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Monday, September 5, 2022

Conflict - How To Keep Your Readers Turning Pages by Marg McAlister

Conflict - How To Keep Your Readers Turning Pages


Some writers are just too kind.

They hate to put their characters under any kind of pressure. They hate to see them losing, or struggling to survive. That's quite understandable - after all, they've become friends with these people. They're cheering for them. They want them to win through!

Now wait a moment. Wa..a..i..t.

It's your readers who are supposed to be cheering your characters on. It's your readers who want things to turn out for them. And it's your readers that you have to make suffer - because if you do, they won't be able to resist turning the page to see what happens next. They'll feel bad for your characters... heck, they may even shed a tear or two... but they will keep turning pages. They have to. They need to know how this all turns out!

Conflict is the engine of your story. It keeps the wheels turning; it keeps the characters moving. Take away conflict, and what have you got? A cheerful little afternoon tea-party, that's what. And like all afternoon tea parties... it can get a little boring. A few cream cakes and a few hours of conversation, and you've had enough. You want to go home.

At all costs, you must prevent your readers from packing up and going home. Or more accurately - to close the book that represents the cozy (but boring) tea party. Here are a few tips on building and sustaining conflict in your story.

1. Think "Drama"

In one corner of a restaurant you have a happy couple, gazing into each other's eyes. They're smiling. They're happy. In the another corner you have couple No. 2. Their body language is enough to tell anyone that there's trouble brewing. At first, they argue in low voices. Then things start to escalate. Their voices start to rise, and it ends when she throws wine in his face, sends her chair flying back, and storms out.

Which couple is attracting all the attention?

No contest! Naturally, it's the one involved in all that DRAMA. We're all drawn to conflict. We wonder about the reasons for it. We're eager to hear about the outcome. We HAVE TO KNOW MORE.

Give your readers drama, and you can be sure they'll keep coming back for more.

2. Portray Strong Emotions

If you don't allow your characters to experience emotion - and to show their emotion - then you're losing readers. One of the chief reasons that editors give for rejecting a novel is "lack of emotional punch". By making sure that you let your characters experience a full range of emotions, you are dramatically increasing your chances of acceptance.

In any one day, we all go through a whole lot of emotions. We're happy. We're sad. We're gloomy. We're ecstatic. We're jealous or envious or embarrassed.

Make a point of getting into your viewpoint character's skin. Become that character. First, imagine your character's appearance. Then climb inside. Look out through this person's eyes. See what she sees; hear what she hears; feel what she feels. And share those emotions with the reader.

If your viewpoint character is engaged in a conversation, make sure you give the reader more than talking heads by filtering everything through your character's emotions. We should 'hear' her thoughts; feel her embarrassment; experience her heart- wrenching fear. Emotions make your story live.

3. Pull the Thread Tighter

Once you have the reader tangled in drama and strong emotions, carefully pull the thread tighter. This is called 'get the heroine up the tree and then throw stones at her'. Or 'have him hanging on the edge of the cliff by his fingernails, then put a pack of wolves below him'. Just when it seems that things can't get any worse - make them worse! It's always possible.

Always think: "How can I raise the stakes? How can I make things really bad for my character? How can I add a twist that she's not expecting - just when she thinks everything is about to turn out all right after all?"

You can't have the tension turned up to "10" all the time, of course. If you do that, readers become accustomed to all the drama and it fails to have an effect. So give your characters time to wind down and plan their next move. Shift to a different point of view for a scene or two, while your main character is left in a precarious situation.

This lets the reader relax for a while - and the ensuing conflict when things go wrong (yet again!) is all the more powerful. But never let that thread slacken too much. Even when there's a lull, leave the reader on edge, knowing that things aren't settled yet! Gently, gently... keep stretching the tension... keep building the conflict.

Your readers just won't be able to help coming back for more.

