Set in 10th century Wales, the narrative faithfully follows EVERY move in the queen sacrifice game, known as "The Game of the Century" between Donald Byrne and 13-year-old Bobby Fischer in New York City on October 17th, 1956.
5 January 2014
3 January 2014
Four Time-Saving Social Media Tips Every Writer Needs to Know, by Frances Caballo
"...this book is a must for every writer who wants to sell books!"
What is time suck? It’s the hours of time you can unintentionally spend in front of your computer reviewing Facebook posts, retweeting your Tweeps, and uploading photos while your writing and maybe even your family await your undivided attention.
We've all lost time while using Facebook.
Perhaps our only intention was to post an update and an image, but then … look
what happens instead? You see a post from a friend who is feeling down, so you
stop to write an encouraging note. Then you notice that a colleague posted a
great article about self-publishing, and you can't resist the temptation to
read it. You navigate to the website with the article and you find a book for
sale there. You've got to have it. So you go to Amazon, read the reviews, and
decide whether you want a new or used version or an eBook.
You eventually return to Facebook, upload
your image, and write the update. How much time have you lost? Thirty minutes?
Maybe an hour?
Who has the time for that? Getting lost in the vortex of time suck is
easy, and it’s the greatest fear among writers who are new to social media. But
there are remedies.
Four-Step
Cure to Social Media Time Suck
There are four basic principles to social
media that you can follow:
1.
Curation – Set a timer and
spend five to 10 minutes each morning scouring the Internet, websites such as
Alltop for the best information to share in your niche. Or use a curation
application such as Scoop.it, Paper.li or Google Trends.
2.
Schedule – No one has the
time to spend all day – or long chunks of time – at their computers posting
content to their social media profiles. Use an application such as Hootsuite,
TweetDeck (for Twitter only), or Buffer schedule your posts, tweets and updates
throughout the day. With Buffer and Hootsuite, you can schedule your Facebook
posts; however, Facebook has its own scheduling feature right within the status
update box on your Facebook author page.
3.
Socialize – Use your mobile
device in the evening while you relax to check your social media accounts.
Spend 15 minutes commenting, sharing posts, retweeting and re-pinning on
Pinterest. Consciously schedule this time into your day and enjoy it –
virtually. If you’re concerned about the clock, set your timer again so that
you don't lose track of time.
4.
ROI – Once a week schedule
some time to review your statistics to analyze your return on investment (ROI).
Indicators will include statistics on engagement, influence, and demographics,
and enumerate the number of new likes you received on your Facebook page,
retweets, new followers and other measurements. Use this information to gauge
your success and understand which messages work best with your audience.
Social
Media vs. Broadcast Media
Television and radio programs are
considered broadcast media. They tell us what their messages are. In the case
of TV, with few exceptions, there isn’t any room for viewer feedback or
conversation unless you consider what happens on the Maury Povich Show
conversation. Talk radio includes listener views but the environment is still
controlled by the producer and the host.
Social media is the first form of media
that emphasizes and rewards conversations. You now have the opportunity to talk
with your readers, learn about them, and empathize with them. Writers who don’t
schedule time to be social on Facebook or Twitter are turning a social platform
into broadcast media. If you simply broadcast your messages – “Buy my book!” –
you won’t be rewarded in website visits or book purchases. However, if you
allot time for talking with your readers via social media, you will gain loyal
followers who, in many cases, will help to market your books.
You can schedule 15 minutes at the end of
your day for thanking your retweeters (Twitter followers who re-post your
messages), commenting on your friends and fans’ posts, and interacting with
your growing body of contacts. Use this time to engage with other writers,
colleagues, editors, agents, readers and friends. Thank people for finding and
posting a great blog you enjoyed reading. Share a stunning image of a dahlia
that a reader pinned on Pinterest. If you interact with your contacts, your
following will grow.
Measure
Your Return on Investment (ROI)
Social media platforms are free, but our
time isn’t. In this 24/7 culture that we live in, there never seems to be
sufficient time to check all of our email, read our Facebook friends’ posts,
and finish all the books we hope to write. So we want to be certain that our
time on social media is well spent.
