Visual Post-Open Book Blog Hop

When I saw the topic for this week’s blog hop— a visual post—I thought it would be easy. Pictures! I have them! Lots of them! But it turned out not to be as easy as I thought. First, I wanted to make sure I didn’t post things I’ve previously shared on here. Second, how the heck can I cut down all the beauty I’ve seen to one post? How many pictures can I get away with showing everyone without totally overwhelming the site? And last but not least, mountains or flowers? I never did make a decision on the last one, so I give you both. Oh, and I threw a few trees in there just because I could.

By the way, all these pictures were taken either by my husband or by me. So welcome to the Rocky Mountains (and a bonus pic!)

And here’s the bonus picture I promised you …
Redwoods!

I’m looking forward to seeing what  everyone else has posted. I’m planning on following the links below, and I hope you are too. And if you want to leave me  a comment, please fell free to do do!

August 22 – Image/Graphics/Visual Post – Include a collection of images around a central topic or idea.
Rules: 1.
Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Wordpress:

Custom Blog:

Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

Visual Post-Open Book Blog Hop

When I saw the topic for this week’s blog hop— a visual post—I thought it would be easy. Pictures! I have them! Lots of them! But it turned out not to be as easy as I thought. First, I wanted to make sure I didn’t post things I’ve previously shared on here. Second, how the heck can I cut down all the beauty I’ve seen to one post? How many pictures can I get away with showing everyone without totally overwhelming the site? And last but not least, mountains or flowers? I never did make a decision on the last one, so I give you both. Oh, and I threw a few trees in there just because I could.

By the way, all these pictures were taken either by my husband or by me. So welcome to the Rocky Mountains (and a bonus pic!)

And here’s the bonus picture I promised you …
Redwoods!

I’m looking forward to seeing what  everyone else has posted. I’m planning on following the links below, and I hope you are too. And if you want to leave me  a comment, please fell free to do do!

August 22 – Image/Graphics/Visual Post – Include a collection of images around a central topic or idea.
Rules: 1.
Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
WordPress:



Custom Blog:


Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

Quotes- Open Book Blog Hop

This week we’re supposed to  gather notable quotes from influential people in hopes of inspiring our readers. But if you’ve followed my blog, you might realize that I don’t always do things in the most conventional fashion. With that warning, I give you a list of things they NEVER said.

  • Just the facts, ma’am.
    • This, the best known quote from the Jack Webb series Dragnet, was never said by Sgt. Friday in any of the Dragnet radio or television series. The quote was, however, adopted in the 1987 Dragnet pseudo-parody film starring Dan Aykroyd and Tom Hanks in which Aykroyd played Sgt. Joe Friday.
    • Correct versions:

“All we want are the facts, ma’am.”“All we know are the facts, ma’am.”
Source: Urban Legends via Wikipedia
Elementary my dear Watson
Meaning: 
The supposed explanation that Sherlock Holmes gave to his assistant, Dr. Watson,

when explaining deductions he had made.


Origin:
In fact the line doesn’t appear in the Conan Doyle books, only later in Sherlock Holmes’ films.
He does come rather close at a few of points. Holmes says “Elementary” in ‘The Crooked Man’, and “It was very superficial, my dear Watson, I assure you” in ‘The Cardboard Box’. He also says “Exactly, my dear Watson, in three different stories.



The phrase was first used by P. G. Wodehouse, in Psmith Journalist, 1915.
Source: The phrase Finder

Abraham Lincoln is frequently misquoted:
“There is no honorable way to kill, no gentle way to destroy. there is nothing good in war, except its ending.


In 2014, model Bar Refaeli posted this quote on her Instagram, attributing it to Lincoln.


Unfortunately, she’s more than a century off. In reality, it’s a “Star Trek” quote, according to the Times of Israel.



In a season three episode of the show, Spock, Kirk and Lincoln all end up in a battle with villains from history and, although the Lincoln character does utter those words, the real Lincoln did not. #oops
Source: New York Daily News
“Those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.” — Dr. Seuss


It certainly feels Seussian, doesn’t it? All topsy-turvy and self-affirming. But he never wrote it. It was something an extremely successful (remarkably non-childlike and whimsical) businessman and presidential adviser, Bernard Baruch, said to a newspaper columnist who asked him how he handled the seating of all the rich bigwigs at his dinner parties. “I never bother about that. Those who matter don’t mind, and those who mind don’t matter.” However, Baruch was probably quoting an already well known phrase from the 1930s coined by that great philosopher Anonymous. The first part of the quote, “Be who you are…” just attached itself over the years.
Source: Mental Floss
Here’s another one, just for fun.


