BOUND – BLOG TOUR AND REVIEWS

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Are you ready for the mother of all blog tours? Before we kick it off, I want to extend a huge and heartfelt thank you to all the reviewers and bloggers, and to the readers who pop in and take part. This is my biggest giveaway so far, and the winners are going to be thrilled with their prizes.

So much generosity of time is humbling. Hopefully you enjoyed or will enjoy reading BOUND as much as I did writing it.

May 2- 13 Reviews

May 2 Review

happy tails and tales

Http://happytailsandtales.blogspot.com

May 2 Review

Mythical Books

http://mythicalbooks.blogspot.com/

May 3 Review

The Booksnake Etc.

http://thebooksnakeetc.blogspot.com

May 4 Review

Romance Authors That Rock

https://pratr.wordpress.com/

May 4 Review

Inner Goddess

http://www.innergoddessforum.com/

May 5 Review

Diane’s Book Blog

http://dianes-book.blogspot.com

May 6 Review

The Cubicle Escapee

www.TheCubicleEscsapee.com

May 9 Review

Fanatical Paranormal Romantical

http://fanaticalparanormalromantical.com/

May 10 Review

Books N Pearls

http://booksnpearls.com/blog

May 10 Review

With Love for Books

http://www.withloveforbooks.com

May 11 Review

I Smell Sheep

http://www.ismellsheep.com/

May 12 Review

Splashes Into Books

http://splashesintobooks.wordpress.com

May 13 Review

Miley the Book Junkie

http://mileythebookjunkie.blogspot.com/

May 16 Review

Paranormal Tendencies Book Reviews

http://www.paranormaltendencies.blogspot.com

May 16-30 Tour

May 16 Spotlight

Highlighted Author

http://highlightedauthor.com/

May 16 Spotlight

3 Partners in Shopping, Nana, Mommy, and Sissy, Too!

http://3partnersinshopping.blogspot.com/

May 17 Spotlight

T’s Stuff

http://teresanoel.blogspot.com/

May 17 Spotlight

Emma Weylin

http://emmaweylin.com/

May 17 Spotlight

Book Crazy Scrapbook Mama

http://www.bookcrazyscrapbookmama.blogspot.com/

May 18 Guest blog

Hart’s Romance Pulse

www.hartsromancepulse.com

May 18 Spotlight

Share My Destiny

http://sharemydestiny.blogspot.com

May 18 Spotlight

Ramblings of a book nerd

http://booknerdramblings.com/

May 19 Guest Blog

Fang-tastic Books

www.fang-tasticbooks.blogspot.com

May 19 Spotlight

Deal Sharing Aunt

www.dealsharingaunt.blogspot.com

May 20 Spotlight

Roxanne’s Realm

www.roxannerhoads.com

May 23 Spotlight

Lisa’s World of Books

www.lisasworldofbooks.net

May 24 Interview

Butterfly-o-Meter Books

http://butterfly-o-meter.com/

May 25 Guest Blog

The Creatively Green Write at Home Mom

www.creativelygreen.blogspot.com

May 26 Spotlight

Zenny’s Awesome Book Reviews

https://zennysawesomebookreviews.wordpress.com/

May 27 Spotlight

Ali – The Dragon Slayer

http://cancersuckscouk.ipage.com/

May 30 Guest blog

Urban Fantasy Investigations

http://urbanfantasyinvestigations.blogspot.com/

RELEASE DAY

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BOUND is out. Fact. My baby has left home and must find its own path in the world now. There will be turbulence along the way—some tough reviews, some criticism—but I’m proud of it and believe it will do well.

I have learned much since GUARDED. For example, I have learned that publishing books is a business and that readers are not my friends, but customers. That means a smile is not enough to keep you guys interested. You want—and deserve—value.

So I finally started to take my newsletter seriously. I won’t inundate subscribers with endless emails, but will keep them coming at regular intervals, at a rate of roughly 1 to 3 a month. My first newsletter went out a few weeks ago to announce the release of Bound and to offer an exclusive read of chapter 1. Today’s newsletter includes a discount code for money off BOUND.

My next newsletter will include a great giveaway, and in the future I plan on bringing my subscribers more discounts on other books, free or discounted reads by other readers, and much, much more.

That’s just step one.

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What I have planned for later today is an awesome Facebook party with some fantastic readers (you can see a list on TBR Shelf) and huge prizes. The fun kicks off at 2 p.m. EDT (11 a.m. PDT). I can’t wait to see you there.

