Now up front I want to say I’m not against paid on-line writer courses. I can only comment on the ones I have looked at and in a couple of cases paid out good money for. They are full of useful content that, if you are in the right place with your writing and prepared to put in the time and effort I’m sure they can have a major impact. However, what they are not (in my opinion) is a magic bullet. For the vast majority of Indie-authors success will not be instant and when it comes will probably be modest. But hey, modest is good and I’ll be happy with modest when I get there. And yes any better than modest, I admit, would be great.
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Wednesday, 29 November 2017
Thursday, 16 November 2017
Writers beware - sod's law exists
Part of my first job on leaving Uni was in the quality assurance section of a scientific organisation. Believe it or not, before the late 1970s little of it existed. After all everyone was doing their best so the data and reports would be fine wouldn’t they? Answer, no. Because if nothing else Sod’s Law operates. i.e. whatever can go wrong, will go wrong. And one of the problems back then was that nobody understood what could go wrong – it was of course, anything and everything. So after a few well published cases, which I won’t go into, the need for a formal system of quality assurance was established.
For me this involved, amongst other things the checking of scientific reports, both for internal consistency and against the “raw data”. At first my involvement, essentially pointing out where people had made errors was resented. I mean, who was I to tell a senior scientist they had made mistakes. And this wasn’t just the odd typo, whole lines of data were transposed, decimal points were in the wrong place, thing disappeared from the records only to appear elsewhere. I could go on. These didn’t always affect the scientific outcomes, but occasionally they could and this was important work. What’s more it’s not as if you could predict when or where a major error might occur.
For the complete blog follow this link
For me this involved, amongst other things the checking of scientific reports, both for internal consistency and against the “raw data”. At first my involvement, essentially pointing out where people had made errors was resented. I mean, who was I to tell a senior scientist they had made mistakes. And this wasn’t just the odd typo, whole lines of data were transposed, decimal points were in the wrong place, thing disappeared from the records only to appear elsewhere. I could go on. These didn’t always affect the scientific outcomes, but occasionally they could and this was important work. What’s more it’s not as if you could predict when or where a major error might occur.
For the complete blog follow this link
Wednesday, 1 November 2017
What does it take to be a writer? - Persitence
For most writers success is not an overnight event. One of my all time, and sadly missed, writer heroes, Iain Banks, completed five or six books before being published. He persisted.
Now I write this blog a week or so after I’ve launched my latest book. I’ve had some sales, but not as many as hoped for. So yes, I admit it, I’m a little disappointed. I feel that I just need that kick start, that nudge that sends sales cascading. The book itself is a new venture for me, being urban fantasy / detective story, written in a humorous style, rather than my usual science fiction.
For the full blog follow this link
Now I write this blog a week or so after I’ve launched my latest book. I’ve had some sales, but not as many as hoped for. So yes, I admit it, I’m a little disappointed. I feel that I just need that kick start, that nudge that sends sales cascading. The book itself is a new venture for me, being urban fantasy / detective story, written in a humorous style, rather than my usual science fiction.
For the full blog follow this link
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