Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


How to Increase Blog Traffic

When I first started my blog four years ago, it with the intention to keep better track of the books I have read.  Before that, I kept notes in spiral notebooks on books I read and had a hard time finding my notes on specific books.  My book blog has been great for that initial purpose but it has become so much more since then.

I had no idea that there was an entire community of supportive book bloggers out there who would actually read my book reviews.  All of a sudden people started commenting on my posts, then I got followers, and then the offer for free books rolled in.  Now I have over 630 followers and would love to have more.  Yes, I have become just as addicted to blogging as I am to reading books.

I recently got an offer to review Become a Blogging Ninja and couldn’t pass up the opportunity.  I have only been using Facebook and Twitter for about 6 months now and know that there are more efficient ways to use them.   I want to know how to use social media to my best advantage.  I tried reading blog posts with social media tips and tricks on how to increase blog traffic.  However, I really needed someone to sit down with me and explain everything from start to finish.  
Become a Blogging Ninja is a short ebook of only 130 epages but it is packed with some very useful information about blogging and social media.  It easy to understand, even easier than the books for “Dummies” and “Idiots” series.  

First Heather gives mostly common sense tips on blogging such as being sure to proof read every post before you post it, keeping the side bar neat and tidy and not cramped, and using a large enough font size to make it as easy as possible for people to read your content.  She also stressed that you should promote other bloggers as well.  In return, you will be promoted as well.  I have experienced this first hand, so I know it’s true!

Social Media

Then she got into Facebook.  She explains how to sign up and create a Facebook pages.  I would have found this quite helpful when I was setting up my page.  She suggested that you upload photos from you blog to Facebook and add a witty caption with a link to the corresponding blog post.  I have never done this but can certainly see how it could capture people’s attention.

She also talked about the use of the @ sign, which was totally new to me as well.
“If you’ve reviewed a specific product or featured another blogger, posts for you etc., be sure to tag them when you share your blog post link. You can tag on Facebook by entering the “@” symbol before a name or page. {You have to be friends or “like” them in order to do this.} This automatically puts your post on their Facebook wall. Instant exposure to a new crowd!”
Then Heather talks about Twitter, what it is, how to tweet and follow, and what some of the lingo is.  She explains the use of the # hashtag, which I have already been doing.  She explains the use of applications for Twitter such as TweetDeck or Hootsuite, which was totally new to me.
One advantage of using a Twitter application as opposed to the native Twitter website is that you can view multiple streams at once.  With one glance at the screen, you can see your  Twitter stream, your mentions, your direct messages, and almost anything else you choose.”
Heather suggests keeping your Tweets to about 125 characters instead of the 140 characters allowed.  This makes it easier for people to retweet your tweets.  I’ll have to work on this because I have enough trouble getting my Tweets down to the 140 characters.  LOL!  She also suggests using tools such as Timely or Buffer to schedule your tweets.  They help you find the best times for tweets to post. I just recently found out about Buffer but still not quite sure how to use it.
Next, Heather talks about Stumble Upon.  Now I’ve been “kind of” using it for awhile but have been un-sure how to really use it, so I was really looking forward to this part of the book.  She explains how to find people to follow.  I couldn’t figure that out on my own, so that really helped.  She also gave a good overview of what kinds of posts to stumble.  Once a post is stumbled it’s up there forever, so it’s good to us stumble for “timeless” posts, not ones that will expire such as giveaways. 
It is important to add social media buttons to your post or sidebar where people can easily find them and use them to share your posts.

SEO

Heather then covers Search Engine Optimization (SEO).  Before I read this, I didn’t even know what SEO stands for.  LOL!
“The main thing to understand about SEO is keywords.  Keywords are really just search engine terms.  The higher your website ranks for a certain keyword, the closer to the top of the search results list you’ll be.”
Heather explains how to find the correct keywords, including the use of Google AdwordsKeyword toolOnce you figure out the keywords it’s time to use them.  I had no idea how, but I do now, thanks to Heather.  I know it will take practice but I tried to use my new knowledge of using keywords with this post.
Heather really covers a ton of useful information in Become a Blogging Ninja, too much for me to go into in this one post.  If you want to learn more on how to use social media and SEO effectively, I highly recommend this book!  Hopefully, I’m on my way to becoming a Blogging Ninja.


