Piperic
similar sites
‹ ProfileAI ReportTools

Sites similar to lostetter.com

A Little Lost – Musings of Author Marina J. Lostetter · ranked by shared content topics & relevance
71match
acoyletaylor.com
A. Coyle Taylor (she/her) – Musings of a Wandering Mind
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
69match
juliannorth.com
Juliannorth.com – Website of author Julian North
2 shared topicsfiction
69match
bugandbearbooks.com
Bug & Bear Books – Website of author Paul Roberts
2 shared topicsfiction
68match
eddieggarza.com
The Writing of Eddie G Garza – Musings and Stories
2 shared topicsfiction
68match
lorettapolaski.com
Loretta Polaski – Author of Suspense
2 shared topicsfiction
68match
louisemarburg.com
Louise Marburg – author website
2 shared topicsfiction
67match
juliebrooksauthor.com
JULIE BROOKS – Author of A Haunting at Venus Bay
2 shared topicsfiction
67match
bryanoneill.com
Bryan O'Neill | Author
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
67match
juniperwhiteauthor.com
Explore the Worlds of Juniper White – YA author
2 shared topicsfiction
67match
siennacash.com
Sienna Cash – Author of Worst-Kept Secret
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
67match
adammannan.com
Adam Mannan – Author
2 shared topicsfiction
67match
juliaboon.com
Julia Boon – Author
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
67match
recordsofanaspie.com
Records of an Aspie – The musings of Tim
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
67match
corytoscano.com
Cory Toscano – Author
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
67match
jrludwig.com
J. R. Ludwig – Author
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
66match
adamgochenour.com
Adam Gochenour – Author
2 shared topicsfiction
66match
corrinedalton.com
Corrine Dalton – Indie Author
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature
66match
justacoupleofauthors.com
Just A Couple of Authors
2 shared topicsbooks-and-literature

How the match score works

Each match is a 0–100 similarity score — the higher it is, the more two sites resemble one another. It’s computed automatically from our own crawl data (never from what a site says about itself) by combining several independent signals, so a high score means several of them point the same way:

No single signal decides the result — they’re blended together. Treat the score as a way to rank candidates rather than an absolute percentage; the chips on each result show which signals contributed.