We interrupt the blog scheduled for this time for Breaking
News
Dot Dee Dot Dot. Dot Dee Dot Dot. Writing short is hard.
Authors in the Guppies anthology,
Fishnets, are being asked to provide a 50- word biography in preparation for
publication. A number of authors
have mentioned that it is difficult to summarize a person’s life in 50 words or
less. Some have set off emergency
flares. I thought I would see if I
could offer examples and information to see if I can help.
For the anthology I wrote: the following 47-word bio.
Warren
Bull, a multiple award-winning author, was nominated for a 2012 Derringer
award. He has more than forty short stories published. His novels ABRAHAM
LINCOLN FOR THE DEFENSE, HEARTLAND, MURDER IN THE MOONLIGHT available at http://www.warrenbull.com/kindle_editions.html and a short story collection, MURDER MANHATTAN STYLE
available at http://www.warrenbull.com/
It’s not exactly scintillating
reading but it is an example of some basic ideas.
It is written in the third person.
My name is on the first line.
Awards and publications are noted.
The bio has a clear target
audience.
In this bio I want to reach
readers. I want to say, “If you
enjoy this story, you might want to find, buy and read my other work and then
write glowing reviews on Amazon and Goodreads. Here’s a map to my works.” (I might mention blog readers are
also invited to do the same.)
Awards and publications say, “Look,
dear readers, I know my way around a paragraph. I’ve worked with a thesaurus, a
dictionary, an eraser and a red pencil many times before.”
What did I write before I had
publications and awards? I tried
to give readers a little background and taste of my word-smithing. For
example: “Warren Bull is a
psychologist in his ‘day job.’ He comes from a functional family and is a
fierce competitor at trivia games.”
A biography gives you the
opportunity to address the most important people in the writing world —
readers. So write, polish, re-write, run it by people whose skills you respect
and keep your audience in mind.
Does this help?


10 comments:
Warren,
For me writing the brief bio is really difficult. I have hundreds of publication credits and they all matter to me.
I'm looking for meaning in dot dee dot dot, dot dee dot dot.
Jacqueline,
That's because you are a successful writer. When I write for a publication or editor that published me before, I mention those publications. Otherwise I try to mention publications in venues similar to the new venue.
It's a nice problem to have
Peg,
That's the sound of a ticker tape printing out breaking news. You're probably too young to remember the sound.
Warren, nice post! Writing that brief bio is always a problem for me. I try for it and go over, then cut this book or this award or combine these two until I get down to the word limit. I hate it--and I don't even like long bios of myself.
Linda, It is hard. And the more you publish, the harder it gets.
Excellent! I'm printing it out so I can write a good short bio. Many thanks for the good example!
Pat Browning
Good and timely blog, Warren. Thanks for reminding me it's something I should do today. Could I copy yours changing the name and publications. Do you think anyone would find out I'm not published as widely as you are?
Pat, You're welcome.
Gloria,
Please feel free to use mine as a template. There's no reason to reinvent the wheel.
As for publications, I won't say anything if you don't. How would anyone know?
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