Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Is AI Text Destroying Our Characters Humanity?

 

In Publishing News This Week

 

The end of March saw the closing date for authors to claim compensation from Anthropic in the Bartz vs Anthropic class action. However, this doesn’t mean that Anthropic is off the hook. This week the Association of American Publishers, along with the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical publishers joined a class action taken by the Concord Music Group publishers. Yes, song lyrics were ripped off as well as scientific, technical, and medical information. So Anthropic might have to delve into their $300 billion wallet and find some loose change.

Over on Lit Hub, Mary Childs has an article on feeling left out of the Bartz claim…her book was in the original theft, how come It wasn’t chosen to be in the compensation?

 

The Guardian reports that Penguin Random House is taking Open AI to court because their Chat GPT bot plagiarized their German children’s book. This court case is being taken in Europe. This is a specific case involving a chat bot. The case is compelling and Open Ai don’t really have a leg to stand on here.

 

Are animated micro dramas the next big thing? Harlequin thinks so. They have partnered with Dashverse, an AI entertainment company, to produce animated micro dramas inspired by their romance titles. They have a huge back list to mine if the first forty animations do well. 

 

Publishers Weekly interviewed agents and publishers about the Shy Girl controversy which I reported on last week. There was skepticism about Hachette’s claims that they didn’t know anything about the problem before it was brought to their attention. 

There are some telling comments about the disparity of power between what publishers demand of authors and what use of AI they make themselves. 


Mark Williams has been looking at the audiobook industry and finding the gaps that publishers are missing. Mark is a teacher in The Gambia, one of the poorest nations on Earth and he shares insights into a world where everyone has a smart phone but not a book or a credit card. There is a distribution model ripe for disruption. A fascinating article.

 

Jane Friedman has a great article about how the Bookstore Market has changed and what publishers should be doing to support them. The article is based on the recent Book Industry Study Group candid discussions at their recent event. If you know a bookseller pass it on. (I will be) Jane also has some author takeaways to think about.

 

Joanna Penn recently interviewed Anne Lamott and her husband Neal Allen on their new book Good Writing. Many writers will know Anne Lamotts book Bird by Bird which is one of those books on writing that every writer should read. Anne and Neal’s new book for writers is on crafting sentences. Read the transcript or listen to the interview it is fascinating.


This month Richard Charkin is reflecting on those strategy retreats that he attended when he was a publishing CEO and how quickly the high ideas and plans fell by the wayside to corporate bottom lines. This year will the strategy retreats focus on AI and will they change anything in publishing land?

 

Sara Hildeth writes this week about the rise of AI text generated newsletters. Her response is to question why writers would even bother to use an AI to generate text. The act of writing demands so much more from the writer. This is a thought provoking article on what it means to be a writer.

 

Written Word Media has an interesting deep dive article into what moves the needle as you go from Author to Authorpreneur. The transition to a business takes a different mindset and a willingness to look at marketing strategies.

 

Donald Maass has an interesting article on the writers toolbox of questions to make your characters and plot stronger. The important takeaway here is you can read loads of craft books but do you put the ideas into practice?

 

Mark Leslie Lefebvre is also looking at characters this week, specifically how your characters look at the world differently. Are you thinking about your characters world view and how they move through your story? 


In The Craft Section,

15 actionable tips for writing deep characters- Joanna Penn- BOOKMARK


Ego driven vs Soul driven character arcs- K M Weiland – Bookmark


Using contradiction to create micro tension- C S Lakin


How does fear play into Character arcs- Becca Puglisi- Bookmark


Types of backstory – Gabriela Pereira

 

In The Marketing Section,

How to beat your newsletter competition- Jane Friedman- Bookmark


How to build a powerful email list- Sandra Beckwith- Bookmark


AI systems can rescue you from difficult marketing tasks- R J Redden


Marketing myths – Rachel Thompson- Bookmark!


