Showing posts with label book blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book blog. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 June 2017

How do readers discover books?



If you're a self-published or independent/small press published author, you've probably read many blog posts about what makes a reader choose to buy a book.  Is it the eye-catching cover?  The favourite genre?  The catchy blurb?  The price?  The reviews?  Of course, it's a combination of some or all of those elements.  Before any of them, though, comes the greatest problem of all:

In a time when thousands of new books are published every week, how do you get the reader to discover the actual existence of your book in the first place?  




As well as being a writer, I am an avid reader.  I read 99% of books on the Kindle app on my tablet, and download between 1 and 10 a week.  I read, or start to read, between 6 and 15 books a month.  I'm sure you've seen all those graphs showing how most readers discover the books they buy, so I thought I'd do an assessment of the around 300 books I've reviewed on my book blog.  The categories differ slightly from those you see on standard graphs, but I think the results will be interesting for writers and book bloggers to see how an average Kindle user makes her choices ~ particularly for those writers who don't buy Kindle books themselves, but hope to sell their own.


Here goes:


Amazon: chanced upon during an Amazon browse (usually in 'also boughts'), 
or books that have come up as recommended for me by Amazon.
16


Book Blog: downloaded after reading a review on a book blog, 
or other article about the book/author.
36


Personal Friend Recommendation.
4

Twitter, after talking to the author/getting to know them.
34

Twitter, via a passing tweet.
16

Favourite author
When I've read one book by an author via one of the other discovery routes, 
and liked it enough to buy another of their books ~ sometimes just one other, but with some authors that initial discovery has resulted in multiple downloads.
92


Chosen to review from the list of submissions
on Rosie Amber's Review Team, of which I am a member.
90


Other Review Request: I don't take requests generally,
but on occasion a fellow writer has asked me to review a book, 
or I've read submissions for an award.
10


Paperback lent to me.
3


Won the book 
(incidentally, I've since bought and reviewed all of this author's work)
1


Bought after watching a TV programme or film.
8

Classic I always meant to read.
1


Facebook promotion or advert.
0


Goodreads recommendation.
0

Sometimes the categories merge, for instance, when I choose a book from Rosie's review team list that I would have bought anyway.  And do bear in mind that I don't use Facebook much, and when I do it's mostly in a non-book/writing fashion.  It's worth noting, too, that I am about 50% more likely to download a book if it is available on Kindle Unlimited.


I'd be most interested to hear how you make your choices 😃



Saturday, 31 December 2016

Online Book Awards: the end of the year mentions that make the year's work so worthwhile


At the end of each year I look forward to putting together my 'Best of' list of the memorable books of the year.  I love to spread the word about my favourites, especially if they're self-published, just starting out, don't have a huge following, or whatever, because it's so damn hard to gain recognition in these days of total market saturation and goodness knows how many millions of books on Amazon already, with thousands more being released each month.   So here's my favourite books of 2016, if you aren't amongst the *large number* of people who've already looked at it on my book blog!


Another reason I like to put this list together each year is that there is nothing quite like discovering your book on someone else's 'best of the year' list.  Almost more than anything, these accolades make all the hard work and the 'oh God I've just written 30K words of total garbage' days worth it.  I was over the moon to see The Devil You Know on four book blogger 'best of the year' posts.  So a big huge enormous thank you to Lizanne: Lost in a good bookBetween The Lines, Mrs Bloggs' Books and Alison Williams :).  

I was also delighted to see The House of York named in EmmabBooks' list of 5* rated books for 2016.  I'm so grateful for all the reviews for both books this year, and for my novella Best Seller which I released in March.  I was surprised and bowled over to see it named as 'Favourite Overall' for 2016 on Ellie Firestone's blog.  I got this book ready for publication whilst laid up in bed after a knee op Being immobile had its upside!  My husband got me one of those table things like they have in hospitals, for my laptop; through February, March and April my world was my bed, my crutches and my laptop on that table.


I think anyone who tries to sell something they've produced, be it a book, music, art, whatever, spends half the time assailed by self-doubt, and the validation of a reader considering your work good enough for a 'best of' post is such a confidence booster.