(c) copyright Marg McAlister




Marg McAlister
Marg McAlister
has published magazine articles, short stories, books for children, ezines, promotional material, sales letters and web content. She has written 5 distance education courses on writing, and her online help for writers is popular all over the world. Sign up for her regular writers' tipsheet at http://writing4success.com/
 

Sunday, September 4, 2022

Creating Scenes that Sizzle by Martha Alderson | Writing Tips Of The Day

Writing Quote Of The Day: Exposition

Writing Tips Of The Day: Creating Scenes that Sizzle

 

by Martha Alderson


Every story spans a period of time. Story can be defined as conflict shown in scene, meaning that most writers will treat time in scene rather than in summary.

An example of a partial scene from Rick Bragg's memoir, Ava's Man:

Charlie felt the hot rush of shot fly past his face, and his legs shook under him with the boom of the gun. But it was a clean miss, and he started to run at Jerry, closing the distance even as Jerry fished in his pocket for another load.

Twenty feet...

Jerry cursed and broke open the breech.

Twelve feet...

He slapped in the fresh shell.

Eight feet...

He snapped the gun closed.

Six feet...

He threw it to his shoulder.

Four feet...

He saw a fist the size of a lard bucket come flying at his nose.


Every high point in a story must be played out in scene on the page, moment-by-moment in real time. The technique of slowing things down forces the stakes in a story ever higher. At the same time, the stakes also rise for the writer.

Many beginning writers hide from the pressure of creating scenes by relying on summary. These same writers hold the mistaken belief that they can control things better by "telling" what happens rather than by "showing" what happens in scene. Consider, instead, the idea that by breaking down each scene to its smallest parts you retain control.

Essential Element #1: Time and Place

The first layer of every scene deals with time and setting. Often this layer is implied or understood from the scenes and summaries that precede it. Either way, be sure to ground your readers in the "where" and "when" of the scene. The last thing you want is for your reader to awaken from the dream you have so carefully crafted due to disorientation or confusion.

In the scene from Ava's Man, the time is established in the earlier part of the scene - "They were getting ready for supper just a few weeks later when."

Essential Element #2: Character Emotional Development

If conflict, tension and suspense drive the reader to turn the page or send the viewer to the edge of her seat, the character emotional development motivates them. Readers read stories and viewers go to the movies to learn about a character's emotional development. The word development implies growth or change. Therefore character becomes a layer.

Using the example, Charlie's character emotional development has deepened over the scope of the story thus far. "Then Charlie did one of the bravest things I have ever heard of, a thing his children swear to. He opened the door and stepped outside to meet his enemy empty-handed, and just started walking."

Essential Element #3: Goal

The protagonist has a long-term goal for the duration of the story and smaller goals for every scene. They may or may not reach the scene goal by scene's end, but viewers and readers who know what is at stake for the character are more apt to cheer for the character's successes and mourn his failures.

For example, in Ava's Man we know that Charlie's goal for the portion of the scene written above is to close the distance between himself and Jerry before Jerry loads the gun.

Essential Element #4: Dramatic Action

Dramatic action that unfolds moment-by-moment on the page makes up the next layer of scene.

In our example, the dramatic action intensifies because of the "ticking clock" - will Charlie stop Jerry in time or will he get shot?

Essential Element #5: Conflict

Embedded within the dramatic action lies a layer or two of conflict, tension and/or suspense. The conflict does not have to be overt but it must be present in some form. Fill a scene with tension or suspense or something unknown lurking in the shadows and you have yourself an exciting story. Remember that setbacks and failure create suspense, conflict and tension, not success or good news.

Charlie's dilemma has conflict, tension and suspense. Will he or won't he? is a simple and powerful set-up.

Essential Element #6: Emotional Change

Just as the action in every scene affects the overall emotional growth of your characters as a reflection of the entire work, the action also affects your characters emotional state at the scene level. In other words, the character's mood changes because of what is said or done in that specific scene.

In Ava's Man, Charlie starts the scene angry that Jerry hurt his friend, Hootie, "just for the sport of it." The more he thinks about "now this man had come to his house, bringing the treat of violence to where his wife and children lived," the angrier and more determined he becomes.

Anger consumes Charlie. Then Jerry says he is coming inside the house and Charlie becomes furious (an emotional change in intensity).