Amazon A content can upgrade your sales page- Penny Sansevieri

 

To Finish

Recently Tessa Barbosa wrote an interesting article on Writer Unboxed about the value of craft in the art of writing. “Creativity is a practice, just like meditation. It is about noticing things, making connections and asking questions." 

An AI can’t replicate your voice or point of view. Go out there and be human!

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

Do you want the best of my bookmarked links in a handy monthly newsletter? You can subscribe here to join our happy band.

If you want the weekly blog in your inbox subscribe to the free Substack version.

If you like the blog and want to buy me a coffee, I appreciate the virtual coffee love. Thanks.

 

Pic  

Photo by Emilipothèse on Unsplash

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Smart Ideas


In Publishing News this week,


One of the flow on effects in the Straits of Hormuz crisis is the slow down in the global supply chain. We have been here before, when a globally important canal was blocked. Suddenly everything is in short supply including books. They are stuck on a freight ship under fire in the Straits of Hormuz. Publishers Weekly looks at the rising costs due to this war.

 

Over the last week there has been comment over the Shy Girl book being pulled by Hachette just as it was being prepared for publication in the US. That’s a lot of pulped books as it was already on sale in the UK. The reason for the pulling- the book didn’t pass the sniff test for AI use. If so, why was it acquired in the first place? The author claims an editor must have used AI. Hachette didn’t notice anything until a New York Times article from another writer pointed it out and then they cancelled the book immediately. Mark Williams looks at the contract clause invoked and the problems this might create for authors in the future. 

 

Publishing Perspectives writes in their news roundup about Germany launching a credit card sized book token with a link to an audio book similar to the Tonies character player for children. Publishing Perspectives went on to say that Tonies has almost a 50% take up in target families in Europe.

Over the many years writing this blog the idea of physically owning your digital books has never gone away. Reading books on devices and subscription is not owning the book. You buy a license to read it on your device, kindle, smartphone, tablet or computer. This is true for audio books as well. Various companies have started with great intentions and then have gone quiet after trying to get traction from publishing companies to make bookcover trading cards with a download link combining the idea of convenience and physical ownership. If adults can buy Tonie character stories for their kids, is there a market for their favourite characters with audiobook or eBook links? 

 

Sweden recently had its Book Industry day and Publishing Perspectives covered the discussions. Amongst the applause at rising print book sales and the huge growth in audio, a new bookseller commented on Bookshops as social spaces. 

This idea has been on my mind for a while. The Bookshop as a curated experience. 

Savvy independent booksellers are embracing the idea of Bookshops as Destinations, offering experiences that enhance the readers enjoyment, Book club nights, author talks, panel discussions, book launches, themed membership nights. The Bookshop is the new literary salon. Who wouldn’t want to be a part of that atmosphere?

 

Publishers Weekly writes about the Substack-ified books that used to make the literary community ill. Authors were doing deals with Substack to serialise books back when Substack was new. A decade on and publishers are now realizing that the literary creator economy is over on Substack and they had better factor it in now that there are no longer glossy magazines to publish stories in.

 

The nightmare of having your social media or publishing accounts suspended can be paralysing to an author. Becca Syme writes about how to deal with the calamity and offers helpful advice based on how other authors came through the experience.

 

Jane Friedman has written the comprehensive post on AI and Publishing. This is an FAQ article that will be updated constantly. In the meantime, Jane has hit every major AI question with comprehensive answers.

 

Writing retreats and why they are a good idea, Harper Ross writes about how you can organize one for yourself. If you are lucky enough to get away and go write somewhere with like minded people you will already know this is golden time. 

 

Mark Leslie Lefebvre writes in praise of PLR. If you are lucky enough to live in a country that has the Library Public Lending Right – don’t take it for granted. There are plenty of authors who would like the chance to enjoy what you have. In the meantime, support your local library. I know a thriller writer who has all her book launches in the local library and they are highly anticipated affairs.