   
So, will I be calling myself 'award winning'???  I love what fellow writer Carl Rackman said.  He's going to call himself an award winning author, because he won awards for swimming in 1987, and he's an author.  My husband made the same suggestion to me a while back: "They don't know the award is for the backstroke" (and no, I won't be calling myself an 'award winning author'!)




 

Thursday, 14 July 2016

#TwitterTips posts (and more) on @rosieamber1's Wednesday Wing

Aside from the book reviews, Rosie Amber's readers and writers blog has many and varied features, one of the most popular of which is her Wednesday Wing, which gives advice on blogging, social media, self-publishing and more.  I've contributed a few articles on this, and thought I'd provide the links here in case anyone has missed and would like to read them.

Note: 2019
The odd bit of practical advice may be out of date now, as the site changes all the time, but the basic principles remain.

Twitter Tips











and for writers and reviewers....





Sunday, 12 June 2016

Big huge thank you!

I'd just like to say a big huge thank you to everyone who voted for me in the Bloggers Bash Awards!  And to Sacha Black and her gang for all their hard work in organising it.

I was delighted to see that I came second in the 'Best Pal' award: 

"Which blogger do you want to go to the pub with? Or maybe have dinner with? Who never fails to reply to comments, and has thoughtful things to say. Maybe they encourage the community through weekly challenges or blog parties. Who wouldn’t the blogging world be the same without?"

That's a lovely one to win, I was pleased just to be among the nominees for it!



Big congratulations to Rosie Amber for getting second place in Book Review blog - I am a member of her reviewing team #RBRT), so it's great to see that we're doing something good.  Not just book reviews, Rosie does all sorts of other posts, such as info for writers and bloggers, and genre specific reading suggestions.  And a big cheer for fellow #RBRT member Shelley Wilson for winning the 'most inspirational' category :)

Thank you!



Thursday, 19 May 2016

Jera's Jamboree: Book Review (Novella) : Best Seller - A Tale of Th...

I was so thrilled by this lovely review for Best Seller, from book blogger Shaz Goodwin :)

Jera's Jamboree: Book Review (Novella) : Best Seller - A Tale of Th...: If you're a regular blog reader you will know I always thoroughly enjoy a Terry Tyler novel. Terry peels back those layers of tangled...



VOTING NOW OPEN!

Voting is now open for the Bloggers Bash Awards ~ voting closes on June 9th, the winners to be announed on June 11th.

One vote per category :)

Full details and lists of nominees in each category on Sacha Black's blog ~ vote HERE

 

Friday, 22 April 2016

Annual Bloggers Bash Awards!

Please see below a link to the above, run by Sacha Black and some of her blogging friends ~ you're invited to nominate for the awards, for which there are several categories, including  
  • Funniest Blog 
  • Most Informative 
  • Best Book Review
... and more!  You nominate just one at a time, as you are required to give the website/URL of the blog, then say which award you are nominating it for.  You may only nominate one per category.  Find the websites of many blogs you like via the blogger's Twitter Bio.

If you are interested, there is a Bloggers Bash event in London on June 11


Please see all details HERE

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

LAID UP


Few things make you appreciate simple, everyday activities such as nipping down the road to the greengrocers, like being practically (and, I hope, temporarily) immobile, as I have been for the last few weeks and will continue to be for a while.

Me, hobbling up the greengrocers.  Oh, okay, it's not.

I won't go into detail as I don't want this post to be too much of a moan; suffice to say that it's probably a condition called PVNS in my left knee, and necessitates a leg brace, crutches, a biopsy in a month and subsequent operation that will mean another six weeks' recuperation.


The downsides?  Well, yes, they're obvious.  At first I thought 'yippee, good excuse not to do housework', and have adjusted my mindset to accept that living in a pigsty is the least of my problems, though I do manage to do a little tidying up by transporting items from room to room over my shoulder.  Most things have to be bought and fetched for me, and I find that hard.  The worst downside is the occasional, excruciating pain.  So bad that it causes sweating and yelling ~ last time, even huge doses of morphine didn't touch it.  The other night I was watching a documentary about Guns 'N' Roses, in which Duff McKagen said that when his pancreas burst after years of rock star excess, he too had the experience of zero effect from 'enough morphine to knock out a horse' (which is what the nurse said I'd had).  The TV interviewer gasped in awe; I merely raised a world-weary eyebrow.

