Craft a Feature Post

Okay, this is one I can get into up to my well-endowed and rapidly aging hips since it follows my new discovery–creating pins for Pinterest. The current assignment from Blogging 101 is to craft a recurring feature post. blogging-university

Perfect–and I know JUST what I’ll call it:

 Freaky Friday Features

cocos-island-pinWhile the title is not terribly original, the first one posted is a pin I created today using of one of the latest discoveries from my Grandfather’s treasure trove, a painting of Cocos Island. (Only freaky, I guess, if you consider the original painting is close to 90 years old.) Yes, another subject I’ve covered fairly well on this blog. The island is a fascinating study actually borne of all the stories relating to pirate treasure, including the Loot of Lima. There were a number of pirates who buried their treasure on this island, however, one of which was Edward Davis, the subject of my grandfather’s sail to the island.

There are a number of reasons I like the idea of a recurring feature: Continue reading “Craft a Feature Post”

Making the Blog Work

To those of you who are casual spectators and come in to the blog to check the post and then check out, you may not have noticed anything different. For the keener observer, I hope you’ve noticed a few, perhaps subtle, changes. It started months ago when I noted it was time to step it up and make the blog work! FIRST–a change of theme!

That started a whole boatload of changes: blogging-university

1) Started with a class late last year.

2) Currently, there is a free WordPress Blogging University, Blogging 101 class–it’s like getting a writing prompt–and it opens the floodgates.

3) Reach out and touch someone–add to your web log. Examples: I’m enjoying Shanan Winters and her Interpreter of Inspiration blog. She has just published her first novel and has a lively blog–obviously having previously read and implemented all the wonderful “how to” articles I’ve been hitting. Ana Spoke has a very dynamic blog in which she just discovered “Face Swap Live“, a cell phone app that she used to promote her new book AND make a book trailer for “Shizzle, Inc.” Hilarious and way too much fun!

Get Back to the Basics Continue reading “Making the Blog Work”

Who Writes This Stuff?

Hubby and I are probably the last couple in the U.S. to discover the drama series “Breaking Bad.” Living and traveling in an RV using Wally World parking lots, family driveways, and over-the-air antennas will seldom get you much in the way of serious TV other than news and weather–if luck is holding. Actually, we went the way of free over-the-air antennas well before that giving up on the ever-escalating charging practices of cable and satellite companies. Social Security benefits just doesn’t include extras

The series, originally aired on the AMC network through 5 seasons, tells the story of Walter White. Yes, yes, I know–you’ve seen it! Then I don’t have to mention the impact it has on you–scenes continue to haunt your thoughts. Who writes this stuff??! This series was widely regarded as possibly the best television series–ever. The event stacked up awards that included everything from writing to acting including best actor and supporting actor. They all deserved the awards.

In 2013, Breaking Bad entered the Guinness World Records as the most critically acclaimed show of all time.

breakingbad
Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston

Continue reading “Who Writes This Stuff?”

Do You Need Inspiration to Write?

I’m very proud of my fellow Idaho Author Community member, G. S. Wright, for continuing to doggedly get those words out there. He has an unparalleled drive I’ve not seen in many other authors in that he is keeping, and posting, his total daily words. No, Garth is not writing a book (he’s writing several). Garth has a number of projects going, including series installments and short stories.

I admire his dedication and keen ability to keep all his plots separate in his head. It must be a youth thing, as I feel accomplished getting out one blog post a week. Back during the Blog Challenge, I took on writing a blog a day for five weeks. Thank heaven for the writing prompts, as I am slow to initiate when forced to originate. For me, writing comes so much easier and more natural when inspired.skyline

My inspirations often hit when walking the dog and I walk her several times a day. Impossible to stop and make notes, I begin dictating thoughts on my handy-dandy cell phone which is also keeping track of my steps, miles, and route.

Last week during a visit with my hikin’-lovin’ cousin came a crash course in writing prompts, inspirations, and blog post ideas. Lost! Difficult to dictate when hiking with someone and gasping for breath. Fortunately, the hiking trails themselves were inspirational and apparently something this area (Phoenix) excels in providing. Who would have given serious thought to a desert, which may exceed 120o in the summer, would discover the winter-long pastime of hiking?  Continue reading “Do You Need Inspiration to Write?”

Do You Buy A Book From The Cover? Covers Get You Noticed (or not)

Perhaps you buy a book based on the cover–I bought this one because I loved the cover. It is compelling, isn’t it? You HAVE to look at it. Is it the face, the expression, or just because it’s a cow? There is something in those whimsical eyes that makes you want to see/read more. And that’s what I’m talking about! mornings-two-pan

That old sage “don’t judge a book by its cover,” has a multitude of meanings–generally considered that we shouldn’t let first appearances seal our judgment. That’s true! But I see the cover before even reading the title–don’t you? According to Nick Thacker of The Book Designer, you do as well!

Covers Get You Noticed!

How heavily does a book cover get you noticed (or ignored)? There is a reason so many experts in the business point to obtaining a professional to design your cover–it leads to attention and credibility.

The First Impression

The cover represents that instant first impression–critical to maintaining interest. It creates a visual impression regarding your writing. Does it exhibit quality? Millions are spent on packaging. How is your packaging? Does it project the feeling that you didn’t care or just wanted to finish the book and get it published?

Covers Promote the Genre

The best covers communicate the genre of the book before the title does. The cover of the book above spoke volumes and I knew what it would be about before I read the description.

