About Me
- MichelineMcAllister
- I have two novels published and currently for sale ~ Welcome To My Life & Love You, Love Your Work, Let's Do Lunch! Check your fav booksellers online. I also write screenplays, teleplays, and shorts. I currently work as a writer and an artist in Los Angeles. Visit me on myspace www.myspace.com/michelinemcallister
Monday, October 18, 2010
Negative Wanker About NaNo
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
NaNoWriMo is COMING UP!
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Book Blogging: All It Takes Is a Native Guide
Book Blogging: All It Takes Is a Native Guide
I met She Writes' co-founder Kamy Wicoff when we both spoke on the "Evolving Publishing Ecosystem" panel at BlogHer'10 this past summer. After we were both stumped by a question from author Gretchen Rubin during our session - "There are SO many book blogs - which ones should I start with?" (there are no quick-and-easy answers to that one!) - we talked about the idea that one way of addressing it could be to develop a greater book-blogger presence in the She Writes community. After all, as most of us know already, one thing that the publishing ecosystem is evolving into is a place where the connections between readers and authors are more direct.
We kicked this initiative off during Book Blogger Appreciation Week (BBAW) last month, but it was never meant to stop there - bringing dedicated book bloggers to the She Writes community is intended to be an ongoing thing. Today, I'm focusing on some people within the book-blogging community who are drawing on their experience to function as facilitators between authors and bloggers. Their goal is steering writers toward their most receptive potential readers, while building a business based on doing what they love.
One of the first blogger-developed business ventures in this realm was TLC Book Tours. Founded in 2008 by California book bloggers Trish Collins (Hey Lady! Watcha Readin’?), the "T", and Lisa Munley (Books on the Brain), the "L," TLC has access to a large pool of blogs. They draw from that pool to create carefully-scheduled virtual book tours across a small group of selected host blogs. Lisa and Trish get to know the interests of the bloggers they work with, and as book bloggers themselves, are considerate of their time. They strive for a good match between the book and the blogger; to that end, their tours will sometimes include blogs that don't specialize in books but do have a content focus relevant to a particular book's subject matter. TLC encourages author involvement with tour hosts via guest posts and interviews.
Newly-established Booklicity is taking a different approach to the matchmaking process. Chicago-based book blogger Jen Karsbaek (Devourer of Books) channeled some of her frustration over book-pitch misfires - books that don't fit a blog, pitches that ignore a blog's review policy, requested review dates without enough lead time - into a targeted book-publicity service. Booklicity maintains an extensive book-blog database, and applies knowledge of the blogs within it to find those best suited to review a particular book; its packages offer authors a set number of blog reviews, but don't organize them as a formal tour. (Jen recently shared some tips about what not to do when working with book bloggers in a guest post at The Debutante Ball.)
Getting books into the hands of targeted reader/reviewers may be only part of a bigger strategy for some blogger/author ventures; their activities may also include developing authors' blogs and websites, fostering a presence on Twitter and Facebook, and social-media coaching. While these companies may have similar missions and menus of services, their end-products will be tailored to the client, and their approaches reflect the sensibilities of their founders.
Winsome Media Communications is a bi-coastal partnership between Amy Riley (My Friend Amy, founder of Book Blogger Appreciation Week) and Nicole Bonia (Linus’s Blanket). Their recent services to clients have included organizing virtual book tours, hosting Facebook parties, and website design. Nicole and Amy also host The Underground Literary Society, a podcast organized around selected themes and featuring interviews and discussion with authors.
Social MediU is operated by Mid-Atlantic bloggers Rebecca Joines Schinsky (The Book Lady's Blog, the Bookrageous podcast) and Michelle Franz (Galleysmith). In addition to social-media consulting and related services, Rebecca - a former bookstore events manager - has a special interest in blogger/bookstore affiliations; she partners with Richmond, Virginia's Fountain Bookstore, and worked with Fountain and the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance (SIBA) in developing the "Get In Bed With a Book Blogger" campaign.
If you're an author looking to connect with book bloggers, having a book blogger guide you through the process seems like a great way to get started!
Disclosures and Disclaimers: I have met several of these bloggers in person and consider all of them friends. I was not asked to write about their companies and received no monetary compensation for doing so. Rather, I initiated this project, requested, and received permission to write about each of them. However, I am open to working with any and all of these ventures as a blogger; my blog is an occasional tour host for TLC and Winsome, and is listed in Booklicity's database.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Rainy Days Are Great Writing Days

and there will be a new short ghost story up every day from now until Nov 1st, so please stop by and check them out!
Monday, October 4, 2010
Literary Agents Open the Door to Self-Published Writers
Again, I am just grabbing an great article I found an posted it. I think this is great! I found this in Forbes of all places that I never read, maybe it's cuz I saw Wall Street and got inspired to think about money more, in any case. This is great.
Literary Agents Open the Door to Self-Published Writers
The top dog at one of the most successful literary agencies in New York says he’s in hot pursuit of self-published books to represent to mainstream publishers.
“Absolutely, yes!” That was Jim Levine’s unequivocal answer when I asked him recently if he was accepting self-published submissions.
Levine is a founding partner at Levine Greenberg Literary Agency, among the top five overall most active agencies in the business, according to Publishers Marketplace. And he’s on the crest of a wave of agents beginning to represent authors who’ve self-published and are seeking mainstream commercial publication.
A notable shift in attitude
Levine’s attitude is a notable shift, since in the past, most agents shunned self-published books as tainted goods and a tough sell. Levine says that’s changing.
