#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Steffanie Costigan

I’d like to welcome Steffanie Costigan to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Hardest thing about being a writer: For myself the hardest thing about being a writer is my struggle with my learning disability having dyslexia makes me take longer than the normal writer luckily, I have tools to help me work with my dyslexia.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Coming up with stories; I am really an outside of the box thinker and it helps me develop unique ideas and takes on stories.

Things you need for your writing sessions: My phone and other devices that help me write despite my dyslexia. Music is another thing I find helpful and for my own comfort a nice warm drink next to me.

Things that hamper your writing: Hehe well I am a mother of four kids ages ranging from eight to three months; so, as you can imagine at times it’s not easy.

Things you always put in your books: I enjoy writing mainly in first person perspective. You will notice that style in a lot of my books.

Things you never put in your books: Steamy romance hehe, not my style.

Things to say to an author: Tell me about your book, or how did you come up with such and such for your book?

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: I have never heard of your book, just joking hehe. “There is not enough steamy romance in your book.” Not all books are steamy romance just a heads up to the steamy romance lovers. Just because characters fall in love doesn’t mean there has to be steamy romance.

Favorite places you’ve been: Australia Adelaide! Met my husband there.

Places you never want to go to again: Hehe Alberta Canada during a blizzard.

Favorite books (or genre): I like fantasy reads, history, murder mystery, utopian. But some books that I have read as a kid have still stayed close to my heart such as Where the Red Fern Grows, The Whipping Boy, Last Unicorn, Tuck Everlasting. I really liked the Phantom of the Opera as a teenager.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Mommy porn books hehe; not my jam.

Favorite things to do: Write Hehe, I enjoy painting, spending time with my family.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Hehe nothing, I would not run through a fire or eat bugs to avoid doing anything. I just simply wouldn’t do it. But somethings I don’t enjoy doing is the never ending dishes they are despicable.

Best thing you’ve ever done: I have accomplished a lot but for me the best thing I feel I did was marry my husband.

Biggest mistake: Not finishing high school. After high school education cost a lot of money, so I invested a lot for up grading in post-secondary. Wish I was able to finish in high school but unfortunately my circumstances made it difficult for me.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: When I was a young girl, I was such a risk taker. Being around 18 at the time I free climbed up this mountain with no climbing gear and one of the rocks I stepped off of collapsed just as I stepped off of it near the top. Definitely not recommended.

Something you chickened out from doing: It’s funny cause I was a crazy risk taker as a teen to young adult. After having my first child something just clicked in me, and I don’t know why but I became so scared and cautious. So going to this place full of rides I chickened out of going on this roller coaster with my husband, and I would not let him go on it either for fear the roller coaster would crash and everyone die. But in my defense that roller coaster does have a reputation, and it was shut down for years due to the roller coaster going off the track and everyone on it dying. I believe it happened in the 1970s or 80s and it was at West Edmonton Mall in Galaxy Land.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: Something that really touch me was a reader that was recovering from surgery in the hospital shared with me despite the pain they were in they found hope from reading my book Land of the Dragon. It really touched my heart.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: Oh gosh, I can’t go into details fully because of how messed up the email was but basically a gross man making sexual comments towards me. He got blocked really fast.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: I am an artist, so I really enjoy painting and drawing. I also am involved in theater mainly directing and play writing.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it:

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books: Well, this is a bit graphic but it’s from a true story. In my book Land of the Dragon there is a scene that my main protagonist female character Eleanor being in the setting of Nazi Germany 1940s comes across some children throwing pebbles into the open mouth of a corpse. This is a true story growing up my next-door neighbors were immigrant from Germany and lived in their youth during World War II in Germany and they told me how desensitized the kids were and how normal it was to see kids poking or throwing rocks into the open mouth of a dead corpse. So that was something I added into my book to really pain the scene of how awful that time was.

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not: I don’t think I have had someone think a story was related to myself yet.

About Steffanie:

Steffanie Costigan holds a strong passion for writing despite her severe disability with dyslexia. She has previously released a historic fantasy Land of the Dragon an award-winning novel, and children’s book “A Stony Gaze,” and her new children’s book coming out in December Crazy Potatoes. She hopes to release many more books in the future.

