I'll leave it to you networking pros to figure out the how, but hardly anyone comments on the Kobo
Writing Life blog, so that might be a start.
I have several events planned throughout 2014, so keep an eye on the Kobo
Writing Life blog for more details.
We created the Kobo
Writing Life blog at www.kobowritinglife.com in order to outline spotlights on authors, highlighting various things that they are doing, as well as to share information and insights about KWL, as well as the craft and business of writing (See Darcy's post about starting your novel on Kobo
Writing Life blog here), so that's a great place to keep your eye out for updated tidbits and info.
To make it easier for you, I've filtered the last few years of
my writing life blog posts.
The Kobo
Writing Life blog is getting the first look at bestselling author J. Robert Kennedy «s upcoming title, The Templar Detective and the Parisian Adulteress,...
I had a guest post on the Kobo
Writing Life blog about briefing cover designers, and another at the Writers» Workshop about optimizing keywords and categories.
If you want to upload direct to Kobo, or read
the Writing Life blog or subscribe to the podcast, you can do so from the main site: Kobo Writing Life.
Writing my latest post this morning on the ALLi blog, it occurred to me that many people who read
my Writing Life blog will have no idea of the double life I lead.
Not exact matches
This guest post
written by Melanie Biehle, creator of Inward Facing Girl, where she
blogs about contemporary art, design, photography, and
life in Seattle.
When this equilibrium is achieved, good sleep is effortless,» Chopra
wrote in a Heal Your
Life blog post recently.
She
lived in a small village in Pakistan that was invaded by the Taliban, and at age 11 she utilized a cell phone to call a BBC reporter who
wrote up a
blog that would bring awareness to unknown atrocities being committed in her area, the Swat Valley.
Superman still
lives on Krypton and the rest of us are just doing our best,» Godin
wrote in a
blog post.
For example, entrepreneur and marketing consultant Marcus Sheridan
wrote a thoughtful piece on his
blog (thesaleslion.com) about the implications of
live - streaming video — in particular, how transparency will transform business.
«For Sergey and me this is a very exciting new chapter in the
life of Google — the birth of Alphabet,» Google chief executive Larry Page
wrote in a
blog post on Monday.
We're now working on a
live event, a full website and
blog with contributors
writing about influence and personal branding, and much more.
«I seriously doubt that I would have been as successful in my career (and happy in my personal
life) if I hadn't always placed importance on my health and fitness,» Branson once
wrote in a
blog post.
SecondAct contributor Amy Gutman
writes the
blog Plan B Nation:
Living Creatively in Challenging Times.
«The incident at the Bangladesh apparel factory that claimed 1,000
lives is less an issue of domestic versus foreign manufacturing than it is about fast fashion and the hidden costs of disposable retail,» he
wrote in his
blog on the company website.
«With more than half of the world's population now
living in cities, environmental health is becoming increasingly important to quality of
life,» CEO of Aclima Davida Herzl
wrote on the San Francisco - based company's
blog.
Inspired, the 24 - year - old
wrote a
blog post about the experience, and the chorus of comments from fellow converts came fast: «This has changed my
life!»
He also has a
blog, where he
writes about frugal
living, creative ways to save money, and other musings.
In addition to
writing compelling
blog posts about exercise techniques and healthy
living (one example: «The Single Biggest Mistake Most People Make With Their Programs»), Gentilcore's site provides a veritable library of fitness, conditioning, and nutritional information.
Maybe upload it on YouTube and
write a short
blog post describing what went on in the
live stream.
This
blog is more than 10 years old, and I've been blogging for nearly 20 years now... so the break from
writing and sharing my
life has been strange, but good.
We've
written in this
blog about strategies for RRSP and TFSA investing by
life stage before.
I
write for a
living for clients who pay really well, so I'm not interested in side
writing jobs for ridiculously low pay (I mean $ 5 for a
blog post, seriously?).
Natalie @ Debt and the Girl
writes Being an Anonymous Blogger and Compromising with Myself — I am the type of private person that likes to
blog for an undisclosed amount readers and discuss personal details of my
life.
