Tweet In the fall of 2009, I started a grand experiment. The English department at my alma mater lost their Tech Writing professor at the last minute, and the chair of the department asked me to step in and teach the class for a semester. I agreed, and then scrambled to put together a lesson […]
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Tagged Blogging, Consortium Books, Creative Writing, Dave Doolin, Platform and Promotion, Publication, Storytelling, Teaching, Technical Writing, The Consortium, Unstressed Syllables
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Tweet I’ve spent a couple weeks now talking about self-publishing. This week I promised to talk about my actual experiences with the process, and so I started that yesterday with a little bit of a grumpy glimpse into CreateSpace’s print-on-demand operation. I still use CreateSpace, though, and I still recommend it. You should go in […]
Tweet As promised, I’m going to tell you how we actually go about publishing a book to Amazon. I’ll save some of the “how to” aspect of it for next week, when I discuss Consortium Books processes. First, I want to describe some of my experiences with the distributors. It might help to briefly explain […]
Tweet I love my job. Have I mentioned that? Well, let me mention it here and now: I love my job. I get to write, I get to read what my Writers Tribe writes, and I get to read all sorts of books in all sorts of genres. It’s exactly the job for me, and […]
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Tagged Character, Cubby Greenwich, Dean Koontz, Grimbald and Clotilda, Milo, Plot, Point of View, Relentless, Shearman Waxx, Storytelling, Vivian Norby, Writer's Tribe
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Tweet You almost certainly already know this about me, but I’m a captain of industry. I’m a prince of the new media. I’m a president, CEO, and executive director of a small business registered with the State of Oklahoma (national tax exempt status…pending). I’m talking about the Consortium, a cooperative of artists dedicated to an […]
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Tagged Becca J. Campbell, Colors of Deception, Courtney Cantrell, Ed Cantrell, Editing, Ghost Targets: Expecation, Gods Tomorrow, Jessie Sanders, Joshua Unruh, Publication, Sean Sanders, Taming Fire, The Consortium, Trish Pogue
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Friday, February 25, 2011
Tweet I’m a week late posting this, and you’ve all got my apologies for that. I ended last week’s conversation on self-publishing with Thursday’s claim that it’s an author’s responsibility today to learn the hard work of publishing. Here’s the thing: it’s tough work. I’m a week late posting this because I’ve been in a […]
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Tweet Ohhhh, my dear inklings. I did a scary, scary thing. I let go of my baby, my precious, my sweet toddling kiddo. I sent my tender little one out into the world, went back into the comfort of my home, and closed the door. And then, I sat back and waited in agony. What […]
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Tagged Aaron Pogue, Beta readers, Colors of Deception, Courage, Creative Writing, Editing, Fear, Google, Jessie Sanders, Reading, The Writing Life, Urban Dictionary, WILAWriTWe
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Thursday, February 17, 2011
Tweet On Tuesday, I published the second book in my series. I posted the same little sales blurb in half a dozen different places, but around here I gave a little something extra. I told you about the process of writing the series, and my plans going forward. That’s not necessarily something I talk about […]
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
When we writers mention “social writing,” what we think we mean is getting together to encourage each other and spend several hours working on our projects in the same location, one which most likely involves food and copious amounts of coffee. But “social writing” consists of far more than that…
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Tagged Aaron Pogue, Coffee, Epic, Fantasy, Ghost Targets: Expectation, Jessie Sanders, Joshua Unruh, JT Hackett, Mashup novels, Polish pottery, Roadrunner cartoons, Social Writing, The Consortium, Thomas Beard, trib, Weird Western, WILAWriTWe, Wile E. Coyote, Writer's Tribe
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Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Tweet First things first, I need to take care of a little business. You might have already seen this on one of my other sites, but I’ve got three significantly different audiences across all three and, y’know, I really need to let all of them know. After all, it’s a good book. You should read […]