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February 11, 2020 by Amanda Zieba

I’ve been writing weekly on this blog for almost three years.

In that time I’ve committed over 150,000 words about writing to the screen. Recently, I realized that except for the five most recent posts, the rest remain largely unseen. This, to me, seemed like a pretty big waste. I wrote these pieces to be helpful. I wrote them so that other writers knew they were not alone in their frustrations or joys or blocks. I wrote them to share good news and creative prompts and writing processes that worked for me.

And for the most part… once their week in the spotlight had come and gone, they just sat there collecting proverbial internet dust. So, I decided to do something about it.

Because I want you to be able to use these words as tools, inspiration, education and entertainment, I’ve organized them for you here. You can now browse them by category (Authorpreneur Advice, Writing Tips, Inspirational Posts, Environmental Blog Posts and finally, Guest Blog Posts). Either click these links or the pictures below to take you where you want to go!

To subscribe and receive a post delivered to your inbox weekly (along with a a free writing prompt gift!), click here.

Happy reading and happy writing!

Amanda Zieba

Authorpreneur Advice from Amanda Zieba
Writing Tips from Amanda Zieba
Inspirational Blog Posts from Amanda Zieba
Environmental Blog Posts from Amanda Zieba
Behind the Scenes of Amanda Zieba's Stories
Guests Posts on AmandaZieba.com

** If you liked what you read on my blog today and want to stay connected, you can sign up for any of my eNewsletters (with free gifts!) HERE. To subscribe to this blog and receive the post in your inbox each week, click HERE. As always, feel free to share this post with others you think might be interested via email, Facebook or Pinterest. **

February 11, 2020 /Amanda Zieba
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Success Could be as Close as Lunch Time

February 05, 2020 by Amanda Zieba

I know that I chose this road… the path of a partly self employed authorprenuer. And while there are many parts of this lifestyle I love (time to work on my writing and flexibility for my family top the list), I’m starting to feel a bit tired. 

When most of your time is your own and there is a large menu of options from which to choose, sometimes the mental gymnastics of figuring out the correct puzzle piece of a task to place in the empty hole of your schedule can be exhausting. Especially when some of the puzzle pieces make money today (substitute teaching), some might make money one day (writing projects) and some that are self care and make you no money at all but still feel valid (exercising). How do you choose? What do you prioritize? 

In 2019 I busted my butt. I taught, wrote, presented, traveled, published and half a dozen other odds jobs. I am very proud to report that when all was said and done I made the same amount of take home pay that I did when I was a full time teacher. (Side note: my husband carries our family’s health insurance and this fact makes the prior one possible.) When I think about this achievement, I am both proud and a little jealous. It’s easy to fall into the comparison game and when I see other couples our age making double the money my husband and I make (as we work 50-80 hour weeks between our day jobs and passion projects) it doesn’t seem fair. It makes me wonder, what should we be doing differently?

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February 05, 2020 /Amanda Zieba
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Try Not to Be Afraid: Inspiration from the 2020 Grammys

January 29, 2020 by Amanda Zieba

If I am 100% honest there is something that makes me even happier than writing. It’s singing. I grew up surrounded by music. I was in church choir from a young age and spent most of middle school and high school in a glorious musical experience my neck of the woods calls show choir. (Not to mention regular choir class as well.)

Watching the Grammys and hearing the performances of today’s biggest and brightest stars always fills my heart in a way that few other things can. No, that’s not true. I get the same feeling when I sing at the top of my lungs in my car, or from the pews at church.

The difference between writing and singing, for me, is that singing is something that scares the bejeezus out of me. Put me in a choir and I’m good to go, but the threat of a solo will have me melting faster than cotton candy on a four year old’s tongue. Place my writing in a post that goes viral and you will find me only slightly sweaty from nerves. But singing on a stage, all alone, even though music makes me happy? So, so happy? No way, Jose. 

So what’s the point?

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January 29, 2020 /Amanda Zieba
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Blogging Workshop: A Recap

January 22, 2020 by Amanda Zieba

On Monday, nine brave writers joined me for a new adventure, my first ever blogging workshop. I have been writing on my blog weekly for almost three years and felt, that over time I had learned a thing or two. In the hopes of sharing what I’ve learned (and also making a little money), I decided to create a blogging workshop.