Me and Duff McKagen: too rock 'n' roll for morphine

Only gas and air took the edge off it for me.  The last time it happened I lay in A&E practically delirious with pain for one and a half hours until an angel appeared in the form of a wonderful doctor whose name I didn't manage to catch apart from his being called Izzy or Ezzy, whose dear sweet nurse gave me much gas and air and wiped my sweating brow; Angel Doctor drained a cupful of blood from the football that used to be my knee.  He was one of those Africans who are so black that all I could see was the whites of his eyes and his lovely smile He had the most calming, beautiful aura I've ever come across, and I felt completely safe in his hands.  I dunno, perhaps the morphine did affect me after all, but I honestly felt that I'd been sent a divine being!  I've looked him up on the health authority website but can't find him... so perhaps he really was :)

At least it's winter; it's quite nice to have an excuse to stay inside, warm and cosy!  I like to think that I'm a fairly positive and contented person, and indeed my situation does have upsides.  I haven't had a cigarette for four weeks so may have given up (though I don't want to totally give up because smoking makes you look hard and cool, and non-smokers are girly wimps), but the main bonus is reading time.  Currently, I have hours a day for one of my favourite things in the world!  I read about fifteen books over the last four weeks.  I review for Rosie Amber's Review Team and am on the panel for a historical fiction award, so I have much time to give to both, as well as some of my own choices.  The TBR list is finally getting chopped down a bit!  
 
Five of Rosie's review team!

No domestic chores means I have more time to write, too ~ my new novella has been sent for proofreading (details soon), and yesterday I actually wrote a six page letter in longhand, to a friend I haven't seen for a while.  You know, like people did in the olden days! 

With reference to the first paragraph, about learning how to appreciate the small stuff, back in 1982 I shared a flat with my friend Helen, and we had no fridge.  When we finally got one we felt as if we'd been given some fabulous treat.  The joy of being able to have salad, and the milk not going off, was such a novelty.  I imagine I will feel the same once I can walk once more, and I hope I never take it for granted again!  In the New Age early 90s I remember reading a book called 'Flow', one of the many self-help books that were everywhere back then ~ it was leant to me by Jane with whom I shared a house at the time.  She was a great fan of the whole New Age scene, and was always feng shui-ing the downstairs loo and sneaking off to do Shamanic drumming.  The message I took from it was that happiness is derived not from having your dreams come true but from obtaining joy via the everyday things in life.  Tis true indeed, and I still try to live by that; I often think of that fridge :)

 Helen and me in 2015 ~ still proud fridge owners, 33 years on 😉

Just one last thing and very, very important thing ~ we've been so lucky with family and friends and all their offers of help and kind messages.  Real life, online, and online friends who've become real life ones too ~ you know who you are, and THANK YOU xxxxxx




Thursday, 26 November 2015

The Z Files: Stacey Garrity ~ Scorpio

Astrology ~ a bit of fun, a load of rubbish, or something to take seriously?

I invited around 70 writers/bloggers to write a piece about how typical they are of their sign, and how its traits affect their writing life ~ if at all...

Has your favourite writer been featured yet?  Links to all previous posts at the end of this one :)


Today I've got another intense Scorpio for you!  Stacey Garrity, who runs a really excellent book blog called Whispering Stories (link at end of article).  She's very professional and the blog is so well presented; as well as book reviews, Stacey has included features such as 'The Writing Life' in which she interviews authors, Fun Fact Friday and a monthly poem ~ and lots more.


Stacey with her husband ~ they'd just climbed Mount Snowdon in aid of Childflight,
a volunteer run charity with which they are both involved, that takes long term sick children and their families on holiday (click link for more info).


Welcome to The Z Files, Stacey, and please tell us about your Scorpio blogging self!


"I am quite a typical Scorpio, although I don’t read my star sign any more.

As a teenager, I was obsessed by them and would read numerous magazines every day."



"Looking at the traits associated with being a Scorpio, I realised that at some point throughout my life, I have had, each and every one of them – positive and negative, though most of the negative ones no longer play a part in my life.

