They are in close communication with publishers and have inside
knowledge about genres or subjects of interest to a publisher.
Not exact matches
Therefore, it's all
about keeping enough distance from your
genre so you can innovate, but having enough
knowledge and exposure in it to create something people want to read.
He wrote the book on writing fiction, and he has built mailing lists both as a fiction and nonfiction author, so no matter what
genre you're writing in, he has some great tips and
knowledge about building an e-mail list.
The more relevant, accurate information
about you (you the author, not necessarily the person if you write under a pseudonym), the more likely it is that you'll appear in a
Knowledge Panel, or that your work will show in the
Knowledge Panel as «similar works» when authors in your
genre appear.
«To my
knowledge, there is no other private forum where such «power authors» with an indie mindset can get together to talk
about possibilities across
genres, across territories, and across formats, to see what new avenues might be possible for authors.»
I learned a lot
about the
genre there and I thought I could put that
knowledge to good use.
[39] The
genre - discovery approach works so well for this inquiry because by finding examples of a
genre and studying its features, writers can construct their own
knowledge about the essential qualities of a
genre and that
genre's flexibility; writers therefore become more prepared to produce their own writing in that
genre than if, for example, they received and tried to follow a generic template or checklist for how lawyers blog.