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Monday, September 3, 2018

How To Make An Impact With Your BOOK_IWSG post




We all want to write a best-seller.  Not for fame nor for fortune.  

Just to be able to support ourselves living out our dream.

But how to do that?


I could date Gal Gadot, of course, but I think her husband might object.  

And he looks mean! 



No.  

We will have to do it the old-fashioned way: by using the tools at hand the best way we know how.

HOW TO ULYSSES YOUR WAY 
TO NOVEL SUCCESS

1.) SUCKER PUNCH YOUR READER WITH THE FIRST SENTENCE

The thinking behind the studio's thinking on making movie trailers of late is 

TO MAKE IT SO COMPELLING THAT PEOPLE HAVE NO CHOICE BUT TO BUY A TICKET 

no matter what the critics say.


The first sentence to my story in TALES TO BE TOLD AT MIDNIGHT is

"The rape had been the best thing to have happened to her."

How could you not want to read on?  

And remember the FIRST LOOK option on Amazon will hook your reader 

if you just set the bait correctly.


2.) LEARN FROM THE MOST POPULAR GIRL IN HIGH SCHOOL

BE FAST.  

Not free.  People value what they pay for.

But put out ... as quickly as you can with quality one after another.  

 You want to have other books to offer should lightning strike and you gain a fan.

Which leads me into the next point:




3.) BRAND YOURSELF WITH A SERIES

It won't hurt much, 

but it will give a new fan certainty 

of enjoying more adventures with the characters she or he has grown to love.

Readers who like one novel will confidently buy the next.

And the series name will draw the eye of past readers browsing thumbnails of your book covers.

Which leads me to my next point:


4.) LET YOUR TITLE BE LIKE THE SKIRTS OF THAT POPULAR GIRL

BE SHORT

Choose a brief emotive title. Pack it with meaning, menace and drama.

 Why short? 

Your cover will shrink to a fingernail on Kindle and other mobile devices. 

So make it legible!

James Patterson uses such titles: 

ZOO, THE FIRE, WITCH & WIZARD, THE QUICKIE

Which, of course, leads me to the next point as well


 4.) ATTENTION SPANS HAVE CHANGED

TV sound bites, Twitter feeds, Buzz feeds, Facebook posts ...

All of them have conditioned those who still read to bore easily.

A bored reader is more dangerous to us than any lion, for you will lose them as customers.

Keep your sentences as short as models' skirts.

James Patterson is the expert here. 

His sentences average just six words. 

His paragraphs are typically no longer than five lines and often just one line.

Tell your story your way, but if it is to make an impact there is a model to follow.


 5.) WE ARE A LONELY SOCIETY 

Give your MC a foil character with whom to talk ... even if it is only the moon.

Even Tom Hanks had Wilson, the basketball, 

with whom to share his innermost thoughts and fears on that island.

Conversations with the buddy character can introduce conflict to keep a scene alive, 

give the main character a plausible sounding board for their woes and triumphs, 

and also prompt the protagonist to reveal  information.

 Foil characters also furnish sub-plots. 

Get them into troubles of their own. Make them victims.
  
Use a foil as a series character in your every novel as I do with Mark Twain 

in my NOT-SO-INNOCENTS series and in my Egyptian Victorian fantasies.



6.) A PLOT WORTHY OF A MOVIE



Dueling vampire empires, alien evil clashing with ancient darkness, 

Mark Twain, Oscar Wilde, Nikola Tesla -- 

all worrying less about saving the world than 

saving their friend who is married to a demon-empress,

poised to set all the world ablaze with her dark ambition.

Outlandish but so was SHE and LORD OF THE RINGS.

You must strive to craft a riveting plot worthy of your reader.



7.) WATER COOLER DIALOGUE

My blood center still has a water cooler and coffee maker where workers chat a bit during the day.

Work to have your dialogue be quoted at the water cooler of today's culture:

Twitter, Facebook, Buzz Feeds, personal blogs.

There is a reason NIKE sells ball caps and T-shirts with their logo.

Be as smart as NIKE, have your fans advertise for you.

I HOPE THIS HELPS 
IN SOME SMALL WAY, 
ROLAND

26 comments:

  1. Series do make it easier to hook a reader. They like one, they'll like them all.

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    1. I've found that out with my own series. The latest Longmire novel has just been released, and I am about to reunite with old friends again. :-)

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  2. Even though short stories are my world, I have a couple of books in the works. I have a second book in mind for the YA, but three for an adult mystery. Here's the thing. Keeping facts straight in subsequent books will be my challenge. This is why I am not a liar. Can't keep track of them.

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    1. Keep cliff notes summaries for the lives of your main characters -- it sometimes helps to do that.

      Then, again, Charlaine Harris was terrible on continuity in her TRUE BLOOD mysteries and sold quite well.

      Talking YA -- are you going to submit to the IWSG Anthology whose genre is YA Romance and theme is Masquerade?

      To me, High School is a root canal: your whole world when you are in the middle of it. Once it's over, you're just glad you're done with it! :-)

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  3. Series are good; Paterson's style, not so much.

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  4. Excellent tips, Ronald. I'll pick up the ones that apply to my genre, and type of publication :)

    Lovely to 'see' you after a long while--I've been on an involuntary hiatus, and missed reading your posts.

    Damyanti

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    1. I hate that your hiatus was involuntary. :-( I pray things are somewhat improved. I have missed you being here as well.

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  5. These are all great tips. Thanks for your kind comments on my blog today. I'll keep at it! The successes, big or small, are worth the hard work, and waiting!

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    1. Just not giving up when our spirits sag is a victory, right?

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  6. Now, I'm going to have to take a peek at Paterson's writing. Series do hook. And keeping titles simple for the thumbnail view is priceless!

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    1. Thanks for liking my simple title reasoning, Tonja. :-)

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  7. Great post, from start to end. You had me at why we write.

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    1. Yes, we all are astute enough to realize that being the next J K Rowling is not going to happen for most of us. :-)

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  8. I've always written nonfiction and I've just started my first fiction series and you have inspired me to write faster!

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  9. All of these make perfect sense and I loved laughing while learning. Thank you.

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    1. If you can make your audience laugh, then it is all worthwhile. Thanks for visiting and talking with me a bit! :-)

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  10. Happy IWSG Day!
    Great tips and humor. You make great points that reflect the times.
    Thanks for sharing.

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  11. Outstanding advice. I'm especially a fan of writing for short attention spans like mine. Short sentences and very brief chapters or reading segments work well for me as a reader and that's the way I like to write.

    I'd like to make a living with my writing, but a bit of fame can come in handy at times and you'll never find me arguing with fortune--I'll gladly take it if it ever comes my way.

    Arlee Bird
    Tossing It Out

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    1. Fame is a good way to get your foot into the door of some very influential places, and that's for sure!

      I've taken to writing short stories lately. My companion Halloween collection, PERCHANCE TO NIGHTMARE, comes out the first of this October Both SILHOUETTES and NIGHTMARE contain very short tales among the longer to satisfy most tastes ... I hope!! :-)

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  12. Solid tips for sure. Series will bring more readers in, especially if they can be read independently of each other enough to let them start anywhere in the series (which hopefully then leads them to the first book). And marketing. Oh yes. Marketing.

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    1. Hiss!! You said the evil word, Marketing! :-) That is an area in which I am still struggling. Best of luck with your sales, Shannon!

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  13. Brilliant advice and cleverly presented, Roland. I will save this as it makes my head nod - like a bobble-head.

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    1. My job as rare blood courier makes my head bob! Out of fatigue. Glad you liked my post, Roland! :-)

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