Have you ever been misquoted? Join the greats! 
Let’s find out what the rest of the gang put together for us. Just follow the links below. And please leave a comment, if you feel so inclined. But don’t quote me on that—or do, as the case may be! 

August 15 – Quote Post – Pull together multiple quotes from influential people (other writers, publishers, industry experts).
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Wordpress:

Custom Blog:

Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

Quotes- Open Book Blog Hop

This week we’re supposed to  gather notable quotes from influential people in hopes of inspiring our readers. But if you’ve followed my blog, you might realize that I don’t always do things in the most conventional fashion. With that warning, I give you a list of things they NEVER said.

  • Just the facts, ma’am.
    • This, the best known quote from the Jack Webb series Dragnet, was never said by Sgt. Friday in any of the Dragnet radio or television series. The quote was, however, adopted in the 1987 Dragnet pseudo-parody film starring Dan Aykroyd and Tom Hanks in which Aykroyd played Sgt. Joe Friday.
    • Correct versions:
“All we want are the facts, ma’am.”
“All we know are the facts, ma’am.”
Source: Urban Legends via Wikipedia

Elementary my dear Watson
Meaning: 
The supposed explanation that Sherlock Holmes gave to his assistant, Dr. Watson,

when explaining deductions he had made.

Origin:
In fact the line doesn’t appear in the Conan Doyle books, only later in Sherlock Holmes’ films.
He does come rather close at a few of points. Holmes says “Elementary” in ‘The Crooked Man’, and “It was very superficial, my dear Watson, I assure you” in ‘The Cardboard Box’. He also says “Exactly, my dear Watson, in three different stories.


The phrase was first used by P. G. Wodehouse, in Psmith Journalist, 1915.


Source: The phrase Finder


Abraham Lincoln is frequently misquoted:

“There is no honorable way to kill, no gentle way to destroy. there is nothing good in war, except its ending.

In 2014, model Bar Refaeli posted this quote on her Instagram, attributing it to Lincoln.

Unfortunately, she’s more than a century off. In reality, it’s a “Star Trek” quote, according to the Times of Israel.


In a season three episode of the show, Spock, Kirk and Lincoln all end up in a battle with villains from history and, although the Lincoln character does utter those words, the real Lincoln did not. #oops

Source: New York Daily News

“Those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.” — Dr. Seuss

It certainly feels Seussian, doesn’t it? All topsy-turvy and self-affirming. But he never wrote it. It was something an extremely successful (remarkably non-childlike and whimsical) businessman and presidential adviser, Bernard Baruch, said to a newspaper columnist who asked him how he handled the seating of all the rich bigwigs at his dinner parties. “I never bother about that. Those who matter don’t mind, and those who mind don’t matter.” However, Baruch was probably quoting an already well known phrase from the 1930s coined by that great philosopher Anonymous. The first part of the quote, “Be who you are…” just attached itself over the years.

Source: Mental Floss

Here’s another one, just for fun.


Have you ever been misquoted? Join the greats! 

Let’s find out what the rest of the gang put together for us. Just follow the links below. And please leave a comment, if you feel so inclined. But don’t quote me on that—or do, as the case may be! 

August 15 – Quote Post – Pull together multiple quotes from influential people (other writers, publishers, industry experts).
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
WordPress:



Custom Blog:


Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

Survey Post—Open Book Blog Hop



This week we’re doing a statistics post, so I decided to revisit an old post pf mine. 


I’ve not had much luck with paid advertising, and as a result. I’m always shy about doing it. My last book launch, I hired a company to arrange a blog tour for me. They warned me up front they wouldn’t guarantee sales, I should look at it as a way to get my name out there. It was good they made the statement, because I didn’t see a jump in sales on any day I was featured on a blog stop.

But I’ve been hearing good things about RobinReads in various groups I’m a part of, and decided to give it a try. The cost was withing my budget, and I wanted to see if it would increase sales.


First off, it was incredibly easy to sign up. Their criteria for accepting a book is posted and easy to understand. Here’s what the sign-up page says is their criteria for a listing:




All the information they need is included in their short and simple sign up form. I got an email accepting my submission within a couple of days. Once I’d paid for my ad via PayPal, there was nothing else for me to do except to wait for the day it ran. (Saturday, May 3rd)

When I checked the web page early in the morning, I was disappointed to see my book was listed at the bottom of the page.I worried that the readers wouldn’t see it. I was wrong.

I’d thought about tracking sales hour by hour, but that didn’t work out. So here’s the statistics I have. All times listed are Mountain Time.