She resides in Canada, where she was born and raised with her husband and four children. Steffanie is a journalist and hopes to continue her passion for writing books and her dream of continuing as a journalist. Steffanie studied creative writing and took her program in digital communications and media at Lethbridge Polytechnic.

She hopes her writing will resonate with people and inspire those that read her writings. Her passion for writing started at the young age of three years old; She has written a couple of plays. Steffanie also wrote “A Stony Gaze” in a play format and had the opportunity to direct it in 2021.

#WriterWednesday with Jonni Jordyn

I’d like to welcome author Jonni Jordyn to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you need for your writing sessions:

I work in peace and quiet. I know some writers like music in the background, but it’s too distracting for me, possibly because I am a musician. I have not yet learned the discipline of turning off my ringer.

Things that hamper your writing:

Interruptions, whether the phone, or my granddaughter, or worse, my addiction to TikTok can really break my thought process.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Getting it into people's hands. That’s why I finally hired a promotional team to help me get my books out there. I’ve always had good reviews, but just not enough readers.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

For me, writing is actually easy. I like to twist multiple sub plots around the main plot, giving readers many avenues to guess the outcome with the full belief that I’ll completely surprise most of them (and some reviews have confirmed that).

Favorite foods:

Most anything Asian, but especially Thai.

Things that make you want to gag:

I don’t know if I’ll ever get over my mental block that prevents me from trying escargo.

Something you’re really good at:

Playing Jazz and Latin piano. It’s one of my gifts. (Actually, creativity and artistry in general, which is why I was able to leave music to write.)

Something you’re really bad at:

Reading music. I played naturally by ear and nobody ever knew it. That’s also why, when the horn player's music stands fell over like dominoes, I was able to cover their parts.

Things you’d walk a mile for:

I actually walked a mile to an urgent care facility because a large blood blister was under my now disconnected toe nail. They refused to take my insurance, and I walked back.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room:

I’m autistic and have auditory processing disorder. I struggle to stay composed if there are a lot of conversations going on at the same time. I also struggle to hear any conversation with music in the background.

Things to say to an author:

I loved your book! Please tell me there will be a sequel!

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book:

I’m a writer too, well maybe not like you, of course, but I have a book. Here’s where you can find it on Amazon. Apologies and exceptions to actual authors. I even offer slack to fellow autistic persons who maybe can’t help it, but when I’m sitting at a table selling or signing books, that’s where the focus belongs.

Favorite places you’ve been:

Tahoe, California. I love that lake for camping, bicycling, and in the winter, skiing. I have taken part in a ride all the way around the lake twice.

Places you never want to go to again:

I don’t want to get into any trouble with my readers there, but I won’t be returning to Florida until their government finds their humanity again. Sorry for getting political, but they started it.

Favorite books (or genre):

If I look at my library, I have mostly science fiction, and a lot of really old stuff too, like Edgar Rice Burroughs, Ray Bradbury and, on the top of my list, Aurthur Clarke.

Books you wouldn’t buy:

I will not be purchasing any more books or merchandise related to Jo Rowling.

Best thing you’ve ever done:

Living my best life. The process of rebranding my entire catalog afforded me the opportunity to re-edit all of my books, and in doing so, I have re-confirmed that I have made the correct decision.

Biggest mistake:

Marrying the wrong person for the wrong reason and getting trapped in a nightmare at the hands of a narcissist.

The coolest person you’ve ever met:

I did an open air concert in Los Angeles. We went on before the Blues Brothers, and I have to say that Jim Belushi was an absolute blast. We sat back stage enjoying the catering and laughed and laughed.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video:

I did a show that was mostly Motown stars from the past. The Marvelettes were there, and they were classy ladies around us, but it had been at least four decades since their album covers were printed, so it’s not their fault that time and age had changed them.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done:

I was a professional musician. I played keyboards in a popular Latin band. We did tours with names like “Legends of Latin” and we usually headlined the shows.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it:

I did a show with Santana’s late brother and gave the venue the backline (the equipment I required) so I only had to bring backup diskettes to load my sounds into the keyboards. One of my diskettes was bad, and the diskette reader on the other keyboard was broken. I had to reprogram them while the rest of the band was doing our sound check. I definitely compromised some of my sounds.