But if you think about the genre of the book you are currently reading, is the cover:
  1. Bloody, violent, or dark? Is it a thriller, mystery, supernatural, vampire?
  2. Muted tones of blue or pink with two people embracing–romance?
  3. Ultra-future depictions of buildings, vehicles–sci-fi, fantasy?
  4. An authority figure standing next to a desk pointing at you–non-fiction? 

Many publishing houses are dusting off the old favorites now with expired copyrights and designing new eye-pleasing covers. Penguin Classics is having a great time with their successful reprints of the Jane Austen classics. The venerable Barnes & Noble began more than 20 years ago with its “Collectibles Editions.” Fresh New Cover! Show me the money!

 

Cocos Island Treasure by Stanley McShaneI enjoyed the blog written by Liz Stinson years ago regarding the book whose cover judges you before you can open it. The subject of book covers, however, is one I’ve scrutinized before on this forum. I decided to use my grandfather’s own paintings for several of the covers for the manuscripts written and painted a century ago.

Incidentally, how did you perceive the book I introduced above? Did you correctly guess that this is a folksy, down home bit of western Americana?  The book examines three generations of a family living in a gritty, small town in rural eastern Oregon. Ox (Gramps) has increasing age-related health problems as he is met by his son with the startling discovery of a skull on their five-generation ranch property that quickly has his son Jiggs questioning all he’d believed about their family origins. Jiggs’ son, Nap, is caught between the two and is too young to have sufficient experience in dealing with family issues he isn’t privy to. Jiggs, however, is determined to discover to whom the skull belongs.

Busters of Bitter River by Stanley McShaneWhile my grandfather wasn’t a professional book cover artist, it somehow seemed appropriate to use those little pasteboard paintings as they were originally intended. To quote another of those famous old sayings, “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.”

© 2016 Virginia WilliamsResource Box

Become a Flatbed Driver in 6 Weeks!

You’ll remember that last week I alluded to my DH (dear hubby in RV vernacular) making the decision he’d need a job to pay off the debt incurred with trying to avoid abandoning the little box on wheels we’d tried driving east. We got as far as Indiana where he alternately wrenched on both the MoHo and the little Chevy Tracker (better known as “the Toad“, also in RV vernacular).

My intrepid hubby looked at a number of possibilities, including being the local Wally World greeter, but during the winter in Snow Bird paradise (Yuma, AZ), there is little hope of that going very far. In exasperation one day, he announced to me that he’d decided the local truck driving school looked like a dandy place to begin a new career. In a panic, I reminded him he had entered his 7th decade, we had no money for school, and I couldn’t imagine him becoming an OTR (“over the road in trucking vernacular) truck driver at this stage of our lives. While some schools boast a three-week course, many extend from a month to six weeks. Uh oh.

There is a serious shortage of truck drivers leading to increasing demand that will soon top 111,000 drivers. They offer financial assistance for schooling and the course is GI Bill approved. There are three kinds of schools:8876

  1. Private schools (may or may not include placement)
  2. Company paid CDL training
  3. Public institutions–vocational, technical, etc.

Continue reading “Become a Flatbed Driver in 6 Weeks!”

Women Write More Blog Posts

In a report released by Nielsen in April 2012, the gender gap widens significantly when it comes to social media presence; specifically hosting and posting blogs.

The findings didn’t just indicate a specific difference in the propensity of women to blog, but in active social media presence in general, engaging in Facebook (no big surprise there) as well as Twitter. The subject has been the object of argument since blogs began. And as one blogger queried, “…the blogosphere covers more than just technology, does it have a gender?” Should we really assume men write tech, women write about social issues? (Or, are women writing the majority of blog posts–technological or not?) Perhaps it is time for a little poll of our own:

I loved the blog posted by Elizabeth on Goodreads in November of 2014 looking at whether or not men read men and women read women. Okay, okay, okay! But the argument is still: who is writing most blogs–today?

Women write to connect,

Men write to research, sell, and compete 

You can read those same thoughts on website after website, all showing beautiful graphics proving their points. Another blog posted January 2015 by Iris on BrandWatch also breaks it down to age and income. (Neil Patel posted the same stats and graphics in October 2014.)

It’s difficult to find a recent definitive answer. Perhaps you’d assume the stats haven’t changed that much. I’ll be adding additional polls from time to time and glean some up-to-date stats to post here later in the year. Hopefully, you’ve voted on the first!  ©2015 Virginia Williams

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What is Nano-Punk?

In my day, a looong time ago, things were so simple: Radios with general audience series that didn’t have to be rated, black and white round-screened TV’s with programs also unrated, and books in genres you could understand just by the name (most likewise unrated). There was no nano–anything: nano-punk, nano-technology, or cyber-punk.

It was a book series I recently completed that got me started exploring “Nanopunk,” a sub-genre of science fiction. The “Futurescape” novels written by Dean C. Moore in Terraforming Earth-Phase 1-“The Plagues Era” and Phase 2-“Humanoids in Sealed Habitats” are extremely eye-opening.

Divided into two classes, fiction and non-fiction, the genres back then were easy to discern. Fiction separated into simple headings: genres

  1. Drama
  2. Comedy
  3. Crime/Detective
  4. Fairy Tale
  5. Fantasy
  6. Historical
  7. Horror
  8. Mystery
  9. Romance
  10. Science Fiction
  11. Suspense/Thriller
  12. Western

Continue reading “What is Nano-Punk?”

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