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How an author and songwriter created one website for her books and lyrics

Pooria Arab3 min read

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Celina Shanavanna needed one place where people could see her books, song lyrics, and creative work.

Celina writes books and creates music about reality, relationships, and personal healing. The music itself is not hosted on Solo. Instead, her Solo site gives readers a place to discover her books and understand the writing behind the songs. Many of her lyrics came from the books she features on the site, while the music lives elsewhere, including Bandcamp.

The problem: making creative work easier to find

Artists and writers often have their work spread across different places. Music may live on one platform, book information somewhere else, and the broader story might only exist in social posts.

Celina wanted a site she could figure out and use. The goal was not a complicated publishing system or a new place to host the songs themselves. It was a clearer home for her books, lyrics, and creative story.

Why Solo fit the job

Celina chose Solo because it felt usable. She described it as a site she was able to figure out. The writing took time, but once the site was finished, she could share it directly.

"Always be your real self and never allow yourself to shrink."

That message shows up in the way she talks about her work. The website is not just a page with links. It is a place where her books, lyrics, and story can sit together.

What became easier

Solo made it easier for people to see what Celina does. That is a basic job, but it is an important one. A creative website should help visitors understand the person behind the work, find the projects that matter, and take the next step.

For Celina, that meant giving her books and lyrics a more organized public home. She has written lyrics and composed many songs, and the site gives new visitors a path into the written work that helped shape those songs.

The result

Celina said that after the site was finished and posted on Facebook, she had a couple of purchasers. That is a small but concrete result: people saw the site, understood the work, and took action.

For authors and musicians, a website does not replace the platforms where work is sold or streamed. It gives those platforms context. It tells people who you are, what you make, and why they might want to keep listening or reading.

See Celina Shanavanna's site at soloist.ai/celinashanavanna.

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