Another event is scheduled for the Saturday after (2 p.m. EDT, May 7, 2016), this time involving interviews with a host of bestselling and award-winning authors—totally live. And better yet, YOU can ask questions, too.

Much, much more is on its way. Among it, Book 3 of The Silverton Chronicles, where things really get crazy.

Until then, if you have comments on BOUND, GUARDED or anything else, please get in touch. I’d love to hear from you.

APRIL UPDATE

Everything’s moving forward for the big book launch on April 30. Stay tuned for updates on two awesome Facebook events with a roster of big-name authors, my mega blog tour, a newsletter with an amazing book discount, and much, much more.

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Meanwhile, I’m in the throes of book 3, and it’s going to be a crazy ride, guys.

Little Things – Huge Difference

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Welcome to your next stop on the Little Things Blog Hop

My name is Carmen Fox and I am an urban fantasy author. Last year I released Divide and Conquer, although you probably know me as the author of Guarded, Book 1 of The Silverton Chronicles. Good news. My new book Bound, the sequel to Guarded, is now out for pre-order and is set to be released in April.

I love my covers. They make me happy. You know what else makes me happy? Popping bubble wrap, a fresh breeze in the morning, and hanging with friends.

How about you? Comment on this post by letting me know what little things make you happy, and you could win a copy of any of my books (your choice) and a $5 Amazon gift card.

I will pick a random winners at the end of the blog hop. Here’s what they’re about:

Guarded
Ivy’s neighbors have a secret. They aren’t human. But Ivy has a secret, too. She knows. As long as everyone keeps quiet, she’s happy working as a P.I. by day and chillaxing with her BFF Florian, a vampire, by night. When a routine pickup drops her in the middle of a murder, her two worlds collide. While Florian knows how to throw a punch, deep down he’s a softie. His idea of scary? Running out of hair product. It’s time Ivy faced facts. Even with a vampire on stand-by, one gal can only kick so many asses.

For help, she must put her faith in others. A human, who might just be the one. A demon, who will, for a price, open the doors to her heritage. And a werewolf, who wants to protect her from herself.

Torn between these men, Ivy must tread carefully, because one wants her heart, one wants her body, and one wants her dead.
Bound
Florian has it all: excellent fashion sense, a kickass job with his best friend, and a hard-won place among Silverton’s werewolves. When a pack of females pads into their territory, Flo’s alpha dispatches him to handle a merger. Total cakewalk. Except Keely, their alpha, has no intention of submitting her wolves to Flo’s larger pack. Worse, a single glance from her baby blues sends his eloquence on vacation and his heartbeat into overdrive. His flirtations seem welcome too, but there’s a snag. She doesn’t know he’s a vampire.

While Flo struggles with his conflicts—obey his alpha or win over Keely—his estranged sire blasts into town with a catalog of radical ideas. And hanging out with unsophisticated werewolves didn’t make the list.

With violence in the air and all sides testing his loyalties, Florian must bite back, even if showing his fangs costs him the girl.

 
 
 

Don’t forget to enter the extremely large rafflecopter that has a

$50 Amazon Gift Card Grand Prize!
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/ba44e54f2/?

Don’t forget to hop to the next blog for some more fun! If you’re going in order, Candace Laville is next.



FORMATTING YOUR MANUSCRIPT FOR PUBLICATION

Smashwords have a really long “bible” for you to wade through. But assuming your book is relatively clean, all you really need is what you find in this post. Just in case, save a copy of your MS before adding these changes.

I believe the instructions work for D2D too.

Smashwords requires the addition of “Smashwords Edition” on the copyright page.

First things first. Before your individual chapters, remove the page break (which you get by clicking ctrl+enter) and manually insert a section break “new page.” This can be found on your Layout tab in the ribbon. Repeat this for all your chapters.

Header Styles

In your document, press Ctrl+A to highlight all.

Click “Normal” as Formatting Style box on the MS Word ribbon.

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Right click on box to

Modify.

Pick font and first-line tab (if needed), and go to
Paragraph to set the spacing after your paragraphs to what works best for you. Click “do not add space between paragraphs.” Leave line spacing at “At least” or don’t touch at all.

Run through your MS to highlight your chapter headings and use the “Header 1” and “Header 2” features, and modify as above.

