Why Blog? Just Because

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It started as one thing but became something quite different…

It was back in January 2010, having just published my first novel, that I began writing this blog. The word on online-writer-street was (and still is), that as an author, it was advisable to have a blog in order to raise your authorly profile and to alert potential readers to your masterpieces and where they could buy them.

So after a bit of research I chose WordPress to be the host for my blog. I liked its ease of use, even for an old, not very tech savvy bird like me. I also liked the wide choice of style and appearance that WordPress has to choose from.

To start with I blogged mainly about my writing. I wrote about the process, motivation and road to publication and beyond. At first the number of people viewing my posts was low. But ever so gradually the numbers grew. People started to ‘like’ the posts and comments started to come in. I also visited and began to follow other people’s blogs.

Later I linked my posts to my Twitter account, so that I could alert folks to new posts. And over the years I reviewed and updated the look and type of content on my blog and I also got my own domain of putitinwriting.me

And now? Now Put It In Writing is my online hub. It’s my home on the web. Yes, I have two author websites – one for each of my author identities – but they’re really just shop windows for my work. And yes, I have two author pages on Facebook where I engage with the readers of my books. But it’s on the blog that I write and share the stuff that matters most to my writing soul.

Nowadays after 268 posts, I write about books I’ve read, I write about my experiences, thoughts and reflections and sometimes I even write about my writing. I hope to entertain, give pause for thought and to inform.

But I no longer do it to sell books. I’m not sure it ever had that effect anyway. I blog because I love it. I enjoy writing the posts and I enjoy the comments and interaction that my posts generate.

And I get just as much enjoyment from reading others’ blogs. I follow a lot of other blogs here on WordPress and elsewhere, covering a wide variety of topics and types of writing. By engaging with fellow bloggers’ posts, I in turn, am entertained, made to think and informed. I read my fellow bloggers posts, comment on and share them on Twitter. And they do the same for me. And it’s through blogging, and the often related use of Twitter, that I feel like I’m part of a mutually supportive community of readers and writers.

The bloggers I follow are, by definition, all writers. They include fellow novelists, book bloggers who love reading and reviewing what they’ve read, and others who are commentators on all sorts of interesting topics.

Below I’ve listed just a few of my favourite bloggers –

Some wise and wonderful author bloggers include:

Helen Mackinven at https://helenmackinven.wordpress.com

Anne Stenhouse at https://annestenhousenovelist.wordpress.com/

Shelley Sackier at https://peakperspective.com/

Bryn Donovan at http://www.bryndonovan.com/

Summer Pierre at https://summerpierre.wordpress.com/

Henry Chamberlain at https://comicsgrinder.com/category/henry-chamberlain/

Martin Griffin at http://www.martingriffinbooks.com/

 

Some of the insightful and dedicated book bloggers who I’ve ‘met’ through the wonderful Book Connectors group on Facebook include:

Linda at https://lindasbookbag.com/

Hayley at https://rathertoofondofbooks.com

Anne at http://beingannereading.blogspot.co.uk

Joanne at https://portobellobookblog.com

 

Then there’s nature writer and artist and real life friend, Jan who blogs at https://janhendry.com/

There’s spot-on observational post writer Andrea at https://andreabadgley.com

There’s truck driving, Shakespeare buff and art lover George at http://myshakespearejourney.wordpress.com/

There’s lovely writer and photographer Marsha at http://tchistorygal.wordpress.com/

And finally, there’s the educational and engaging official blog of the Culloden Battlefield and Visitor Centre at https://cullodenbattlefield.wordpress.com/2016/04/15/270-years-ago/

 

One last thing  before you go, why do you read and or/write a blog? Do you have a sense of an online tribe and if so where does that come from? Do leave your thought in the comments below.

 

 

17 thoughts on “Why Blog? Just Because

  1. You are so right. I started a website to blog about my still-forthcoming book, but now have friends and we’ll always keep in touch and maybe someday share visits. I find that WordPress is about all I can handle, maybe because I just send the blog over to Facebook but don’t add anything there. Somehow I haven’t dared try Twitter, afraid I’ll never get off the web if I start. Nor to the annoyance of my kids, do I have a smart phone. People seem to become addicted to it.

    • Hi Paula, yes there’s a danger of social media addiction. Everything in moderation 🙂 And doing what you’re comfortable with is definitely the wise way to go. Thanks for visiting and commenting.

  2. What a lovely surprise to have a mention in your post Anne – flattered and touched to be included. I hope one day to meet you in real life as you’ve been a great virtual friend to me over the last few years. x

    • Of course you were included. And I’m sure we’ll meet one day. We live in the same country for goodness sake, let’s make it happen.

  3. Anne, I am so honored to get a shoutout on your blog! That means so much to me! And I love this post. I am just like you — my blog has become a creative project unto itself, and I learn so much from other bloggers and from commenters. Congratulations on a great blog and 268 posts! You are an inspiration!

  4. Excellent blog Anne. Why blog? Blogging is like opening a steam vent on a pressure cooker of unspoken words. And it breathes life into our work. I look forward to reading more of your posts.

  5. I started blogging because it seemed easier than writing a book. Maybe I’ll still write that book one day, but blogging takes up quite a lot of my ‘spare’ time, so I might have to make a difficult choice. 🙂

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