Now, on Wednesday, safely on the other side of this first-time venture, I am thrilled to say that we all not only survived but thrived.

The week prior to the event I spent time gathering our supplies and food (writers need fuel!) and setting up our work environment. By the time I went to bed Sunday night, I felt confident we were ready to roll.

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January 22, 2020 /Amanda Zieba
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Hope in the Mail: A Book Review

January 15, 2020 by Amanda Zieba

When I read Wild Bird by Wendelin Van Draanen, I saw a trio of my students in the main character, Wren. Bad choices, toxic relationships, hard situations. I saw what their lives could become if they didn’t make a conscious decision to turn around and walk the other way. I bought three copies of that book and wrote a note to each girl. “I see you,” the note said, “and it doesn’t have to be this way.” I messaged Wendelin on Facebook and told her about my students and plans for the books and notes. For my students and I, hope in the mail looked like three personalized and autographed book plates (stickers) accompanied by three gorgeous feathers the girls could use as bookmarks. “I see you,” Wendelin said to us through her actions, and gosh does that feel good.

As a writer who has many words under her belt, but who has yet to cross the chasm into the traditionally published world, I often feel unseen. The thing about the writing world is that there are so many people wanting help, and only so many people who have enough experience to provide responses to their questions and panicked pleas for advice. This problem is compounded by the fact that the people who do have the experience are often too busy doing the actual publishing work to be able to stop and help the people needing it.

Enter, Wendelin and her new, generously beneficial, book.

Hope in the Mail is an honest look at one author’s writing career, from its seedling beginnings to the solid status of an eighteen-book series. Through this part-memoir, part writer’s guide, I feel seen. As I read these pages it’s like Wendelin is leaning across the dozens of states that separate her desk from mine, and gently whispering in my ear, “I see you. I know you are working hard. Hang in there and hey, let me offer you some free advice.” (Or some $17.99 advice).

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January 15, 2020 /Amanda Zieba
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2020 Word of the Year: Hope

January 08, 2020 by Amanda Zieba

For the past few years I’ve picked a word to symbolize the year ahead. A word, that when reflected upon, would give me a boost, a bit of inspiration, or a pep talk. In the past, my words have been very action oriented. Connections. Evolve. Elevate.These words embody my inner hustle. While I’m not ready to throw in the towel, I’ve begun to have a different feeling deep down in my core. A light, airy feeling that centers in my chest. It is different than the mechanical whir of a motor that had previously occupied that space and when pressed to name it, I think I’d call it HOPE.

The sentiment that “Hope is not a plan” has been attributed to many famous people, including journalist Anderson Cooper and military man Benjamin Ale Okland. It is a phrase my husband and I will often say to our students and athletes. Hope on its own does not accomplish tasks or achieve goals.

But, I feel I’ve spent the last four years getting all the right pieces in place and all that’s left for me to do, is hang on and hope.

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January 08, 2020 /Amanda Zieba
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Gifts Galore

January 01, 2020 by Amanda Zieba

A word of warning: when you brand yourself a certain way, people tend to purchase you gifts in connection with that particular passion.

For example, my husband is a big baseball fan. Not only did he play throughout high school and college, he has now coached at both of those levels as well. For six months of the year, when he is not with us at home, my husband eats, sleeps and breathes baseball. Typically for Christmas, his gifts reflect this passion. Goodies for the dugout like sunflower seeds, extra chapstick and a heated shirt to protect him from the brisk spring breezes and gloves thin enough to allow him to keep book during the game, but warm enough to keep his fingers from freezing off. (Spring baseball in the Midwest can really be a beast!) This year he even got a cup made from the barrel of a baseball bat!

Similarly, I found myself inundated with gifts to make my word nerd heart happy. In case you are also a bibliophile, a story-enthusiast, an office supply junkie or a writer-sort-of soul, I’ve decided to share my gifts here.