We also want to analyze what works and what
doesn’t. Do more of your friends and fans on Facebook comment when you include
an image with your post? If you’re testing blog post titles, was there a
certain title that your Tweeps retweeted more often? Are you losing followers
on Twitter as fast as you’re gaining them? Do you know why your Facebook page
likes soared by 300 last month?
You need to know the answers to these
questions so that you will know what to post in the future. Discovering the
messages that resonate with your audience is critical to your marketing
efforts. To know what these metrics are, subscribe to an application that will
analyze your performance and help you to learn from the data that it culls. Here
are a few:
All you need to do is type in the web
address to your Facebook author page (not your personal profile) and this free
program will analyze your engagement. Your score will be somewhere between 1
and 100. The higher your score, the better you are doing. It will rate your
growth in likes, rank your score against similar pages, measure your response
time to comments left by fans, determine whether you are asking questions often
enough, and remind you to denote more milestones. Basically, it provides an
at-a-glance look at the areas you excel in and the areas that need improvement.
Everyone with a Facebook tool should take advantage of this free analytics
program.
For $39/month, SproutSocial will analyze
your Facebook and Twitter accounts. The analytics are comprehensive and in
addition to a PDF report, you can download an Excel spreadsheet that examines
your click-through-rates on a day-by-day basis. It provides in-depth
demographics and measures tweets, retweets, follows, mentions, replies and
direct messages. It will also measure how social you are and determine your
influence. You can also use this application to schedule your posts, unfollow
users, and at the premium level, it will determine your best posting times.
For $49/month, this application will
analyze your data every week, build your reports, and send them to you.
Measureful automatically distills your Google Analytics data into weekly
insights and reports. You can connect your accounts in five minutes or less and
wait for the reports to arrive.
• Curalate
Curalate bills itself as the only analytics
program for Instagram and Pinterest. It will analyze social media conversations
and provide insights into your Pinterest and Instagram profiles. Use it to
measure, monitor and grow your influence. In today's increasingly visual world
of applications, Curalate can combine sophisticated image recognition
algorithms with technologies to provide you with an analysis of your images. If
you're a writer and photographer, this is an analytic tool you’ll likely need.
Social media needn’t force you to spend
hours at your computer every day, sucking the hours out of your day when you
have other pressing needs, responsibilities and desires to write. By spending
fifteen minutes every morning curating and scheduling and fifteen minutes every
evening socializing online, you will benefit from the power of social media in
today’s world and find readers who will be happy to find you and read your
books.
About the Author
Frances Caballo is a social media
strategist, manager, and author of Social
Media Just for Writers: The Best Online Marketing Tips for Selling Your Books and Blogging
Just for Writers. Her new book Avoid Social Media Time
Suck: A blueprint for writers who want
to create online buzz for their books and still have time to write will
be available in February 2014. Her ebook, Pinterest Just for Writers, is
available for free on her
website. Follow Frances on Twitter @CaballoFrances
30 December 2013
Special Guest Post: On Becoming A Writer By N. Gemini Sasson
What if you could remember another life? What if you could re-live it and find love again?
In The Time of Kings: The new time travel romance adventure
set in medieval Scotland from N. Gemini Sasson
is available now on Amazon
# # #
On Becoming A Writer
When Tony invited me to guest blog, I said
yes immediately. For ten days, I kicked around ideas, rejecting one after the
other. I felt like it had all been said before. That writing, the process of
it, really isn’t all that exciting. If you asked me what my work day is like
and I told you, you’d probably yawn.
Then today, a friend asked me how I went
about becoming a writer. Such a
simple question, and yet … so profound. Well, there is no one way. There is no
formula. You just sit down and do it. Day, after day, after day. Word after
word. Page after page. Book after book.
You do it when you don’t believe in
yourself. You do it when you don’t feel like it. You do it when you’re afraid
to show it to anyone for fear they’ll erupt in hysterical laughter or tear
apart every phrase you toiled over. You do it even when you’re not sure your
story will ever be read by another human being.
To get past all that, you have to
understand why it is that you want to write.
Do it because you have something to say.
Something to share. Pain you need to heal from. Hope you keep close to your
heart that things can turn out for
the better, even if only in a fictional world. Do it because you believe in
true love, conquering fear, happy endings and good guys saving the world. Write
to connect with others. Because whatever you feel in the deepest, most hidden
recesses of your soul, someone else has probably felt that way, too.