“Usually when we take on a self-published book we sell it,” he said. “We sold Jason Kaplan’s Things That Suck to Andrews McMeel Publishing, Jeff Rivera’s Forever my Lady to Grand Central, Dane Sanders’ Fast Track Photographer to Random House, and Ivan Sanchez’s Next Step to Simon & Schuster. And that’s just off the top of my head.
So we’re happy to take a look at self-published books. Of the more than 10,000 proposals we get every year, a few hundred are self-published and that number is growing. Sales track is key. If the author has sold 5,000 copies in the previous year, it interests publishers. And if an author has sold that many, she or he probably has some sort of platform.”
The times they are a’ changing
Literary agents have been the missing link for self-published writers trying to break through into mainstream publishing. When I recently interviewed Keith Ogorek, VP for Marketing at the self-publishing conglomerate Author Solutions, he said agents with old-school attitudes were the biggest obstacles for his authors pursuing commercial publishers.
But new attitudes are taking hold, especially among younger up-and-coming literary agents. Check out these three agents and their positions on representing self-published authors:
Nathan Bransford, the popular publishing blogger and agent for Curtis Brown in San Francisco:
“I definitely am on the lookout for self-published books, and have clients who started out self-publishing. I wouldn’t say that I have strict criteria for which self-published projects I take on. It’s all case-by-case.”
Bransford reports selling a previously self-published book on humane dog training, which will be published next year by New World Library.
Terra Chalberg at the Susan Golomb Agency:
“I would absolutely handle more of them, on a project-by-project basis. The self-publishing aspect, for me, only factors in as a sales tool in one extreme or the other – that is, if it hasn’t sold many copies and is “like new” or, if it’s sold so many copies it’s worth the investment (as happened with the self-published book The Shack, which sold a million copies and reached #1 on the NY Times bestseller list, before selling another five million copies since Hachette picked it up for mainstream publication.)
So, it doesn’t matter one way or the other to me or to the editors I’ve encountered. I wouldn’t ever turn a compelling project away because it had been self-published. It holds no stigma for me.”
Rachelle Gardner, an agent with WordServe Literary and also the author of Rants and Ramblings, a smart and well-written blog about writing and the book business:
“I haven’t taken any on yet, simply because I haven’t received any that impressed me enough. But I’d definitely consider it. My criteria are exactly the same as with any other project coming across my desk: Do I think I can sell it? Do I believe in it? Do I think I’d be a good fit with this author? Does the author have an appropriate platform to be able to market this book?
Then of course: how many self-pubbed copies has the author sold, and can they prove it?
Caution and skepticism persist
Not all agents are on board. Veteran agent Sandy Dijkstra (representing Amy Tan, Susan Faludi, Maxine Hong Kingston) for example, says she’s received very few self-published submissions but would handle one if she thought it had potential. So far, she hasn’t.
Another stellar agent, Jane Dystal (representing Barack Obama’s first book, Joy Bauer and Bobby Flay, among others) also has no self-published authors that she’s either represented or sold, as far as she can remember.
Joelle DelBourgo, a literary agent and former top executive at Random House, is divided on the subject, with one very successful experience and others not so much.
“A couple of years ago, an author approached me about her book, which she had self-published,” DelBourgo told me. “She wrote a wonderful letter, provided a dazzling promo kit and included a copy of a beautifully designed little book which she had sold to her clients, 4,000 copies or so, without any bookstore distribution.”
“I was intrigued, read the book right away and took her on. I sold the book for six figures practically overnight. But that’s the exception, not the rule. More recently, we took on an author who self-published a great marketing book and sold 6,000 copies, but publishers were still not impressed enough to take it seriously.”
So despite her initial success, DelBourgo is cautious and skeptical about most self-published books, expressing views held widely among mainstream agents. “My experience is that most self-published books have been poorly edited and produced. Authors don’t always understand that self-publishing means that YOU, the author, are the publisher, and need to do everything for your book that a “real” publisher would do, like editing, copyediting, design, production, marketing, distribution, etc.”
Alice Martell, of the Martell Agency in New York, says “Up until five years ago, I had a knee-jerk negative reaction to self publishing. It’s become quite attractive these days, however, as a way for an author to test-market a book’s commercial appeal. It’s funny, though. Most people don’t assume they’d be great lawyers, engineers or doctors, but easily imagine themselves as magnificent writers. So this is one field in which some kind of review process is absolutely essential.”
My view: Self-published authors need agents
As an editor at a big commercial publishing house, almost all my acquisitions come in through agents. So I’ve always believed that the best way for a self-published author to convert to commercial publication is with the help of an agent. A good agent who believes in your book can make all the difference in the world.
What about you?
Are you a self-published author seeking representation with an agent? How’s that going? Or are you an agent with war stories to share?
What, in God’s name, is the purpose for undertaking such a meaningless activity? To write 50k words in haste cannot yield anything but a muddled, misguided first draft. If the only goal is to “complete the race” the only reward will be that such foolishness is finally over.
If you’re a writer, write. If you want to be a writer, write. Just don’t waste thirty days on a useless sprint when you hone your style and produce a few great pages.
What a jerk...here is what I say to that. First of all, why is it a waste? What exactly about exercising your skills and doing what you love is a waste?
Everyone writes differently, so why say something like that? Clearly this guy couldn't do it, so he has to be mean and nasty.
My first NaNo effort was a lot more than a muddled first draft and was published by a traditional publisher soon after.
So what I say to this eegit is F off would ya! Let others do what they want and have fun. If everything you write is Pulitzer ready, than good for you, stop raining on our parade.
NaNo starts Nov 1st~~ Who is with me?