Charlie's anger gets him to his enemy in time to stop him cold only to see "a huge figure hurl itself at him from the shadows," changing his emotional state again, moving it even higher.

Essential Element #7: Thematic Significance

Thematic significance not only creates mood, it also creates the final layer of scene and the overall spirit of your story. Your reason for writing the story, what you want your readers to take away from having read it holds the key to your theme. When the details you use in scene support the thematic significance you have an intricately layered scene that provides meaning and depth to the overall plot.

The theme of Ava's Man could be that a man who drinks too much but is loyal and just inspires respect and becomes legendary.

Our example scene, Charlie's friend Hootie is accused of stealing Jerry's whiskey. Charlie is not drinking or drunk in this scene but the fact that alcohol is the object of the conflict creates thematic significance.

Early in the scene, Bragg establishes that Jerry has done wrong to Hootie. As much as anger motivates Charlie's actions, so does his deep sense of loyalty to Hootie. This reinforces the idea that Charlie is loyal and, by emphasizing the concept, also strengthens the theme.

At the end of the scene, in summary we are told that Jerry never came back, "maybe because [he] respected [Charlie]." Yet another of the thematic elements is highlighted, deepening the thematic meaning to the entire piece.

Creating a Scene Tracker

Create a Scene Tracker for your project using all seven essential elements for a scene that sizzles. Track each scene for the seven elements. The elements you locate right may very well be your strengths in writing. The missing ones may create more of a challenge for you.

 Take it one layer at a time. Trust the process and good luck!

 

About the Author 

Martha Alderson
Martha Alderson, M.A., is the author of Blockbuster Plots Pure & Simple and an award-winning writer of historical fiction. She teaches plot workshops privately and through UCSC-Extension, Learning Annex and at writers' conferences. She offers plot consultations to writers anywhere in the world. Writers receive a personalized Plot Planner for their individual project.

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Jutoh is an ebook creator for Epub, Kindle and more.

 

Jutoh is an ebook creator for Epub, Kindle and more.

 

Jutoh - Digital Publishing for Everyone

From brainwave to best-seller, Jutoh is your digital publishing assistant.

Create top-quality fiction and non-fiction e-books - novels, self-help guides, poetry, children's books, autobiographies, and more.

Convert your existing book or create it from scratch in Jutoh; edit and format; and output to Kindle, ePub, print, and even speech!

Works on Windows, Mac and Linux. No subscription - unlimited books! Try the demo before you buy.

Jutoh

Jutoh is an ebook creator for Epub, Kindle and more. It's fast, runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux, comes with a cover design editor, and allows book variations to be created with alternate text, style sheets and cover designs.

Jutoh gives you ultimate control of your ebooks. Easily create files in Epub and Kindle formats: publish on any ebook distribution site, including Amazon's Kindle, Apple Books, Google Play, Kobo, and more. Your readers can use Kindles, iPads, iPhones, Android tablets and phones, Macs and PCs. You can also create PDFs suitable for sending to print-on-demand services.
 
Create your project in seconds from existing files using Quick Convert; or create your book from scratch using the built-in text editor. Add images, boxes and tables; create a table of contents, footnotes, index, and bibliography.
 
Select a book cover design from Jutoh's templates, or create your own with the built-in cover designer. Jutoh

Jutoh Plus

Jutoh is an ebook creator for Epub, Kindle and more. It's fast, runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux, comes with a cover design editor, and allows book variations to be created with alternate text, style sheets and cover designs. Jutoh Plus adds scripting so you can automate ebook import and creation operations. It also allows customisation of ebook HTML via templates and source code documents; and you can create Windows CHM and wxWidgets HTB help files.

Jutoh gives you ultimate control of your ebooks. Easily create files in Epub and Kindle formats: publish on any ebook distribution site, including Amazon's Kindle, Apple Books, Google Play, Kobo, and more. Your readers can use Kindles, iPads, iPhones, Android tablets and phones, Macs and PCs. You can also create PDFs suitable for sending to print-on-demand services.
 