The Best Stories
The
best stories reveal truths about ourselves and our worlds that we weren’t aware
of before. They bring us closer together. They move us emotionally.
When I was a teenager, I was in love with
the idea of being a writer. I had a
typewriter and desk tucked away in my closet. I’d write a page or two of a
story and abandon it. I didn’t yet understand that writing a book was a long
and often tedious process.
That dream, though, of being a writer eventually drew me back – but not for another twenty
plus years. Even at thirty, I didn’t yet possess enough confidence in how to
portray my ideas, or understand the parts of a story, or have the commitment to
write an entire book. To those of you at this stage, don’t let that stop you. Start
somewhere. Write journal entries, write articles, write blog posts. Just …
write.
Write as if no one but you is ever going to
read it. Because when you start to worry about criticism, rejection or
disinterest, you aren’t going to write in your most authentic voice. When you
worry about even finishing the blessed book, the whole task can seem so
daunting that you chuck it early on to save yourself the grief.
Take it one paragraph at a time
A writing instructor once asked the class I
was in what defines you as a writer. Most of us said having a book published.
His answer was: Writers write. Plain and simple.
Now, becoming a ‘published author’ is
another matter. Luckily, it’s more attainable than ever these days. Computers,
the internet, and digital self-publishing make it a thousand times easier than
it was a decade or two ago.
Just remember, before you can become a
published author, first you must write.
Until later,
Gemi
About the Author
N. Gemini Sasson is the author of six historical novels set in 14th and 15th century Scotland, England and Wales, including The Bruce Trilogy and Isabeau, A Novel of Queen Isabella and Sir Roger Mortimer (2011 IPPY Silver Medalist in Historical Fiction).
Her latest release is Uneasy Lies the Crown, A Novel of Owain Glyndwr. Long after writing about Robert the Bruce and Queen Isabella, Sasson learned she is a descendant of both.
If you'd like to learn more about N. Gemini Sasson's books, visit her website www.ngeminsasson.com or blog http://ngeminisasson.blogspot.com and find her on Twitter @NGeminiSasson
Her latest release is Uneasy Lies the Crown, A Novel of Owain Glyndwr. Long after writing about Robert the Bruce and Queen Isabella, Sasson learned she is a descendant of both.
If you'd like to learn more about N. Gemini Sasson's books, visit her website www.ngeminsasson.com or blog http://ngeminisasson.blogspot.com and find her on Twitter @NGeminiSasson
24 December 2013
Book Launch ~ Forever Doomed by MaryAnne Kempher @MaryAnnKempher
It's not wise to wander the cruise ship
FOREVER alone at night.
You might not live to see daylight.
Detective Jack Harney agrees to do an old
Army buddy a favor. Curt Noble had some personal business to attend to, he
didn’t say what. What he did say was he needed someone to temporarily take over
his duties as head of security on the struggling cruise ship Forever. Jack
hesitates, but he owes Curt his life so agrees.
He’s told the worst mischief he
can expect to encounter will be the occasional shoplifter, or drunk. Instead,
one week into the cruise, a beautiful red head and a member of the crew are
ruthlessly murdered. Are the two murders connected? It’s up to Jack to find
out. He must find the killer before the ship returns to Tampa’s port, or worse,
before another dead body is found. This won't be easy. The ship is old, it's
security systems outdated, and clues are few, or so it seems at first
It’s not just a sense of obligation that
motivates Jack to agree to Curt's request; Jack moved thousands of miles,
started over, and still can't get Amy O'Brian out of his heart or mind. When
she shows up on the ship, as part of a large wedding party, Jack must fight to
stay focused. To make matters worse, Amy isn't his only distraction; a sexy and
mysterious woman has made it her mission to seduce Jack.
As the body count rises, and time slips
away, Jack has to ask himself, “Did someone commit the perfect crime?”
About the Author
MaryAnn Kempher's writing is infused with mystery and romance. She
spent her teen years spent living in Reno NV where her first book, Mocha,
Moonlight, and Murder is set. The setting for her second book, Forever Doomed,
was inspired by her love of the ocean. Her writing influences include favorite
authors Agatha Christie, Jane Austen and Janet Evanovich. Her guilty pleasures
include any and all sweets, including a good cup of Mocha. She is married with
two children.
