Categories
IWSG

#IWSG Feb. 2024- Author Website Turn-offs!

Created and hosted by the Ninja himself, Alex J. Cavanaugh, the Insecure Writers Support Group posts the 1st Wednesday of every month. Click here to learn more or sign up.

Optional Monthly Question: What turns you off when visiting an author’s website/blog? Lack of information? A drone of negativity? Little mention of author’s books? Constant mention of books?

For me, it comes down to a lack of information and little to no interaction. If I have to look too hard to find out anything about an author, I’ve moved on. So many authors I’ve interviewed over the years have had this problem. If I hadn’t been doing my due diligence to learn about them ahead of time, I wouldn’t have bothered. When I go to an author’s website, I want to know who they are, what they write, and how to connect with them if I so choose. I hope I’ve done these things on my own site so, please, if I haven’t, halla back! I need to know so I can rectify it.

I’ve also posted this response to my social media accounts. I’d love to see you over at Instagram, YouTube, or TikTok.

****

I was hoping to announce my grand plans for the quiet release I’m planning for the book I did about my dog, but I’ve had some health issues that put everything on the back burner. I’m giving myself grace and acting with compassion to not beat myself up about this. I think I’d like to do a fun giveaway and invite other authors, bloggers, or even just pet fans to participate. I’m hoping to do something fun and pressure-free where people get to share stories about their pet for a chance to win… something that I have in mind but haven’t decided on yet. Also, I’m hoping to send out some ARC copies, print and digital, to help gain some reviews. Like I said, this is going to be a quiet release- no major promo. I’m mainly just doing this to honor my dog before she crosses the rainbow bridge. So, hopefully, next month I’ll be better prepared with real details.

****

Now, on to the personal updates.

Health issues- check.
Server and hosting issues- check.
Time limitations and demands of everyday life- check.

I hope to have more and better updates next month. In the meantime, I did manage to post three vlogs in January. I hope to post the last previously planned vlog this month, along with the others planned for this month, but since I’m already behind schedule, I’m not going to stress it.

Click to see my reading vlog- https://youtu.be/N0g3kHcyrsw
Click to see my food vlog- https://youtu.be/EFZpn4Rh814
Click to see my writing vlog- https://youtu.be/41k6reFNO8E or watch below.

I hope to have the missing lifestyle vlog out soon.

****

What turns you off or on about an author’s website/blog?
It may take some time, but I promise, I will eventually stop by your blog.
My response time has gotten slower but I’m still making my rounds.

****

After hanging out with Alex, be sure to stop by and visit this month’s co-hosts:
Janet Alcorn,
SE White,
Victoria Marie Lees, and
Cathrina Constantine!

****

Click here to visit other IWSG blogs and sites to receive and share more inspiration and support. (This month, I’m #27).

Did you know you can join my community for FREE over at Patreon to receive a monthly update on the creative projects I’m working on? I tell you the truth, it’s better than a newsletter!

Thank you for making it this far down the virtual page. Kudos to you! I’d love to know what you thought of this post in the comments below. Stay safe and be blessed.

Categories
Guest Posts

How to Avoid the Slush Pile by Stefan Vucak

First of all, what is as slush pile? Well, in the golden days of publishing, it used to be a large waste bin next to the submission editor’s desk where he would dump your book. Today, it’s likely to be the delete button on his e-mail Inbox. Either way, it’s bad news.

You have written your masterpiece and you are all fired up to mail it to every agent and publisher in the world, traditional or e-book. If you are self-publishing, you needn’t bother reading further.

Someone told me a long time ago that writing the book is the easy part. I spent a better part of six to nine months writing the damned thing. How can it be the easy part? All right, let’s look at your book using a very simple checklist.

  • Is it finished? Amazing how many writers approach an agent or publisher with a half-baked potato.
  • Is the book properly formatted? An agent or publisher may have specific requirements. Before submitting, it is prudent to make yourself aware of what they are.
  • Is the internal layout correct? This means, do your chapters start on a new page using Word’s page break function? Do you have tabs, extra spaces at end of a last sentence in a paragraph, manually centered headings, not spell checked? Starting a paragraph using the Tab key?
  • Has the book been thoroughly edited? Lots can be said about what ‘thoroughly’ means, but I think you get the idea.

If your Page One has any of these tripwire items, you can guess what will happen. Editors and agents get dozens of submissions a day. Even if your book is the next Gone with the Wind, if you haven’t presented it correctly – slush pile.

Having been diligent and done everything right, you’re still not ready to send the thing off. You have just done the easy part. Okay, so what’s the hard part? Making the submission, of course. What’s so hard about that? Churn out a letter and post the damned thing. Time for another checklist.

  • Do you have a polished submission letter that will sweep that agent or editor off his feet?
  • Does the submission letter contain the agent or editor’s correct name? Not much good if all it says ‘To whom it may concern’, or ‘Dear Sir’. It tells the person you haven’t bothered to research the agency or publisher.
  • Have you written a short and long blurb for your book? You’ll need this with your submission letter or e-mail.
  • Is your book synopsis done? This is where many writers suffer agonies of withdrawal symptoms. They can write a Gone with the Wind, but they cannot write a two-page synopsis even if their life depended on it.

The above items will be the first thing an agent or editor sees. If you cannot get past the submission letter – the slush pile. Let’s leave the submission letter and talk about the book blurb. You must write a paragraph, boiling your book down to about 100 words or so, that tells somebody what the book is about, injecting drama, suspense, tears, a shootout – whatever is the theme. Think about making a sauce. Your pot has all the necessary ingredients and is half full of water. To make the sauce, you boil the mess until only a gooey residue is left on the bottom. That’s your book blurb…

To see the rest of this article and learn more about Stefan Vucak, please visit the ECS blog.

Thank you for taking the time to read this post. If you like it let me know and share it with others. See you next time, Toi Thomas. #thetoiboxofwords