Hello, and happy spring!
I’ve been overwhelmed these last few months—both with my day job and three writing deadlines that are rapidly approaching—and have missed every Read Around the Rainbow post this year. 😫 So, today I’m shaking off the guilt of that, and diving in head first.
This month’s topic is blurbs! Do you love them? Do you hate them? When do you write them? What are your thoughts on blurbs?
I doubt you could find an author who doesn’t have an opinion on blurbs. Readers have them as well.
As a reader, I rarely read more than a line or two of a blurb. Sometimes not at all—yeah, I am a book-by-its cover kind of girl. I blame my background in photography and being married to an illustrator—but that is not to say there haven’t been times when it took the entirety of a blurb before I decided to pick up a book. The thing is, I hate spoilers, and blurbs always feel like spoilers.
As a writer, I’ve had an evolving relationship with them. When I first started writing, I was always at a loss. Afraid to say too much—that hate of spoilers thing—and, in fact, I think the original blurb for Cold Fingers—the first story I wrote that was truly mine, and not dictated in some way by someone else—went something along the lines of…
The good ones are either married or straight. Or they're necrophiliacs.
Ha! That terrible blurb still makes me laugh. And Cold Fingers is still maybe my favorite of all my stories. It certainly feels the most me.
My feelings on blurbs changed in the process of writing That Rat, Carter Janson. The publisher I was working with had me work with a blurb coach and it changed my relationship with them and, I think, made me better at writing them. It certainly made me feel more confident in my abilities.
Where before That Rat, Carter Janson, writing blurbs were like pulling teeth, now, they mostly just come to me. Sometimes within the first few thousand words, sometimes closer to the end. Whenever they do come, they are a perfect reminder of the tone and the feel I’m striving for, and an excellent tool when tackling a second draft.
Sometimes I’m lucky enough to know my blurb going in. It acts as a near-pantser’s outline. Because, if I have a more fleshed-out outline, you can bet dollars to donuts, that story’s never getting finished.
So, yeah. I ‘m probably in the minority. But for someone who rarely reads a blurb, I kind of love them!
Shocking!
Make sure to check out all the other Read Around the Rainbow authors to find out how they feel about blurbs. I know I will. I’m curious if any of them use them as a tool while writing, as I do. And how many of them fall in the I loath them category.
Addison Albright • Holly Day • Lillian Francis • Fiona Glass • Ofelia Gränd • Nell Iris
• A.L. Lester • K.L. Noone • Ellie Thomas