Create your project in seconds from existing files using Quick Convert; or create your book from scratch using the built-in text editor. Add images, boxes and tables; create a table of contents, footnotes, index, and bibliography.
 
Select a book cover design from Jutoh's templates, or create your own with the built-in cover designer.
 
Scripts allow automation of tasks such as creating a Jutoh project, replacing content, setting metadata and configuration properties, and ebook generation. Scripts are not procedural and instead comprise groups of property/value pairs.
 
The HTML template system allows you customise ebook sections per section or project-wide, with the ability to edit and include JavaScript code and extra CSS.
 
The HTB/CHM creation feature lets developers add application help to wxWidgets or Windows applications as well as export Epub/Kindle/ODT files from the same project. Jutoh Plus
 
 System Requirements:

Runs on Mac, Windows and Linux.

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Editing in Jutoh


Thank you for coming to Science Fiction Writers’ Week

 

 Thank you for coming to Science Fiction Writers’ Week!

What a week! ProWritingAid couldn’t have done it without you. Thank you for sharing your stories, knowledge, and enthusiasm.

Missed a session, or just want to rewatch your favorites? Head to the Hub to watch the the replays now.

 

How long do I have access to replays?

All attendees have access to the session replays until September 9, 2022.

After that, replays are only available for ProWriting Academy members.

 


Writing Tip Of The Day: Weaving Characterization

 

Writing Quote Of The Day: Exposition

Writing Tip Of The Day: Weaving Characterization

by Ruth Kohut

"There's no need to stop a story to characterize," writes Editor Sol Stein in Stein on Writing, 1995.

You know your characters inside and out. Their hair color, skin tone, clothes sense, shoe size and favorite foods. You know how they move and how they speak. You know everything there is to know about your characters. Now, the trick is to show the reader everything he needs to know without describing your hero's traits in a grocery list.

When it comes to characterization, use every thread on the loom, except straight narrative description. Don't describe your characters - show them. Challenge your readers to pick up the clues to characters you stealthily weave into your story. Each clue brings the reader closer to a full understanding of your characters.

There are several methods of characterization available - actions, appearance, habits, speech patterns, props, even smells.

1. Actions
"Jane had brown eyes and limp hair that she tucked behind her ears. She wore a blue housedress. She was very nervous as she sat down in the chair."

From this paragraph we know a little about Jane, but it's not interesting or even very enlightening. An easy way to make your character description paragraphs more interesting is to make them active. Show Jane's personality and mood through her actions. Describe her physically as a backdrop to what's happening in the scene. Use drama, not thoughts, to characterize.

"Jane perched on the edge of the wooden chair, eyes trained on the floor. She smoothed her faded housedress over her knees as if drying moist palms. One thumbnail found its way to her mouth, the nail already chewed to the quick. She lowered her arm, sending furtive glances to the other occupants of the room."

This example describes Jane through her actions. We know she's nervous by her moist palms, chewed thumbnail and furtive glances. She's also probably poor (faded housedress) and shy or has something to hide (eyes trained on the floor). Describing your characters through their actions shows rather than tells.

2. Habits
Another trick is to give your characters memorable personality traits. Stroking a mustache, chewing on the arm of a pair of eyeglasses, twirling hair and playing with an earring all show something about your character.

For example, your protagonist might jingle his pocket change nervously every time he speaks to strangers or she might run her tongue over her bottom lip before she speaks. The reader may not remember the character's name, but he'll definitely remember the eye twitch or the tapping foot the next time that character appears. This is especially useful for characters who may only appear infrequently in your story, but who are important to the plot.

3. Props and Appearance
Props can tell a lot about a character. Think of your immediate reaction to characters wearing a feather boa, sweat pants, a cowboy hat or expensive jewelry. Your readers will have a different emotional response between a character with a tattoo and one with a cane. Use that response to create characters that come alive.

"Ahead, teetering along the dark sidewalk on stiletto heels, her beehive hair swaying, her small round hips churning, her arms hugging two grocery bags, was Bernadette Mansaw, seventeen-year-old legend."

There's no doubt about what kind of person Mary McGarry Morris had in mind when she created Bernadette Mansaw in Songs in Ordinary Time.