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Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Hustle by Jason Skipper

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on October 12, 2011
Posted in Books Read in 2011My Past Giveaways  | 2 Comments

Chris Saxton is not having an easy childhood.  His father, Wrendon  is a alcoholic and womanizer and doesn’t come home for days at a time.  His mother doesn’t really know how to cope and is afraid to divorce him.  What if she can’t find someone else?

Hustle opens with Chris at ten years old, working at Wrendon’s seafood shop counter after school, because he is too young to stay home alone and his mother works.  One day a guy comes into the shop and offers up his old beaten guitar for sale and Wrendon buys it for Chris and teaches him a bit.

Soon Wrendon gets a call that his father, Buddy is in trouble.  He has been slipping ever since his wife dies.   Wrendon  throws a couple of things into his van, along with Chris to drive from Texas  to Florida, without so much as a note to his wife.  He does call her later that night.  

Once at Buddies, Wrendon puts his l La-Z-Boy chair in the back of the van and uses duct tape to secure the passed out Buddy to it.  Then they head back home.  Once Buddy comes too and starts shouting to let him go, Wrendon sends Chris in the back to help Buddy drink a beer.  This is to ease him off the whisky he’s been drinking.

Chris’s mom finally does leave Wrendon and re-marries but doesn’t make Chris’s life any better.  It’s actually worse.  Chris tries to cope as best he can and struggles to find rehearsal time with his band.  He dreams of making it to the big time some day.

This is a heart wrenching debut novel by Jason Skipper.  It is a well written coming of age and family saga.  The scene in the van with Buddy and the duct tape was both funny but really sad.  Who exposes their 10 year old kid with harsh realities of alcoholism and makes him feed beer to someone?  Yet, this book is very believable.  The characters are well drawn out and we get to know them warts and all.

There was just one place where I thought the story got a little repetitious but otherwise, this book hit a home run for me.

4/5
Thanks to Caitlin Hamilton Marketing & Publicity,LLC
for sending me this book. 


Did you review Hustle? Please leave the link in the comments.

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Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

The Beauty of Humanity Movement by Camilla Gibb

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on September 28, 2011
Posted in Books Read in 2011Canadian  | 11 Comments

Set in contemporary Vietnam with flashbacks to 1960’s/70’s communism, Old Man Hung is said to make the best pho (a beef noodle soup)in the city of Hanoi.  However, you have to find him first!  He has to move his cart to different places around the city to keep the police off his tail.  He use to have a space that he rented by between the rent increases and the bribes he had to give the cops, he couldn’t afford it anymore.  He has loyal customers and word spreads like wildfire to the exact location of his cart from day to day.

Old Man Hung is like a father to Binh, who lost his father Dao to a communist work camp.  Old Man Hung is like a grandfather to Bihn’s son, Tu.  Tu is a tour guide.

One day Maggie a Vietnamese woman who grew up in America, shows up at the Pho cart.  She asks Old Man Hung to try to remember everything he can about her father, Ly Van Hai, to help her locate him.  He was an artist during the Ho Chi Minh regime.  Maggie also works for an art museum in Hanoi and hires Tu to take her around on business.
Art, family, relationships, Pho, and communist regimes are all included in The Beauty of Humanity Movement.  It is a beautifully written story with well developed and memorable characters. 
I especially love Old Man Hung.  He is a witty, kind, and intelligent man with great knowledge of human nature.  He is who Bihn and his son, Tu turn to and watch out for.  The Beauty of Humanity Movement is a delight and I didn’t want it to end.  This book is a must read for those who love literary fiction with a splash of foreign history.

5/5

Thanks to Doubleday Canada for this book.  

Did you review this book?  Please leave the link in the comments.


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Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.