 

Katie Weiland has a thought provoking post on embodied writing or emotionally resonant writing. She writes “Embodied writing is an intentional return to that lived reality as the wellspring for fiction.’ This is an article that will keep you thinking for the rest of the week.

 

In The Craft Section,

Amplifying tension- Becca Puglisi- Bookmark


Journey of a romantic novel- Lucy Hay-Bookmark


Finding the heart of a story- Heather Webb- Bookmark


How to create a consistent Story Tone -K M Weiland- Bookmark


Focus on finishing- Joseph Lallo- Great Advice

 

In The Marketing Section,

Weak promotion dooms good books- Josh Bernoff


Are you overlooking potential readers- Kathy Steinemann- Bookmark


Author visibility- Rachel Thompson- Bookmark


You don’t need 10000 followers- Dan Blank


How to succeed at live events- Russel Nohelty- Bookmark

 

To Finish

You might have noticed the little rocket that I use as part of the Craicer branding. I write science fiction for kids so I let myself geek out a little on space things. This means that I read Andy Weirs books when they came out and watch the movies countless times. Project Hail Mary is a great story and all the scientists agree that it translated over to film pretty well. It deserves every success. Andy’s story is well known to the hard sci fi nerds amongst us. Tasmina Perry has an article on what we can all learn from Andy’s stories. Make your readers feel like smart problem solvers, they will love you for it.

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

It’s nearly time for my monthly newsletter If you want the best of my bookmarked links as well as other eclectic things you can subscribe here to join our happy band.

If you want the weekly blog in your inbox subscribe to the free Substack version.

If you like the blog and want to buy me a coffee, I appreciate the virtual coffee love. Thanks.

 

Photo by Alessandro Bianchi on Unsplash

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Readers- The New Superheros.

 In Publishing News This Week

I am back at my desk after three weeks away and looking through the news to see what I have missed. It is all London Book Fair with side issues of AI and ways to prove human authentication on your books. 

 

While I was away, I scheduled three articles on Copyright, Literary Estates, and Artificial Intelligence to appear on my blog. Thanks to readers who shared them with others. If you missed them and want to catch up, I wrote about 

What Copyright means and what it is worth.

Why you need to understand your Literary Estate.

How Artificial Intelligence can be used ethically.

Looking over the meaty topics discussed at the London Book Fair my articles reflect some of the discussions, which is gratifying.

 

One of the meaty topics discussed at LBF was Joanna Prior’s keynote speech. Joanna is chair of the UK Literacy Trust as well as being CEO of Pan Macmillan and her speech was an admonishment that the publishing industry is focusing on the wrong crisis. “The decline of reading is a greater challenge to our industry than AI could ever be.” Her speech highlighted the challenges we all face to keep our readers. 

 

Two great London Book Fair overview posts were from Tasmina Perry and Deborah Maclaren. Tasmina wrote about the publishing trends she saw at the LBF, short books are in. Deborah had a more considered overview on the big topics that were discussed, preparing for the next generation of readers. Both these articles highlight the need for publishers to be engaged with their readers.

 

Beside the keynote speeches, a protest book was published by 10,000 authors. Don’t Steal This Book was a direct response to the UK governments plan to allow AI companies to train AI models on copyrighted work without compensation.

 

Jane Friedman writes about her concern that author societies that are sponsoring certification models highlighting human authored books may be missing the point. What use is a sticker on the book if you can’t prove and AI was not involved in writing it?

 

Meanwhile, over in The Gambia Mark Williams writes about what it is like to be a teacher with access to AI but not printed books. His comments reflect Joanna Prior’s keynote on literacy and the challenges of keeping a reader. Without readers there is no publishing industry.

 

Publishing Perspectives reports on a panel discussion at LBF that highlighted the need for publishers to make licensing deals with AI. A bad deal is better than no deal was the comment. I’m not sure that should be a business maxim, but the arguments were compelling.

 

Recently Chelle Honiker of Indie Author Magazine interviewed Draft2Digitals CEO Kris Austin on How AI is affecting The Publishing Industry.

