Showing posts with label K M Weiland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label K M Weiland. Show all posts

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Who Has The Power?

 


 

In Publishing News this week,


The first of the AI lawsuits has been decided with a Californian Federal Judge handing down a pre-trial ruling that the Anthropic company was using fair use to train its AI using copyrighted material. However, the fact that they used pirated material was a problem. Read the article from Publishers Weekly and find out what the AI companies are doing now to get around licensing the work for training purposes. I wonder if the judge will address the trampling of the moral rights of the authors.

 

Publishing Perspectives looks at the latest statistics from the American Publishers Association and sales are down across the formats. These numbers are just snapshots they hasten to add. Hopefully it is not a downward trend.

 

On the African continent Mark Williams based in The Gambia looks at how AI is making an impact in publishing. If you can’t get any print books and only sporadic internet what are you to do? Mark talks about how publishing in Africa is quietly breaking records as they figure out ways to get books into the hands and ears of people across the continent.

Mark also looks at a little Romanian startup with big plans to grow across Europe and Latin America. It’s not about competing with everybody else but looking at who everybody else is overlooking and filling the gap.

 

Because writing and journalism go hand in hand, I try to keep an eye out for what is trending in journalism writing. Reuters, one of the world’s biggest news agencies, has released their digital news report for 2025, a snapshot on where people get their news from and who they trust to give them news. Ouch. Social Media wins out. 

Adam Tinworth drills into the data and points out how journalists have to change to cope with the emerging media tsunami.

 

In fun uplifting news, London has its first dedicated romance book store, The BBC reports. Finally, some positive reporting about this genre. Could it be because the Romance genre was behind $1billion worth of sales last year in the UK? The bookstore is loud and proud with a Smut Hut inside it. Interesting how the BBC just couldn’t bring themselves to name the bookstore.

 

The Alliance of Independent Authors has an interesting article on the audiobook book boom and how indie authors and publishers are looking closely at KDP’s AI Virtual Voice. Is it worth doing and how do you price it for the consumer?

 

Anne R Allen has an excellent article on building inventory. This is a positive spin on not being published. I am reminded of one of our most beloved children’s authors who when an American Big Publisher saw her work at an exhibition came calling. Do you have anything else besides that story, she was asked. Margaret Mahy pulled a suitcase out from under the bed. It was stuffed with stories. 

 

Johnny B Truant has been writing lately about the Artisan Author. He has an interesting article on taking back the power over your author career. Have you really looked at who has the power? It is often not the author. So what can you do about it?

 

Savannah Cordova has an interesting article on Angela and Becca’s blog about writing what you know. She turns this familiar writing adage on its head. Know What You Write. 

 

In the Craft Section,

Different character arcs for the same character- K M Weiland Bookmark!


Do you have to use the 3 act structure?- C S Lakin


Semi colons and other punctuation- Becca Puglisi- Bookmark


The importance of conveying character- September Fawkes- Bookmark


6 cheats to tell well- September Fawkes.

 

In The Marketing Section,

5 tips for stella cover design in 2025- Savannah Cordova


10 Amazon KDP secrets- Rachel Thompson- Bookmark


Pinterest -best kept author marketing secret- Melisa Bourbon- 

Bookmark


2 Great posts from Written Word Media- Pen to camera don’t ignore YouTube and Marketing on a shoestring- Bookmark

 

To Finish

Being a kiwi… a New Zealander, I am used to seeing the Haka – often described as a Maori War chant by overseas commentators, at important events. To the outside world it is mostly seen on television at international sports matches to honour the opposition by bringing your best game. Here in Aotearoa New Zealand, it is also performed to honour someone who has achieved great mana or made a community impact by their life and actions. School prizegivings and graduations are often punctuated by Haka from the families of students. It stops us all in our tracks. The recipient is usually in tears for the honour bestowed. The Haka is never taken for granted. Recently Elizabeth Heurgo wrote in Writer Unboxed about the passion of the Haka and how she is using it to tackle the blank page. It’s a fascinating essay linking the Haka to Literature and Booker Prize winners. Your blank page may generate the honour of a haka for your work. You just have to write. 

 

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 Substack version.

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

 

Photo by Mateusz WacĹ‚awek on Unsplash

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Defending Literature Around The Globe.


In Publishing News this week,

 

Copyright received another blow in the United Kingdom this week, when the amended law supported by the Upper house was defeated again in the Lower house. That meant that the new bill will not have any transparency compliance from tech companies. Publishing Perspectives covers the implications and what publishing companies can hope for in the near future.

