Deborah Munro followed Joseph Keeler
Joseph Keeler
Tried doing a crowd funding campaign. My advice to those looking for avid fans: FINISH your book bef...
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Joseph Keeler followed Deborah Munro
Deborah Munro
Greetings! I am a biomedical engineer with a passion for writing. I am inspired by science and love ...
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Deborah Munro liked the forum thread, Recommendation vs. Review?
The recommendations show up right under your book title and above your profile picture.
You will see little icons of the people who have recommended your book, and thats where the recommendations are.
Also all recommendations show up on their page. Reviews do not.
The other part to your question is no. Because it doesnt show up for anyone but you on your page. You can see your reviews on your page, but people have to go to your page to see it. Recommendations show up in peoples notifications and people can then go directly to your page through said notification.
It is WAY more helpful to get recommendations. Reviews are ok, but they dont drive attention as much as recommendations do.
Also recommendations can be shared on facebook and twitter, reviews can not.
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    Greetings! I am a biomedical engineer with a passion for writing. I am inspired by science and love ...
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    Deborah Munro created a forum thread: Recommendation vs. Review?
    I’ve had some recommendations posted for my book and one review. It appears that the recommendations only go to the recommenders followers, and don’t really show up on my page or my project in any meaningful way where others can easily read them. Then today, someone wrote a review of my project and I was given a chance to approve it by Inkshares. It shows up quite prominently.

    So my question is two-fold. 1) Would it be best for readers to write reviews, especially if they have few followers? 2) Is there any way for me to get the recommendations to show up with my project? (Or are they showing up somewhere and I’m not seeing them?)
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    Peter Ryan followed Deborah Munro
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    Greetings! I am a biomedical engineer with a passion for writing. I am inspired by science and love ...
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    Deborah Munro liked the forum thread, Gollancz writers festival
    It was a great day! A bit of a fleeting visit to London for me, as I only attended the morning Writers Day session, but well worth the time.

    The morning started out with a moderated discussion between Tom Lloyd, Ben Aaronovitch and Joanne Harris. They discussed the idea of expanded universes, in particular what it’s like to write in the EU of a preexisting property, and also what they think about the concept of their being a true ’canon’ to a story. Joanne Harris had a particularly interesting take on this, as she deals a lot with Norse mythology. Amusingly, she described the ’original’ written versions of this mythology as Christian fanfic!

    Next, we heard from a literary agent named Juliet Mushens. She gave us a fascinating insight into what the role of an agent is, what an author can expect from an agent and so on. She stressed the importance of drafting, saying that you should expect to do many drafts before querying an agent, but that a submission is quite straight forward: a one-page cover letter, two-page synopsis and the first three chapters of your book. She also said not to worry about submitting to multiple agents, as they expect you will contact many agents at the same time. Also, if you’re submitting a book that’s part of a trilogy, that’s okay; she expects most SF&F books to be part of a series. She did stress however that if you’re submitting part of a series, the publisher will want to have confidence that you know where the series is going.

    Last, we did ’author speed dating’. We got 20 minutes per table of attendees (approx 4 people for table) with 4 of the authors in attendance. I got to speak to Alex Lamb, Joanne Harris, Ben Aaronovitch and Edward Cox. We spent a lot of this time discussing each authors approach to getting an agent, what they thought about writing outside of their own culture and how to combat writers block.

    After these chats, there was plenty of time to get books signed. I bought a few books by authors I hadn’t tried so far, including Edward Cox’s The Relic Guild. Edward was so lovely and supportive! He asked me to let him know how the Inkshares fantasy contest was going from time to time.

    It was great to meet and speak to so many authors - including the many dozens of attendees, most of whom were mid-way through writing fantasy books of their own. I also came away with a nice ’swag bag’ of book samplers and free Audible audiobooks!
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      Deborah Munro liked the forum thread, Thanks not going to readers
      Your email client needs to be linked to your browser, so clicking the "Thank" thing pulls up an email message that you can edit and then send. The "Thank" thing does not, by itself, actually send anything: it’s really just a "mailto:" link that puts a template message in the email body, ready to go.

      I also feel safer if my email client happens to be open at the same time, too.

      When I thank someone via other means (word of mouth, or via chat, or whatever) I will later click the "Thank" button and immediately close the email message without sending it, just so I can keep an accurate record of whom I thanked.
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