4. Speech Patterns
What your characters say and how they say it are important threads in the fabric of your character. Run-on sentences, tight wording, polysyllabic words, colloquialisms, or stuttering and pauses distinguish one character from another without author intrusion. Mark Twain endowed Tom Sawyer with speech that would illustrate his education level, his social class and his sense of mischief.

"Confound it! Sometimes she sews it with white, and sometimes she sews it with black. I wish to geeminy she'd stick to one or t'other -- I can't keep the run of 'em. But I bet you I'll lam Sid for that. I'll learn him!"

5. Sensory Information
Using sensory information is often the characterization method most overlooked. The sound of clicking dentures, the smell of aftershave and the feel of a limp handshake are all effective characterization tools.

"Jenny wandered through the crowd, hiding behind a cloud of perfume."

What do we know about Jenny? She's shy and forcing herself to mingle. As a means of disguising her fear, she wears too much perfume.

"The fresh aroma of cut lumber clung to him like sawdust."

Would we expect to see this character in an expensive French restaurant? Probably not, and now the author doesn't have to tell that information.

You know your characters. Now, make sure they are as interesting to your readers as they are to you.

Don't describe your characters. Let them come alive by weaving their characterization through actions and use physical habits, speech patterns, props and sensory information to make them memorable. Your characters will emerge like the pattern in a loom.



 

Ruth Kohut is a teacher and Vice Principal in Ontario. She has written two novels as well as several articles which have appeared in Learning and Leading with Technology, Canadian Writer's Journal, ETFO Voice and a Writer's Choice Literary Journal.


 

 

Friday, September 2, 2022

Writing Tips Of The Day: Exposition

Writing Quote Of The Day: Exposition

Writing Tips Of The Day: Exposition

 Exposition is the background material a reader needs to know for the story to move forward. In "Little Red Riding Hood," we need to know that our main character is a girl on her way to visit her ill grandmother, who lives in the woods. We also need to know that this girl is young and innocent, and so might be given to speaking to strangers, such as cunning wolves, who are hanging out in the woods. In the story of Adam and Eve, we need to know that our main characters are a man and a woman who live in a garden, that they are the first man and woman who ever lived, and that they have been told not to touch the fruit of a certain tree. In the Dickens story "A Christmas Carol," we need to know that our main character Scrooge is a callous, penny-pinching boss, a man old enough to be set in his ways, and that it is Christmas time. Once this background information is established for each of these three stories, they can proceed."

Rachel Simon

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Fearless Author: Book Launch Plan with Checklists (includes checklists and lists of free eBook promotion sites) by Ashley Emma

 

 Fearless Author: Book Launch Plan with Checklists (includes checklists and lists of free eBook promotion sites) 

by Ashley Emma


Get your free copy of "Fearless Author: Book Launch Plan with Checklists (includes checklists and lists of free eBook promotion sites) by Ashley Emma"

 

Description

Review

"Five stars! I'm speechless!  I can't begin to tell you what a pearl this book is for self-publishing authors. I honestly could not put this book down; I read it from cover to cover until after midnight. The author has a wealth of knowledge on this topic; I can't believe how much I learned from her tonight! She even gives webinars and doing live events for authors. I am a master coach, trainer, and author, so I know talent when I see it!  I'll be honest, I wouldn't mind spending some time getting coached on this topic by the author."
-Rev. Dr. Kevin T. Coughlin Ph.D., Top 100 Amazon multi-bestselling author 
theaddiction.expert  



"Ashley Emma does it again! I have been waiting for her to release a non-fiction book revealing her secrets and Fearless Author hits the spot!
Ashley has multiple Bestselling Books, and her success is well documented. But how does she do it? The details are in Fearless Author.
The icing on the cake is this: she also tells you what to do after you have a bestseller. My favorite parts included the maintaining your marketing post-launch and Permafree. 
I read nearly every book on self-publishing, and I can say that this one has information the others don't have. If you want to be sure you are up on the latest, become a Fearless Author now!" 