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January 01, 2020 /Amanda Zieba
audible, writers digest, book tote, canva, canva pro, author planner, calendar, gifts
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Best Books of 2019

December 25, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

In 2019 I read twelve books and listened to twelve more. This does not count the picture books I shared aloud with my students or read to my own children. These are books I read simply because I wanted to, because their premise intrigued me. Twenty-four books doesn’t sound like all that many. I know lots of people who read more. But, I did a few other things this year, as I’m sure you have. Reading, is not a contest, at least, not if you don’t want it to be.

Next year I’m challenging myself to spend less time on Facebook and more time reading. Not because the number twenty-four disappoints me, but because mindless scrolling isn’t improving the quality of my life and a book probably could. So, less phone, more books.

As I looked back over the list of my books read, (you can check out the entire list here) there isn’t one title that I was unhappy to revisit. They were all good books, but some, as they always do, rose to the top. Below you will see my favorites of the year and the impact they had on me. I’ve organized the titles in genre/age groups, but other than that, it is a random list. Rest assured, any book you pick from this list will be a good read, whether they are found at the top or the bottom.

Go on, read through the list and then pick out your favorite. Go find that gift card you just opened for Christmas and give yourself the gift of a great read. Also, feel free to drop the title of your favorite 2019 read in the comments! I’d love to add it to my 2020 pile of books to tackle.

Happy holidays and happy reading!

Amanda

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December 25, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Top 10 Blog Posts of 2019

December 18, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

I have successfully made it through another year of blogging. One post a week, for an entire year, for the second year in a row.

This year I wrote 47 posts, totaling in 44,110 words. I also hosted four guest writers (for a total of five guest posts) which made up the last of the year’s blog content. Thank you Angela, Valerie, Constance and Brea!

Some people question the value of blogging. I don’t make money from these words I commit to write each week, and usually only about forty people read them. But it’s more than stubborn pride and discipline that keep me coming back, each week, with words to share. These posts are not only a collection of my work, they are a scrapbook of writing memories. The conferences I attended. The books I published. The road trips I took. The books I read. The authors I admired. The thoughts, ideas and experiences I had.

But more than anything else, it is me, getting better, one week at a time. It pushes me to generate an idea and see it all the way through to the end, once a week. It gives me the opportunity to write 1,000 words, every seven days. Fellow Wisconsin author, Blair Braverman, once told me in a workshop that an instructor told her to write 50,000 words, throw them away, and then, she’d be ready to write a book. Or something like that. Some people write one short story a week to accomplish this feat. Instead, I write a blog post. And even though I don’t typically write nonfiction outside of my posts, I feel that this practice still serves me well in my book writing.

I wrote about a lot of different topics this year. Below you will see my top ten most popular posts. But if I were to pick, I think my most favorite posts were the ones about Disney and Diverse Books and the difference friends can make in the writing world.

Sometimes we continue down a path and aren’t entirely sure why we continue to place one foot in front of the other. For awhile that’s the way I was feeling about this blog. But after taking the time to reflect for this post, I am fairly certain why I show up to write these words each week, and I feel even more confident about the fact that I will continue to do it in 2020.

Until next year, happy writing and happy reading!

Amanda

TOP 10 BLOG POSTS of 2019!

High Hopes: A Song for 2019

I’m guessing that good SEO and the popularity of the band Panic at the Disco is more to thank for the success of this blog post than any other factor. That, and it is the pin that gets saved the most often from my Pinterest account . Either way, this inspirational post, was viewed over 500 times, more than any other post in my blog’s history.

Switch it Up: A Graphic Essay

I tried something different in this essay, and apparently it worked! Infographics are a new-ish medium when it comes to information sharing and I thought I’d use their popularity to share information about my writing life on my blog. Turns out, people liked it! This post was read 306 times.


The Writing Life, Honestly its Not For Everyone

Thanks to Michael Perry and his generous share on Facebook, this post was read by over 200 people, making it my third most read post in 2019.


The Emotion Thesaurus: A Review by the Word Nerd

This post reviews a book from one of my favorite writing resource collections EVER! If you are still in need of a gift idea for a writer, add this one to your AMAZON cart ASAP. Thanks to the sharing of this post by the book’s authors Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi, this review was read 183 times.