Kris talked about the flood of AI books in the nonfiction space that they reject. He is not so worried about fiction books authored by AI. We could be inflating AI’s ability to tell a compelling story.

 

Baker and Taylor have finally fallen on their sword and filed for bankruptcy. This surprised a few commentators that thought their recent fire sale of assets might have covered the creditors; however the bills were bigger than anyone knew. They owe some eye watering sums as Publishers Weekly reports.

 

Mark Leslie Lefvbre has an interesting article on being wide and how some authors have failed to understand what that actually means. Mark has done just about every job in publishing and is a great resource for how to run an author business. Are you publishing wide but shallow?

 

Ingram Spark has put together a free book marketing course. Each of the modules are under four minutes long and they cover metadata to publicity to websites to social media marketing. If you were looking for an overview on book marketing this could be for you. You get a certificate as well. 

 

Donald Maass has been an agent for a long time. He writes an interesting article on Writer Unboxed about Reading as an Agent. What he looks for might not be what you think. This is required reading if you are submitting to agents and editors.

 

In The Craft Section,

Awaken your creativity- Sarah Hamer- Bookmark


Learning about genres makes you write better- Andromeda Romano-Lax


Base your story structure on principles not systems- Tiffany Yates Martin


How to write dark stories responsibly- K M Weiland- Bookmark


Writing uncomfortable scenes- Jami Gold- Bookmark

 

In The Marketing Section,

2 excellent posts from Rachel Thompson- Understanding Social Media Followers and Book Giveaway subscriber marketing.- Bookmark Both.


Ten tips for Newsletter swaps- Gayle Leeson- Bookmark


5 ways to make your book relevant to media- Sandra Beckwith- Bookmark


7 Kindle keywords- Dave Chesson- (Updated)

 

To Finish,

While I was away, I did not check my email every day. However, when I did, I was looking through my lists for emails from real people not the next scam email. (There were a few of those.) Recently, Victoria Strauss of Writer Beware went down a Simon and Schuster scam rabbit hole to see how far they would go before they realized that she wasn’t a genuine mark. What I found interesting is that the AI scammer did not flag her name or her actual job which is to write about dodgy practices in the publishing world. If you are reading my blog, you are likely quite up to date on new scam practices, it’s the newbie authors that they target and whose dreams they shatter. A kind word from you and a link to Victoria’s blog might save a newbie from an expensive and embarrassing mistake.

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

Do you want the best of my bookmarked links in a handy monthly newsletter? You can subscribe here to join our happy band.

If you want the weekly blog in your inbox subscribe to the free Substack version.

If you like the blog and want to buy me a coffee, I appreciate the virtual coffee love. Thanks.

 

Photo by Kyle Hinkson on Unsplash

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Trying To Stay Sane for 2026


 

 

And we are back for another year of looking at news, trends, and tips on navigating the publishing world. 


Because I live in the Southern Hemisphere, we also have Summer, schools out, and Christmas and New Year all squashed together in one month of eating, celebrating, and broken new year’s resolutions. But the publishing world continues without noticing we are gone, so the first blogs in January are What Did We Miss.

 

Publishers Weekly reported that publishers are getting together to join a class action against Google. Yes, they too copied the Anthropic playbook and now a court case is looming on the horizon.

 

Spotify having made a substantial inroad into Audibles market share on audio books is looking to expand into video and to sweeten the pot it is going to be super easy to get eyeballs and ears on audio books. Meanwhile, Audible is doing the same according to Publishing Perspectives. The video wars on audio books are about to start.

 

If you are using YouTube for audio books you might like to check out the new trend on BookTok, ambient video for your books. You could upload a video of a cozy fire in a library as the visuals for your audio book experience. This could help with lots of sales if you upload the video to Spotify and Audible.


In AI news – HarperCollins France has decided to embrace AI translation much to the annoyance of translators. Publishing Perspectives reports on The Future of Translation: AI and The Greater Good.

