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Q&A

Pros and Cons: A blog to get feedback

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As a creative writer in my free time, I sometime suffer from a lack of feedback. To get some impressions on what I've written, I either have to ask my girlfriend (who acts as a sort of beta-reader) or some friend.

Now, my girlfriend doesn't seem to mind, but getting feedbacks from my friends is kind of difficult. I usually get no answer back - meaning that either my writings aren't interesting enough to be read, or they have better things to do. Either way, it has little sense to me to bother them further with this topic. If they don't read willingly, they won't give me honest feedback either, and I'll get "yea it was nice" answers at best.

So I was thinking of opening a blog where to publish my short stories, or some of the chapter of my longest novel (which still is far from completed).

I've seen it done a couple of times, mostly by a local author in my country (she managed to publish on Amazon some of the stories who passed through the blog, also). She has a nice community of readers around her blog.

I'd like to build something similar, but I understand it may be a waste of time - worse, free time I could have used to write instead. My other main worrying is that I'm after some cheap, ego-fulfilling way to pass the time, instead of doing something useful.

Note that I'm not searching for beta readers specifically, I'd just like to share my work with someone else. Writing makes less sense if my stuff mostly lays in a pc folder.

What's your take on the matter? What are the up and downsides of opening such a blog. in terms of time consumption and/or motivational gain.

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Publishing a blog make a lot of sense for a non-fiction work. Almost all of my last non-fiction book appeared on my blog first and this had three big benefits:

  • I got me lots of feedback on the quality and interest of the ideas.

  • I got lots of criticism and discovered lots of errors and omissions in my thought and lots of places where my explanations did not come across.

  • It built an audience for the book that both helped to sell it to the publisher and to promote and sell it after it was published.

I can still see a correlation (an imprecise one, admittedly) between the frequency of blog posts and sales of the book.

All of that might work for fiction as well, but there are some downsides:

  • Fiction is almost all about the execution, not the logic or the ideas. A careful and sympathetic critique partner or editor is far more likely to give you good feedback on your execution than a blog reader.

  • Most readers will not want to wait weeks or months between chapters and will lose the thread of the story if they do.

  • Putting your story on you blog counts as publication. Selling a previously published story can be much more difficult. (Unless, of course, it is a huge success and commercial publishers are clamouring to get on board. But the chance of that happening is so remote as to be discounted out of hand.)

The engagement between a story and the reader is personal. If you write a story that one person in ten loves and everyone else hates, you will have a best seller on your hands. But by the same token, you need to know where your critiques are coming from to know if they are of any value. This is why a regular in-person critique group is valuable.

Find a critique group. If you can't find one, start one. If you can't start one, join a local writing class (most are essentially critique groups with a dedicated leader with some more or less tenuous qualifications).

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