Manually use bullet points where necessary.

For special formatting, commandeer another Formatting Style box and modify as desired. Then run through your MS, highlight the text you wish to format, and click your commandeered Formatting Style Box.

Note: do this in one go. Next time you open your document, your modifications may no longer be set to your specifications.

Find/replace

Using the global change feature, or “Find replace,” is easy.
Note: from now on, when you see X, type a blank space

Ctrl+A to highlight all

Ctrl+H to open “Find replace.”

Find: ”
Replace: ==
Click “replace all”
Find: ==
Replace: ”
Click “replace all”
[To harmonize curly quotation marks and straight ones]

Find: XX
Replace: X
Click “replace all”
(Repeat until number of occurrences is 0)
[To remove double blank spaces]

Find: ^pX
Replace: ^p
Click “replace all”
(Repeat until number of occurrences is 0)
[To remove blank spaces at the end of paragraphs]

Find: X^p
Replace: ^p
Click “replace all”
(Repeat until number changed is 0)
[To remove blank spaces at the beginning of paragraphs]

Table of Contents

Setting up a Table of Content (ToC) that is suitable for Smashwords isn’t difficult, but a little mind-numbing.

Start by creating a new page after the copyright statement, before chapter one, using the section break “new page” feature (see above).

Press “return” twice and give yourself a header: Table of Contents. Centered or justified or left, it doesn’t matter.

Now type all the relevant contents you want to link to:

Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Other Books
Acknowledgements

Now the really dull work begins. Scroll through your maniscript to “Chapter One” and highlight the two words. In the ribbon, find “Bookmark” and click open. In the top field, write “one,” and click add.

Scroll through your MS to find “Chapter Two.” Highlight, bookmark, write “two” and add.

Continue.

Scroll to “Other Books.” Highlight, bookmark, write “books” in the top field (it only accepts one word) and add.

Once you’ve bookmarked all the headings you wish to include in your ToC, move back up to your actual Table of Contents.

Highlight “Chapter One” and click “hyperlink.” By default, the box should open to find in “current document.” Locate the word “one,” i.e. the word with which you bookmarked the actual chapter one, click on it and accept.

Repeat this process with your remaing contents. I told you it would be dull, didn’t I?

You can check if it works by testing it, usually by pressing control and clicking the link.

That’s it. Your table of contents is complete.

And they lived happily ever after. The End.

If your MS was relatively clean to begin with, you should be just about done now. Have a quick read through and change the font size on your title page (ideally using a style box, but manually should do just fine), and then manually center the text on the title page and the copyright information.

If your manuscript has undergone many edits and changes, you might need to wipe all formatting and start again by applying italics and/or bold font, then follow the steps as laid out here, or ask a professional.

Good luck.

COVER REVEAL BOUND

Bound – Book 2 of The Silverton Chronicles

Bound coverI am beyond proud to present my new release, Bound. The cover is a stunning masterpiece created by my cover artist Ana Grigoriu. I don’t make her life easy. The mock-up I sent her gave specific instructions on how I wanted the man’s and woman’s legs positioned, the handcuffs, the orientation of the wolf, the red of the shoes… And Ana took all that and came up with this beauty.

It shares many attributes with Guarded, but it’s also utterly unique.

Florian is “Bound by blood. Bound by loyalty. Bound by love.”

His vampire self stands opposite Keely, flirting with her, yet not locked in an embrace. He hides a side of himself (handcuffs) from her. Standing apart, watchful, is a wolf representing the pack Florian belongs to and who has his loyalty. The conflict is palpable, but the red shoes keep drawing our eyes back to what’s important. Keely and Florian’s relationship.

This urban fantasy is, at its heart, a romance. Yet I didn’t want the cover to feature a couple–her with an adoring gaze, him with a bare chest. Symbolically, such a scene would focus on the sexual aspect between two people, and Flo’s budding relationship with Keely is much more than that.

That’s not to say I dislike covers of that nature. I’m only human. 🙂 And rest assured, you’ll find plenty of scenes in Bound that will get your heart pumping.

Anyway, here’s the short description:

Florian has it all: excellent fashion sense, a kickass job with his best friend, and a hard-won place among Silverton’s werewolves. When a pack of females pads into their territory, Flo’s alpha dispatches him to handle a merger. Total cakewalk. Except Keely, their alpha, has no intention of submitting her wolves to Flo’s larger pack. Worse, a single glance from her baby blues sends his eloquence on vacation and his heartbeat into overdrive. His flirtations seem welcome too, but there’s a snag. She doesn’t know he’s a vampire.