 

Canadian authors alerted the writing community to an AI scam that is happening on Amazon. Take a hot new title… change the cover a little bit with AI. Change the author name a little bit. Scrape the insides… and take advantage of the original books marketing push to make bucks. This kind of dupe gives authors a bad name and it’s not their fault! 

 

International tax and legal services firm, PWC has released a report on the impact of AI in the workforce. It’s surprisingly positive with employees who can use AI being valued more. Mark Williams looks at the report findings for the publishing community.

 

Meanwhile, Jane Friedman has written an article about What AI can’t steal from you which is your unique voice and perspective. 

 

Ingram Content Group has integrated AI tools into its marketing platform, Ingram iD. The tools will write blurbs and run campaigns across social media according to Publishers Weekly.

 

The Toronto Comics festival just wrapped up and the big talking points were how much the cross border attendance had taken a hit because of fear of gender challenges at the border. The festival has been a safe space for people from marginalized communities. Although comics are in good heart the people reading them may not be so confident.

 

The International Publishers Association’s World Expressions Forum (WEXFO) has just finished meeting in Lillehammer. The clarion call from the forum was the threat to Democracy from disinformation and censorship. They have released a report exhorting members to resist this. “World Expression Forum calls for resistance against authoritarian forces that undermine democracy and freedom of expression. Democracy is continuously under threat, and we (the undersigned) promise to strengthen our battle against disinformation, censorship and polarization–and improve literacy in our societies.”


Over in the middle east the Shajah Publishing Sustainability Fund has just helped 12 publishers to scale up their business and use new tools to make their publishing sustainable. They get so many business development goodies they must be the envy of publishers worldwide. Mark Williams dives into what is on offer for the lucky selected publishers. This is possible because of the countries commitment to literacy and education. 

 

Seth Harwood writes on Jane Friedman’s blog about the perils of Diminishing Returns in Revision. Do you know when it is time to let go. This is one of my biggest problems…if only I had another five minutes to put in that comma and take it out again four times before I’m finished… .

 

The fantastic Jami Gold is back with an excellent post on writing stand alones in a series. Yes, you can do it. It takes some creativity but we’re writer’s aren’t we? Jami has some great tips for thinking outside the series box.

  

In The Craft Section,

3 act analysis of Star Wars- Gabriele Pereira


Chekhov’s Gun- Anne R Allen- Bookmark


When the 2nd draft feels like a step back- Janice Hardy- Bookmark


Different character arcs for the same character-K M Weiland- Bookmark


Dual Protagonists- Terry Odell- Bookmark

 

In the Marketing Section,

Conquering limiting beliefs- Kimberly Grabas- Bookmark


10 Free Book Promo ideas- Sandra Beckwith


Monitoring your author brand- Dave Chesson – Bookmark


21 marketing tips- Writing Oasis


How to define a strong marketing brand- Jenny Hansen- Bookmark

 

To Finish

It’s halfway through the year and my thoughts turn to the current novel and if I will ever wrangle it into submission. It didn’t help that I wrote out of sequence. Jenny Hansen has an excellent article on the non linear writing process. Some writers work best when the manuscript looks like a mess. 

How often do you start a writing project knowing who the audience for it is? Liz Alterman has an article on The Dynamic duo’s website about pitching the concept to yourself before you write the book. I can’t help thinking that if we did more of this we wouldn’t have half-finished novels in the bottom drawer.

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

It’s nearly time for my monthly newsletter of the best of my bookmarked links. You can subscribe here if you want to join our happy band.

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

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

 

Photo by NASA on Unsplash

Thursday, May 8, 2025

The Courage To Be Creative

 


 

In Publishing News this week,

 

A new press has launched reports The Guardian. Conduit books seek to only publish books by men as they are being “overlooked with the perception that the male voice is problematic.” The founder hopes the press will help to change the narrative that boys and men don’t read. Anything to get people reading, I say.

 

The fan run Science Fiction and Fantasy conference called WorldCon is under a massive cloud at the moment. At issue is the use of ChatGPT to vet authors and panelists. Cora Buhlert, who will be on a WorldCon panel virtually, explores the problems of using AI for programming in her article, Robot Hallucinations. She uses her own name and prompt as an example of the problem the organisers overlooked. It is a minefield. If you are planning a conference- do your own homework, don’t rely on AI.

 

The attack on the arts in the United States continues. Next on the block are the National Endowments for Arts and Humanities. These two organisations have stopped or rescinded funding for Literary grants and awards amongst other important funding for the literary sector. Publisher’s Weekly reports that they fought back in the first Trump presidency, but they may not be able to fight back this time.