I've just
written a
blog post about homelessness and employment, with a focus on Calgary (where I
live and work).
She loves
writing about her
life of travels and her work experiences on her travel
blog, Barbaralicious, where she highlights the ease of working on the road and tries to inspire people to begin their own journey of freedom with this beautiful lifestyle.
Meanwhile, I have gravitated to a certain type of mommy -
blog: one
written by a stay - at - home mother, lovingly grateful to her provider - man, capably in charge of every detail of her children's
lives and home: the Angel in the House, as we might have sneered back in English 101.
Recently, I
wrote on the Neue justice
blog about how charity ought to be more than a spiritual discipline; it ought to be a way of
life.
I know that I've shifted in what I
blog over the years — less blogging about my tinies experiences /
lives, for instance, less burn - down - the - Internet soapbox rants, less day - in - the -
life blogging with simple stories from daily
life — but that means that when I do
write, it's with more thoughtfulness and intention, I hope.
It's
written by my friend Glennon Melton, who
blogs at the wildly - popular Momastery, and it's called Carry On, Warrior: Thoughts on
Life Unarmed.
She has
written more than one hundred articles and
blogs and has contributed to nine books, most recently
Living Faith: The Fragrance of Christ, published by the Evangelical Fellowship of India and the Evangelical Fellowship of India Commission on Relief.
«The challenge»,
wrote Father Alexander Lucie - Smith in his Catholic Herald
blog shortly after the Holy Father had announced his resignation, «will be in having to watch the airwaves fill with a whole load of people who are very marginal to Church
life, and yet who will be invited to pontificate on all matters papal and religious, giving it their own particular slant, which they will advance as a mainstream view.»
There have been times
writing and editing this
blog on that kind of insane schedule for more than a decade when I have wondered who this new frantic way of
life would kill first.
Sarita Hartz is a writer,
life coach, and former humanitarian worker who
writes about wholehearted
living and healthy missions in her
blog Whole at www.saritahartz.com.
You can find Tyler on Twitter or his
blog, www.manofdepravity.com, where he
writes about Millennials and finding the significant
life we're all searching for.
I love studying, reading, and
writing about theology, but I have found that
living my theology helps in ways I never could learn from a book or a
blog.
One of the things I strive to do on this
blog is explain Scripture in a way that shows how people understood it when it was
written, and also showing how the story of Scripture transforms and changes our
lives today.
After I
wrote that post, I was reading some other
blogs and found another prayer that would be a good
life prayer.
So until God raises up something new in my
life, or gives me direction on what He wants me to do, or maybe just gives me permission to pick back up where I left off because I needed a Sabbath rest, I will not regularly publish new
blog posts,
write new books, respond to comments, or interact with people much on the various social sites.
Besides that, you can ask me anything — about
writing, about theology, about politics, about small - town
life, about the
blog, about The Mission, about monkeys, about Alabama Crimson Tide football, about doubt, about faith, about music, about movies, about publishing, about
life.
I've been
writing a
blog to help people learn to
live well with God at http://www.livingwellwithgod.com.
Today Donald Miller deleted the two
blog posts he
wrote about
living better love stories and issued an apology to those who had been hurt by his words.
Once again, let me reiterate:
Life is too short to get this worked up about something some guy
writes on a
blog.
I have many areas currently in my
life where I believe one thing (and
write about it on this
blog), but do something else in my daily practice.
Insofar as the one on the 100 Top Christian
Blogs goes, I'm not nearly there yet but I do love to
write about
life and faith.
This is always a little embarrassing for me because I save my best, most personal
writing for my books and tend to hammer out most of my
blog posts before I've even had my second cup of coffee in the morning, which is a hazy, disorienting time in which I am strictly prohibited from making important
life decisions or ordering things from the internet.
I used to tell a lot more stories about them — their spirituality, their daily
lives, their quirks, their new experiences, their wisdom, their frustrations — but the «mum -
blog» aspect of my
writing has wound down.