Alright. Welcome to the blog (again).

EDIT: As you can tell, I’ve managed to recover the old content of the blog (minus the pictures). Thank goodness for multiple backups!

I had to move servers, and predictably, I downloaded all the files from my server, but forgot to backup the database. So, we’re starting fresh.

One of the reasons that I stopped blogging is that I’m not convinced that beginning author should keep a blog. Frankly, it seems like if you’re going to be writing, you should be writing fiction, i.e. work that will be increasing your reputation. Writers may point to prolific bloggers like John Scalzi or Diablo Cody who have been discovered through their blogs, but not only does the exception NOT prove the rule, but these bloggers also had other “hooks” to draw people to their blogs. Scalzi was a pro-blogger for AOL in the stone age when no one was blogging, and Diablo Cody was a stripper and that’s what her blog was about.

Unless you have a “hook”, it’s better off, in my opinion, not to join the teeming millions on Live Journal, or Wordpress, or Blogger–writers whose blogs have one or two readers, and generally poor content. People just aren’t interested in reading about the local coffee hut. If you are currently one of these writers, be honest with yourself. How is this helping your writing career. No cheats now, nothing ephemeral like, “It’s getting my name out there”. List concrete things that your blog will do for you. If you can’t, take the time you used to use for blogging, and use it to write more fiction.

So, why am I blogging now? I have a hook.

I recently won first place in Writers of the Future. Much of this blog will be devoted to my participation in that contest and my thoughts on winning it. If you’re not familiar with Writers of the Future, I’ll cover the contest in a later post. For now, I’ll simply direct you to the website of award-winning writer David D Levine, whose Writers of the Future page is one of the best resources on the contest that I’ve seen.

Right now, I’m a writer at the cusp of going pro. Hopefully, I can share with you, my gentle readers, how I plan to take my next steps into the markets.

EDIT: This topic was generating quite the discussion, so I’ve elaborated on my thoughts on blogging for new writers here.

Tags: , , , ,

This entry was posted on Sunday, November 16th, 2008 at 8:24 am and is filed under About Me. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
+/- Collapse/Expand All

14 Comments(+Add)

1   Deven    http://blogtiderising.wordpress.com
November 21st, 2008 at 6:34 am

First and foremost, congrats on getting that hook!

I have convinced myself that there is at least one good reason, as a struggling writer, for maintaining a blog and for believing that it is helping my writing career.
Social networking.
On normal days my blog averages perhaps 15 hits a day, and gets less than one comment a day. But sometimes that rare comment is from someone with professional publication credit. Jim Van Pelt and Lucy A. Snyder have both stopped by. Mr. Van Pelt more than once. Others have linked to my blog: Robert Reed and Mary Robinette Kowal are two of these. I am under no illusion that these folks visit my blog on anything that could be called a regular basis.
But they have visited, and just might remember me in the future.
I think this is important for those of us that can not make it to conventions and brush elbows with these folks face to face.
The part of networking that really stokes my fire is the connection I now have with writers that I consider peers. These folks visit more often, and do leave the majority of comments.

I guess the bottom line is that I am jealous and wish I had a hook like yours! But until then…

Congrats again on the WotF win!

2   jordan    http://www.everydayfiction.com
November 21st, 2008 at 7:25 am

Hi Deven,

I know that social networking is an advantage with a blog…but…

Is the occasional comment from a pro worth the amount of time you pour into a blog? I mean, if you want to talk to people with professional credits, join the forums at Asimovs or Realms of Fantasy. When you join SFWA, there are private boards for pros, and also, there’s Codex.

3   Deven    http://blogtiderising.wordpress.com
November 21st, 2008 at 8:52 am

I totally agree that if the only reason for my blog was professional social networking that it would not be worth the effort. Not by a long shot. Your point is valid for the vast majority blogs I would assume.

There is a subtle dynamic at work with a personal blog .vs. forums. On a forum you are just one of many and can get lost in the white noise. With a blog, the people who visit and comment have sought you out in some fashion. It is the same dynamic as attending parties at conventions or throwing your own party at a convention.

My blog has a deeper purpose. For a year I posted every day to get into the habit of writing something every day. I post less now because I am writing fiction more.
I really see it as a tool to help me grow and learn. I post reviews, thoughts political and mundane, things about my hobbies and interests. Isaac Asimov kept a journal his entire life. He never considered it a waste of effort. My journal just happens to be online.
From a realistic point of view, the occasional comment from a pro is just a bonus. My blog is primarily for me and I would do it even if there were zero hits.

4   jordan    http://www.everydayfiction.com
November 21st, 2008 at 8:57 am

You’ve hit upon what I believe is the only really good reason to keep a personal blog–the diary.

My beef is with writers who believe that keeping a blog is somehow helping their career. Like you said, occasionally you get a comment from a pro, but those comments are certainly not worth the effort of writing a blog.