 

The UK Publishers Association have been reminding people of the soft power they wield in the UK economy. Their study puts the figure in the billions of pounds reports Publishing Perspectives. It all hinges on literary tourism. 

 

Spotify is retiring its Findaway Voices by Spotify, arm in August. They have sold this part of the business to INaudio. Spotify will continue with Spotify for Authors its dedicated audiobook distribution business. Dan Holloway reports on the changes for authors.

 

Recently UNESCO released a document from a trio of European organisations entitled A Call For Transparency Regarding AI-Generated Books. Publishing Perspectives reports on the document and the 3 key points UNESCO is asking for. Developing critical thinking is top of the list.

 

Mark Williams of The New Publishing Standard looks at the old model of publishing regions and why it has taken so long for the publishing industry to realise that eBooks are global and you don’t need regional publishing distinctions.

 

Publisher’s Weekly reports that Young Adult trends in books being published this year are bouncing between light and dark. A recent survey shows that its either frothy romance or dark academia that are the stories of the moment. What is there for the teen in the middle?

 

Lit Hub has an article on The Rise of The Submission Industrial Complex, or how journals are increasingly asking for fees to submit work. Some journals are using this to weed out AI written stories. But others are seeing it as a cash cow.

 

David Woghan writes an interesting article on Jane Friedman’s blog about whether you really need Ingram Spark. Print On Demand has come a long way from its beginnings. At issue is print quality and availability. In my experience IngramSpark have been excellent down under. 

 

I love researching…it’s the writing I find hard. The urge to go down the rabbit hole is something I battle every day. Kate Woodworth has a great article on how going down the rabbit hole opened her up to a whole different narrative.

 

Kathleen Schmidt has a great article on book publicity. It’s not a contest. There are many factors that help your book make a splash, having money to spend on publicity is not the only way to get a book noticed.

 

In The Craft Section,

Voice revisited- Terry Odell- Bookmark


Thriller words of wisdom- Dale Ivan Smith- Bookmark


10 things I learned teaching children to write- Tari Jewett


How readers react to reactions- Donald Maass- Bookmark


Writer Better Action Scenes- K M Weiland - Bookmark

 

In The Marketing Section,

8 strategies to boost reader engagement-David Lewis- Bookmark


Stock Photos for Book Covers-Jonathan Green- Bookmark


How to revive a dead email list- Emily Enger- Bookmark


How much does publicity cost- Kathleen Schmidt- Bookmark


Book promotion ideas- Bookbaby

 

To Finish

Joanna Penn interviewed Pia Leichter, a publicist and writer about her new book Welcome to the creative club: Make life your biggest art project. This is a wide ranging interview on being a creative director and taking those skills to apply them to writing and your own life. Changing your own narrative can happen with making small changes in your life. 

Diana Stout writes about persevering through failure. How the writer reacts to failure will show whether they will ultimately be successful. 

Creative Courage to keep writing is what we all strive for.

 

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 Substack version.

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

Photo by Marija Zaric on Unsplash

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Is it Good Literature?

 

 

In Publishing News this week,

 

If you are a comic book publisher by now you must be suffering severe stress at the uncertainty of the Diamond Comics distributor woes. They have a buyer. They haven’t a buyer. Their potential buyer is now suing them. Publishers Weekly tries to keep everyone up to date.

 

Also suffering is the Children’s Publishing community with the news that Albert Whitman and Co is in bankruptcy after 106 years of trading. After a series of disastrous moves and the failure to pay people, usually the first sign of a sinking publishing ship, the company has closed. But will anyone get their money back?

 

The money is being handed out by Spotify - $100 million this year already. Mark Williams looks at the symbiotic nature of podcasting and audio books and speculates what else Spotify might be doing with the spoken word.

 

This week Canada had a national election that highlighted what happens when another countries president tells you how to vote. Amongst the first laws that Canadian authors want fixed is the poorly worded copyright law that is hurting the creative community in Canada.

 

The Book Industry Study Group (BISG) had their annual meeting in New York. The theme – Move Fast and Fix Things. Publishing Perspectives reports on the outcomes from the study group that identifies pain points in publishing and how to fix them.

 

Back in court are five well known authors challenging the legality of the book banning in Florida. Several states are waiting on the outcome as it will set a precedent on whether their book bans are lawful. It is slow going but the outcome is important. Luckily these authors have the financial resources to see it through.

