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Author: Stan Shinn (Page 99 of 111)

Book Blogging — The Next Big Thing?

Book blogging — writing books using the blogging process — is starting to show promise. Note these blog efforts that are making it into print:

Julie Powell’s “Julie & Julia” is the season’s most unusual memoir — a writer’s efforts to master the recipes of Julia Child — and a possible breakthrough for bloggers. Based on postings from Powell’s blog, the book will be published by Little, Brown and Co. (a division of Time Warner, as is CNN) and stores expect strong interest.

Other bloggers with recent deals include Stephanie Klein, who calls her very personal blog, “Greek Tragedy,” and Dana Vachon, an investment banker known as “d-nasty.”

Doctorow E.L. Doctorow’s “The March” is considered a possible breakout novel. “The criteria signing ‘Julie and Julia’ were very similar to what we would use for any book proposal: There was a strong voice, there was a freshness, and a novelty to what she was doing,” says Little, Brown’s Shandler. “This isn’t just a blog that has been printed out into a book. People aren’t interested in that because they read blogs every day. They need to see if the blog can be transformed. You could say that a great blogger is like an excellent guitar player, but the book is like playing piano. Bloggers have a head start because they know music, but they still have to make the adjustment.”

Read more at CNN.com

Christian chick lit is trendy

Chick Lit is hot. According to Jana Reiss, religion book review editor for Publishers Weekly:

It’s the hottest trend going in Christian fiction. It’s trendy, it’s edgy, and it’s appealing to that all-important younger market.

According to the Christian Booksellers Association, it’s a market that drives sales of Christian fiction to more than $2 billion annually.

What’s fueling this trend, and is Chick Lit the best name for it? Insight from this great articles says: 

Of the country’s estimated 3.5 million single evangelical Christians, three-quarters are women, Golan says. But putting them all in the "I’m 30 and have to meet Mr. Right now" category would be a mistake, she says. That’s why Steeple Hill Books prefers "hip lit" to "chick lit."

Read full article: Christian chick lit is trendy

swshinn.com

Google Print is still in Beta, but this upcoming service will be yet another way to make your book ‘search engine friendly’. Google’s description of this tool:

Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information, but much of that information isn’t yet online. Google Print aims to get it there by putting book content where you can find it most easily – right in your Google search results. Just do a search on the Google Print homepage. When we find a book whose content contains a match for your search terms, we’ll link to it in your search results. Click a book title and you’ll see the page of the book that has your search terms, along with other information about the book and "Buy this Book" links to online bookstores (you can view the entirety of public domain books or, for books under copyright, just a few pages or in some cases, only the title’s bibliographic data and brief snippets). You can also search for more information within that specific book and find nearby libraries that have it.

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