The 28th Classic says something
To be honest, I am a contracted wireless group, whether my data is good or not, I will charge for three or four hundred thousand words, and it will be on the shelf, which is the regulation.
Even if it's on the shelves by then, and many readers go to see the stolen post, I won't say anything. I'll even say sorry to those readers.
That's true.
When I started writing, I set the goal of getting a certain degree of recognition (one dollar) from everyone who has read my work.
If a reader reads the stolen post, it can only mean that I haven't written well enough and haven't gotten your approval yet. So I'm just going to try to write better and try to pull you back.
Like complaining about the idea that readers raise books and don't read the genuine version, I really don't have it, and even when I hear some authors say this, I don't even bother to spit on it.
If you can't keep readers from reading and can't keep readers from reading the genuine version, it can only mean that you can't write it, and it shows that the author has no ability to do it, and it's about the readers.
But when I see the readers here, I estimate that they have all read the 180,000 words in front of them. I may not have achieved the level of recognition for a dollar. But the degree of recognition of a "bookshelf collection" should be there, right?
Although there are some other ways to force readers to add favorites, such as breaking updates, or slowing down updates appropriately, which is conducive to the increase of collections. But I really don't want to use this method. It's not that I'm a decent person, it's that I know that if I fool readers today, there will be readers who fool me tomorrow.
So, I formally, seriously, I hope you can add a "bookshelf collection"! (On the work page, click to read the one below to add to the collection, or the chapter.) It's not about adding favorites to your computer's Internet Explorer. )
Then, I took this bookshelf collection and went to the editor to recommend it. The data of the group I signed up for has nothing to do with whether it is on the shelf or not, but only about the strength of my recommendation.
My goal is not to take a hundred dollars from a hundred readers. It's in the hands of 10,000 readers, each paying a dollar.
Therefore, the key to this goal is inevitably related to the recommendation of the work.
As for whether you will look at the genuine version in the future, it will depend on my own ability when the time comes, and whether I can keep everyone.
Finally, I am selling words, not dignity.
I just want to use every handwriting I write to resonate with every reader who has read my work.
"Bookshelf Collection", thank you, claw.;