While Flo struggles with his conflicts—obey his alpha or win over Keely—his estranged sire blasts into town with a catalog of radical ideas. And hanging out with unsophisticated werewolves didn’t make the list.

With violence in the air and all sides testing his loyalties, Florian must bite back, even if showing his fangs costs him the girl.

Wolf vampire

Bound is due to be released on April 30, 2016 and is available for pre-order now. If you can’t wait that long, check out two short excerpts here.

Amazon | Smashwords | iBooks | BN

Book trailer | Goodreads | Facebook page

TITLE REVEAL and GUEST BLOG

Hi everyone.

Ahead of my official cover reveal on March 10 (you do not want to miss it), it’s time to announce the title of book 2 of The Silverton Chronicles. BOUND is an urban fantasy romance with your favorite vampire, Florian, taking center stage.

Bound teaser

I also want to mention that I’m over on New Generation Publishing today, telling my story. Traditional publishing or self-publishing? Only you decide.

Amazon’s Review Rules – What Are They Really About?

Guest post by U.N. Owen
Guest post by U.N. Owen

For a book to be successful, you need reviews.

Here’s the thing. Avid readers, those that build relationships with authors and with other readers, who become voices to be heard, are suddenly prevented by Amazon to leave reviews. The same is true of blogs, just about the only promo opportunity left open to writers that don’t have the backing of their big-buck publishers. Why? Because Amazon seeks to avoid bias.

Well, Amazon. You’ve gone cuckoo.

The fact that I’ve become a fan of a particular author now makes me unqualified to review the book? If I like an author, I will write to them to let them know how much I enjoyed their book, perhaps to ask for an autographed copy. Does that communication make me biased?

Well, duh, Amazon. In books, music, TV and movies, you bet your ass I’m biased. I tend to enjoy music by the same bands, movies by the same director or featuring the same actor. And yes, once I’ve found an author I like, I become–by definition–biased.

And you know what? I like shopping and selling at Amazon. I am biased toward you. But by your standards, my biased opinion is irrelevant.

Seriously, none of this makes sense. You would think a large company would appreciate loyal customers. Loyal customers like shopping at Amazon and reliably buy their favorite authors’ books, then recommend both to friends.

And you frown on this why, exactly?

You’re a business, sometimes you even pay your taxes, looking after the bottom line. Hmm. Why would you punish customers for their loyalty?

Well, allow me some (moderately) wild speculation.

Loyalty is good for business, but loyal readers are an authors’ army. If you want to exert your dominance over authors, life would be easier if you could do this without that army. Your new policy encourages writers to keep their readers at a distance, and encourages readers not to engage with authors if they want their opinions to be heard.

I can’t see any immediate benefit, but I assume you have a plan. You’ve already flexed your muscle in front of big publishers and come to an arrangement; you are currently pushing the smaller presses out of business. I suspect putting pressure on authors who self-publish is next.

The last thing you want is an army of loyal fans signing petitions and causing a stink.

That said, I will continue shopping at Amazon. Once you control all supply, from those who publish to those who make music, and set your own prices, no doubt we, the customers, will pay dearly. Until then, I’ll enjoy a bargain just like the next person.

U.N. Owen

(This is U.N. Owen’s second guest post. Hope you enjoyed.)

A BRAVE NEW PUBLISHING WORLD

Publishing in 2016

Vintage typewriter

Here is a paragraph I discovered on the Internet:

Ultimately, when presenting to a publisher, I provide a cross-section. If a book has 250 reviews with 4 and 5 stars, and 70,000 in sales, this author has a lot of promise. Alternatively, if a book has 200 reviews and only 10,000 sales, it’s going to be so much more challenging to present them and say, “You should invest money in this author.”

The article discusses how agents might be interested in picking up self-published authors under the right circumstances. First, the article claims that the price point plays a part, because 50,000 sales at $0.99 isn’t half as impressive as 50,000 sales at $6.99. This I agree with.

The Math

Let’s do the math. If I sold 50,000 e-books at $6.99, I’d make $240,000. And ebooks is what we’re talking about. Most self-published authors who do well do so because of the digital revolution. Print sales make up a relatively small portion of their overall sales.

