The Blog Awakens!

Far too long since my last post here in Mutterings central, which is pretty funny in a way, since my last post was about how being a blogger is not a requirement for a writer with professional aspirations.  Boy, I certainly proved that, didn’t I?  That’s a long time even by my not-a-blogger standards . . .

Anyway, it was a long summer, but now the Oregon weather is turning cool, one child has started kindergarten, the other preschool, and even Heidi has made a change with a new job that she’s excited about.  We’re also debating about stepping up to a bigger house (or remodeling our current one), which is causing me no end of heartburn.  Even discussing this stuff is stressful.  Being a writer who plans to make a run at it as a full-time gig down the road a bit, I like keeping my expenses low, especially when you never know what the economy will be doing.  But the house is already starting to feel small for the four of us, and as much as it would be nice to make these types of decisions based only on my own needs and goals, other people in the family have needs and goals, too.  It may not happen for 1-2 years, but it may happen next month, which is the part that drives me nuts.  But c’est la vie . . . 

Otherwise, I’m just plugging away like usual, fitting in the writing between the day job, working with Kat on piano lessons, and staying on top of mounds of laundry and piles of dirty dishes.  I’m currently coming to the end of a long book project — longer than I’d like, but that’s the way it goes sometimes.  I’m focusing a lot more on novels these days (although I still try to squeeze in the occasional story), which means there probably won’t be as much publication news.  Of course, I hope the news is much bigger when I do have news to share.  I also made a decision awhile back to stop sharing information about sales until 1) publication, or 2) I’ve been paid.  And I’ll only mention it in the second case if it’s a big deal, as in a massive book deal.  I’ve already had a few sales fall through, so it makes sense to just share news when it’s fairly solid.

A few bits of news I can share:

  • My story, “Deep Down in the Diggyback,” has appeared in Full Unit Hookup #10
  • My story, “Front Row Seats,” which originally appeared online at Chizine, was performed as a podcast over at Pseudopod.org.  Download it to your MP3 player, or listen to it online.  This is another first for me:  the first time I’ve sold audio rights and had the piece actually performed.
  • Although I haven’t been posting here lately, I’ve kept up the weekly interviews over at The First Book blog.  Check them out!  And if you know of first-time novelists who’d like a little exposure, send them my way.  I’m not sure if I’ll keep it up on a weekly basis, but I’m trying.

Of Summer Whirlwinds and a Bit About Blogging

KatThe long days of summer are here, and the family is busy as usual.  Swimming lessons, pony camp, Safety Town camp, fun at the park, running through sprinklers, birthday parties, backyard barbecues, bicycling with our tandem bike and our bike trailer, riding the motorcycle to work, camping in our new tent trailer — between working and everything else, there’s hardly time to take a breath.  The writing productivity is still not quite what I’d like, certainly not what I’d like for where I want to go, but it’s getting there.  Another book coming along soon.  Meanwhile, head over to The First Book and check out some of the new interviews.  In the last few weeks. we’ve profiled Shana Burg’s A Thousand Never Evers, Stephanie Kuehnert’s I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone, Julie Kramer’s Stalking Susan, and Caitlin Kittredge’s Night LifeThe blog continues to be fun, fairly low maintenance, and hopefully proving to be worthwhile for the authors.  (Each interview gets 600-1000 readers the week it comes out, and then more over time.  It’s not in the 600,000 readers a day range that a place like DailyKos gets, but hopefully it’s worth the twenty minutes investment of time the authors put into the interview questions.)

Speaking of blogging, a discussion’s popped up a few times online, and then again in a private listserv I’m on, about the value of doing a blog to a fiction writer with professional aspirations (and by that, I mean a fiction writer who wants to sell their work for money and reach a large audience while doing it). 

Here’s my take:  if you enjoy doing a blog, would do it anyway, and you’re not an idiot lambasting editors who rejected your work, it probably won’t hurt.  In fact, there are a few people (here’s one, here’s another, and here’s one more) who’ve shown it can help your career at least a bit.  If you can do it in a way that is very focused and very limited with your time, as I did with The First Book blog, it can be a good thing, too.  But as a rule, no.  In fact, the vast majority of fiction writers with professional aspirations would be much better off spending that time writing fiction rather than spending it on their blogs. 

