Sentences with phrase «author blogs too»

Not exact matches

The author loves wine as well as cycling therefore he named his blog «The Drunken Cyclist» as he thought he would write about wine and cycling but, not too far along, his focus became almost exclusively on wine.
She is the author and creator of the blog, The Soulful Spoon where she shares fun, easy, and healthy recipes inspired by real food ingredients along with health and nutrition tips too.
The author's blog, focused on whole grains and vegetables, is almost too perfect... Stunning food images, all healthy dishes..»
Personally, I find it rather ironic that you're lecturing the blog author on the rigor of language, when, faced with the need to support the claims made by a documentary that has faced absolutely no real standards of intellectual rigor or merit (the kind of evidence you apparently find convincing), you have so far managed to produce a study with a sample size too small to conclude anything, a review paper that basically summarized well known connections between vaginal and amniotic flora and poor outcomes in labor and birth before attempting to rescue what would have been just another OB review article with a few attention grabbing sentences about long term health implications, and a review article published in a trash journal.
All too often readers will try to pigeon hole a blog's author as Democrat, Republican, conservative or liberal leaning, and so on and so forth.
Marie Reginato is a food photographer in San Francisco and the author of 8thandlake.com, a popular health food blog that shares tips and recipes for having fun in the kitchen and not taking food too seriously.
«Due to my IBS (irritable bowel syndrome), I can't overload my salads with too many veggies or else it upsets my stomach,» says Emily Hein, RDN and author of the blog Zen & Spice Nutrition.
The author loves wine as well as cycling therefore he named his blog «The Drunken Cyclist» as he thought he would write about wine and cycling but, not too far along, his focus became almost exclusively on wine.
-- Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher Blog Host: Every Classroom Matters Author: Reinventing Writing Co-Author: Flattening Classrooms, Engaging Minds:: This email (and tweets too) are off the record unless we specify otherwise.:::::: Sorry for brevity as sent from my mobile device::::::
The authors of the blog contend that the videotaping, which happens in the second semester of senior year, is too early.
You have reached the website and blog of Valerie Ormond, author of Believing In Horses, and Believing In Horses, Too, novels for horse lovers of all ages.
Since getting my first novel published in 2005 I've acquired websites, blogs, joined MySpace, Facebook, twitter, Coffee Time Romance, Goodreads, Author Island, countless bookstores, yahoo groups, just too many to list.
Since this post has been (mostly) about authors who've made enough cash to fill a swimming pool and dive in, visit Midnight Publishing's blog next week for a multi-part series to learn how you too can make some money with your writing — and maybe fill a kiddie pool with some green.
Indie authors can only benefit by following Jackie's blog and the eNovAaW blog too.
Thank you for the info Vinny, now I think I see, You'd like a blog about marketing from lil» ol' me, Promote only when you are in a happy mood, And never promote your books by being far too rude, Try to make your posts interesting, clever and funny, And try not to part with a large amount of money, Now I feel there is one thing I should stress, Never go and give your cash to a vanity press, Blog, tweet and update your Facebook status as often as you can, Make contact with other authors and befriend your only fan, Be courteous, considerate and always be kind, And you will slowly find, You'll get people interested and make them all see, Especially when you give your book away for free, Sit back, relax and be rather nice, And always think about the price, People will not part with their cash unless the price is low, Particularly for an author they do not even know, Always remember to write purely for fun, Never think that your profit will be a huge great sum, And pray for exposure to the lord above, Because self - publishing is a labour of lblog about marketing from lil» ol' me, Promote only when you are in a happy mood, And never promote your books by being far too rude, Try to make your posts interesting, clever and funny, And try not to part with a large amount of money, Now I feel there is one thing I should stress, Never go and give your cash to a vanity press, Blog, tweet and update your Facebook status as often as you can, Make contact with other authors and befriend your only fan, Be courteous, considerate and always be kind, And you will slowly find, You'll get people interested and make them all see, Especially when you give your book away for free, Sit back, relax and be rather nice, And always think about the price, People will not part with their cash unless the price is low, Particularly for an author they do not even know, Always remember to write purely for fun, Never think that your profit will be a huge great sum, And pray for exposure to the lord above, Because self - publishing is a labour of lBlog, tweet and update your Facebook status as often as you can, Make contact with other authors and befriend your only fan, Be courteous, considerate and always be kind, And you will slowly find, You'll get people interested and make them all see, Especially when you give your book away for free, Sit back, relax and be rather nice, And always think about the price, People will not part with their cash unless the price is low, Particularly for an author they do not even know, Always remember to write purely for fun, Never think that your profit will be a huge great sum, And pray for exposure to the lord above, Because self - publishing is a labour of love,
B&N has had issues with erotica, too, limiting an erotic book's ability to rise past a rank of 126, as Wool author Hugh Howey discussed on his blog recently.
«We blog every other day, and we feature guest authors, too.
Best thing I can tell you is to have fun looking at what everyone else is doing... especially YA fiction authors... and you'll start getting ideas... to do it YOUR way... but building social media numbers by simply following other people... can be easier for a fiction author than spending too much time writing blog articles just to try and build a following.
Often authors will face the plight of submitting content with a high word count that leaves magazines unable to accept, blog articles being too long for peoples short attention spans and yet is too short for a full length novel.
Bestselling author of medical thrillers, Tess Gerritsen (Playing with Fire, and the Rizzoli & Isles series) wrote a whole blog about it a few years ago after a friend, Sandra Scoppetone, also a best selling author (Too Darn Hot) wrote this about the novel she was working on at the time: «I hate it.
