Posts Tagged With: Author

Taking Notes

What kind of information do you actually jot down while reading?

When I’m just reading “for fun” I jot down quotes I love. I try to review everything with at least a few sentences so I remember that I’ve already read it and what it was about. When someone smart suggested the quick review, I resisted because I didn’t want to include work in my fun. After a few grudging mini-reviews, though I realized how valuable those few sentences were. I began texting them to email after every book. I assign them to a “win” or “fail” category based on whether I liked it or even read the entire book.

Here is the one for Divergent  by Veronica Roth in the “win” category: “Imaginative and fascinating. I love her characters and their inner examination of bravery, loyalty, and selflessness.”

This is the mini-review for Fires of Winter by Johanna Lindsey in the “fail” category: “I don’t like stories about girls who hate being girls. No sympathy.”

When I’m planning on reviewing the book for my blog, I take more notes.

Names: I write down all the names I can so that I spell them right and can keep track of characters. I hate going back through the book to try to be sure I spelled the characters’ name right. I don’t normally discuss all the characters, but I want those names handy when I do.

Places: If the places aren’t a name I will remember, I jot these down too. Normally I don’t need it for real locations.

Things I liked: I like to make note as I go along so I don’t forget the notable things. I’m pretty good at remembering, but as I get older my memory gets less and less reliable. Writing it down a few times also helps me formulate how I’ll describe it in the review.

Problems: This is the most valuable part of the review. It hurts, but any problems in the work are learning experiences for me, my blog readers, and the writers of the book. The single biggest learning experience so far is to get your book edited by someone else. Yes, the dead horse is enduring another beating. I was so depressed about the numerous spelling, punctuation, and even word usage errors in books I was reviewing that I made it a rule for review that you name your editor. It DOES make a difference. FACT: I just got some helpful corrections from an awesome blogger/writer friend on The Silver Collar, which I didn’t have edited. I read and reread it but still missed that in a story of only 12,000 words. (People didn’t volunteer any corrections either. I had to ask.)

How about you? What do you note while you are reading?

Categories: Reviews | Tags: , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Self-Publishing Timelines

There are plenty of lists telling you how long it will take you to get your book “out there” as an indie author. There aren’t many that outline how long it will take you to “Make it” in whatever way you see that. Amanda Hocking took one year. Another author mentioned that it took her 2 or 3 years before her books began to sell regularly.

Success in Self-publishing isn’t all about how you get the book out there. It is a big step, but it is the first step, not the end.

I’d love to make timeline of success! I have to “Make it” first. For me that means that people buy my books without me feeling I am squeezing buyers out like juice out of a turnip. It also means that my books pay themselves off (Editing and cover art costs, promotions and fees) within maybe a year. I’d be so happy with that!

I admit that when I first put out my book in September, I started daydreaming about buying myself a new car with my book earnings. I still do that from time to time.

 

Here are some timelines for the actual launch of the book:

http://www.spawn.org/editing/publish_timeline.htm

http://media.wiley.com/product_data/excerpt/21/04717995/0471799521.pdf Page 15

http://catherineryanhoward.com/2010/03/27/createspacetimeline/

 

A timeline about Self-published books and their successes, complete with graphs and charts:

http://www.teleread.com/paul-biba/top-self-published-kindle-ebooks-of-2011-a-report-by-piotr-kowalczyk/

 

 

Here are some other cool links I found while I was looking for the others. (That always happens!)

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/28/books/28selfpub.html?_r=1&emc=eta1  The New York Times on self-publishing and the changes in the publishing industry.

http://talkingwriting.com/?p=19426  This is a Self-publishing Timeline in that it is a history of self-publishing. It will surprise you!

http://www.writersdigest.com/writing-articles/by-writing-goal/get-published-sell-my-work/directory-of-self-publishing-companies A Directory of self-publishing companies.

 

Here is my “Timeline of Success” so far:

 

September 29, 2011: Released The Disenchanted Pet

10 sales total in the first month.

