I don’t think a lot of people are worrying about this, but I thought I’d share today why I blog my novels as I write them (or shortly after).
It’s probably not the best marketing move to put my novels on my blog, chapter by chapter, but, well, I’ve never been good at that marketing stuff, for one, but also, I like the interaction I receive when I share my novels on my blog. The interaction is worth more me to than the money, although you might have to remind me of that when we are pinching pennies to get groceries some weeks.
I like that my handful of blog readers interact with each chapter and share with me their impressions or their ideas for how the story should unfold. Based on those impressions, and impressions of friends or family, I adjust and rewrite the story before the final publication. Or sometimes I rewrite it because I like it better. Putting the story up on my blog also forces me to finish it and to edit it chapter by chapter because one, I have “fans” waiting to read the rest of the story (okay, I have maybe 20 people reading and four that comment, but I don’t mind writing it for just those people. I’m not even kidding.) and two, it also forces me to focus on each chapter individually, write before I copy it to the blog to publish it.
I am sure some authors (am I really one of those? I don’t know. . .but it sounds good, right?) wouldn’t want to share their books on their blogs. They’d rather write them, leave them on their computer and then one day get their nerve up and send it to a literary agent, hope the agent picks them up and pitches their book to a publisher and that publisher signs them and their book is marketed to millions and then they become a millionaire. Sharing the book on their blog could mean no one will ever pay them for the book because the readers can simply read the book for free on the blog, right?
Not necessarily.
In my case, I only have about 360 blog subscribers and of those 360, only about 5 interact with me on a regular basis and only about 20 actually follow the stories I share on the blog. Not only that, but of those who might find my blog, how many of them will really want to scroll from chapter to chapter for free, versus buying the book later on Amazon in it’s completed form, or at least “borrowing it” through Kindle Unlimited?
Probably not that many. In addition, once I’ve shared the chapters on my blog, I take down the page that links to each chapter and replace it with an excerpt and a link to my book on Amazon, or wherever else I might choose to sell them in the future. In the end, sharing the novel on my blog is a motivator for me, but also a nice distraction from other stresses in life (like the news) and from what I’ve heard from those who read it, it’s also a nice distraction from them.
I don’t expect that my novels will ever win awards, but they’re already winning me something else – a little bit of sanity and a whole lot of distraction.
And while I’m on the subject of sharing my novel on here, I have two new chapters scheduled this week: one tomorrow and one Friday.
I am in the midst of writing a new novel called The Farmer’s Daughter, but I haven’t yet decided if I will share it here as part of Fiction Friday or not. I have a feeling, though, it’s a story some of my regulars will really like. I’ve shared a little of it on here before.
It’s the story of Molly Tanner, who still lives on her parents farm at the age of 25 and wonders if there is a life for her beyond the farm. At the same time she’s pondering this, she notices that farmhand Alex Stone is paying more attention to her, but she’s not sure why. Five years older than her and her brother’s best friend, Alex is battling some demons of his own, mainly that he’s falling for Molly but he doesn’t feel like he’s good enough for her. He covers his pain from his low self-esteem and his lack of attentative parents growing up by drinking a lot and dating women.
Other characters are Molly’s brother, Jason, her parents Robert and Annie, her grandmother, Franny, and her best friend, Liz. Robert and Annie are facing their own concerns throughout the book as Robert fights to keep the family farm, which he and his brother have now turned into a farming enterprise, running.
This will be the first book in a series, but I’m not going to overwhelm you with the other characters and their backstories. At least not yet!
I’m glad you share your stories here. I always look forward to reading them!
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Thank you! It’s been fun!
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…I want to read that book too! 🙂 I appreciate the distraction! Also, I will willingly buy your books even after reading them on the blog, when we have extra cash in the future. (I did get your first one when you were having the free promotion, but that’s cause cash is tight…as always 😉 ) I think you can definitely count yourself as an author and you are definitely improving as a writer. (Not saying you were a bad writer, because you definitely weren’t!, I can just see improvement…does that make sense?) Keep writing, keep distracting yourself, I appreciate it 🙂 God Bless!
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I know what you mean about the writing. Don’t worry, not offended. I’m constantly trying to improve. Sometimes I go over and over things, knowing I could add more or change more, but if I do what I normally do with things I’ll just sit there changing things and never share it with anyone. Nothing is ever going to be perfect so I’ve had to let that go.
I’m excited for The Farmer’s Daughter because I already have three book ideas for the series in my head and an entire cast of characters.
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I’m excited too! 🙂 It sounds like a great series!!
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I’m just excited to explore these different characters and write something in the third person so I can explore them. Everything doesn’t have to be from just one point of view now. Such fun!
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