Birthing a Book

This post about the creation process of the Close Quarters cover was viewed 112 times, making it my 5th most popular blog entry in 2019.


Different Roads Sometimes Lead to the Same Castle

The popularity of The Game of Thrones helped this post make it onto my top ten list. While I’ve never watched beyond the first season, I have read all of the books. It was hard to escape the flurry of the media storm created by the conclusion of this epic drama on screen. I share my thoughts about this phenomenon in this post that was viewed 111 times.


10 Ways to Blog About Your Book to Increase Sales

I think that this post was the most helpful post I wrote all year. C. Hope Clark from Funds for Writers must have thought so too, because she published a reprint of it on her site as well. I’m not sure how many of her 45,000 followers read it, but on my site it got 99 reads.

Girls Stop Apologizing: A Book Review and Thoughts from an Authorprenuer

I loved this book, so much. If you are curious about the feminine cultural phenom that is Rachel Hollis or are looking for a book to give you a pep-talk, pick-me-up or entrepreneur kick in the pants, this is the one for you. This post was my 8th most popular and was read 96 times.


A Shout Out to Our Big Shared World

I spent a lot of time in 2019 working for an amazing cultural connectivity company. A job, that sometimes even included writing blog posts! You can learn all about the amazing work being done by my friend Colleen Waterston, and my involvement in that work in this post, which when originally posted, was read 91 times.


#MGBOOKTOBER

And finally, #10. This post about my favorite middle grade books was read 77 times. If you are in the market for a good book, no matter your age, this list has some GREAT ones!

So, there you have it. It is my sincerest hope that you enjoyed reading the posts as much as I have creating them. I look forward to sharing more of my writing journey with you next year.

P.S. Stop back next week for a run down of the ten best books I read in 2019!!


If you liked what you read on my blog today (or are in search of weekly word nerd goodness) and would like to have it delivered to your inbox every Wednesday morning, you can sign up HERE. As always, feel free to share this post with others you think might be interested via email, Facebook or Pinterest. **

Affiliate marketing is promoting a product or service in return for a commission. When you purchase a product or service through one of my links, I earn a small part of the sale. There is NEVER any extra cost to you. If you looked up the same product on the same site through another source besides my website, the price will still be exactly the same. 100% of the time.

I also NEVER link to products or services that I don't 100% believe in. I will never tout a company or their goods if they are disreputable or if I don't believe them to be worthy of your hard-earned money. In no way are my affiliate links a scam. (Language borrowed with permission from Kristen Kieffer on Well-Storied.com)

December 18, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Gifting Yourself Grace

December 11, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Last week was… off. Unproductive. Frustrating.

It seemed that every task, every chore, every project required just a little more effort, a little more patience, a little more time. No one thing was HARD or a really BIG deal. It was a week full of first world problems.

  • A sick kid that required washing puke covered sheets at 5:30 AM.

  • A jammed printer that delayed the start of class by twenty minutes.

  • An inconvenient, but necessary stop for gas.

  • An unprepared student testing the very last reserves of my end of semester patience and compassion.

And a dozen other little things I have already forgotten because they are so insignificant. But collectively, they make the week exhausting.

I think the entire week could be summed up in a Monday afternoon trip to the bathroom. As I entered the stall and pulled down my pants, $27 fell into the toilet, which would have been annoying enough, but it was made worse by the fact that I didn’t see it until I had already peed all over it. What should have been a two-minute pitstop on my way off of campus because and exercise in money laundering. And while it was totally legal, it was kind of gross and took time I wasn’t planning to spend.

After three straight days of these shenanigans I began to think that the universe was trying to tell me something. Maybe these seemingly random occurrences of frustration had a message buried deep down inside them. But what could it be?

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December 11, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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The Truth in My Fiction

December 04, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

It’s no secret that my newest book, Close Quarters,  was inspired by my family. As the dedication page says and the story alludes to, we are a loud, interconnected, overstepping group of humans who love each other very much. The memories we have created were the foundation for this story of the Ames cousins, who come together when times got tough. But just how much of the story is true? Today I will use my weekly blog post to point out a few of the absolute truths woven into the fiction and share a few behind the scenes stories as well.