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books:

I wrote my baby brother into one of my books. He was a musician, and I included his act in a scene where the antagonists ran though the theater trying to escape. He’s also the only person to get two dedications.

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not:

OMG. My therapist read one of my books and kept saying that she saw me in about half a dozen of the characters. If I was in them, it wasn’t intentional, but may have been subconsciously placed there.

About Jonni:

Jonni Jordyn, born in Oakland, Ca, started out playing music at age two, and moved on to singing and acting in grade school. High School introduced writing and film making followed by drawing and photography in college. In other words, she had a VERY LIBERAL arts education.

Jonni published some poetry and some india ink drawings in literary magazines while in college, won critical acclaim for her acting in a cabaret theater, but was faced with a decision to pick out the arts she wanted to pursue.

Of all the available opportunities, music and song writing won the first round when she found herself performing with legendary stars of the sixties and seventies.

Round two began years later, after leaving California for Arizona. It all started with a blank piece of paper and the question, "how can I possibly write more than eleven thousand words for a single story?" A valid question which was followed up a year later with, "How did I ever write 160,000 words?"

Now, the writing comes much easier, but still there are questions like, "How will I ever get all these ideas written down?" followed closely by, "How many times can I edit the same book?"

Jonni currently lives in Colorado with her bird.

My Revision Process

I think revising and editing are the hardest (and maybe the most important) part of the writing process. Here is what works for me.

  1. The First Draft - I write the first version, and I typically don’t edit during this stage. Depending on what’s going on, this takes me about two to three months.

  2. First Read Through - I print the book and do a complete read through. I look for spelling and grammatical issues and plotholes.

  3. Check the Chapters - I change the view in Word, so I can see a full page. I make sure the chapter lengths are reasonable (so one doesn’t have three pages and the next one has thirty-two pages). Then I read the last paragraph of each chapter. I want them to keep the reader reading past his/her bedtime. You don’t need to give a reader a convenient place to put a bookmark.

  4. Dialog Check - Read through all the dialogue to make sure you didn’t leave off any quotation marks. Are there any dialog tags that can removed? Are there any paragraphs that need dialog? Eliminate the chitchat and the boring.

  5. Search for the Overused Words - I keep a list of words that I use way too much. I search for each one to see if I can find a better way to say the same thing.

  6. What’s in a Name - I search for any names that I change during the writing process to make sure there are no traces of the old one still lingering. I also have multiple series. I do a search to make sure none of the protagonists accidently end up in another’s book.

  7. Continuity Issues - After each major revision session, I print a new copy. I do a read-through to make sure that things that are supposed to, stay the same. I keep a big spreadsheet for each series/book for a reference for hair color, eye color, preferences, type of car, etc. Look for places where your character does things out of order (like eating before ordering). Make sure names have consistent spellings throughout the entire manuscript.

  8. Read aloud - Read your manuscript out loud or have Word read it to you. You’ll hear words that are used incorrectly that you may not spot on the page.

  9. Spell Check - I check the spelling after every major revision.

    I usually read the manuscript at least six to eight times before it goes to my critique partner and critique group. Then it goes to my agent and editor for more revisions.

    What is your favorite part of the writing process?

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Mary Dutta

I’d like to welcome the amazing Mary Dutta to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

Things you never want to run out of: coffee and half-and-half

Things you wish you’d never bought: The air fryer collecting dust in the closet

Hardest thing about being a writer: Getting plot twists right

Easiest thing about being a writer: Brainstorming the start of a new story

A few of your favorite things: Mechanical pencils, yellow legal pads

Things you need to throw out: All the annual planners I never used

Favorite foods: Any variation on pork and potatoes

Things that make you want to gag: oysters

Something you’re really good at: Teaching

Something you’re really bad at: Directions

Favorite music or song: Anything I can sing along to

Music that drives you crazy: Anything electronic

Favorite smell: Lilacs

Something that makes you hold your nose: Roses

Things you always put in your books: Humor

Things you never put in your books: intense violence

Favorite books (or genre): Nowadays, mysteries. Back in the day, Victorian novels