           9:00 AM      3 books sold (All in the UK. The rest of the days sales were from the US)
        12:00  PM     19 total books sold
           2:00 PM     31 books
           5:00 PM     36 books
           6:00 PM     39 books
           7:00 PM     46 books
           8:00 PM     47 books
            9:00 PM    51 books

And that was the last sale I saw while I was up. One more copy was sold overnight, bringing the total to 52 books. The one thing I didn’t do was track my Amazon sales rank from the beginning. The highest my book ranked 5755 in the overall paid books. 

So I made the cost of the ad back with some to spare. As the book I listed is the first in a series, I’m hoping that selling it cheaply will result in sales of the second book. So far, I haven’t seen that happen, but I still have my fingers crossed.

So now to the important question—would I use RobinReads again? And the answer is yes, absolutely. It may not have propelled me into any top 100 lists, but it certainly introduced me to some new readers.

So that was the old post. Now for some updated information. RobinReads has upped their prices, and I’d have to sell a lot more books to break even. The sales of the collection Stories of Sun, Sand and Sea jumped when we advertised with RobinReads, putting us into the top 100 in Amazon sales in several categories, although not in the overall Amazon standings. I believe this is the right image of that day:

So would I still advertise with RobinReads? The answer is a big yes, even though I didn’t see the hoped-for bleed over into sales of my other books. Maybe next time!

To find out what other authors are sharing this week, check out the links below.

August 8 – Survey Post/Statistics Post – Collect some data or do a bit of research and share the results. Highlight key takeaways, important findings, or ways to implement the new information.
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
WordPress:



Custom Blog:


Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

Survey Post—Open Book Blog Hop





This week we’re doing a statistics post, so I decided to revisit an old post pf mine. 



I’ve not had much luck with paid advertising, and as a result. I’m always shy about doing it. My last book launch, I hired a company to arrange a blog tour for me. They warned me up front they wouldn’t guarantee sales, I should look at it as a way to get my name out there. It was good they made the statement, because I didn’t see a jump in sales on any day I was featured on a blog stop.

But I’ve been hearing good things about RobinReads in various groups I’m a part of, and decided to give it a try. The cost was withing my budget, and I wanted to see if it would increase sales.


First off, it was incredibly easy to sign up. Their criteria for accepting a book is posted and easy to understand. Here’s what the sign-up page says is their criteria for a listing:





All the information they need is included in their short and simple sign up form. I got an email accepting my submission within a couple of days. Once I’d paid for my ad via PayPal, there was nothing else for me to do except to wait for the day it ran. (Saturday, May 3rd)

When I checked the web page early in the morning, I was disappointed to see my book was listed at the bottom of the page.I worried that the readers wouldn’t see it. I was wrong.

I’d thought about tracking sales hour by hour, but that didn’t work out. So here’s the statistics I have. All times listed are Mountain Time.

           9:00 AM      3 books sold (All in the UK. The rest of the days sales were from the US)
        12:00  PM     19 total books sold
           2:00 PM     31 books
           5:00 PM     36 books
           6:00 PM     39 books
           7:00 PM     46 books
           8:00 PM     47 books
            9:00 PM    51 books

And that was the last sale I saw while I was up. One more copy was sold overnight, bringing the total to 52 books. The one thing I didn’t do was track my Amazon sales rank from the beginning. The highest my book ranked 5755 in the overall paid books. 

So I made the cost of the ad back with some to spare. As the book I listed is the first in a series, I’m hoping that selling it cheaply will result in sales of the second book. So far, I haven’t seen that happen, but I still have my fingers crossed.

So now to the important question—would I use RobinReads again? And the answer is yes, absolutely. It may not have propelled me into any top 100 lists, but it certainly introduced me to some new readers.

So that was the old post. Now for some updated information. RobinReads has upped their prices, and I’d have to sell a lot more books to break even. The sales of the collection Stories of Sun, Sand and Sea jumped when we advertised with RobinReads, putting us into the top 100 in Amazon sales in several categories, although not in the overall Amazon standings. I believe this is the right image of that day:


So would I still advertise with RobinReads? The answer is a big yes, even though I didn’t see the hoped-for bleed over into sales of my other books. Maybe next time!


To find out what other authors are sharing this week, check out the links below.

August 8 – Survey Post/Statistics Post – Collect some data or do a bit of research and share the results. Highlight key takeaways, important findings, or ways to implement the new information.
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Wordpress:

Custom Blog:

Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

Research—Open Book Blog Hop

Based on the research I do, I bet I’m on a government watch list somewhere.

But, I suspect many writers of mysteries are. We write about things that are against the law and—hopefully—make them believable even if they only happened in our imaginations.