If you know my family, this might be especially fun. But if you are a random writer, stopping by my site by chance, I’ll invite you to stay. It is my hope that seeing how one writer takes their real life and spins it into a saleable story will be worthwhile and worthy of your attention.

I’ll start at the beginning.

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December 04, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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A Poem of Gratitude

November 27, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Almost exactly a year ago I posted a list of writing-related things for which I am grateful on this blog. It is a lovely list and almost everything on it remains a solid and beneficial impact on my life… writing or otherwise. I thought I might make a second edition of this list, but after reading the original, I’m hard pressed to come up with anything that I didn’t already include.

So instead, I’ll leave you with a Gratitude poem.

Yep, you heard me right. I said a POEM.

I’m currently playing around with ideas for a novel in verse. A novel in verse is a story told entirely in poems. A few of my favorites include When My Sister Started Kissing by Helen Frost and The Crossover by Kwame Alexander. I’ve confessed before that I hold no English degree. Similarly, I have zero training in poetry. But, like anything else, I’m diving in head-first and willing myself to figure it out as I go.

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November 27, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Writers Helping Writers

November 20, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Today’s post comes from my fellow author friend, Brea Behn. I first met Brea when she attended my Word Nerd Writing Retreat back in the summer of 2018. In addition to being a great writer I can tell you that she makes a dang-fine lemon meringue pie. Unfortunately we don’t have any dessert to serve up today, but Brea is serving up loads of helpful advice in her guest blog post, giving authors what she wishes she had when she first began pursuing publication. I’m grateful to have Brea’s wisdom on my blog today and hope that you find inspiration and hope in the words she shares.

When I finished my first book, publishing was far from my mind. Writing for me was processing and healing trauma. Then it became more. A passion and my happy place. The first time someone suggested I pursue publishing my book, I had my doubts but thought it would be a fun challenge.

Fun is not how I would describe pursuing publication. Brutal would be more like it. I did months of research and preparation. Prepared a cover sheet and query letter. After countless rejections from agents, I turned to independent publishers instead. More rejections and disappointment. Then I went to a literary conference and got a critique done on my manuscript. She told me I was pursuing the wrong genre. That my book was not adult dystopian, but YA. I started sending out query letters again with new hope. Still, when rejection number 50 came in I almost gave up.

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November 20, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Close Quarters Launch Party Recap

November 13, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Monday night was an incredible night.

I know that a few weeks ago I likened sharing a book with the world to the process of growing and birthing a baby. Well, if I’m going to stick with lifetime milestone event analogies, I’m going to say that the Close Quarters Launch Party felt like a wedding. So, so many of my people… from childhood neighbors and teachers to current co-workers, from my best friends from my prior town to my current Bingo besties. Family and friends. Fellow writers and even a few strangers who took a chance and joined the celebration. Everywhere I looked I was surrounded by kind and supportive people who chose to come and share in the joy of my new book. To say I am grateful is an understatement.

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November 13, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Writing Local

November 06, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

When I created my Champion Chocolatier series, I had so much fun writing about the city of Duluth. I enjoyed reliving vacation memories and my favorite tourist spots. Because the pages were built on a foundation of real experiences, the words came easy and the process of world building, one that is normally time consuming, went a whole lot quicker.

As I embarked upon writing my new series, Close Quarters, I fell in love with the idea of placing the story in my hometown of La Crosse. My characters were bound to visit restaurants and hair salons and go on dates, right? Why not use real locations, ones that already held a host of memories fueled by dozens of sensory details that I’d already experienced? The decision was a no-brainer.

Today in my blog post I am going to highlight a few of my favorite local locations featured in the book and share how these places impacted my life. As a special treat, I’m even going to share a few sneak peek snippets from the book, Close Quarters!

