REVIEW

Befuddled by Blogging? Books to Blog By

Written by Connie Bennett
Published September 25, 2005

Curious about blogging? Wanna know how to do it? Wondering how it evolved? Don't have a clue as to its incredible impact?

Many fellow authors and entrepreneurs have been tossing such blogging questions at me lately. Gee, I'm flatttered, but I'm just not an expert even though I'm happily posting my thoughts, which are getting "pinged" into the "blogosphere." (Flummoxed by those terms? So was I not so long ago.)

You see, I decided to start a blog after attending a Publishers Marketing Association Publishing University in early June, where one speaker after another urged us authors to blog to build a platform and get the word out about our books. That convinced me. Not knowing how or where to begin, I consulted experts. Here, then, are my four hot resources to help you quickly become a blogger or blog watcher:

1. Blog by Hugh Hewitt

Even if you decide not to blog, you simply must buy, devour (!), and digest the fascinating book Blog by the amazingly articulate and knowledgeable New York Times best-selling author Hugh Hewitt, a hugely popular blogger (hughhewitt.com), nationally syndicated conservative radio talk show host, constitutional law professor at Chapman University, and columnist for The Weekly Standard and WorldNetDaily.com.

In Blog, Hewitt convincingly skewers the mainstream media or "MSM" (of which I used to be a member) and explains how blogging is revolutionizing our information landscape and dismantling the old media monopoly.

Hewitt transports you into very recent history and explains how smart, savvy, muckraking bloggers kept stories alive that — ultimately, with the help of the slow-to-dig-up-the-facts MSM — led to the unraveling (so to speak) of Dan Rather (or "Rathergate," as the author dubs it) and Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.).

Hewitt even recounts how bloggers unmasked John Kerry's lie (his "Christmas-not-in-Cambodia debacle," as Hewitt puts it) and doggedly pursued the truth about the embellishing, exaggering rogue journalist Jayson Blair, whose scandalous downfall also hurt New York Times editor Howell Raines.

Whatever your political persuation, you'll be intrigued, I believe, by Hewitt's insights and perspectives, as well as his touting of blogging as "a nearly cost-free opportunity to establish or defend a brand and to introduce new products or buzz, and to do so over and over again."

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Connie Bennett is an experienced journalist; author of the engaging, engrossing book, SUGAR SHOCK! (Berkley Books, Jan. 2007); and a former dedicated “sugar addict,” who reluctantly quit sugar and refined carbohydrates on doctor’s orders in 1998, which made all 44 of her perplexing symptoms vanish. Connie is a sought-after “Savvy Sugar Sleuth,” who playfully but seriously spreads the sour scoop about sweets and other “culprit carbs,” which could send you into SUGAR SHOCK! You can visit her at her website.
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Befuddled by Blogging? Books to Blog By
Published: September 25, 2005
Type: Review
Section: Culture
Writer: Connie Bennett
Connie Bennett's BC Writer page
Connie Bennett's personal site
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