When it comes to blogging I most associate myself with being focussed, determined and ambitious.  I am a keen planner and I am meticulous about everything I do, this helps me keep focus on the task at hand and do it to the best of my ability."



"I have always been ambitious, so it came as no surprise to me when I wanted my blog to be more than just about reviews, I wanted it to have a variety of categories that people could enjoy.

Lastly I am an extremely determined person, and when I set my mind to something I don’t give up easily.  Some days, blogging is hard, especially with three children, work and being a Patient Representative for a charity.   I can sometimes be sitting until nearly midnight writing new posts, as I am determined to make my blog a success."


It deserves to be a success, it's a great blog!  The link to it is HERE and you can also follow Stacey on Twitter.  Her book review list has grown so large now that she's looking for reviewers to help her out; if you think you may be interested in this, the details are HERE.

Stacey was the seventh Scorpio to respond to my invitation to contribute to this feature (five was the maximum from any other sign), so I'm getting a bit low on famous Scorpio writers!  But I've found one nicely appropriate one, and I'd saved one of my favourites....

.... Evelyn Waugh ~ I've read a few of his books, and A Handful of Dust 
is definitely in my all time Top 20


...and Margaret Atwood, Canadian poet, novelist, activist ~ and literary critic!  
I expect she would have had a book blog, too, if she'd been born forty years later :)



Coming Next: A New Romantic trio ~ with four zodiac signs....

Previous Posts (click name to see post):
Aquarius and Capricorn: Nicky Black








Wednesday, 28 October 2015

A New Hashtag: #TuesdayBookBlog



Most Twittering bloggers know about the benefits of 'blog share' days; it all started with Rachel Thompson and her fabulously successful #MondayBlogs.  Now, there is also #wwwblogs on Wednesday (Wednesday women writers), #SundayBlogShare, #ArchiveDay on Saturday, and probably others, too.


Since Rachel started #MondayBlogs, she's been battling against people using it for book promotion; her view is that you have six other days of the week to promote your books, but #MondayBlogs is about the writing itself ~ in other words, blog posts about anything other than your book!  The rule is: no book promotion of any sort on #MondayBlogs, not even third party reviews.

Because there are so many avid readers, writers and book bloggers out there who understand the benefit of blog share days, Rosie Amber's Book Review Team is introducing a new hashtag on Tuesdays, for book posts only ~ #TuesdayBookBlog.

Photo by Barb Taub

As anyone who starts a hashtag knows, the main difficulty involved is dealing with 'hashtag abuse' ~ tweeters who spot a popular hashtag and add it to any tweet, whether relevant or not.  We will do our best to limit this, but do feel free to draw anyone's attention to the rules, if you feel moved to!


The guidelines for #TuesdayBookBlog:

DO post:

  • Blog posts only!
  • Book reviews ~ either for your own books, or other people's, or reviews you've written on your own blog.
  • Author Interviews ~ yours or others'.
  • Cover reveals ~ yours or others'.
  • Upcoming/new releases ~ yours or others'.
  • Articles or guest posts about books/writers ~ you/yours or others'.


DO NOT post:

  • Anything that isn't a blog post
  • Blog posts that aren't about books/writers.
  • Porn.
  • Blatant promotion of an existing publication that isn't a proper article - in other words, a blog post consisting of nothing but the cover of the book, Amazon blurb and buy links.  This was one of the ways in which #MondayBlogs was abused, after people were told they couldn't use the hashtag for tweets with Amazon links; they simply stuck their Amazon links in a blog post.  Not cricket!!!

To get the most out of #TuesdayBookBlog:

  • Retweet others on the hashtag and spread the word.  Hashtags only work if you do your bit, too!
  • The power of Twitter is in the retweet, more than the tweet.  Hashtag retweets are never guaranteed, but do remember that the more you do, the more you are likely to get back. A while back I came across this as a Twitter rule: "An RT is better than a TY".  In other words, a retweet back is a better way of saying 'thank you for the retweet' than a tweet saying 'thank you for the RT' ;)
  • We hope you will enjoy using #TuesdayBookBlog, and look forward to seeing you there :)