Joleene Naylor gave me this
Blogger's Recognition Award, which is for recognition of bloggers, which I am
one. This came as something of a surprise to me, as I never thought of myself
as a blogger even though my blog is hosted by Blogger.
Joleene’s a great writer and a
great person, even though there’s a spider on the front of her blog: https://ramblingsfromthedarkness.wordpress.com/
As you all know unless you’ve
blocked me for going on about it, I have a new book coming out this month, so
I’m late getting this out. But when someone takes the time to think about you …
well, you’ve got to respond. The idea is to give a brief story on how your own
blog got started, along with advice for new bloggers, and to provide a link to the
giver’s blog, which—see above. Also, the original post comes from here: http://eveofnight.blogspot.co.nz/2014/10/lets-celebrate-whos-up-for-award.html?m=1
My blog story is indeed a story,
which started not with a blog but a column. “Column” is a newspaper term,
describing what today we’d call a blog. I started out with a humor column that
was carried in some local newspapers, but didn’t appear online. (Yeah, it was
that long ago.) So, to get it online, I got a LiveJournal account, which I
still have. (Yeah, it was that long ago.)
So the idea was to get my weekly
column on the web, which I suppose is where Joleene’s spider came from. But at
about the same time I started writing fanfiction, and that ended up there, too.
(Look for me under the name Ozma914, although I haven’t had time to write
fanfic lately.)
Later I figured out how to post
photos. Before you knew it I had a blog, which still goes under the name of my
humor column: “Slightly Off the Mark”.
And what advice do I have for
bloggers? It’s so cute that someone might think I know what I’m doing.
One of the things I hear often is
that you should have a narrow focus, so you can build an audience, or
readership, or duchy, or whatever the term is. If you’re a writer writing to
writers, do a writing blog. If you’re writing for readers, also do a writing blog,
but showcase instead of talk about. Or talk only about Super Soldier Sailor
Moon, or politics (yuck!), or the emerald ash borer.
Good advice. I don’t do this.
My advice is that whatever you’re
really interested in, that’s what you write about. If you have eclectic
interests, then write eclectically, and maybe message me to explain what “eclectic”
means. Just as my books are of different genres, so is my blog: I write about
writing, astronomy, politics (yuck!), humor, pets, family, firefighting, and
whatever causes me pain, such as all that stuff.
If you don’t like blogging, people
will know. So in the end, my only good advice is to have fun and, if you want
to have a lot of followers, don’t be dull.
As for my nominees, usually in
cases like this I simply open it to everyone; especially since in this case most
of the bloggers I follow most regularly have already been nominated, and it’s
important to be regular. (I’m looking at you, Roger and Donna! I mean about
already being nominated, not about being regular.) So I’m only passing this on to a few, but
it’s the chosen few:
Kelly Hashway: http://kellyhashway.blogspot.com/
Lena Winfrey Seder: http://pearldropsonthepage.blogspot.com/
Rosanne Dingli: http://rosannedingli.blogspot.com/
William Kendall: http://williamkendallbooks.blogspot.com/
Shelly Arkon: http://secondhandshoesnovel.blogspot.com/
I don't follow that narrow focus advice either. Never could!
ReplyDeleteOur minds range too widely to be tied down!
DeleteThanks for participating! Ha! I remember Live Journal - though I didn't use it myself I knew people who did - does this make me old? ;)
ReplyDeleteIf it does, than that's two of us! So no ... no, it doesn't.
Delete