-Ray Brehm - Bestselling Author of Author Your Success and The Author Startup
-
"If you've ever even considered writing a book, you should read this one first.
Ashley has done the research for you. Follow her very detailed, informative, and money-saving instructions on how to prepare your book before it is published, then publish and market it during its launch. 
There is also a thorough checklist at the end of the book covering all the content in this book, and you can follow it step-by-step so you don't miss anything. This well-written instructional book has inspired me to consider becoming an author as well."
-Karen Herzog, court transcript proofreader
ProofIsInTheReading.com 
-
"You can now take a peek at a best-selling author's promotional game plan! Ashley Emma lays out a 
step-by-step plan for any author to market a book easily and at very little cost. Beginning authors will especially find this book helpful. It's a quick read, and it's packed full of practical advice. Any author would benefit by using only a fraction of the tips listed in this book. 
The list of places to promote your book along with the step-by-step publishing and marketing checklist is well worth the cost of this eBook."
-Nicole Cruz, proofreader and book editor 
nicolecruzproofreader.com 
-
 "Chock full of marketing resources, Fearless Author is a must-read for new and experienced self-publishing authors. From building email lists to getting reviews, best-selling author Ashley Emma shares her tried and true methods for publishing and successfully promoting eBooks. With extensive lists of websites and resources, you'll want to read and then re-read this guide before launching your own book!"
-Shannon Booth, proofreader
boothsproofs.com
-
"What a great resource for budding authors! Marketing seems to be one of the most difficult pieces of the self-publishing puzzle and this book gives so much information and insight on that topic. Thank you for sharing so many specific sites, groups, and professionals. Very helpful!" 
-Amy Schauland, Freelance Proofreader 
sparrowseyeproofreading.com 
-
"Direct, straightforward, step-by-step, very useful."
-Omer Dylan Redden, author of Give and Grow Rich: Change Your Mind, Change Your Money
-
"This amazing author has done it again.  I am a new author getting ready for my first book launch, and The Fearless Author was exactly the right book for me at the right time.  I highly recommend this book for authors. It's filled with all the right information to help authors succeed. It's a reference book I'll be using for years." 
-Marlene Wagner, author

 

 Get your free copy of "Fearless Author: Book Launch Plan with Checklists (includes checklists and lists of free eBook promotion sites) by Ashley Emma"

Product Description

Have you always dreamed of becoming an author? Do you want to build your business, get high-paying leads on autopilot, and beat your competition?
Fearless Author will teach you everything you need to know about how to launch and market your own eBook fearlessly.

Whether your goal is to achieve your dream of becoming an author or you want to skyrocket your business by using your book as your “Ultimate Business Card," this no-fluff guide will show you a plan you can implement quickly.

When you use the free printable Book Launch & Marketing Checklist that you can download on my website (see inside book for link), you won’t even have to take notes unless you want to.


Discover how to:

-Build your email list on autopilot

-Use beta readers to improve your book

-Get reviews

-Get editorial reviews

-Choose the best categories and keywords

-Launch your eBook

-Market your book consistently long-term

-Use permafree books to build your fan base


You will also discover:

-Why you need an email list

-How to make it easy and fun for your beta readers

-Why you should give away your book(s) for free to your email list

-How to use KDP free promotions

-How to build continue to build your email list, drive readers to your other eBooks, get readers to “like” your Facebook page, and get reviews from readers all on autopilot through your eBook(s).

-Plus SO much more!


Bonus Material Includes:

-The questionnaire I send to my beta readers

-The experts I hire

-The Book Launch and Marketing Checklist

-The Permafree Book Checklist

-A list of links to various helpful resources used throughout the book

-PLUS a list of free eBook sites you can market your eBook on!

Download the FREE Fearless Author printable Book Launch & Marketing Checklist at www.AshleyEmmaAuthor.com/FearlessAuthorEbook

Let me show you exactly how I launched 3 bestselling eBooks before the age of 25!


