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November 2021 Blog Status

Yes, I know I’m typing this up before the month is officially over, but I don’t think a few more hours are going to alter the outcome all that much. November’s hits to the site are well above October and are also the best the site has done since January 2021. The hit count had already exceeded October even before I published three new books at the end of the month, so that’s not the primary cause, either. We’ll see how much they impact December’s numbers.

[Final November number was 796 hits, October was 597, an increase of 199 — exactly a third. While the posts related to releasing the new books only contributed 45.]

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Pandemic Taboo — Taboo Menage Erotica

Pandemic Taboo Caption

Book 4 of “Taboo in a College Town”

When Josh and Samantha invite their classmates and lovers Sarah and Tom to spend Spring Break with them, Covid-19 precautions turn a one week visit into a much longer stay — and into so much more.

Can they keep their family’s secrets? Do they even want to? What other secrets will be uncovered which will change everything?

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Families United — Taboo Menage Erotica

Families United Caption

Book 3 of “Taboo in a College Town”

How much drama can erupt when Gloria’s parents and grandmother come to visit at Christmas?

Just wait until her stepbrothers show up on Christmas Eve!

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Daddy’s Loophole – Taboo Menage Erotica

Daddy's Loophole

Book 2 of “Taboo in a College Town”

Throughout his 20-year marriage to Katie, Scott allowed her to have female lovers, so long as it was in a threesome… until Katie asked him for a divorce so she could marry Ashley.

Now, his new girlfriend Gloria has made the same promise.

When Scott walks in on Gloria with his daughter Samantha, will Scott go through with the offered threesome or has Gloria discovered
Daddy’s Loophole?

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October 2021 Blog Status

A little delayed, but here is the latest monthly status…

October recovered most of the dip from September’s drop, where it did not do so in 2020, so that’s good. It would probably have been better if I had not lost Internet access towards the end of the month. This little thing about the bill not getting paid… (you can always help me in restoring it by buying my books, naturally!) The automated posts I had set up let me take a few days off of social media, but I’m not going to my local Starbucks to use their WiFi on a regular basis. I swear they’ve removed all of the comfortable chairs they used to have. Anyway, let’s hope November proves to be better still.

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Why use Scrivener?

It’s a question which comes up on Facebook and Twitter all the time, so I figured I would capture my answers to one of those posts and create a blog post about it…

If you haven’t already heard about it, Scrivener is software designed for writing books, with a whole lot of features, which you can use or choose not to use. Not everyone likes it, but for those who do, we come to depend on it.

The main benefits to me are:
1) Ability to easily divide the project into Chapters and even separate books in a series; Folders can have their own text, to serve as a header. Everything can be drag/dropped, to re-sequence if needed.
2) Selective export based on those divisions. Export just one chapter, one book or an omnibus version, without altering the project at all. Definition of page breaks is done based on these divisions at export time, rather than in the text itself. With increased emphasis on serialization (Radish, Vella, etc), being able to export each episode separately is more important than ever.
3) Export to multiple file formats. I sometimes produce exports to .rtf, .doc, .docx, .epub and .pdf, for the same book. If I’m exporting subsets, too, it remembers the settings for each subset/format combo. Amazon’s .mobi is included, too, but I don’t use it much, preferring to import .docx into KDP and let Amazon generate .mobi for me (Smashwords and Streetlib do so, too, although Smashwords wants to import .doc and Streetlib starts from .epub).
4) The separate Research area, which is project-wide, but never part of the export, so you don’t have to worry about avoiding that.
5) Ability to import the book’s cover into the project and include it in the .epub export. For a multi-book project, I can include ALL of the covers and select which one to export, per book.
6) By having a template which contains all of the initial structure and some content like back matter, I save some time setting that up and can get into writing quicker.

Addendum (June 11, 2022): Please note that the above was written based on Version 1.9 of the software for Windows. I have not used the version for macOS/iOS. The current version for Windows is 3.1.1 and while it retains the above benefits, I am still adjusting to its newer features, so none of those are mentioned here.

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Asking for reviews

I don’t often put out requests for reviews, but today I will. Not for reviews at Amazon or Goodreads, but at the other sites where my books are for sale which allow reviews, but for which I rarely or never get any, such as Smashwords, Barnes & Noble, Streetlib, Google, Kobo etc. If you’ve read one of my books and liked it, please consider dropping some words of encouragement at one of those sites. I could really use the positive energy right now.

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August 2021 Blog Status

For the second month, total traffic to the site rose, but only back to the levels in March/April, after a low in June. August 2020 had been my peak month that year, so I’m not too surprised, but it might also mean September will be lower once more.

After thinking Books2Read was the main culprit behind a traffic decline, it has only received about 500 total clicks since March, when the difference between August 2020 (my highest month of the year) and August 2021 is more than 600 all by itself. So, clearly something else is causing the traffic to go down. But, do I focus more on writing my current WIP or on rewriting promo blurbs for my existing books, to fix it? I think I’ll do the former and keep my fingers crossed that September is another rise.