Apologies for no blog last week. It was family medical drama week.
In Publishing News this week,
In my blog two weeks ago, I wrote about the US government firing the Director of the Copyright office. As with all these government moves there are court cases pending to slow down the speed of these changes. The Copyright Director is suing to get her job back.
Across the pond in the UK, Elton John and other big names lambasted the news that the AI transparency act favours tech companies, calling the government decision criminal and irresponsible. Publishing Perspectives has a detailed look at what went wrong with the proposed law.
Giving tech companies an almost free rein to use copyrighted material seriously undermines what copyright stands for. At the moment the EU seems to be the only jurisdiction where artists copyright matters. Keep an eye on what your own government is doing around these laws for creative artists.
In an I-can’t-believe-it move, a Texas court has reversed a book banning law, stating that libraries must be the voice of the government. The librarians are warning that this smacks of propaganda for the state.
The invisible first lady of America is bringing out a memoir. Eyebrows are raised as the narration of the memoir is a cloned AI voice, which will also be used in translations. Mark Williams looks at the rise of synthetic voices and the possibilities for publishers.
The UK Children’s Laureate has launched a campaign to get families to read in response to the dismal reading statistics that were announced recently. It is well known that if you read to children from birth they start school with a big advantage that only keeps continuing. Congratulations to our own newly appointed Reading Ambassador for New Zealand, Kate De Goldi.
Publishing Perspectives has an interesting essay from an Indian publisher on the rise of Print on Demand use by publishing companies and how it is changing the nature of the publishing business. These insights could be applied to other publishing territories as well.
Literacy is being challenged. What can publishers do about it? Richard Charkin writes in his monthly column about the clouded nature of publishing stats and how the underlying news means we must worker harder to engage readers. Key to this is amplifying the uniqueness of their authors.
Two great podcasts caught my eye this week… The SPA Girls celebrated 500 episodes with a great chat about the past and where they think the future of publishing will go.
Joanna Penn interviewed Comic and Game maker Dave Morris about creative control, world building and AI tools. Dave has some interesting insights on training AI on your own content.
If you are looking for some great craft books check out Storybundle. Kris Rusch has curated an excellent collection of books – You pay not much – the authors get the money and so does a great charity. Win Win Win.
Writers and discipline. We chase it, revere it, get the apps, try the productivity short cuts. Harper Ross writes on Writer Unboxed about the discipline myth and what sustains us.
Lisa Norman has an excellent post on staying true to our unique voice. Over the years all the tools we have used to showcase our writing have changed but our unique voice hasn’t.
September Fawkes has a great post on misaligned characters wants and plot goals. When the character is acting against what they profess they want sets the scene for a weak plot or theme. How can you fix it?
In the Craft Section,
Secondary Characters- all the fun and less work- Laurie Schenebly Campbell
Choose a powerful foundation for POV -Lynette Burrows- Bookmark
Plot twists- crafting the unexpected- Tammy Burke-Bookmark
The power of connotation in picture books-Chelsea Tornetto- Bookmark
Enneagram for character development- K M Weiland – Bookmark
Reading like a writer- Michelle Barker
In the Marketing Section,
10 little known Substack features- Rachel Thompson
10 things I wish writers knew about marketing- Dan Blank- Bookmark
How to maximise being a podcast guest-Sandra Beckwith- Bookmark
What is book bundling and how does it work- Penny Sansevieri- Bookmark
Video marketing tips for authors- PR by the book
Audiobook marketing- Reedsy- Bookmark
To Finish,
It is mid way through the year. Where has the time gone? How are the writing goals?
If you are feeling down in the dumps, try a creativity date. Monica Cox has an interesting post on Angela and Becca’s website about the benefits of the artist date. You don’t need to date an artist you just need to make time for creativity, with no strings attached. Create for the sheer joy of creating.
Isn’t that why we started writing in the first place?
Maureen
@craicer
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Photo by Nick Karvounis on Unsplash
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