 

Dan Holloway reports on moves to make AI generated films eligible for The Oscars. While you are pondering this, check out Wiley (Academic publishers) guidelines for using AI in book and journal writing. My thought is that by the end of the year most publishers will have specific guidelines like these. After all, if they are using it in their offices can they really demand others don’t?However, be very transparent in your AI dealings. Publishers won’t back you up if there is a court case. You are on your own, and they may just sue you to make the point.

Use AI as a tool to help creativity. Your author voice is original, and an AI is not. An algorithm can’t feel like a human can. 

 

Amy Bernstein has a great post on Jane Friedman’s blog about using fiction techniques to make your nonfiction book better. Borrow From Fictions Toolbox to Elevate Your Nonfiction Book.

 

Andrea Grigg has an interesting post on Writers in the Storm about Emerging from Writers Block. When you have tried everything and beaten yourself up for having writers block it might be the permission to quit that frees you. Everyone’s creativity is different. 

 

Two excellent craft articles caught my eye this week. Becca Puglisi’s Build Character Growth Milestones into your story and Katie Weiland’s impressive take on the Corrupt Character Arc. These are two outstanding posts on the craft of writing compelling characters. 

 

In The Craft Section,

Trigger questions for world building- Jaime Buckley- Bookmark


Genres of writing – Storygrid- Comprehensive!


Building scenes with beats- C S Lakin- Bookmark


The 5-4-3-2-1 of scene setting- Diana Giovinazzo


Why you should avoid bored protagonists -September Fawkes- Bookmark

 

In The Marketing Section,

3 author mistakes when marketing- Sandra Beckwith


10 strategies to grow your author newsletter -Rachel Thompson- Bookmark


Where to find readers- Fussy Librarian


Is Kindle Unlimited right for you – Penny Sansevieri- Bookmark


Approaches to marketing – Story Empire- Bookmark

 

To Finish

 

A long time ago before we had children… my husband and I used to hold Port and Poetry nights for our friends. It was our version of a literary salon. Friends would arrive with Port… or something else and their favourite poems and we would read them out loud. Sometimes there would be a theme, or we would just gossip about world events. When the kids came along we didn’t hold so many, but they were allowed to read out their favourite poems when we did. The Guardian recently wrote about the new literary salons being held. Funny, Sexy, and a bit Weird- how the young are doing literary salons now. Take an odd venue, stuff it full of people- bring a DJ, and read anything you like. 

Literature, always in fashion!


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 Substack version.

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

 

Photo by Iñaki del Olmo on Unsplash

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Speaking Up for Reading


 

 

In Publishing News This Week


Another week, another news story on the Institute of Museum and Library Services, this time it’s an open letter to Harper Collins. Everyone else has made the campaign to save the Institute a priority- why haven’t they?

 

In the UK, a new survey on reading finds that nearly half of the adults surveyed struggled to finish a book. This should be ringing all sorts of alarm bells. Most reported that they had seen a significant shift in their lack of reading in the last three years. 

Barbara O’Neal’s article on Writer Unboxed about The War of Attention is a timely reminder to be proactive in carving out reading time. 

Sara Hildreth also has a great post on types of reading slumps and how to fix them. If we all share these articles around we might get some people reading again. It can only be good for us.

 

Recently I was out with family, and we were in a pub that had been decorated with old Reader's Digest books. You know the ones, four abridged stories in one volume. I had to explain to the teen what they were. Book subscription boxes are on the up reports The Guardian. In fact they are becoming so popular as a curated reading experience that they are starting publishing companies.

 

Richard Charkin writes on the existential threat to publishing. Which one I hear you mutter. Yes it’s all of the above but the biggest threat according to Richard is the publishing industry itself.

 

While we are lamenting reading with our eyes, perhaps we could take some time to look at reading with our ears. The rise of Spotify and its commitment to audiobooks, especially the launch of its short form audio this year, has reaped a big industry prize, says Dan Holloway. 

Authors are taking advantage of the short form audio boom and reaping a nice pay day with 2000 word novellas. Revenue exceeded $2Billion in podcast advertising writes Mark Williams.

The Alliance of Independent Authors writes on how to use short form audio to your advantage. Meanwhile, over on The Creative Penn, Joanna has an interview with Derek Slaton on how he is using short form audio as serialized chapters on YouTube. This is a fascinating look at another form of storytelling with podcasting and YouTube.

 

Anne R Allen has revised her post of 10 pieces of bad advice new authors get from their unhelpful friends.- Hands up if you have received more than one of these gems of bad advice.