So this agent would be interested in me if I made $240,000 on a single book? Hell, half of MarryMe.com would be interested in me if I got $240,000 in one fell swoop. But seriously, if I’d made that amount of money, I wouldn’t approach an agent. I’d approach big publishing houses myself, let agents approach me, or more likely, continue going it myself.

Sure, agents might be able to get me great deals with fantastic advances from publishing houses, but I wouldn’t go seeking them out. No, at that level of success I’d make them chase me the way authors usually chase them.

Agents and Editors

I was lucky. I got my first contract before I had to send out a single submission. Finding a way to publish with more control was my next goal, and I got there a few months later with Smart Heart Publishing. If an agent had found me at that point, perhaps we could have done something good together. But agents don’t come looking for you. They’re snowed under with submissions, in what they call the ‘slush pile.’ Well, if that doesn’t make an author feel all special. Most companies keep their lingo internal, lest their valued customers visiting the factory hear about “bring the idiot to work day.” Agents, on the other hand, proudly tell everyone how much in demand they are. They cling to their exalted titles even now, when so many authors make a living or at least comparable money from self-publishing.

And why not? Every year, thousands of authors dream of landing an agent. They want to be like John Grisham, James Patterson and Stephen King, and an agent is the only way to reach those dizzying heights. Agents still fulfill a vital role in the publishing world. Once they find an author they like, they will fight for them – for a percentage (after all, who wants to work without pay?).

I’ve done a lot of growing up over the past two years, so my understanding of publishing is more realistic than it used to be. The publishing industry is holding on tight, especially in literary fiction, which will remain their stronghold. But much of commercial fiction has channeled into alternatives, i.e. digital publishing and self-publishing. The demand for commercial fiction is higher than the publishing industry can satiate. True genre readers are voracious. They don’t care how their books came to be. Assuming the story is engaging enough and the editing doesn’t suck, they’ll read your book. That’s not to say they’re not discerning. They can simply derive a great deal of pleasure from reading books that aren’t original enough to warrant signing up for an advance.

Agents ask, who wants another Twilight or Hunger Games or True Blood? Editors say, not us. Readers, meanwhile, stand in the background, waving their hands, shouting, Me! Me!

But if editors say nay, agents aren’t going to pick you up. Editors are right to say nay. They need big sales for their huge operating and publishing costs, and the biggest sales come from the unusual and new, not from the familiar. I write urban fantasy, and every six months another agent declares the genre dead. Well, I haven’t suddenly stopped reading urban fantasy, and neither have others. It’s just that another vampire story or another werewolf story or another witch story is not going to be the “next big thing” that makes them money.

Readers

And yet, these books still have readers. Why? Here’s the surprise: readers don’t need huge twists on the genre or in terms of plot to love a book. Because that’s what I used to think, so I chased every variation and every twist. One day it clicked. I bought my first Rachel Morgan book because the world intrigued me. The book’s setup was “new” for me, but I kept buying the series because I’d become fond of the characters and the storylines were engaging. No 6th Sense style plot twists, but I wasn’t after a blockbuster movie anyway. I was after a well-made TV series that would keep me entertained for more than two hours. And I’ve continued to buy UF series ever since.

To stick with the analogy: editors and agents are hunting the next blockbuster. They can afford to back a few flops because the Titanics and Brokeback Mountains rake in more than they lose.

Smaller publishers or self-publishing authors specialize in TV. This could be a straight to TV drama, i.e. a one-off, or a series that celebrates the familiar, not the new. Don’t misunderstand. We don’t want same old, same old. Build exciting worlds, create great characters, add humor or intrigue. But you don’t have to reinvent the genre. Just put a fresh spin on it.

This much is clear: Traditional publishing is highly suited to literary fiction, and the Big Five (or Six? I forget) are set up perfectly for print.

Genre readers, however, are extemely likely to buy ebooks. Many still like print, but if you read as much as true devotees, shelf space is at a premium, and ebooks, well, they don’t take up much. These readers are prepared to pay decent money for ebooks, too, proving that authors do not have to sell out at $0.99, but they balk at having to pay $9.99. Yet these are the ebook prices often demanded by traditional publishers. Print books are expensive, we get that, but ebooks cost a fraction of that. There is no justification for inflating prices to $9.99 or above, other than to keep readers buying the print books at the same price, so publishers can turn and say, ‘we told you, ebooks don’t sell.’