Books you wouldn’t buy: Horror or anything graphically violent

Favorite things to do: Reading, cooking, hanging out with the people I love

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Camping (which I imagine includes running through a fire and eating bugs)

Best thing you’ve ever done: Having my kids

Biggest mistake: Waiting too long to start writing fiction

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: Designed classes so I get to teach on cool things like the Marvel Cinematic Universe

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: The novel that lives in a drawer

About Mary:

Mary Dutta is the winner of the New England Crime Bake Al Blanchard Award for her short story “The Wonderworker,” which appears in Masthead: Best New England Crime Stories. Her work can also be found in numerous anthologies including the Anthony-nominated Land of 10,000 Thrills: Bouchercon Anthology 2022. She is a member of Sisters in Crime and the Short Mystery Fiction Society. She lives outside of Birmingham, Alabama (the Magic City) and teaches at The University of Alabama at Birmingham. Visit her at marydutta.com and enjoy her blog at Writers Who Kill.

#WriterWednesday with CC Robinson

I’d like to welcome CC Robinson to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you never want to run out of: Coffee, tea, and Nerds gummies.

Things you wish you’d never bought: Polly Pockets (all those tiny parts end up everywhere!), my bookshelf dress (I’m such a nerd), and a four-pack of canned chickpeas that the food pantry won’t take.

Things you need for your writing sessions: Water, good lighting, and my epic movie soundtrack playlist on Spotify.

Things that hamper your writing: distractions (hello, ADHD), kids (see #1), and my cat Newt when he sits on my keyboard (also see #1).

Hardest thing about being a writer: finding the time and energy for marketing and social media because if readers don’t know your book exists, they won’t read it

Easiest thing about being a writer: writing the book

Things you always put in your books: courage and hope against impossible odds because we all need inspiration

Things you never put in your books: actual curse words

Things to say to an author: I read your book and left a review on Good Reads and Amazon

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: if I had written your latest release, I’d [insert anything here, it doesn’t matter, we’ve stopped listening because we wrote it, you didn’t]

Favorite places you’ve been: Cincinnati’s underground tunnels (the inspiration for Divided’s rebel movement, the Underground), Alaska, Sierra Leone, South Africa, US National Parks, and the Smokey Mountains

Places you never want to go to again: New York City – I’m sorry, I’m not a big city gal.

Favorite books (or genre): YA dystopian, post-apocalyptic, hard science fiction, mystery, select epic fantasy, and sweet romcom

Books you wouldn’t buy: anything with a spice level over 0 – I can’t stomach it.

People you’d like to invite to dinner: Jesus, George Lucas, Malcolm Gladwell, and my female MC Rose Chen all at the same time. It’d be a great conversation, especially since Rose would pick apart everyone’s ideas like a girl-boss.

People you’d cancel dinner on: most politicians, but especially my fictional Supreme Commander Martin – think North Korea’s Dear Leader combined with a former gang banger

Favorite things to do: swimming, hiking, jeeping, reading, spending time with friends, and dancing

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: clothes shopping for myself

Best thing you’ve ever done: start a medical clinic in Sierra Leone after their civil war – I met the most amazing people and witnessed miracles in the face of impossible situations (no running water or electricity, no medical care except our clinic, and abject poverty)

Biggest mistake: wasting ten years of my life running away from my calling

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: stared down the barrel of a semi-automatic rifle in rebel-controlled Liberia - we got out alive after paying their tribute, which is a whole story

Something you chickened out from doing: again, clothes shopping for myself – I pay someone else to do it, that’s how much I hate it.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: my book club read your book and had the best discussion

The craziest thing a reader said to you: Divided reminded me of Fahrenheit 451 – really? That’s a classic and feels a little over-the-top but I’m humbled and amazed they thought it.

About CC:

CC Robinson has over two decades’ experience in cross-cultural settings as a medical doctor working in post-civil war nations and as an Associate Pastor at a multi-ethnic congregation led by an African-American man in Cincinnati, the setting for Divided. When she’s not throwing on her superhero cape to save her characters from their dystopian antics, CC enjoys hiking, gardening, dancing, swimming, and driving her jeep through the woods with her husband and three kids. Find her on most socials except Twitter / X as @ccrobinsonauthor. 