 

Dave Malone has an interesting post on what labeling could look like as a way to distinguish works with AI use in it. He has some clear examples of types of labels which could be used on creative work. (It looks a little like a nutrition label, but the concept is worthy.)


Steph Pajonas has an interesting post on AI resistance being a problem for your ego. Are you letting your ego get in the way of using this tool?

 

Mark Williams keeps his eye on the publishing in the rest of the world, and he has some interesting things to report on the new darling of the Frankfurt Book Fair- India.

With their Gen Z numbers bigger than the population of the United States this is a potential publishing market that has been ignored for too long. The New Delhi Book fair is aiming for over 2 million visitors. If your country has just signed a free trade deal (NZ) this could be a great opportunity for publishing expansion.

 

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has seen the future in kids literature and it is Manga. They have embraced the Manga storytelling style and are teaching their kids to create this using their own stories.

 

Big Bad Wolf is back in Indonesia. BBW takes English language books that would be pulped otherwise and sells it in huge sales that last a week and are round the clock. Children’s books are in high demand. The numbers are astonishing. (A nice little earner for the publishers who write off their books, officially.)

 

Every January, the list of books, songs and films coming into the public domain gets attention. This is for specific books or characters. So thriller authors if you want to do your own versions of The Saint or Miss Marple or the Maltese Falcon you are in luck. Check out the list. There might be a pot of author gold waiting for you.

 

If you are thinking about the coming year and what might be the dominant themes check out Joanna Penn’s predictions for publishing in 2026. She is a publishing futurist and is often ahead of the trends.


Meanwhile, Erin Niumata has an interesting post on selecting a word of the year as your guiding star for decisions in your author life.


In the Craft Section,

How to use character tropes without the cliches- Angela Ackerman- Bookmark


3 Unforgettable Scenes- James Scott Bell


Summing up your story in 2 sentences- P J Parrish- Bookmark


The sentence and the story; a fable- Donald Maass


When to reveal story stakes- K M Weiland- Bookmark

 

In the Marketing Section,

Tips to overcome video shyness- Amy Rogers Nazarov- Bookmark


2026- the year to stop being invisible- Jaime Buckley


The pitch- a writing selling point- Ellen Buikema- Bookmark


Facebook ads for authors – video teaching by David Gaughran- Bookmark


5 social media metrics that matter- Rachel Thompson- Bookmark

 

To Finish,

As we look to start another calendar year of writing and publishing organizing ourselves into productive habits become the most pressing things to conquer in January. In the Southern Hemisphere it is right up there with getting the kids back to school after the so called Summer holiday. (It’s torrential rain here- Climate Change is biting.) If the thought of planning a year full of writing activities daunts you, check out this excellent post from Alexa Bigwharfe on a way to plan your writing goals and keep you moderately sane for 2026.

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

Do you want the best of my bookmarked links in a handy monthly newsletter? You can subscribe here to join our happy band.

If you want the weekly blog in your inbox subscribe to the free Substack version.

If you like the blog and want to buy me a coffee, I appreciate the virtual coffee love. Thanks.

 

Pic Photo by BoliviaInteligente on Unsplash

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Counting The Cost

 

In Publishing News This Week,

 

The publishing world was rocked by the death of Porter Anderson. Porter was a long time commentator and publishing news journalist. I shared many of his articles on the blog over the last decade. He was a kind and generous man who will be missed. I still grin when I see the words The Industry. Porter coined this tongue in cheek phrase, “the industry, the industry,” when reporting on the impact of another merger of publishers or publishing shaking event. RIP Porter.

 

Publishers Weekly reports the deep dissatisfaction with the new owners of Edelweiss, the ARC copy review site and sales database. Prices have gone up sharply. Being in this catalogue was essential for small publishers but now they are being priced out.