The Future of Publishing

At the moment, there is room for all three models. Will the trend to digitize genre fiction continue? I hope so, not just as an author but also as a reader. The quality argument is no longer valid. Yes, some ebooks suffer from poor or non-existent editing. But honestly, I’ve read some mainstream fiction in print format recently that had plenty of typos, a formatting error, continuity problems and repeated information that should have been picked up and nixed in a thorough edit. The editing wasn’t bad enough to make me stop reading, but my point is, it was worse than most self-pubbed books I’ve read recently.

Sadly, black sheep in the self-publishing world remain. And it’s not like reviews will help readers separate the good from the ugly. One person has declared Guarded to be poorly edited, whereas several others expressly praise the good editing. Excerpts will give you an idea of the book’s quality, as do reliable book blogs, but there are no guarantees.

My advice to new writers? Continue chasing that dream. New writing stars are discovered every year. Polish your manuscript and approach agents and editors. But consider alternatives, too. Writing stars can emerge by way of the traditional route, like James Patterson, or via new avenues, e.g. Hugh Howey. Work hard, don’t give up, and good things will happen to you.

Written by Carmen Fox, December 10, 2015

Why Isn’t My Book Selling?

Guest post by U.N. Owen
Guest post by U.N. Owen

Dear New Author,

You published your book about three, four weeks ago. Right about now you should be getting frustrated. Why isn’t my book selling, like, at all? Why aren’t the reviews coming in? Why aren’t my readers telling their friends? Did they hate my book?

No, they did not hate your book. It simply takes the right occasion for readers to talk about their latest read. How many books that you’ve read over the past year did you make a fuss about? A book may be wonderful, but as soon as you reach the last page, you’re ready for the next adventure.

Now that you’re a writer, you’re more aware of your fellow authors’ plights. So you share their promo posts on Facebook, but did any of the books, even the ones you loved, make you urge your friends to buy it? Or to leave reviews? Did you do any more than hit ‘share’?

Even if Anne Reader totally and absolutely loved your book, your success as an author is not her priority. Her friends are into cats and updates on her family. Not your book. Sure, posting about your book would help YOU, but to be blunt, she’s not getting anything out of it. Besides, what if her friends hate the book and think she’s weird? Or what if they think she’s weird to post about a book in the first place? No, it’s safer not to.

In other words, there are just too many reasons not to recommend your book.

Even if Anne says to her besties, “hey, I just read this book and loved it, you should read it too,” how many of her friends are going to scramble to buy it?

If you find twenty readers in the first week, and around eight loved it and six liked it, maybe two will tell their friends ONCE about your wonderful novel. How many of these friends will remember the title the next time they’re browsing Amazon?

I’m not saying good things won’t happen, but they happen a) slowly and b) not in a way that you’d ever hear about it. This business is unpredictable, and reality is stacked against you.

One thing is certain: Anne probably won’t share the news for you. That’s not her job.

It’s yours.

Ads don’t work for new authors. They are a tool for selling, not for promoting. In other words, you have to get your name out there (promoting) before you can use it as a sales tool. Only hard, relentless work will make a dent. Maybe you’re skilled at promoting yourself. One of my friends is hopping from blog to blog, giving interviews… She works like a maniac at it. And that’s how she gathers sales. What’s more, she’s become damn good at it.

Find whatever promo activities work for you.

My point is this: Keep it up. It might take a long time, but the recognition and the recommendations will add up. Two recommendations will become eight after a year. Release another book, and now you have fifteen fans eager to tell their friends. After five years, you’ll have an army.

Now you’re getting somewhere.

Don’t forget building your platform as an author in the meantime. No, not a platform. Think of it as a resumé. Work on getting experience, on using new skills, and you’ll be climbing that ladder in no time. Don’t believe the naysayers who claim you’ll never make it as a writer. Because you might. Work hard, seize opportunities, and be patient. That’s how all overnight successes happen: slowly. Do that, and you stand a pretty good chance of being able to support your hobby, make enough money to attend conferences, to pay for blog tours and promo material from your writing kitty. And to build something that’ll help you in your retirement.

And maybe, much, much more. Just have fun doing it.

Good luck and keep writing.

U.N. Owen

PS from Carmen: Ms. Owen is right. But if you enjoy writing, you don’t need the lure of instant success to keep going. Enjoy the small triumphs. Learn from the failures.