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July 3, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 35 Comments

John Green: A Social Media Marketing Success Story

John Green: A Social Media Marketing Success Story

by Anne R. Allen   This blog got a mention from Nathan Bransford in his “This Week in Books” post on Friday. Of course I’m basking in his überblogger glow. Thanks Nathan! He also pointed out a blogpost I’d missed from Smashwords CEO Mark Coker, in which Mr. Coker bestows his blessing on agents-turned-epublishers. As I mentioned last week, some […]

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Filed Under: Social Media and Marketing For Writers Tagged With: John Green, Mark Coker, Nathan Bransford, NYT Book Reviews, Social Media Marketing, The Fault in Our Stars, VidCon, Wall Street Journal

June 26, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 63 Comments

Literary Agents: An Endangered Species?

Literary Agents: An Endangered Species?

  by Anne R. Allen   Publishing keeps zooming into the future:   This week, J.K. Rowling announced she’s self-publishing the Harry Potter ebooks, and as one agent tweeted “why [does] she need a publisher anymore? I predict Pottermore becomes her sole publisher.” On the same day, Publishers Lunch announced yet another agent, Sarah Dickman, is leaving agenting […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business Tagged With: Agent Savant, Andrea Brown, Catherine Ryan Hyde, J. K. Rowling, Kris Rusch, Kristin Nelson, Laurie McLean, Literary agents, Meredith Barnes, Michelle Davidson Argyle, Pottermore, The Passive Voice

June 19, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 34 Comments

E-Book as Query Part 2: 10 Tips for Spotting Bogus and Predatory Agents.

E-Book as Query Part 2: 10 Tips for Spotting Bogus and Predatory Agents.

by Anne R. Allen As I reported last month, the self-published e-book is fast becoming the query of choice for many New York literary agencies. Rather than slog through mountains of slush, agents are closing their offices to queries and shopping for new clients in the Kindle bestseller lists. Why not? That’s where they’ll find unrepresented […]

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Filed Under: Scams and Alerts for Writers, Self-Publishing, The Publishing Business Tagged With: agent scam, Anne R. Allen, bogus agents, indie authors, Kindle authors, query, Query Tracker, Ruth Harris, self-published e-book, Writer Beware

June 12, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 58 Comments

How to Blog: Seventeen Tips from Elizabeth S. Craig

How to Blog: Seventeen Tips from Elizabeth S. Craig

Today we’re proud to have a visit from social media guru and mystery writer, Elizabeth S. Craig, who writes the Memphis-set Riley Adams mysteries. Elizabeth’s blog has been voted one of the Writer’s Digest’s Top 101 Sites for Writers for two years in a row, so she knows what she’s talking about. So here we’ve got seventeen (count […]

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Filed Under: Blogging for Authors, Social Media and Marketing For Writers Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Blogging tips for writers, Elizabeth S. Craig, Fiction Groupie, Finger Lickin’ Dead, how to blog, Mystery Writing is Murder, Riley Adams

June 5, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 40 Comments

Writer’s Conferences—Are They Relevant in the Internet Age?

by Anne R. Allen   The summer writers’ conference season is upon us, and wordsmiths everywhere are packing up laptops, manuscripts, and literary dreams to head for those idyllic retreats where they can polish their craft, learn the latest publishing trends, and hang with successful authors, agents and publishers—for a hefty fee. At some of […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Brave New Trail Conference, Central Coast Writers Conference, DC Stanfa, how not to pitch to agents video, Laurie McLean, Mark Coker, Smashwords, writers conferences

May 29, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 87 Comments

Writer’s Block and Depression: Why You Shouldn’t Bully Your Muse

Writer’s Block and Depression: Why You Shouldn’t Bully Your Muse

by Anne R. Allen Some professional writers claim writer’s block doesn’t exist. They’ll tell you they never have any trouble banging out their daily pages—and laugh at people who do. William Faulkner said, “I only write when I am inspired. Fortunately I am inspired at 9 o’clock every morning.” Terry Pratchett—not earning himself any fans […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection, Writing Craft Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Clarissa Draper, Julia Cameron, Nancy Andreasen, Plato, Steve Martin, Terry Pratchett, William Faulkner, Writers block, Writing and Depression

May 22, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 51 Comments

What it Really Means When Your Book Gets Rejected

What it Really Means When Your Book Gets Rejected

  Today’s guest post is from one of my favorite authors, Ruth Harris. She’s a bestselling author–and a former Big Six editor and  publishing executive who has gone over to the indie side. She knows what she’s talking about. Her sales numbers are in the millions. Her fiction has been translated into 19 languages, published […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Big Six publishers, indie publishing, Ruth Harris, why your manuscript got rejected

May 15, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 58 Comments

Is the E-book the New Query?