Metadata. It’s important. And many people in publishing do not understand it. It is the difference between finding your book in an online catalogue where it is supposed to be or the book disappearing completely. Darcy Pattison has an informative post on metadata.

 

Bloomsbury has partnered with AI reports Publishers Weekly. If you sucked in your breath at that headline, you are not alone. However, they are using AI technology for discovery and engagement. Not for writing. Only for learning outcomes in their academic division. Really. 

 

Anne Trubek has an interesting article on Will AI Written Books Destroy Publishing. She lays out where AI and the publishing contract language of indemnity diverge. This is a soothing post for most writers worried that AI written books will replace them.  

 

Mark Williams has an interesting post on the music industry and how the music publishers are using leverage with the AI companies to get favourable terms. This is something that the publishing companies are trying to do. With the recent court case judgement of training AI’s coming under fair use if you buy a copy, publishers might have missed a trick with licensing.  

 

Written Word Media have published the results of their annual survey of writers. One of the interesting ways they present this data it what each finding means for the author reading the survey.

 

Richard Charkin has an interesting column on the measurement trap and how what you measure in publishing gets in the way of why you are measuring. Is the industry failing to understand the basics of good publishing judgement? 

 

Agent Richard Curtis has a guest post on Jane Friedman’s blog about the Importance of Print and why it never died. Print might still be alive but some formats of it are shrinking fast. 

 

Jenn Windrow has an excellent post on making your writing sparkle. She see’s developmental editing like a Christmas Tree. Has it got a good structure? What about the sparkle?

 

 

In The Craft Section,

The case for shrinking your novel- Amy Bernstein- Bookmark


Keeping score- Donald Maass- Bookmark


Four moments you should hold the conflict- Becca Puglisi


The most powerful writing tip- Sue Coletta- Bookmark


Naming your book- Penny Sansevieri

 

In The Marketing Section

Can Facebook ads sell books- Randi Minetor- Bookmark


Understanding IngramSparks title processing


Amazon royalties explained- Dale Roberts - Bookmark


Long term author career- Podcast with Joanna Penn and Jennifer Probst – Interesting


The Taylor Swift Newsletter strategy- Katrina God- Bookmark

 

To Finish,

The last month of the calendar year and everyone is thinking I haven’t met my goals.

If that is you, cut yourself some slack. Are you further ahead on your writing journey than the start of the year? If you need some concrete help in goal setting check out this article from the SPA Girls. They are fantastic and one of my go to podcasts.

As it’s December, there will be lists of writer gifts out there. Katie Weiland has 12 days of writing gifts to get for yourself or a friend. Treat Yourself.

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

Do you want the best of my bookmarked links in a handy monthly newsletter? You can subscribe here to join our happy band.

If you want the weekly blog in your inbox subscribe to the free Substack version.

If you like the blog and want to buy me a coffee, I appreciate the virtual coffee love. Thanks.

 

 Photo by Alexander Grey on Unsplash

Thursday, November 20, 2025

The Spirit of The Gift



 

In Publishing News this week

 

The closure of Baker and Taylor book distributors has ongoing ripple effects throughout the book publishing industry. As the biggest book distributor to libraries, publishers are scrambling to put together dedicated sites. Small publishers are left hanging and now the implications are being felt with other book distributors. Publishers Weekly reports on Lectorum Publishing’s closure. Lectorum, the largest independent distributor of Spanish language books explains that the hits kept coming and they couldn’t overcome them. 

 

Spotify is expanding its reach again. This time into the Nordic countries home of Storytel. Storytel have just posted a third quarter profit. Europe and the American continent have been the preferred audiences to chase. I wonder which one will get to Asia or Africa first. Spotify reports that more than half of its listeners are under 35. With the younger demographic of Africa’s population, the struggle for the worlds ears between these two companies is just getting started.

 

November had three big conferences for the publishing community, Sharjah, Shanghai, and Author Nation and all of them addressed the AI conundrum. Do we? Don’t we? and How much is too much?