That means we have to learn a lot about topics that normally are untouchable in polite society. What’s the best way to dispose of a body? Can you tell what caliper a bullet was by looking at the exit wound? What shape will a body be in if found two years after death in the desert?

Okay, I haven’t used any of those in one of my books—yet.  I have, however, learned a lot about guns in general.

My heroines are not shrinking violets. In fact, they kick ass when its needed. Luckily, I have a husband who was an armorer in the military so he’s my first source of information. If needed, I can turn to the several guys at work who are hunters and are willing to talk about ammo and shooting in general. There’s also a email group that I am a member of where the participants discuss anything and everything crime related. If all else fails, I resort to a writer’s best research friend—Google.

Although I’m still no expert, I know a lot more about guns than I used to. For example, a revolver and a pistol are not the same thing. Sure, they are both handguns, but the way ammunition is fed to the chamber is different. (Kind of like a square is always a rectangle but a rectangle is not always a square!)  Oh, and did you know cops always have a bullet in the chamber? And while an AK-15 is not a real gun, the AK-47 is.

As a writer, there are times when I need to take “liberty” with the facts to make a story work. and while some people may object to that, as long as it’s done deliberately and with great care, I feel there’s nothing wrong with it.

The problem with doing research on the internet is that’s it easy to get lost. By that, I mean to wander from one interesting fact to another because it might be useful to your current writing. For example,I went looking for the handgun manufactures that have the best reputations. Glocks made the top ten, but barely. The Sig Sauer, which I’d never really known about, was #1. So that’s what I gave my heroine in Wolves’ Knight for her “personal” carry. (Plus a retired police officer recommended it.)

So far I haven’t explored the topic of really big guns. Cannons. I could easily lose an hour or two in that topic. Ones that are so big they need their own railroad track to move on.  Guns that can hit targets 70 miles away. I don’t know how I’d work one of those into my books, so I’ll close that window on my computer and come back to all of you.

Now let’s do a little research and find out what the other writers in this hop have to say. You can find them by following the links below. And, as always, feel free to leave me a comment! Who knows, you may lead me to an interesting topic to waste my time on the internet—I mean research!

Oh, and to whomever the poor soul is from the unnamed government agency that watches over me, thanks for reading!

August 1, 2016
Research Post. Post your interested, unusual or eye opening research. Or, in the alternative, you can post about how you research.
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
WordPress:



Custom Blog:


Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

Research—Open Book Blog Hop

Based on the research I do, I bet I’m on a government watch list somewhere.

But, I suspect many writers of mysteries are. We write about things that are against the law and—hopefully—make them believable even if they only happened in our imaginations.

That means we have to learn a lot about topics that normally are untouchable in polite society. What’s the best way to dispose of a body? Can you tell what caliper a bullet was by looking at the exit wound? What shape will a body be in if found two years after death in the desert?

Okay, I haven’t used any of those in one of my books—yet.  I have, however, learned a lot about guns in general.

My heroines are not shrinking violets. In fact, they kick ass when its needed. Luckily, I have a husband who was an armorer in the military so he’s my first source of information. If needed, I can turn to the several guys at work who are hunters and are willing to talk about ammo and shooting in general. There’s also a email group that I am a member of where the participants discuss anything and everything crime related. If all else fails, I resort to a writer’s best research friend—Google.

Although I’m still no expert, I know a lot more about guns than I used to. For example, a revolver and a pistol are not the same thing. Sure, they are both handguns, but the way ammunition is fed to the chamber is different. (Kind of like a square is always a rectangle but a rectangle is not always a square!)  Oh, and did you know cops always have a bullet in the chamber? And while an AK-15 is not a real gun, the AK-47 is.

As a writer, there are times when I need to take “liberty” with the facts to make a story work. and while some people may object to that, as long as it’s done deliberately and with great care, I feel there’s nothing wrong with it.

The problem with doing research on the internet is that’s it easy to get lost. By that, I mean to wander from one interesting fact to another because it might be useful to your current writing. For example,I went looking for the handgun manufactures that have the best reputations. Glocks made the top ten, but barely. The Sig Sauer, which I’d never really known about, was #1. So that’s what I gave my heroine in Wolves’ Knight for her “personal” carry. (Plus a retired police officer recommended it.)

So far I haven’t explored the topic of really big guns. Cannons. I could easily lose an hour or two in that topic. Ones that are so big they need their own railroad track to move on.  Guns that can hit targets 70 miles away. I don’t know how I’d work one of those into my books, so I’ll close that window on my computer and come back to all of you.