Is the E-book the New Query?

by Anne R. Allen If you’re like me, you’re getting a little bored with the indie vs. legacy publishing debate. People are talking a lot of crap on both “sides” of what shouldn’t be an either/or argument in the first place. (See sci-fi author Jeff Carlson’s great post on the subject here.) But this week I […]

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Filed Under: Self-Publishing, The Publishing Business Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, BookCountry.com, How to get an agent, Jane Friedman, Jeff Carlson, Joe Konrath, Kindle publishing, Self e-publishing, Stephen Leather

May 8, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 59 Comments

Twitter For Shy Persons—Secrets of Stress-free Tweeting

Twitter For Shy Persons—Secrets of Stress-free Tweeting

   by Anne R. Allen Twitter terrifies me. Seriously. It’s been described as the world’s biggest cocktail party and that sounds about right: cacophonous, shallow, time-consuming Hell for shy, writerly persons. But many experts say authors who are serious about publication MUST be on Twitter. So a year or so ago I steeled myself and […]

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Filed Under: Social Media and Marketing For Writers Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Elizabeth Spann Craig, How to Tweet, Jane Friedman, Nathan Bransford, Ruth Harris, Schmoozing on Twitter, Tweepi, Twitter for Shy Persons, Wendy Sparrow

May 1, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 61 Comments

Want to be a Successful Author? 10 Things English Majors Have to Unlearn

Want to be a Successful Author? 10 Things English Majors Have to Unlearn

by Anne R. Allen   One of my favorite moments in film happens in Star Trek IV, when the Enterprise crew find themselves back the 20th century. Kirk refers to “the complete works of Jacqueline Susann, the novels of Harold Robbins,” and Spock replies, “Ah… The giants!” Funny bit. But the thing is—they were giants. Not great writers, but […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Genre guidelines, how to be a successful author, Literary genres, Star Trek IV

April 24, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 19 Comments

Some Caveats for Self-Publishers from Bestselling Author Jeff Carlson

Some Caveats for Self-Publishers from Bestselling Author Jeff Carlson

When my post on three questions to ask before you self-publish went viral last week, Thriller and SciFi author Jeff Carlson  asked to join in the discussion. I think you’ll find this account of his experiences eye-opening. Thanks, Jeff! Using Both Sides of the Sword by Jeff Carlson   Anne and I go back to the 1990s and my […]

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Filed Under: Self-Publishing Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Jeff Carlson, self-publishing expenses, Self-publishing on Kindle, SLO Nightwriters, The Frozen Sky, The Plague Year

April 17, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 89 Comments

12 Signs Your Novel isn’t Ready to Publish

by Anne R. Allen   Self-publishing is the trending subject in Cyberia. Last week my post on self pubbing got over 2500 hits. And 60 comments. It not only made “Best of the Best” of Jane Friedman’s “Best Tweets for Writers,” but got a shout-out from publishing blog-god Nathan Bransford. (Thanks, Jane and Nathan!) I’m amazed. Many thanks to all […]

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Filed Under: Self-Publishing Tagged With: 99-cent e-books, Amanda Hocking, Anne R. Allen, Colleen Lindsay, Jane Friedman, Karen McQuestion, Kindle, Mark Williams, Nathan Bransford, self publishing

April 10, 2011 By Anne R. Allen 47 Comments

What if Somebody Steals Your Plot?

What if Somebody Steals Your Plot?

by Anne R. Allen   I often hear from new writers who are afraid their plots will be stolen if they talk about their books online or in critique groups. But I tell them to rest easy. Writers have a lot to be wary of these days—faux agents, bogus publishers, e-book pirates, content mills, James Frey—but […]

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Filed Under: Scams and Alerts for Writers, The Publishing Business, Writing Craft Tagged With: Anne R. Allen, Homer, Kathleen Duey, Kindle Nation, memes, no new stories, Quotes4Writers, Richard Dawkins, steal your plot, Victoria Strauss, Virgil

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writers digest 101 best websites for writers award

Anne R. AllenAnne R. Allen writes funny mysteries and how-to-books for writers. She also writes poetry and short stories on occasion. She’s a contributor to Writer’s Digest and the Novel and Short Story Writer’s Market.

Her bestselling Camilla Randall Mystery Series features perennially down-on-her-luck former socialite Camilla Randall—who is a magnet for murder, mayhem and Mr. Wrong, but always solves the mystery in her quirky, but oh-so-polite way.

Ruth Harris NYT best selling authorRuth is a million-copy New York Times bestselling author, Romantic Times award winner, former Big 5 editor, publisher, and news junkie.

Her emotional, entertaining women’s fiction and critically praised novels have sold millions of copies in hard cover, paperback and ebook editions, been translated into 19 languages, sold in 30 countries, and were prominent selections of leading book clubs including the Literary Guild and the Book Of The Month Club.

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