My thoughts are that it’s okay to keep a blog as a diary, and even as a writing prompt, but once it begins actually cutting into your writing time, a writer needs to put it aside.

5   Suanne Warr    http://www.suannewarr.com
November 21st, 2008 at 10:46 am

Hey! I just caught up to the train and heard your big news–congratulations! That is seriously awesome.

As for the blog discussin, you make some good points. It’s my opinion that you’ve passed over a couple of factors, but since I’ve got a blog, I’ll go over there and blog what I have to say. Thanks for giving me a topic, or hook, today. ;)

6   Jordan Lapp    http://www.everydayfiction.com
November 21st, 2008 at 1:23 pm

Hey, thanks for the kudos Suanne! I’m glad you’ll be writing a few shorts in the next couple of weeks. It would be a shame to make it all the way to Semi-Finalist and then give up.

I look forward to reading your post on keeping a blog!

7   RS    http://robertswartwood.wordpress.com/
November 22nd, 2008 at 12:32 pm

Getting to the party late as well, I’m afraid, but I just wanted to say congrats on the win. Very exciting stuff.

8   RS    http://robertswartwood.wordpress.com/
November 22nd, 2008 at 12:43 pm

Oh, and my two cents on blogs: I think it’s important for writers nowadays to have some kind of web presence. Believe me, I wish this wasn’t the case — I hate self-promotion more than anyone else — but unfortunately that’s how the business is now run (my agent said as much to me the other day: when they buy your book the publisher expects you to do book signings, go to conventions, etc.) So that’s why I have the “blog” I have — for web presence, something that gives a bio and bibliography and contact information, and I try to update it at least once a week but don’t beat myself up if I don’t … basically, until I feel it’s worth spending the money on getting a real site developed, I’m happy mooching off a free blog.

9   Jordan Lapp    http://www.everydayfiction.com
November 22nd, 2008 at 12:44 pm

Thanks Robert! If any of you guys are interested in entering the contest (and you should), I’m constructing a resource page. You can find it here

10   Jordan Lapp    http://www.everydayfiction.com
November 22nd, 2008 at 12:59 pm

Robert,

I absolutely agree with you re: web presences. IF you have a book to sell.

If you’re still only writing short fiction, and therefore only selling to editors and not the public, it’s my opinion that you should concentrate on writing a novel rather than a blog.

11   Steve Goble    http://www.stevegoble.com/blog
November 24th, 2008 at 11:46 am

I don’t know that my blog does anything to help my writing career, but it does help people who like my stuff find more of my stuff, because I maintain a “published works” list and a “coming up” list.

I also think my blog might be at least of marginal help in spreading the news about publications out there. If someone reads me in “A Thousand Faces” and tracks back to my blog, they might well end up heading to “Every Day Fiction” or “Flashing Swords” as well. A trickle of traffic, perhaps, but if it helps at all, it helps.

I blog for reasons beyond just my writing career, though. I need a place to vent now and then, and the blog is a convenient place to do that. I’ve connected with old friends (Hi, Deven!) through the blog, too. Both of those reasons are sufficient for me to continue blogging, even if the blog never aided my writing career at all.

All that said, though, I agree with Jordan about where a writer should put his or her energies. I don’t allow the blog to eat up much of my time, and if I’ve got to decide between working on a story or working on the blog, I’ll work on the story.

– Steve

12   Jordan Lapp    http://www.everydayfiction.com
November 26th, 2008 at 10:11 am

Steve,

Your list of published works, etc. Could be posted at a static website, not a blog.

That said, I agree that a blog is a great place to post coolness that you want stored, like a diary or something, but if it’s for business, writers need to treat it like one.

13   Amy Sterling Casil    http://asterling.typepad.com
December 10th, 2008 at 11:58 am

Congratulations AGAIN, Jordan. I love the theme of your blog, and I want to read some of this daily fiction.

Seems to me it’s all about doing what we want to do and what feels right!

14   Jordan Lapp    http://www.everydayfiction.com
December 11th, 2008 at 2:17 pm

Thanks, Amy! Your essay was such an inspiration for me, so your congrats really mean a lot.

Every Day Fiction is doing pretty darn well. We’ve just put out an antho that looks gorgeous. We’re no Realms of Fantasy or GlimmerTrain…yet… but the stories are getting better and better the more we get “known”.

2 Trackbacks/Pings

  1. What Does a Blog Do For Me as a Writer? at Tales from the Raven    Nov 21 2008 / 10pm:

    [...] the same post which anounced his quarter finalist win at wotf, Jordan discussed his take on the pros and cons of blogging as a not-yet-professional [...]

  2. Should Beginning Writers Blog? — BillWardWriter.com    Nov 26 2008 / 3pm:

    [...] blogging now that he has found a theme, or ‘hook,’ to blog about. As he remarks in his first post, and elaborates further in a follow-up, his blogging originally fell by the wayside because he [...]

Leave a reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Name (*)
Mail (will not be published) (*)
URI
Comment