March 2012 Signed on Kindle Select: No sales AT ALL

Total sales for The Disenchanted Pet :

7 Createspace (paperback incl. Amazon)

10 Smashwords sales, 52 total downloads (including freebies)

8 Kindle sales

 

February 29,2012: Released The Lustre

Blog release party, 10 sales total during party

Promotion on multiple book sites

Total sales for The Lustre:

5 CreateSpace sales (paperback incl. Amazon)

10 Smashwords sales, 30 total downloads

14 Kindle sales

And The Silver Collar has sold 6 copies on Kindle even though it is free on Smashwords and I put a link to the free download as a “review”. People are so weird.

What is your “Timeline”?

Categories: My Books, Publicity | Tags: , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Serious Humor

Wha? Serious Humor sounds like an oxymoron. Well, it is, but it’s also a legitimate technique that I love to use.

Serious humor is mostly situational. A character is engaging in activities that are not humorous, but something occurs to make them humorous, or the nature of the scene makes it funny. I used this type of humor a lot in How to Win Friends and Influence Magicians. You get all the laughs of a joke without ruining the serious messages of your book.

Example:

‘“Really?” I scolded the nearest building, showing it my most fierce expression of reproach. “Is this how you’re going to do it?” The building tried to pretend it didn’t hear me. I turned to a building on the other side that I know was in on the whole thing too. “Are you serious?” I demanded of the building. “Are you honestly going to set up some hocus-pocus barrier to keep me in like a trapped rat?” The building looked belligerent, knowing it was guilty. But it didn’t apologize. So I yelled at it for a while, though it didn’t help me get out.’

Everyone has yelled an inanimate objects. The character is serious and angry, but the situation is funny. Serious humor!

Another example would be a group of characters following another character in secret. The purpose is serious and the characters are serious about it, but you can make it really funny as they try not to get caught and have to react to the movements of the one they are following.

Face it, life is hilarious. If it doesn’t make you laugh, it makes you crazy. So laugh! It costs less than institutional care.

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A New Wattpad Short Story: Horarium

“Horarium”

Genre: Science Fiction

This  is another new story, I’ve just begun on Wattpad for use as a free short story. When finished, I will post it many other places for free reading.

http://www.wattpad.com/4413365-horarium

Synopsis:

Two teens fall prey to the deadly Horarium Virus, which kills the infected within 11 months. Banished to the Quarantine Zone, they meet and find love within tragedy,. They also learn profound truths about life and humanity as they face impending death.

Cover photo by Pedro Simao http://www.sxc.hu/photo/708452

 

Categories: My Books | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Deep Breath

Ok! I’m working on focusing. Deep breath! Aaah…Whoooo. Maybe I had too much coffee. (Kidding! There’s no such thing.)

I have to remind myself not to become anxious or insane about my writing success. My inner Cuckoo wants to SEE some RESULTS NOW!!!! But that isn’t how it works. This is a slow process, gradual.

This is, I think, a thing with authors. We begin to obsess about the mechanics of it, how many books we sell, how many people follow our blog…. It’s maddening, how slow everything is, especially in self-publishing.

My neuroses:

Am I doing it wrong?

Am I missing something?

Am I failing and don’t know it?

Why don’t people want to buy my book?

The truth:

This is a new frontier–online self-publishing. We are in the new Gold Rush.

It takes more than 9 months to “build a platform” and establish oneself online.

I am NOT writing for the money. I am selling to pay for editing so I can create something beautiful.

Just because I feel like having stuff happen, doesn’t mean it will.

Just because I’m too busy to deal with things doesn’t mean things won’t happen.

I can’t make this happen with my mental powers. (ESP and Telekinesis is very weak in my family. I can only move individual molecules with my mind. I can only read 1/2 second of people’s thoughts. It sounds like “Urp!” “Buh!” “Gek” :P)

What I am doing, when I have time to do it, is enough for now.

Breathe in, Aaaahhh. Breathe out, Whooo.

