Why You Shouldn’t–or Should–Blog a Book

I came across an interesting blog post not long ago and bookmarked it. I also left a comment. If you are considering blogging a book, you might want to read it–just to get a different perspective than mine. It’s written by Joel Friedlander, the proprietor of Marin Bookworks, in San Rafael, CA. Joel is a book designer, a self-published author, and blogs at TheBookDesigner.com. He has been a guest blogger for me on Write Nonfiction NOW!

He offers five reasons why you shouldn’t blog a book, including:

  1. Blogging is specialized writing
  2. Blogging needs lots of formatting
  3. Blogs are mostly written in either a commercial or a journalistic style
  4. Blogs are about communication
  5. Blogs need a schedule

You can read read his post here.

Joel brought up some good arguments in his post. However, I would say that if you go through the nonfiction book proposal process first to see if your book is worthy of being blogged, and then you set out with the intention of blogging a book to create an audience and attract attention and get that book written, you’ve negated many of his reasons for not blogging a book. Plus, if you edit your manuscript to rid it of blog-like formatting and overly blog-like style–and then hire a professional editor to polish it up, you’ll have a manuscript that reads well enough for a traditional publisher or for you to independently publish without fear of turning away readers.

So, I say, keep on blogging those books. But take Joel’s words of caution to heart.

Are Blogs and Blogged Books Protected by Copyright Laws?

I’ve been asked the same question several times: If someone blogs a book—actually composes it in the form of blog posts they publish on the Internet—do they need to worry about a copyright for that blogged book. The question has been asked about blog copy in general as well.

Previously, I’ve offered a general answer: As the blogger, when you hit the “publish” button, you basically copyright the material by becoming its publisher and publishing it.

In fact, my answer was correct. I just didn’t offer you the background material to go with it. I’d like to do that now. Under the Copyright law of 1976, which went into affect in 1978, any work created in a fixed form is protected by copyright upon creation. That means that when a work is put into any fixed form—printed out from your home laser jet printer, published as an e-book, booklet or POD book, or sent into Cyberspace as a blog post, your written work is protected by copyright. Thus, completed and published blog post, or all the posts that comprise a blogged book, comprise written works created in fixed form and are protected by copyright.

This information comes straight from a copyright attorney. I asked another literary attorney as well, who advised that writers always print out their work. That means, as a precaution, simply print out your blog posts before actually posting them on the Internet.

The so-called “Poor-man’s Copyright,” putting your work in an envelope and mailing it to yourself, only serves to prove when you wrote something not that you wrote it.  However, it can be a handy piece of evidence should you need it, I’m told by the copyright attorney.  As he said, it’s useful but not terribly essential.

And actually filing our work with the copyright office can be a royal pain in the rear if you produce a lot of writing, such as daily blog posts. If you want to sue someone for infringement and collect damages, if you worry about being infringed, or if you ever want to bring a lawsuit against someone for infringement and want to collect money, having a document that says you own the copyright to your work certainly can be a useful.

Blog Showcasing Awkward Family Photos becomes a Published “Album” and NYT Bestseller

Some of the blogs that have become books have involved little writing—or almost none at all. A recent pick involves awkward family photos with short pithy captions. That’s it.

Mike Bender and Doug Chernack turned embarrassing family snapshots into a booming Internet industry—and now a book. First they took photos that used to gather dust in the back of family albums and put them into an online album. Now they’re giving the world a chance to chuckle at them on the printed page.

The L.A.-based screenwriters turned AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com into one of the biggest hits on the Internet. The blog garners 15 million people a month visiting to leaf through photos of families they don’t even know. And now their book, Awkward Family Photos, made the New York Times best-seller list.

These bloggers new they had a hit from the start, though. Within days of launching, the website crashed from too many photo submissions. They receive some 6,000 admissions glasses glory.

If they can do this simply with photos and captions, you can do it with some great copy. You just need a super idea to go with it and some really good niche marketing.

To read more about this blog-to-book, click here.

1000 Awesome Things Blog Published as a The Book of Awesome

A while back I mentioned an awesome blog I found that was turned into a book. This blog goes to show that anyone can find something about their life to blog about–or about which to blog a book.

Neil Pasricha

During the worst year of his life, Canadian Neil Pasricha decided to try to focus on the positive and come up with 1000 simple, free, awesome things most people take for granted, posting one each day on a blog 1000awesomethings.com. Pasricha, 30, who works in human resources in Toronto, won two Webby awards, known as “the Oscars of the Internet,” at the same time that his marriage broke up and one of his closest friends committed suicide. Yet, he kept on finding little things that he found awesome…like putting on underwear hot from the drier, the moment when you unravel the knot in a necklace, finding change in your pocket, and a new checkout lane opening up at the grocery store.

The Book of Awesome, published by Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam April 15, 2010, contains 200 of his awesome things.

Wow. What an awesome idea! And what an awesome practice. I’m going to start looking for awesome things in my life every day–or more awesome books to blog.