However, all blogs are not equal.  The term blog has come to encompass a huge variety of styles and types, everything from the teenager blogging about his problems getting a date to the prom to the freelance journalist writing about Kosovo.  It applies to someone like me, who posts, at most, a couple times a month, to a the hugely popular Gizmodo, where you’ll find at least three or four posts an hour.  It applies to my friend, who blogs beautifully but irregularly about her life and her son’s battle with Autism.  A blog is a tool; how it’s used varies greatly.

Me, I’m never going to be much of a blogger.  It’s just too easy for me to waste time doing it, and I know for a fact that it takes time away from my fiction.  There’s little to no evidence that it will lead to greater sales; most writers with popular blogs work them very hard, and most of them have a platform or presence in their chosen field that gives them as much exposure as their blog, so it’s nearly impossible to qualify exactly how much impact their blog might have on their sales.  So for me, it’s always going to be a very tiny part of my writing output.  And if it wasn’t a least a little fun, I wouldn’t do it at all.

Yes, you’ll hear the token writers who say “I wouldn’t have a career without my blog because such-and-such editor read my work on my blog and asked for it.”  Yes, it does happen; and yes, it’s as rare as lightning striking someone on the head on a sunny day.  If you hear that comment and think you, too, should be blogging so you can be “discovered,” then you’re not taking the right lesson from it.  What you should be thinking is that these writers weren’t getting their work out in front of enough editors, otherwise they would have had editors knocking down their doors for their work.  Usually, when I press such writers, they admit that they weren’t actively submitting their work, or that they gave up after a handful of rejections.  

Remember, however, that this is all regarding professional fiction writers. If you write for fun, just want to build a little audience for your work and see what happens, there’s nothing wrong with doing a blog.  In fact, there’s lots of reasons to do it — making new friends who share a common interest, networking, etc.  I’m not anti-blog at all.  I’ve read some beautiful writing on blogs.  But if you’re a fiction writer who hopes to someday make a living from your work, and you’ve got this idea put into your head that you really should be doing a blog, that it might be hurting your career if you’re not, that’s pure bunk.  You’re going to develop readers by writing great fiction, not by writing great blog posts.  Believe me, nobody perusing the book stand at your local grocery store is going to care at all whether you blog or not.  Blogging can also be the ultimate time waster and the ultimate writing avoidance tool.  It’s why I don’t have a comments section on my own site.  It would be one more thing I’d obsess about, and I’ve already got too many things to obsess about it as it is.  So you’ve got to know yourself, too, and if you do blog, do it in a way that works for you.

One last point, and one you may think is counter to everything I’ve just said (but really isn’t):  I do think that every fiction writer with professional aspirations should have a regularly updated Web page, just so your readers can find your work.  It’s cheap and easy, so there’s no reason not to do it.  Heck, for $8/month, you’ll get more than you’ll ever need.  I don’t think you’re going to pick up a lot of new readers this way, but it can help the readers you do have find even more of your work, and that’s a good thing. 

Up on The First Book: Patrick Balester and IN THE DISMAL SWAMP

Up this week on The First Book blog:  Patrick Balester and his debut from Avalon, IN THE DISMAL SWAMP.

A snippet:  “When I began looking for a publisher, I didn’t have an agent, and wasn’t sure how to get one, so I targeted small publishers that accepted submissions directly from writers. Then I moved to Missouri from Virginia! 18 months after sending out the manuscript, I got a letter from Avalon Books on Christmas Eve 2006. The associate editor had been looking for me and had managed to track me down, and told me they wanted to buy my book.”

Read the rest of the interview here:  http://thefirstbook.wordpress.com

Dispatches from the Frontlines of Fatherhood: Backseat Drivers

We were on our way home, Kat and I.  When we took a left onto the bridge, a guy in a truck, who had been waiting to turn right, inexplicably turned in front of us.  After narrowly missing him — I swerved and he braked at the last second — I cursed at him and shook my fists and did all the regular things you do when you feel wronged as a driver.  We drove on, my heart pounding, and I’d almost forgotten about my five-year-old daughter in the back seat until she suddenly piped up.

“And that’s why you wear seat belts!” she said.