Or—
The
Good, the bad, and the Ugly
On
the Kidlit chat boards the question arises periodically: should I have a photo
of self on my website, and should it be a formal author photo, or would any
snapshot do?
This
is not a question about the photo that goes on your published book. The
publisher will determine this, and they will specify what they require.
House-style varies, and a writer receives guidance when the time comes.
This
is also not a question for the famous among us. Their faces are known, many
times known, and their websites (if they have such) may not include an image of
the author’s face anywhere.
The
question of putting one’s face out there in virtual land was one I struggled
with six years ago. Once I succumbed and accepted it, I must admit that I gave
it little thought. But when I saw others who wiggled about whether and how, I
realized there is what to consider.
Some
are on the verge of their debut release, which prompted me to make a website in
the first place. Others just wanted to have a web-presence where, unlike the
social networks, they had full control. Their reasoning? Just in case an agent
or editor they were writing to wanted to make sure they were not scary and, in
fact, rather pleasant and thoughtful folks.
I
asked myself if I must have a photo at all, and the answer was a resounding
YES. I have to confess that when I look up someone’s book or Internet musings,
I am sorely disappointed if I can’t see his or her face. I suspect they don’t
really want to be published, (literally, be
made public) or they are in deep hiding in the witness protection plan.
Better to swallow the squeamishness and just put our faces out there.
This
brings us back to the beginning. What makes a good author photo, and should a
professional take it?
{Disclosure:
my daughter always took mine. I suppose she is a professional of sorts, as she
has taken publicity photos for her colleagues at Juilliard. But she and the IRS
know I never paid her for mine.}
If
you take into account that author and bio photos are not all-important, will
not be decisive deal makers, and that professional photographers charge as
little as $100 and as much as $3,500 a session—It becomes a matter of your
financial situation. It was never in my budget, but everyone is different. You
will be fine if you know a talented friend, at least until you begin to make
enough money to take this expense as deductible from your taxes. Only you know
the answer to that.
What
makes a good author/writer photo is, to my mind, a photo that truly represents
you. It looks like you, not you after a radical makeover. The setting tells the
story of what you do, (Write? Illustrate? Edit?) and the facial expression says
what you want to communicate. If a wide-tooth smile isn’t right for you, don’t.
If wearing a professional blazer makes you look like a corporate attorney, not
an artist, then don’t wear one. The photograph should say this is me, and, again, only you know the answer to that.
It
is a good idea to have people who know you chime in. Things that matter not a
bit for a bio picture bog us down. (Are my eyes green enough? Was I having a
less that perfect hair-day? Is that a double-chin? A pimple?) Another pair of
eyes will take in the overall feel, the “vibe” if you will, and help your
choice.
But
the right choice is the authentic you on a good day.
---
Articles
of interest—
Two snarky rants about clichés
And
two that take it seriously and attempt how-to advice—