 

Terry Odell has a super post on the very underrated super power that every writer has. It has nothing to do with structure and everything to do with voice. 

 

In The Craft Section,

2 great articles from Becca Puglisi-6 tips for creating chemistry between characters and Effective dialogue techniques- Bookmark


How to use asides- Arthur Plotnik


Writing a fall arc- K M Weiland – Bookmark!


Villains vs Antogonists- Debbie Burke- Bookmark


Unforgettable villains- Masterclass

 

In The Marketing Section,

How to define a strong author brand- Jenny Hansen- Bookmark


Teachers guides with AI- Darcy Pattison


How to talk about your book ahead of publication- SamMissingham


Crucial elements to an author website-Carlyn Robertson- Bookmark


Prize ideas for promotions-Bookbub- Bookmark

 

To Finish,

Dan Blank takes the concept of the writers voice and expands it in this great article on the incredible power an author has to take us out of our daily life and into another world. He writes about how to use your writer friends to challenge yourself to go deeper as a writer. We all have a unique voice, are we using it in our writing?

 

Maureen

@craicer

 

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

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

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

 

Photo by DESIGNECOLOGIST on Unsplash

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Reading Success

 


London Book Fair is over and in comes Bologna Children’s Book Fair. I like to think it’s the most important because without creating readers the other book fairs wouldn’t exist. 

Publishers Weekly has a deep dive into what the big topics are at Bologna. The crisis in early literacy is worrying and have the covid years caused a reading slump or is it cyclical?

 

Graphic novels are now one of the biggest formats at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair. There are many interesting moves in this area reports Publishers Weekly. One thing that caught my eye in this article was audio books scripts generated by graphic novels.

 

The awards for Children’s Publisher of the year at Bologna is always a great event. The world is divided into six continent-ish zones and so there are six winners. Publishing Perspectives has a run down of the winners. Congratulations to Mila’s Books from New Zealand which took out the Oceania prize.

 

In another attack on literacy in the United States-The staff of The Institute of Museum and Library Services – the body that oversees funding for libraries have been placed on administrative leave according to Publishers Weekly. Hopefully their jobs can be saved.

 

Also closing their doors is NaNoWriMo. After a turbulent year and falling memberships the organization has closed. NaNoWriMo was a great idea and many bestsellers got their start in the white hot frenzy of writing a novel in a month.

 

Ingram Spark’s new book to screen database, MediaScout is now live. Publisher’s Weekly reports they already have an impressive number of books in the catalogue.

 

Mark Williams looks at the latest fallout of Meta AI and the proposed tariffs that had a good portion of the world on edge. While Mark see’s the value in some AI tools on the basis of its coming anyway we may as well use it. Dan Holloway looks at the impact AI has had on translators and artists. 

 

Teri Case writing on Jane Friedman’s blog looks at how AI made her want to trademark her name and how she went about it. This came about because Jane Friedman’s name had been stolen and pasted on AI generated books last year. Amazon wouldn’t take the books down because Jane hadn’t trademarked her name. 

 

Kathleen Schmidt has a fascinating article on book publicity. She dives into when and how to connect to your audience and book publicists. This is a must read if you have a book ready to release into the world.

 

Sandra Beckwith has a list of useful apps and tools to help the writer.

 

Donald Maass writing on Writer Unboxed has an excellent craft article on the hidden reason why readers read. Donald has excellent advice on how to craft your plot to hit all the right cues. A must read!

 

In The Craft Section,

The wolf under the table- J Scott Coatsworth


How conflict enhances your story- Ellen Buikema- Bookmark


4 stages of knowing in character arcs- K M Weiland – Bookmark


Using writing prompts to unstick yourself- Savannah Cordova


Dialogue mechanics- Becca Puglisi- Bookmark

 

In The Marketing Section,

How to get accepted by a distributor- Bokbaby- Bookmark


Marketing tips for a new genre- an example - Bookbub


Author swag and merch- IWSG- Bookmark


Amazon central changes – Penny Sansevieri- Bookmark


How to sell on Amazon – Dave Chesson – updated- Comprehensive!

 

To Finish

The world can be filled with negativity everywhere you look. It’s hard to stay upbeat when you feel bludgeoned by the daily news. In writing we can so often feel discouraged about our work. Harper Ross had a timely post on Writer Unboxed last week -The importance of defining success for yourself. This is a little reality check to recognize the wins in your creative life and celebrate them.

 

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 Substack version.

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

 

Photo by Blaz Photo on Unsplash

Related Posts with Thumbnails