. Back in my teaching days, we had Listening Post which the children loved. Earphones on, storybook in hand, and read along with the narrator. One of my plays was produced in this format. I was thrilled because I knew kids loved listening to stories. This old technology (cutting edge when I was a child) has largely disappeared but now every child seems to own headphones and we have a boom in audiobooks….


Yesterday I listened to a mammoth post by Joanna Penn on Exclusivity versus Wide– the conundrum that faces the Indie author. Joanna broke down the arguments for each side by format, Ebook, Print, and Audio. Joanna posts a transcript of her podcasts… if you want to quickly scan for the main points but if you have the time to listen, it’s well worth it.
Staying with Joanna, She recently interviewed Ruth Ware on self-editing and contracts. This is also a must listen/read for a quick primer on best practice.


While you are contemplating selling your own books… spare a thought for your website. Career Author has an interesting article on viewing your author website as a hub and the spokes going out always bring your reader back…


One of the things that struck me recently is how many people seem to think it is OK to wander into a bookshop, look at a book and then search it up and buy the book online, sometimes while standing in the store. When you know how the margins are squeezed for bookshop owners, the showrooming model that Amazon has adopted for their brick and mortar stores is not a great customer model for the Indie bookstore owner. If you want to get your books into stores you also need to support them. A bunch of children’s bookstore owners hilariously turned this on its head this week to make a point.


How productive are you when it comes to writing? Could you do it better? All authors will be nodding because it’s always a guilt trip for us. Joanna Penn has an excerpt from her recent book on productivity which has some great tips.

In The Craft Section,

3 act arc for showing shame in fiction– Writers in the storm


What will you sacrifice to be better– Beth Cadman


The circle theory of story– Go Into The Story- Bookmark


Tricks and tips for catching errors Janice Hardy- Bookmark


Writing prompts- a waste of time? Savannah Cordova


How to end the story, questions– Writepractice- Bookmark


World building is for every story– Jami Gold

In The Marketing Section,

5 ways to stand out as an author on social media– Eevi Jones- Bookmark


A tool to format book descriptions– Kindlepreneur- Bookmark


Twitter for authors – Bookbub


Author engagement-build brand and fans– Bookworks


Cheatsheet on how to write a logline– Bang2write- Bookmark

To Finish,

The act of writing is the act of creation. Sharing your creation is the tricky bit. If you are tempted to  Indie publish you need to understand how to be an Entrepreneur. Some might say that writing and entrepreneurship are opposites. But they both need a passion for the project. Jami Gold has an excellent post on looking at entrepreneurship from a writers point of view.


I have some Advance Reader Copies of my middle-grade novel, How To Lose A Rockstar to give away on my Facebook page. Drop in and take a look.




Maureen
@craicer

 

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