Now let’s do a little research and find out what the other writers in this hop have to say. You can find them by following the links below. And, as always, feel free to leave me a comment! Who knows, you may lead me to an interesting topic to waste my time on the internet—I mean research!

Oh, and to whomever the poor soul is from the unnamed government agency that watches over me, thanks for reading!

August 1, 2016
Research Post. Post your interested, unusual or eye opening research. Or, in the alternative, you can post about how you research.
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Wordpress:

Custom Blog:

Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

A Personal Experience – Open Book Blog Hop

I discovered home when I was eighteen years old.

Sounds like a line from a romance novel, doesn’t it? But what I fell in love with was the mountains.

Growing up in northwestern Pennsylvania, I was surrounded by the Allegheny Mountains. I spent hours as a teenager walking and bicycling in the hills that surrounded my childhood home. The forests and meadows were part of my nature. I studies the plants and knew which ones were food and those that had other uses. I even knew where a few rare plants were sheltered.

But after high school, I took a Greyhound bus west to a college.far from my familiar surroundings. It was an exciting transition—new surroundings, new friends, new educational challenges. It was wonderful, and I was on a continuous high.

And then it happened. For one of the classes I was taking, we took a weekend field trip. In a college-owned bus, we piled in our sleeping bags and luggage and took off to study local flora. The road we took was unlike anything I’d ever experienced. Hairpin turns, sharp inclines, cliffs that dropped hundreds of feet from the side of the road.

Finally we got to the top. And I never wanted to go down again. I’d found my place on this earth.

After that I could not be content with rolling hills. I needed sharp peaks and deep valleys. I joke that I must have been a mountain man in a previous life. Some days, I’m not sure it’s a joke. The mountains are where I feel the most like myself. From the lower reaches where you have to have to lift your eyes to see the snow-covered peaks to the upper heights where you can see for miles and beyond that’s where I want to be. When I’m among them, I feel fulfilled.

Life’s journey hasn’t always allowed me to make my home among the mountains. Bit even when I lived in what other people considered paradise, I wanted to leave and return to my personal heaven or as close to it as I can get while I’m still alive.

Soon after the trip, I met a wonderful man and fell in love again. He loves the mountains too, so he doesn’t mind sharing me with them. Most of the time, anyway.

To find out what other people are sharing, see the links below. And if you want to share something, you can o it in the comments. Thanks for reading!

July 25, 2016
Personal Experience Post – Let your guard down. Form a connection with your readers by sharing a deeply personal experience.
Rules: 1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
WordPress:



Custom Blog:


Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code

A Personal Experience – Open Book Blog Hop

I discovered home when I was eighteen years old.

Sounds like a line from a romance novel, doesn’t it? But what I fell in love with was the mountains.

Growing up in northwestern Pennsylvania, I was surrounded by the Allegheny Mountains. I spent hours as a teenager walking and bicycling in the hills that surrounded my childhood home. The forests and meadows were part of my nature. I studies the plants and knew which ones were food and those that had other uses. I even knew where a few rare plants were sheltered.

But after high school, I took a Greyhound bus west to a college.far from my familiar surroundings. It was an exciting transition—new surroundings, new friends, new educational challenges. It was wonderful, and I was on a continuous high.

And then it happened. For one of the classes I was taking, we took a weekend field trip. In a college-owned bus, we piled in our sleeping bags and luggage and took off to study local flora. The road we took was unlike anything I’d ever experienced. Hairpin turns, sharp inclines, cliffs that dropped hundreds of feet from the side of the road.

Finally we got to the top. And I never wanted to go down again. I’d found my place on this earth.

After that I could not be content with rolling hills. I needed sharp peaks and deep valleys. I joke that I must have been a mountain man in a previous life. Some days, I’m not sure it’s a joke. The mountains are where I feel the most like myself. From the lower reaches where you have to have to lift your eyes to see the snow-covered peaks to the upper heights where you can see for miles and beyond that’s where I want to be. When I’m among them, I feel fulfilled.

Life’s journey hasn’t always allowed me to make my home among the mountains. Bit even when I lived in what other people considered paradise, I wanted to leave and return to my personal heaven or as close to it as I can get while I’m still alive.

Soon after the trip, I met a wonderful man and fell in love again. He loves the mountains too, so he doesn’t mind sharing me with them. Most of the time, anyway.

To find out what other people are sharing, see the links below. And if you want to share something, you can o it in the comments. Thanks for reading!

July 25, 2016
Personal Experience Post – Let your guard down. Form a connection with your readers by sharing a deeply personal experience.
Rules: 1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use ‪#‎OpenBook‬ when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Wordpress:

Custom Blog:

Code for Link:

get the InLinkz code