Let’s Be Social:

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ccrobinsonauthor?igsh=YnkzYWx5cWJ1aXdy&utm_source=qr

Titkok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ccrobinsonauthor?_t=8ofyObnJ4HP&_r=1

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/dvHm5hULkk3CK77Q/?mibextid=LQQJ4d

Website: https://ccrobinsonauthor.com

Organizing Your Website

Whether you’re creating your author website or overhauling your current one, here are some things you may want to consider.

  • Determine what you want your visitors to see first.

  • Decide on the number of pages that you need for your content.

  • Figure out what you want on each page and where you want to put them. The easiest way to do this is to storyboard your pages. Sketch out your design on a whiteboard or a sheet of paper. It can be full of stick figures. This is a way to organize your thoughts and ideas.

  • Use the site-builder’s templates. There are lots of designs that are already created. You can use these or modify them to fit your style.

  • Use colors to match your branding. Figure out what you want to project and represent. Do you write dark thrillers or humorous cozies? Your colors and fonts should give your readers/visitors an idea of what to expect in your writing. To get ideas, look at other authors’ websites (in your genre).

  • After you build your website, make sure to check all links and forms that you have on your site.

  • Check your website on a variety of devices to see how it presents. Most web services will optimize your site for the device your visitor uses. It’s a good idea to make sure all the pictures and forms look correct. People who use a computer, will see a wider picture than those on a cell phone that tend to render websites in a tall format.

What would you add to my list?

#WriterWednesday with Don Sawyer

I’d like to welcome Don Sawyer to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you never want to run out of:

Diet Dr Pepper, although my doctor tells me I should drink more water, so I guess water?

Things you wish you’d never bought:

Televisions. Life is too short.

A few of your favorite things:

Saxx underwear, a good imperial stout, any book by Ursula LeGuin, mixed nuts (no peanuts)

Things you need to throw out:

Half of my clothes and all of my university essays

Things you need for your writing sessions:

My computer, quiet space, inspiration, focus

Things that hamper your writing:

AC/DC (though I love them at other times), feeling unmotivated, time, fatigue

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Moving a reader toward identification with your characters and their conflicts when all you have to work with are clumsy, limited words. Sometimes it feels like trying to build a fine watch while wearing heavy work gloves.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

Finding things to write about.

Note: both of these were provided by my eldest daughter, who knows me pretty well. (Though I did think she went a bit overboard with the second question!)

Words that describe you:

Focused, serious, principled, committed, caring, sensitive, persistent, passionate.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t:

Impatient, judgmental, obsessive, stressed, grouchy (only sometimes)

Favorite music or song:

Werewolves of London

Music that drives you crazy:

Anything that doesn’t have a beat and is easy to dance to.

Favorite beverage:

Toss up: Dr Pepper and a good stout (that complies with the Bavarian Beer Purity Law) Something that gives you a sour face:

Sour beer. They shouldn’t be allowed to call these things beer.

Something you’re really good at:

Socio-political analysis

Something you’re really bad at:

Making small talk

Last best thing you ate:

Fresh peach pie with whipped cream

Last thing you regret eating:

Too much peach pie with whipped cream

The last thing you ordered online:

David Samson’s book Our Tribal Future: How to Channel or Foundational Human Instincts Into a Force for Good

The last thing you regret buying:

Shoddy woodworking set for my grandsons

Things you’d walk a mile for:

A great English pub

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room:

A bar with Fox News on the ubiquitous TVs

Things you always put in your books:

Empathy, ethics, justice, passion, compassion, friendship

Things you never put in your books:

Overt eroticism

Favorite places you’ve been:

The Gambia, Ghana

Places you never want to go to again:

Florida

Favorite books (or genre):

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Left Hand of Darkness, The Poisonwood Bible

Books you wouldn’t buy:

Anything by Ayn Rand

Favorite things to do:

Explore human diversity through travel and interaction with other cultures

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing:

Attend a Trump rally

Best thing you’ve ever done:

Have kids

Biggest mistake:

Not having my OCD diagnosed earlier

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

Riding on the back of a crocodile at the Paga Crocodile Pond in northern Ghana

Something you chickened out from doing:

Not a lot

The nicest thing a reader said to you:

(Letter from a student): I would like to acknowledge how much I really enjoyed your novel, Where the Rivers Meet. This novel was the first book I’ve ever read and actually finished.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you:

I don’t think I’ve had many crazy comments. Some are naïve or reflect a lack of knowledge of writing and the writing process, but crazy? I can’t think of any really.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done:

Developing the West African Rural Development training materials for grassroots development workers and training a brilliant group of facilitators in both Ghana and The Gambia.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it:

Jamaica Climate Change Action Training for Youth. Ending of funding and change of government meant this promising program was never fully implemented.

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books:

Watching an elderly Native Indian woman who could not pay for groceries be humiliated in a grocery store in Lytton, BC. That scene was incorporated in my YA novel Where the Rivers Meet.

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not:

One of the main characters in Running loses his father in a hunting accident he blames himself for. The trauma affects him deeply. This was not me but based on the experience of one of my good friends, Bob Garrison.

About Don:

An educator and writer, I grew up in Michigan and came to Canada in the 1960s, where I more or less flunked out of a PhD program in Modern Chinese History. This turned out to be a blessing as it opened up a world of opportunity and experiences I never contemplated. From teaching in a small Newfoundland outport to training community workers in West Africa to teaching adults on a First Nations reserve in British Columbia to designing a climate change action course for Jamaican youth, I have worked with youth and adults from many cultural backgrounds and in a variety of locales.

Inevitably, these experiences have made their way into my writing. I have authored over 12 books, including two Canadian bestsellers: the YA novel Where the Rivers Meet (Pemmican) and the adult non-fiction Tomorrow Is School and I Am Sick to the Heart Thinking about It (Douglas and McIntyre). The first book in his Miss Flint series for children, The Meanest Teacher in the World (Thistledown) was translated into German by Carlsen (hardback) and Ravensburger. My articles and op-eds have appeared in many journals and most of Canada’s major dailies

I was never a very good boxer, but I continue to train in the ring and walk in the woods whenever my hips don’t hurt too much. I currently live in St Catharines, Ontario, with Jan Henig Sawyer, my very tolerant wife of 54 years.




What an Author Needs to Get Started

It’s often difficult for authors to figure out where to start building their social media and internet presence. There is so much out there. It can be overwhelming. Here are the key things I think new authors need to have to get started.

Heather’s List

  • Professional Headshot – Selfies aren’t the quality you want for print and digital - This is one of the first investments I made in my writing career.

  • Your Biography – This should be written in third person. For your website, you may want to have a short one and a longer one that can be used when you do events and presentations.

  • A Short Description of Your Book/Work – Have a short summary of what your book is about. This could be as short as an elevator pitch or a couple of paragraphs long.

  • A URL and a Site to Host Your Website – You need a URL and a site to host your website. Try to get your name or penname if possible. The website is the hub of your author platform. You want readers to be able to find you.

  • A Newsletter/Email Marketing Service – You will need a hosting service to maintain your list of followers and to create and distribute your ne3wsletters. Many services are free, and others have fees based on the number of followers you have.

  • Book Cover Images – You will need clear images for your website and socials. If it’s the original (giant) file, you may want to think about reducing the size to make it more optimal for mobile users. Large files take a while to load.

Here are some other things you need to consider as you start creating your author presence.

  • Your Budget – Determine what your budget is for your website, tools, URL, and author photograph. Start small. You can always add on to what you’ve created.

  • Who Maintains Your Sites? – If you pay someone to maintain your website and socials, it can get expensive. I like the freedom of being able to update my site whenever I want without waiting for someone else to do it. Youtube and many of the hosting companies have tons of videos to show you how to create and maintain your site.

  • Your Tools – I invested in two subscriptions to help me create my graphics. You will need to include a visual with your posts on social media. There are lots of free and for a fee products out there. Do your research and check to see which ones you're most comfortable with using. I use Canva and BookBrush.

What would you add to my list?