Reviews:

“…The list of places to promote your book along with the marketing checklist is well worth the cost of this eBook.” -Nicole Cruz, proofreader

“...I can’t begin to tell you what a pearl this book is for self-publishing authors. I honestly could not put this book down; I read it from cover to cover until after midnight. The author has a wealth of knowledge on this topic; I can’t believe how much I learned from her tonight!  She even gives webinars and does live events for authors..." –Rev. Dr. Kevin T. Coughlin Ph.D., Amazon Bestselling Author

"I read nearly every book on self-publishing, and I can say that this one has information the others don’t have. Become a Fearless Author now!” -Ray Brehm, Bestselling Author of The Author Startup

 

Get your free copy of "Fearless Author: Book Launch Plan with Checklists (includes checklists and lists of free eBook promotion sites) by Ashley Emma"

 

From the Author

Check out this podcast interview with Ashley Emma and AOIS21 Publishing! It is all about Ashley's Amish Adventures and Ashley's immersive research.
podomatic.com/podcasts/aois21/episodes/2017-01-06T21_13_53-08_00 

From the Inside Flap

EXCERPT FROM FEARLESS AUTHOR Getting Editorial ReviewsThere are so many author Facebook groups or online author and writer groups that you can join to interact with other authors. Writing a book can be such a lonely journey and your friends and family might not really understand why you are so passionate about your book. You can easily find other writers online who will share your enthusiasm and understand your struggles and appreciate your milestones.Once you make some friends with other writers and authors online, you can help each other out. You can write each other editorial reviews and regular reviews. You can also cross-promote each other on your email lists. You could even make a boxset with your fellow authors and further drive sales to each other's books. Editorial reviews are the reviews you sometimes see in the beginnings of books or on the backs or covers of books. They vary in length. You could put a short one or a snippet of one on your cover, such as, "A five-star read," or "Impossible to put down." As for your longer editorial reviews that are usually a paragraph or two in length, you can put these in your book description box in KDP right under your description. You can also add it to the editorial Review section in Author Central. When doing this, make sure you copy and paste the review into Notepad or WordPad on your computer, then copy it from there and paste it into Author Central. If you don't do this, it might mess up the formatting and make the words run together. Put your editorial reviews everywhere you can. These are your "social proof," showing people that other authors appreciate your book. When asking other authors for editorial reviews, make it worthwhile for them. Offer to return the favor, and also include their website and book links in the review. It's like free advertising for them. It's a win-win situation for both of you.To make it easy on them, send the abridged version of your book for them to read. That way if they don't have time to read the whole thing, they can still write a thorough and honest review.To make it even easier, you could write a few sample editorial reviews for your eBook and send them to the author, letting them know that they can pick one if they don't have time to write their own. Also let them know they could tweak them to make it sound more like their own wording. The easier and quicker you make it for people, the more likely they will agree to do it, especially with more well-known authors.You can add a "Praise for (your book title)" section in the beginning of your book and add all the editorial reviews there. At least four or five is good, but you don't want to overwhelm the readers with pages and pages or else they will just skip over them. If you do get a bigger amount of them, you could put a few in your book, a few other ones in your eBook description and a few others in your Author Central to vary them.You can ask anyone you want to write you an editorial review, but I recommend asking other authors, writers, or editors or proofreaders because they are in the writing industry.  Dealing with Bad ReviewsLet's face it. You're probably going to get some negative reviews on your book, and sooner than you might think. Expect them. Most authors get them, even the famous ones. And you know what? It's ok! Not everyone will love your work.Actually, people in my group of authors say that you should celebrate when you get your first negative review because it is a sign that you are a true author. If someone doesn't like your book, that is because you can't please everyone. If you try to please everyone, you will fail!Don't take mean or negative reviews personally. I know it may seem like they are directly insulting you and your precious masterpiece that you spent so much time on, but usually reviewers are reviewing the book as a product they purchased, not you personally. And if they do direct insults at you personally, then that could mean they are jealous or just an all-around negative person who is trying to make themselves feel better by putting you down. Maybe they just had a really bad day. I cried over my first negative reviews. (Just ask my husband--he's the one who comforted me!) They made me feel down for a few days and made me lose sleep. Even the ones that weren't even accurate and the one from the person who clearly did not read the book and just skimmed over it. When you work so hard on a book for months or years, it hurts when someone bashes it.I'm a very sensitive person, but I am getting better at shrugging off the mean reviews and making my book better when people critique it. When I got my last negative review I actually wasn't bothered by it. I check my reviews every day! I probably shouldn't even read the negative ones, but I just can't help it.So, when you get negative reviews, take a deep breath and ask yourself if you can take what they said and use it to make your book better. Look up your favorite books of all time on Amazon and read the negative reviews. See? Even the most amazing books to you still probably have negative reviews! Then, if you are really daring, click on your reviewer's name and read their other reviews. I'm guessing there is a good chance that they left a bunch of other negative reviews. Doing both of these things help me feel a lot better because it reminds me that I am not the only author with negative reviews. Just don't leave a defensive comment on the negative review. It might start a nasty fight. You can, however, vote "Not Helpful" on the review and ask other people to do the same to flood it out with good reviews. Send out a plea to your email list or friends on Facebook, especially in groups for authors. Vent to them. While your friends and family might not understand, they will totally get it!You can even email me at ashley@ashleyemmaauthor.com if you want to chat. I love talking to other authors about stuff like this! I've emailed other authors for emotional support and I am so grateful for them. We should all help and support each other.  Just don't put yourself down. It's all part of being an author. Your book is not for everyone. You are still wonderful, motivated, successful, and talented. If you need to distract yourself to keep the negative thoughts away, then play some music, exercise, or do something you love. Just don't take it personally!  

