Failsafe 01/26/2012
Molly Gloss said once that getting a book published is just “the first of a hundred new ways to fail.” I am staring at about fourteen hundred new ways to fail this morning, wondering which to write about. The head shot. Introversion. Anonymity. Publishing world crashing to pieces. Review network going, going, gone, and those reviewers who do remain completely oblivious to my work. Mormon backlash. No backlash. Deep longing to find the right readers without a national forum to find them. Income. Hah! Let’s stick with the head shot. _ Can’t I just stay home and send someone else to do it? I’m not a whiner, in all cases, but I do tend to believe that the few hundred photos of me since birth prove that whatever spirit I have ain’t captured on film. Or digits, or whatever today’s digital cameras use to record the particular moments when I am not at my best. Still, a writer needs a head shot. Not one snapped spontaneously in the garden . . . _ Nor on the back deck by the bar-b-que . . . _ Nor one with a purple gorilla . . . _ Nor one clearly photo-shopped to include the out-of-doors . . . _ Nor, my favorite, one with her nephew Jim. _ No, a writer needs to find the money and the courage to let someone else catch the spark of her (arghhsoundofgrindingteeth), so that she opens her book-doors graciously to anyone who comes knocking. Hello, my name is Barbara. My book will take you places. It will not fail, you will be safe. Couldn't I send my dog instead? Tributary coming, summer 2012. 1 Comment Save the Last Dance for Tree 01/19/2012
_ Hundred-mile-an-hour wind gusts are fairly common in Boulder, Colorado, at least since I moved here. The gusts last night started around dark and walloped our cul-de-sac without mercy until noon today. I slept approximately not at all. The house shook, the windows howled, the fireplace flue played the pan flute all night long. _ This morning around five thirty I heard a little tap, a dainty scrape outside. When I walked out my door at eight thirty, I saw this-- _ being held up by this-- _ engulfing both cars like this-- _ as nearly 8,000 pounds of pine tree blocked our driveway. _ The arborist from Blue River Tree Care was already on the scene. He called in the largest crane that I have ever seen (and I’ve installed landscapes for 14 years) which dropped a daredevil down into the crown of the tree who chopped two branches out with a hand saw, attached the cables and while we gaped from the upstairs landing window that two-story pine tree _ danced like a baby ballerina up over our heads _ and touched down in point, where the crew promptly undressed her. _ This miracle surpassed the miraculous activity indoors: my final day polishing the last draft of my novel Tributary, 19.6 years in the making. Sharing the very last hours on this my magnum opus with the flight of the bumblebee pine tree-- I may have to take up the pan flute. And play it hiking in the pines. (For those of you smitten with pan flute fever . . . check out this crazy website!) Payback Time* 01/07/2012
How many books have you read and loved? How many of those books have you reviewed? _ Authors have spilled their sweat and inky blood for you. It’s time you paid them back. We count on online reviews to spread the word and promote our titles. Luckily, an online book review can take just a few minutes. So challenge yourself to review the best ten books you’ve read in the last year. And then do it every year. Contribute reviews to help boost your favorite authors and keep their books from going out of print! It's simple. Here's how: On any of the following bookseller sites, enter the title of the book you’d like to review. Then, once you’re on that book’s page . . . AMAZON--_ Scroll down past the professional reviews and the “Product Details” to “Customer Reviews.” On the right hand side of the page, there’s a button called “Create your own review.” _ You’ll be given the opportunity to create your reviewer name and password. Then you can 1) rate the book with stars, from one to five 2) enter the title for your review 3) type in a written review of at least 20 words. You can then preview your review and post it, once it says what you like. _That took five minutes, max! BARNES & NOBLE-- _ Similar to Amazon, scroll down to “Customer Reviews.” Click on the “Write and Review” button on the right hand side of the page. Create an account for your reviewer self, and then proceed to rate with stars and a written review. You can choose to show your pen name or write an anonymous review. POWELL'S BOOKS-- _You click on “Add a comment for a chance to win!” in order to create your identity and then star and review the book. This is right under the “What Our Readers Are Saying” heading. BOOKSAMILLION-- _ On this site, you can only enter a star rating, so it is fast and easy! All of these booksellers give you the chance to post your review to Facebook or Tweet it or email it to friends. It’s up to you, how far and how wide you’d like your review to spread its wings. _ And for the Truly Devoted Reader: This is a great website for book fanatics. You can meet other folks with your reading tastes, read reviews by your "friends," write reviews of your favorite and unfavorite books, and win free books on giveaways. It really is a fine way to keep a journal of all you’ve read. You won't be alone! Goodreads has 6,700,000 members who've added more than 230,000,000 books to their online "shelves."Click here for a pitch from one devoted fan. Or just join the conversation. It’s easy to sign up on Goodreads. Once you have an identity, you get your own reviewer page. You can enter the name of any book, and it pops up cover and all. You can then read existing reviews, say whether you’re reading it or have already read it, and give it a star rating and/or add a written review. When you sign up for favorite reviewers, you'll get updates on books they’ve read. You can join groups of like-minded readers. You can also visit author pages, to read blogs and watch book trailers. Goodreads will send you handy suggestions for titles you may love and a monthly newsletter of what's new in your favorite genres. Better still, you can go to authors' pages, and leave encouraging words. If they're active Goodreads members, you will be able to find out what they're reading and reviewing. Wouldn't you love to know what's on your favorite author's nightstand? _There's a great big network of book lovers. | All Lit Up:
|















RSS Feed