Calibrating Your Sharing: A Nerdy Exploration Another mini-zine inspired by Kening Zhu's Sharing Space Camp class. This one looks at calibration of clinical tests to explore how we might calibrate our sharing choices.
Received and Subtly Answered: Online Sharing as Liturgy Another mini-zine inspired by Kening Zhu's Sharing Space Camp class!
Substack Really, Really Scares Me Many people say that writers can make more money elsewhere, or even that Substack is actually bad at paid newsletters. But I'll leave that aside because I'm actually concerned about something else. The Substack writers no one talks to for this kind of article.
My Sharing Story A little zine I made about my previous experiences sharing my work on Substack, for Kening Zhu's Sharing Space Camp class.
How to Survive as a Writer in a Capitalist Dystopia by Russell Nohelty I just finished reading How to Survive as a Writer in a Capitalist Dystopia and I was intrigued by how he broke down audience growth. Specifically: * It's ok and very possible to pay for advertising to get newsletter leads, and you can see this as a way of
What would a different container for online writing look like? Let's think about the inherent characteristics of the blog format, which I would also see as including most online newsletters with a website archive. These generally have: * Work that is finished, or mostly finished * Presented in a linear, time-based format (typically reverse chronological order) * A sense of permanence
Visuals, layout, reader experience, and you When I published my essay collection Even the Cemeteries Have Space Here, I made the layout choices very intentionally to create a sense of spaciousness for the reader. Shea in the Catskills contributed artwork that further deepened the reader's spacious and reflective experience. I was asked about an