From the Back Cover

"This amazing author has done it again.  I am a new author getting ready for my first book launch, and The Fearless Author was exactly the right book for me at the right time.  I highly recommend this book for authors. It's filled with all the right information to help authors succeed. It's a reference book I'll be using for years." -Marlene Wagner, author

 

 Get your free copy of "Fearless Author: Book Launch Plan with Checklists (includes checklists and lists of free eBook promotion sites) by Ashley Emma"

About the Author

 

Visit www.AshleyEmmaAuthor.com to download free eBooks by Ashley Emma!

Ashley Emma wrote her first novel at age 12 and published it at 16. She was home schooled and knew since she was a child that she wanted to be a novelist. She's now an award-winning USA Today bestselling author of over 20 Amish fiction books.

Ashley has a deep respect and love for the Amish and wanted to make sure her Amish books were genuine. When she was 20, she stayed with three Amish families in a community in Maine where she made many friends and did her research for her Amish books. To read about what it was like to live among the Amish, check out her book Amish for a Week (a true story).

Ashley's novel Amish Alias was a Gold Medal Winner in the NYC Book Awards 2021. Her bestselling book Undercover Amish received 26 out of 27 points as a finalist in the Maine Romance Writers Strut Your Stuff novel writing competition in 2015. Its sequel Amish Under Fire was a semi-finalist in Harlequin’s So You Think You Can Write novel writing competition also in 2015. Two of her short stories have been published online in writing contests and she co-wrote an article for ProofreadAnywhere.com in 2016. She judged the Fifth Anniversary Writing Contest for Becoming Writer in the summer of 2016.

Ashley owns Fearless Publishing House in Maine where she lives with her husband and four children. She is passionate about helping her clients self-publish their own books so they can build their businesses or achieve their dream of becoming an author.

Download some of Ashley's free Amish books at www.AshleyEmmaAuthor.com.

ashley@ashleyemmaauthor.com

>>>>Check out Ashley's TV interview with News Center 6 Maine! https://www.newscentermaine.com/article/news/local/207/207-interview/what-led-a-writer-to-the-amish/97-5d22729f-9cd0-4358-809d-305e7324f8f1

See all Ashley's other podcast interviews and articles she's been featured in here: http://ashleyemmaauthor.com/author-interview/

 

Head on over to ashleyemmaauthor.com to download the free printable Fearless Author Book Launch & Marketing Checklist!

 

 

 Get your free copy of "Fearless Author: Book Launch Plan with Checklists (includes checklists and lists of free eBook promotion sites) by Ashley Emma"