Showing posts with label appreciation for bloggers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appreciation for bloggers. Show all posts

Friday, 16 August 2019

, , , ,

We Book Bloggers Need to Recognise Our Worth

We Book Bloggers Need to Recognise Our Worth

Book Bloggers Need to Recognise Our Worth


Last month, YA author Courtney Summers sent out her third newsletter of the year, "She knows she's talented," about her path to realising she's good at what she does, acknowledging it, and, ultimately, that her success is down to her hard work. She was particularly talking about herself as an author, and other authors, but it got me thinking about about how I think of myself as a blogger.

"I waited years for someone or some milestone to signify I'd earned my career. This in spite of the countless hours of work I'd put into my craft, the talent I knew I had, the deadlines I'd met, the accolades my books received, and the audience I built. While I waited, I often apologized for or disclaimed the utter audacity of my having them. Do that enough, self-doubt creeps in. Doubt yourself, you'll act accordingly." From "She knows she's talented," by Courtney Summers.

Continue reading We Book Bloggers Need to Recognise Our Worth

Friday, 25 January 2019

, , ,

Why Authors Should Respect and Appreciate Book Bloggers

Why Authors Should Respect and Appreciate Book Bloggers

There have been a couple of things that happened a few weeks ago that really upset and angered me. First there was the news that Kathleen Hale, an author who stalked a reviewer who wrote a negative review, is having a book published about said stalking. Then there was author E.K. Johnston tweeting that she writes in ARCs, "This is an ARC. I hope you didn't buy it", if the person wanting it signed doesn't want a personalisation, implying that pretty much everyone with ARCs, but especially bloggers, will sell on ARCs. Then there was author Dahlia Adler - but also the blogger behind LGBTQ Reads - tweeting about authors not promoting content on blogs that they requested/were involved in. All of this showed that there is a lack of respect for bloggers. And it really wound me up.
Continue reading Why Authors Should Respect and Appreciate Book Bloggers