For more about MaryAnn Kempher, visit her
author Facebook page find her on Twitter @MaryAnnKempher and visit her website: mkempher.com
Purchase MaryAnn’s books here:
If you purchase Forever Doomed in paperback for uner
$11, you can get the Kindle version for just 99 cents.
22 December 2013
Forced Entry (MP3 Download) by Michael Brookes @TheCultofMe
Forced Entry audio short is now available!
Terrorists have seized a suburban dwelling and a special forces unit is despatched to rescue the hostages. They're trained for every conceivable eventuality, but they haven't trained for the horror they encounter. Inside the house they find a sealed basement door and a trail of blood leading to the bedroom. None of them were prepared for what awaits them: Mystery and unimaginable evil...
Forced Entry is only £1.99 and can be downloaded from The Radio Theatre Workshop online store
- Running Time: 18 mins
- Cast: Janet Westwood Wilson, Benjamin Goodman, Liam McCauley, Christopher Jarvis
- Adapted and Directed by Christopher Jarvis
- Music by Allen Stroud.
# # #
Writers: If you would like to discuss producing a high quality audio book get in touch with specialists The Radio Theatre Workshop HERE or find them on Twitter @theradiotheatre
17 December 2013
13 December 2013
What are you waiting for? START WRITING! ~ Guest Post by Madeline Courtney
Hey, guys! This is my first guest blog, so here goes. My name is Madeline Courtney and I'm a Writer from Carthage, Missouri. I'm seventeen years old and I'm self-publishing my first novel, THE CASE OF IRENE ADLER, which is a retelling of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's A SCANDAL IN BOHEMIA. It is also the first book in my Sherlock Holmes series.
So, I'm going to blog about Writing and my routines. I chose this topic because a lot of people (followers on Twitter, emails, etc.) have asked me how I make time to write a whole novel and continue going to school. My answer to this question is always the same. If you really want to do something then you'll make time. It's also easier because, after suffering from very serious bullying at school, I am being homeschooled and taking classes online. Because of this, I am not only publishing my first novel, but also graduating highschool a whole year early.
I have a very strict schedule, as all Writers should, and I follow it completely.

So, I'm going to blog about Writing and my routines. I chose this topic because a lot of people (followers on Twitter, emails, etc.) have asked me how I make time to write a whole novel and continue going to school. My answer to this question is always the same. If you really want to do something then you'll make time. It's also easier because, after suffering from very serious bullying at school, I am being homeschooled and taking classes online. Because of this, I am not only publishing my first novel, but also graduating highschool a whole year early.
I have a very strict schedule, as all Writers should, and I follow it completely.

As of lately, my grandparents have had the laptop so I've been having to use the desktop (not fun, as it is located right in the middle of the living room, where everyone likes to hang out.)
I force myself to push through it by plugging in my headphones and turning them up all the way to drown out the noise of the TV and family talking. My family know that if they want to talk to while I'm writing they either text me or wait until I'm done.
Usually I try to write two to three hours everyday without a break except for more British Tea. I guess, what I'm trying to say is, if you want to write a book YOU HAVE TO HAVE A CAVE. There is no other way around it. At least for one hour a day you have to go into The Cave and just WRITE because if you don't you never will. If you want people to take you seriously as a Writer, you have to take being a Writer seriously.
Ksenia Anske (@kseniaanske on twitter) is a big inspiration for me because she helped talk me into writing to deal with my depression. If you can get past the Blocks, the lack of confidence (we all get it!), and everything else you should really try Writing. It's a wonderful way to relax and it's brilliant for therapy (part of the reason I started!) Writing THE CASE OF IRENE ADLER has helped me escape my depression. My best friend Melissa has always been supportive of my dream and for that I am thankful. I guess you could say I write because I have to.
I am a Writer. I am a survivor. And I hope everyone who reads my novel will finally understand the real me. If you ever want to talk about Writing or publishing or just need to talk I am on twitter @MaddieC123 my blog is MadelineCourtney.blogspot.com and you can email me MadelineCourtney58@gmail.com
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