 

 

Categories: Publicity | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Review Book List

I realized it has been a while since I listed the books I’ll be reviewing soon. Below is my list in a loose order. I may not release reviews in exactly this order but I’ll try. If you are supposed to be on this list but I don’t have you here, please reply so I can be sure you see where you are on the list. Some have links, and these are the ones I bought during my February Birthday spree, or that were included in the email request.
Also after some inner struggle, I’m going to limit my future reviews to books that are edited by another person besides the author. (Yes, your Uncle Frank does count, as long as he knows what he’s doing.) I’m going to require that you list the name of your editor in order to accept a review copy. I believe in good books and in order to encourage fellow authors to excel in their writing, I think this is the best course of action. 
  • Merlin’s Wood by Anne Hamilton (started reading hard copy with kids)
  • Revolussion by Kathy Bell
  • The Mine by John Heldt
  • The Footloose Killer by Michelle Johnson
  • Megan and Liam: a CITY WEDDING by Maggie Carlise www.maggiepublishing.wordpress.com (I downloaded the preview by accident, thinking it was the full book. This is why I posted no review yet.)
  • Mark of the Loon by Molly Greene (readying review for release May 14)
  • When Girlfriends Break Hearts by Savannah Page (awaiting finished copy)
Categories: Reviews | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

New Review: Flash Bites by Krista Bunskoek

Flash Bites

by Krista Bunskoek

Genre: Short Story Anthology

Like to read, but find you just don’t always have the time to finish that good story? Then Krista Bunskoek’s debut Flash Bites is for you.

These thought-provoking short stories pack an emotional punch. From sci-fi, romance to action, these 6 stories can each be read in snack-sized bites of 10 min or less, and may just leave you inspired.

Escape from your smartphone and zoom in an electric unimobile in Freedom!, or be swept off your feet, with a twist, in a quest to find Mr. Right in List for Love…

For less than your morning coffee, make your day a happy one with these bites of flash.

Read my review here: http://katepolicanisreviews.wordpress.com/2012/04/27/flash-bites-by-krista-bunskoek/

Or just buy on Amazon

iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/ca/book/flash-bites-few-short-short/id471779666?mt=11

Kobo: http://www.kobobooks.com/ebook/Flash-Bites-few-short-short/book-4D0laxQRtUK7c-geIRxt-g/page1.html

or Nook: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/s/bunskoek?keyword=bunskoek&store=ebook

Categories: Reviews | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Short Story Success!

I had to just drop a few lines to say that I am having amazing success with my free short story! (Thanks for reading if you did!) I just went over the 200 downloads mark in 3 weeks! It has surpassed my other free ebook already that has been out since November.

Also, I’ve gotten some feedback from friends who hadn’t gotten around to reading any of my work. I think I’m getting a chance because of the quick read. I’m always so happy when someone likes my writing–like I get when I buy someone the perfect gift.

I would definitely recommend the free short story as a promotion! I’ve gotten some sales since releasing my “free sample”!

Categories: My Books, Publicity | Tags: , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Readability

I’m learning a lot more about what makes a book “readable” or not. This is completely unrelated to the plot, characters, and themes. You can excel in all of these things and still not have a readable book. What makes a book “readable” for you?

Here is what turns a book from a “nice read” to a “fantastic read”, for me:

  • The book begins by developing an emotional attachment in me to the character. Ways to do this: sympathy, mystery, thrills, a problem
  • The book stays on the story path of the main character and side characters without too many switch-offs and rabbit trails. Some are interesting, but too many are confusing.
  • There is balance between the time spent describing the inner emotions of the character and time spend on their actions. If the balance is off, you get cold, unlovable characters or you get sappy characters and a lagging story line.
  • There is mystery/suspense in the plot, but I am clued in subtly throughout. It is a tough balance between excitement and confusion, understanding and over-explanation.
  • The writing is done in uncomplicated style, but using correct grammar, punctuation, and word usage. It isn’t as vital in character dialogue, but in the story body it is absolutely necessary. The wrong use of a word or an awkward sentence snags my whole attention and I lose track of all the nougat-y goodness of the book.
  • There is a definite conflict going on that unfolds throughout the story. A simple series of events can occasionally draw me in but it takes some pretty fantastic writing for that to happen. Excitement generated by love, danger, rivalry, and/or tragedy helps draw me through the story.
  • Humor doesn’t work in every story, but when it does, it really enhances my enjoyment. I really enjoy “serious humor” in a story that might not have room for outright silliness. I define “serious humor” as passive humor that results from character circumstances that would otherwise not contain humor.

 

Categories: Writing | Tags: , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Places to Post a Free Ebook!