 

One of the keynotes of Sharjah was an address by Keith Riegert about AI tools. Publishers Weekly reports on this with the title When It Comes To AI, Adapt or Die. This is stark look at the AI tech disruption in publishing. Keith Riegert says we should treat AI as “a very intelligent but inexperienced assistant.”

 

Adding his ten cents into the mix is Mark Williams explaining that book sellers did embrace AI tools back in 2023 then walked back from it. 

 

So where does that leave us at the end of 2025. Publishing Perspectives has an article on using AI for marketing, including the recording of a panel discussion at Frankfurt. Not using it is not an option, according to the panel discussion. 

 

In my opinion, if you pass lots of junior publishing jobs to AI, how will the juniors know when AI gets it wrong or how to do the job without AI? We could lose a lot of knowledge if we let a computer do the thinking. In the publishing office it should be what is the best use of my assistant’s time? Do they understand enough about my business to use AI to my best advantage? The value of AI is speed in marketing, analysis, and productivity tools. But it is a very poor replacement for creativity. It’s the doubling down on being human that distinguishes us from a machine.

 

Publishers Weekly has an article on what’s happening in children’s publishing in China.

They are not having a fantastic year. The stats are reflected throughout the world as everybody is struggling to find children’s audiences. Where are they all and who is the competition? When I was talking to children at a recent market, they all said they read graphic novels. Producing a graphic novel is time consuming and expensive. A conundrum for the children’s publishers.

 

Joanna Penn is back from Author Nation the world’s biggest indie author conference. They had over 80 presentations and every major vendor was in attendance. Joanna gives a run down on the big topics of conversation. 

 

Richard Curtis has an excellent post on the profit and loss statement. For many in the publishing world this is the most important piece of paper in the office. And one that is not talked about. Understanding this document is key to every publishing decision.

 

Rachel Thompson has an excellent article on subscribers and their importance in marketing. I was recently talking to a publisher about owning your audience and Rachel’s article explains how your free newsletter subscribers are just as valuable as your paid ones. 

 

Michelle Barker (writing on the dream teams blog) has an excellent article on the qualities of a successful writer. It is not about sales. 

 

Dave King has an interesting article on Writer Unboxed about Redshirts. This is shorthand in the writing community for the character that is only there to die. If you are thinking about killing off a character, are you using their death wisely? 

 

In the Craft Section,

Microtension- a must in fiction- C S Lakin- Bookmark


Character layer by layer reveals-Patricia CrisaFulli- Bookmark


Crafting memorable sidekicks- Elizabeth Spann Craig


Is your protagonist the main character- September Fawkes- Bookmark


3 things silent movies can teach you- Janice Hardy

 

In the Marketing Section

Bookmarketing requires patience- Sandra Beckwith


Free Bookfunnel marketing guides- Bookfunnel- Bookmark



22 ways to grow your email list- Bookbub- Bookmark!


Strategies to get into libraries- IngramSpark


Author branding – Kindlepreneur- Bookmark

 

To Finish,

It’s that time of year where everywhere you look there are Black Friday deals along with Cyber Monday deals. It’s a sign of cultural capitalistic dominance when a holiday only relevant in America spreads around the world as an exhortation to spend money as a way of celebrating the Thanksgiving holiday. Why not flip this on its head and show your thanks to your fellow authors by reviewing their books or subscribing to their patreon or buying them a coffee. If you are hanging out for Black Friday deals for writers then the dream team Angela and Becca have great website discounts. Katie Weiland has a discount on all her courses and books. Women in publishing has collected a long list of other writerly Black Friday discounts. 


Go Forth and Give Thanks.

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

Do you want the best of my bookmarked links in a handy monthly newsletter? You can subscribe here to join our happy band.

If you want the weekly blog in your inbox subscribe to the free Substack version.

If you like the blog and want to buy me a coffee, I appreciate the virtual coffee love. Thanks.

 

Photo by Jess Bailey on Unsplash

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