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November 06, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Writing Wisdom from Barbara Joosse

October 30, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

This past weekend I had the honor and pleasure of being a featured author at the Edgerton Book and Film Festival. It was three days (if you count the full day I spent at their middle and elementary school talking to their thoughtful and engaged students… which I do!) of books and book loving people. The entire event and organization is a testament to what a small group of committed individuals can accomplish. Thank you, to everyone associated with this event, but especially Logan Nelson, Pat Brabazon, Kirsten Almo and Leslie Bakkum for inviting me to participate in this year’s festival.

The highlight of the weekend for me was not one of my own speaking presentations (I did two, one on my process of writing The Orphan Train Riders and one entitled Self Publishing 101), but the hour I spent listening to and learning from Barbara Joosse.

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October 30, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Birthing a Book

October 23, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Many people liken the process of creating a book to the experience of growing and birthing a baby. I would agree on many levels. For the most part growing a baby is a behind the scenes job. Many of the tasks are accomplished beneath the mother’s flesh, unseen to the world, except for the growing bulge of her belly. Even the writers who work in public places and are visible, rarely show their work in progress. It’s all a mystery, until the final reveal.

There are some people who are very good at showing their creative process to the rest of the world. Creative entrepreneur Austin Kleon discusses this idea in his three-book series (which I highly recommend).

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October 23, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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#MGBOOKTOBER

October 16, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Last week I was scrolling through my Instagram feed when I noticed that it was suddenly inundated with pictures of middle grade book covers accompanied by the hashtag #MGBOOKTOBER. This caught my attention for several reasons. As a former middle school teacher, I LOVE middle grade titles. I love their innocence and the way these titles help readers see the world through the eyes of their target audience, mainly, kids stuck in the hard times of middle school. Many adults have recently been drawn to read books in the YA age bracket, but as of yet, this slightly lower target age range seems to be outside of the average reader’s radar. I am thrilled that #MGBOOKTOBER is attempting to change that.

I was also drawn to this monthly challenge of naming a book for each day of October because I recently started teaching pre-service education students. Namely, I teach future teachers how to teach reading. A common woe of my current student population is that they are unfamiliar with the current book publishing landscape. Unless they were tutoring in an elementary school or it was on the required English reading list, they didn’t/don’t do much reading. (sigh.) Especially “kids books”. If a book was published after they left middle school, it’s likely they haven’t read it. I am hoping I can use #MGBOOKTOBER to highlight a few of my favorites and give them a quick peek into this niche market/audience.

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October 16, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Books & Beer: A Different Kind of Book Club

October 09, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Guest post written by Valerie Biel

It all started in a bar . . .

Sounds like the beginning of a bad joke or a dubious romantic comedy, right?

More than four years ago, a few readers were gathered at a brew pub in Columbus, Wisconsin, discussing how they wanted to start a book club. But—they wanted it to be a different kind of book club. They wanted to talk with the authors of the books they read. But this isn’t how book clubs typically work. So the question was posed:

Did they know any authors?

This is when all heads pivoted to me. I was the only author they knew personally. So on April 28, 2015 I was the inaugural guest author at Books & Beer Columbus where the group read my first book Circle of Nine: Beltany. I became the coordinator of the group because as an author I already knew other writers and frequently meet them at writing conferences and book festivals.

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October 09, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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Beta Readers

October 02, 2019 by Amanda Zieba

Today’s blog post from Constance Malloy is all about beta-readers. I find this so ironically fitting because last week I put out a call for a last minute guest post because I was too busy to write my own post. Why? Because I am putting the final touches on a manuscript so that I can send it to my own pool of trusted readers before the final draft! Stay tuned for more information about this project soon!

But before we continue, what exactly is a beta-reader?

A beta-reader is kind of like a practice audience for an author. Keep reading to learn more and see how one author uses this process to ensure her work is the best it can be.

Since publishing my memoir Tornado Dreams, I have been asked many questions by people who want to write a book. Many of those questions have focused on the topic of readers. Did you have readers? How many did you have? How did you go about selecting them? What did they need to know to help you? Did having readers help or hinder the process? 

These are important questions to ask, since having one’s work read by others prior to submitting is so vital to a writer’s success. That statement implies my answer to the first question, so let’s dive in.

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October 02, 2019 /Amanda Zieba
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