In Publishing News this week,
Publishing Perspectives writes about a new UK literary magazine starting up which is international in its outlook. Fictionable has short fiction, translated fiction, and short graphic fiction and is backed by some big literary names.
Pan Macmillian has had a cyber-attack that seems to have crawled right across the company over the last week. I’ve seen a couple of references of it hitting the US and now the UK.
This week the UK government released its response to Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property consultation paper. Are the AI’s being given copyright rights? Not yet.
As everyone delves through the document to find out how many rights AI will have, there are rumblings from Techcrunch over Alexa’s new features. Amazon has given Alexa the ability to speak in dead relatives' voices, (for an extra layer of creepy.) Of course, it would never be abused.
Publishing perspectives reports that German audio publisher Bookwire has now added AI voices to its range of narrators, the first audio publisher to do so and have them for sale. (Google offers AI narration only on their publisher dashboard.)
If you want to learn more about this checkout Joanna Penn’s great article on AI Narrated audiobooks.
Book Riot reports on the latest data on American reading habits. The stats say that half the adults don’t pick up a book but it depends on their age. Who are the biggest readers? Some interesting takeaways from this.
Meanwhile, the Alliance of Independent Authors is collecting data of its own. They want Authors to share their earnings and their publishing numbers to get a snapshot of how healthy the publishing industry is. Check out their numbers so far this year.
Penny Sansevieri has a great article on getting the most out of writing conferences. If you are attending one soon, check out her tips.
Jen Calonita has an interesting article in Publishers Weekly on being a children’s writer on TikTok. Embrace the fun.
Kris Rusch continues her series on why writers fail- How do writers treat money? Love it. Loathe it. Spend it. Hoard it. It’s a problem that writers are always struggling with.
Ruth Harris has a great post on how lists can keep you sane as a writer. Use them to jog your memory, plan your scene, character interview, plot points… there’s a list for everything.
In The Craft Section,
13 Methods for writing the best dialogue
3 ways to infuse Character voice
Point of View and voice- John Gilstrap- Bookmark
Trimming- The tricks of the trade- Scott Myers
The role of the antagonist in story structure- K M Weiland- Bookmark
Is the last page as good as the first- Anne R Allen- Bookmark
In The Marketing Section,
How to acquire an agent- Lauren Sharkey
Kindlepreneur list of promo sites- Dave Chesson
Get better book launch results- Sandra Beckwith- Bookmark
How to get a great author photo- ALLI
How to prepare for a blog tour- WritePublishSell
To Finish,
It’s been a while since I linked to a Terrible Minds ramble but this week’s news has been an up and down rollercoaster of emotion. Chuck Wendig looks at how writing is a place to put your rage, sorrow, and even joy and have it take the emotional load you may be carrying.
Maureen
@craicer
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Pic Photo by Andrea De Santis on Unsplash