Too few authors realize that writing that engaging blog post is only a job halfway done when it comes to making sure it's seen by potential readers.
It would take me too long to break down everything for the ~ 30 book categories, so I decided to focus on the ones most likely to interest my blog readership, which comprises mostly genre fiction authors.
Most authors spend way too much time and money setting up their blog, telling their website designer exactly what to do, obsess over every little detail for months, and then... nothing.
As the cost of setting up a blog starts at free, there's no barrier to authors who self - publish their work, and many of those are producing some excellent material too.
Helping Writings Become Authors — K. M. Weiland is an internationally - published and award - winning author, and she mentors authors and blogs to help theAuthors — K. M. Weiland is an internationally - published and award - winning author, and she mentors authors and blogs to help theauthors and blogs to help them, too.
While sites like Barnes and Noble's NookPress and ebook distributor Smashwords make headlines through their blogs and travel by word of mouth, too many authors are overlooking the opportunities that Kobo's Writing Life platform has to offer.
In my experience as a fledgling indie author over the past six months or so, review blogs are one of two possible types: too big to even respond to a query, or so small that they are suspect as actual review blogs vs. people who just want free books.
But I had stumbled across the blogs of some authors doing well with e-publishing and decided to try the novels too (also, I was dreading the Agent Query Game).
Our Virtual Book Tours are so popular, we help authors from other publishers facilitate virtual book tours, too, although those authors aren't mentioned on our blog or in our app (let's leave that up to THEIR publishers, shall we?)
Often authors will face the plight of submitting content with a high word count that leaves magazines unable to accept, blog articles being too long for peoples short attention spans and yet is... [Read more...]
And one valuable blog in my genre (the romance blog Dear Author — I write romantic suspense) will no longer accept books for potential review unless they are available in all formats, so KDP Select is a negative there too.
As we, authors, are also readers, I am trying to read as much as possible the work of indie authors, and recently I started posting the reviews on my blog too and shout out on all my social media accounts.
Put yourself in a blogger's shoes: Are you more likely to give consideration to an author who sends you a note telling you exactly why a conversation about his book is perfect for your blog or a mass e-mailed message that went to countless other bloggers, too, who will end up running the same mass - produced content you'll use?
A blog is a good addition to any author website, but revealing too much of your private life can give identity thieves all the information they need to guess a security question or password.
My third book, Captivate Your Readers, comes out on Saturday, but I've been too busy with final revisions to arrange much, although I did organize a 15 - book giveaway of writing guides by various authors on my blog (which ends Sat.)
This week's topic covers tactics an author can pursue to get featured on the Outskirts Press app, and since the app takes stories and features from our blog, these tactics work for getting exposure on our blog, too.
We've previously written about how partnerships can lower your publishing costs, but after having interviewed bestselling author Tom Morkes for our podcast, we knew that a blog post about book crowdfunding would be of benefit to first - time or veteran authors hoping to find additional income sources, too.
Blog Post Quality and Quantity — How to Have Your Cake and Eat it Too by Stanford Smithat on Pushing Social 5 Signs You're Having a Blog Identity Crisis & 8 Ways to Fix It by Roni Loren Essential Twitter Hashtags for Authors, Readers and Publishing Industry Professionals by Jordan Dane on The Kill Zone
I could see the first book or two in order to drive sales of the rest of the series, but I fear that authors and publishers giving away too many books for free smacks of desperation, and will have a «tragedy of the commons» affect, where no one is able to sell e-books anymore, but that's for another blog post.
Nina Amir, the author of the new title «How to Blog Your Book» (Writer's Digest Books) has lots of ideas on this topic, too, you might want to check it out.
It's too early to tell but I will be watching closely... Although I don't have a large following yet, I do have a few of my favorite authors on my Facebook page and will re-post this blog there to see if it can be helpful for them and I can possibly get their feedback as well.
Here's a blog post with links to a few studies: http://goodmenproject.com/newsroom/the-harriet-potter-effect-or-why-we-prefer-male-characters/ If you look at the Top 100 for the epic fantasy genre, too, you'll see it's dominated by male authors.
Sure, I have all the obvious tabs: Author bio, appearances, book news, links to blogs, excerpts / readings and «what's new», but what I really need is to focus on what additional elements that truly add value to my readers (and yes, I also know I need to update my news / appearances too...) As a reader I know I enjoy websites that are beautifully designed, visually appealing, easy to read (no weird fonts or jarring colors) and which offer lots of value added information that keep me coming back.
I think that's everything I want for my author website (though lots of visitors and blog comments would be great too!).
I do belong to a number of writers groups, we share blog posts, Tweets, blog about each other's work... I must say so far it hasn't worked too well for me, as part of the issue seems to be that we locate many authors, follow authors and authors join our groups, and we seem to have more difficulty locating readers.
Nina Amir presents How Writers and Bloggers Can Use the Rule of 5 To Become Discoverable posted at How to Blog a Book, saying, «Too often authors don't do enough to help market their books and to make themselves and their books discoverable.
Despite the ease to get set up, these free sites can be too restrictive for growing a professional author blog or website.
I've been posting a lot of advanced Amazon hacking and guerrilla book marketing stuff on my blog, but I realized that's too much for people who are still struggling to finish their first book, get it published, and build an author platform.
Once you find what makes you happy and you pursue that, you may realize happiness has a cost, too, according to Jessi, an author who has documented her journey from traditional publishing to indie on her blog, Jessi Gage.
All the big name authors» books available at bargain prices have had a huge impact, too, as Russell Blake said on his blog in December:
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