I looked around and found several places to post my free ebook! Here they are:

http://www.freebookspot.es/ This one I had trouble figuring out just how to get my book up. I skipped it to move to easier uploads.

http://www.getfreeebooks.com/

http://www.scribd.com/

http://www.globusz.com/

http://www.bookyards.com/

So call me a dunce, but I didn’t know you could upload books on Goodreads. Derp!

I also learned where to post videos on Smashwords. There is a link on your book page on the right side underneath the “total downloads”.

Categories: My Books, Resources | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Silver Collar

“The Silver Collar”

by Kate Policani

Genre: Short Story, Fantasy, Paranormal

Bought as a child to slave at an inn, Lyneth suffers under a terrible curse. Her frightening transformations can only be stopped when a priest puts a silver collar around her neck. The collar stops the change, but makes her ill. Her dangers increase as she matures into a beautiful and desirable woman. When a mysetrious nobleman visits the inn,her life changes forever.

This is the short story that I posted recently on Wattpad. I’ve finished it and I have posted it on Smashwords as a free ebook! https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/153927

It is on Kindle too. I’ll be posting it here and there and everywhere that allows free ebooks!

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Kickstarter part 2

My Kickstarter project is live! Visit here: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/523666041/book-launch-how-to-win-friends-and-influence-magic

And here is an interesting article on Kickstarter http://www.forbes.com/sites/suwcharmananderson/2012/03/28/where-do-kickstarter-supporters-come-from/

Categories: My Books, Publicity | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Amputeddy! What’s that?

Were you wondering about that word at the top of my page?

Amputeddy is a creation of Jean Boelter and myself from way back in 1988. I made a bear for her with a left-leg amputation like hers. Yes, my aunt Jean lost her leg to a tumor when she was just five years old. The idea took off as she showed her bear to her other amputee friends. We devised the name together and then she began looking in to manufacturing the bears. At first they were all hand-sewn by family members.

In 2005 I co-wrote three books with my dear aunt Jean. These were designed to go with the bears and be another, less expensive way to help children with amputations come to terms with their new challenges, and also help children to relate to adults in their lives with amputations. These bears and the books have really made a big difference in people’s lives.

Aunt Jean passed away in 2010 from cancer. She is missed very much by many people. I dedicated my first book to her, and modeled a character after her in my next book.

I’m reprinting the Amputeddy books (now that I know how to do that)! It is a slow process, since the original files seem to have been lost. I am scanning them in one page at a time and learning how to format a picture book on CreateSpace and in ebook form. 

I have a CreateSpace link, though it isn’t yet active, and some more information here: https://katepolicani.com/amputeddy-books/

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How Do You Choose What to Write?

How does an author choose what stories to devote their energy and time to finish? Most of us have many ideas floating around based on what interests us from the world around us. But how do you choose what to work on next?

Here is how it works for me. I made a pretty picture!

The books that I’ve devised an outline for, in my head or in writing, get chosen and filtered through the Think Tank for the order I choose them. Things that have progressed naturally to near-completion also get chosen this way. Some subjects that “write themselves” are stories I have intense feelings for, or things that are really relevant to me at the time. These ideas erupt out on their own and I find time to write them because I HAVE TO! These get published too and sometimes without choice from the Think Tank. The Lustre was one of those “feeling” stories.

A story doesn’t get written because it is in the Box of Shame, which means I’ve overdone it for myself and dislike the story because it is Abodid (this is a very appropriate baby word for “hateful” coined by my son Corbin the Philosopher at age 18 months). The rest of the unfinished rabble exist in the idea cloud, which means they have at least a few sentences to remind me of the concept. These could be one of the four completion categories some day if they eat their Wheaties.

Ross Gale has this interesting take on the books writers choose to write: http://rcgale.com/2012/04/18/writing-what-you-ought-to/

Categories: My Books | Tags: , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Some Links and a Question

First, here are a few more links I’ve found:

http://bookmarketingbuzzblog.blogspot.com/2012/04/news-media-hates-these-15-things.html This is a good one about things not to do when approaching, well, anybody.

http://www.jogena.com/ebookdir/ebookfaq.html This is an ebook directory.

The Question:

What burning questions would you like me to answer on this blog? I have written a lot about my experiences, but what have I left out?

 

Categories: Resources | Tags: , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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