Category Archives: Book.ed News

Informational news

Recommended

The third annual Chicago Book Expo will be held Saturday, December 6, 2014, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Columbia College Chicago, 1104 South Wabash. The centerpiece of the event will be an expo of Chicago area independent publishers and literary organizations on the first and eight floors of the building. This will be an expansion of last year’s event, which was named by New City as one of the top five literary events of 2013.

This week’s Booked webcast re-broadcast (starting November 24th) features a perfect book to give yourself or someone you care about for the holidays. Author Sue Baugh talks about the incredible global journey she took while writing Echoes of Earth and the unexpected discoveries she made along the way. This show takes full advantage of our video format to share some of the spectacular photos from the book. You can catch the show on U-Stream this week and, as always, in the Booked Archives.

Collector’s quality limited first editions of Romina Power’s moving memoir/biography, Searching for My Father, Tyrone Power are now available. Please send an email to request a special order while quantities last. In film historian Matthew Hoffman’s book review of this handsomely produced book, he says it is “… a work of love that his fans will certainly love. Considering that Power himself was an avid collector of first edition books, this was a nice homage to him. Though it took years to see the light of day in this country, I can tell you that it’s been worth the wait. This is a beautifully written and compiled book for the global fans of Tyrone Power.”

Recommended

This week’s Booked webcast re-broadcast (starting November 17th) continues my thought-provoking interview with David Murrary, co-author with Lt. Col. Mark Weber of the true, inspirational bestseller Tell My Sons. At the age of 41, Mark lost a valiant 3-year battle with cancer. He spent the last year of his life transforming his lifelong personal journals into a book with the David Murray’s skillful help. While Tell My Sons began as a legacy to Mark’s children, it took on a life of its own as an inspirational memoir with remarkable wisdom we can all apply to our own lives. David Murray shares the incredible backstory of this transformative book this week on U-Stream and, as always, in the Booked Archives.

The third annual Chicago Book Expo will be held Saturday, December 6, 2014, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Columbia College Chicago, 1104 South Wabash. The centerpiece of the event will be an expo of Chicago area independent publishers and literary organizations on the first and eight floors of the building. This will be an expansion of last year’s event, which was named by New City as one of the top five literary events of 2013.

Holly-would

I’m not off to see the wizard but from November 13th through the 17th, I will be in the land of wizardry: Hollywood. I’ll be there for the final events of a 7-month-long Centennial Celebration of screen legend Tyrone Power. This is also the final leg of promotional activity for the Centennial Limited Edition of Searching for My Father, Tyrone Power, written by his daughter, Romina Power. I’ve played a pivotal role with the book, most notably in the past year as editor, publishing supervisor and marketer.

In the past year, I’ve moved from writing about what it takes to produce and promote a book to actually doing it. I’m glad to say that what I’ve written holds true in the real world. Books are like a 3-legged stool. The legs represent: writing, publication and promotion. The stool will not stand and the book will not sell without all three legs sturdily in place.

Writing means the original work and good editing. Publication means production and distribution. Promotion means reader awareness from day one going forward. While writing might be a singular effort, one must partner along the way if success is to be achieved. I invite writers to read my past blogs for helpful information about taking a book from conception to celebration. You’ll find these posts by clicking the category: For Authors.

As every author knows, there is always an interesting story behind the story; how a book is conceived and born. The goal of Booked is to enhance books for readers by bringing the back story forward. That is what our webcast interviews do. Last year, I took a hiatus from the interviews to work on the Tyrone Power “project” (book and centennial events). Along the way, I’ve been asked to work on other book projects. I hope to return to the webcasts but until then, I will continue my blog posts and invite you to watch past shows in the Booked Archives.

Recommended

This week’s Booked webcast re-broadcast (starting November 10th) will move and inspire you as you learn the moving true story of Lt. Col. Mark Weber, author of the bestseller Tell My Sons. At the age of 41, Mark lost a valiant 3-year battle with cancer. He spent the last year of his life transforming his lifelong personal journals into a book with the help of co-writer David Murray. While Tell My Sons began as a legacy to Mark’s children, it took on a life of its own as an inspirational memoir with remarkable wisdom we can all apply to our own lives. David Murray shares the incredible backstory of this transformative book this week on U-Stream and, as always, in the Booked Archives.

The third annual Chicago Book Expo will be held Saturday, December 6, 2014, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Columbia College Chicago, 1104 South Wabash. The centerpiece of the event will be an expo of Chicago area independent publishers and literary organizations on the first and eight floors of the building. This will be an expansion of last year’s event, which was named by New City as one of the top five literary events of 2013.

Recommended

If you’re going to be in Los Angeles November 13th-15th, you have a last chance to join in the Centennial celebrations honoring movie legend Tyrone Power. Since May, celebrations have occurred around the U.S. to great response. For more information about events (and some photos of me with the Power children in Ohio), visit Movie Memories Foundation.

Collector’s quality limited first editions of Romina Power’s moving memoir/biography, Searching for My Father, Tyrone Power are now available. Please send an email to request a special order while quantities last. In film historian Matthew Hoffman’s book review of this beautifully produced book, he says it is “a work of love that his fans will certainly love. Considering that Power himself was an avid collector of first edition books, this was a nice homage to him. Though it took years to see the light of day in this country, I can tell you that it’s been worth the wait. This is a beautifully written and compiled book for the global fans of Tyrone Power.”

This week’s Booked webcast re-broadcast (starting October 27th) will thrill your funny bone as I jokingly spar with Al Zimbler, octogenarian author of several laugh-out-loud books, including Broadway at 77th. You can catch the show on U-Stream and in the archives of the Booked website.

Recommended

Booked is delighted to rebroadcast its classic interviews and book reviews on UStream… because good books don’t have an expiration date. The shows continue to be accessible in the Booked Archives and book excerpts are also available on the website. This week’s re-broadcast (starting October 20th) is part two of my thought-provoking interview with transgender author Renee James, winner of several awards for her psycho-social thriller, Coming Out Can Be Murder.

Gone Fishin’

I’m taking a 2-week break from blogging. No, not vacation. Fishin’ for book sales as part of a 2-day Tyrone Power Centennial Celebration in Wilmington, North Carolina. For information about the two events taking place, visit TCM News. The lead story and the third feature story are two examples of how to promote a book by relating it to other events.

My weekly blog will return September 28th.

Recommended

May 1st will be your first chance to purchase a limited first edition of Searching for My Father, Tyrone Power by Romina Power. The book will be available only at Tyrone Power Centennial Celebration events. For more information, check out my YouTube interview with film historian Matthew Hoffman.

Recommended

Plans for the nationwide centennial celebration of legendary actor Tyrone Power are expanding. To learn more, Booked blog readers can see my YouTube interview with film historian Matthew Hoffman. A very special launch event, May 1st at the historic Pickwick Theatre will feature the opportunity to purchase a collector’s quality Limited First Edition of Searching for My Father, Tyrone Power by Romina Power. It’s an updated and expanded English-language version of Romina’s Italian bestseller, Cercando Mio Padre. If you can’t make the Pickwick celebration, Taryn Power Greendeer (Tyrone’s younger daughter) will appear at the Northbrook Public Library on May 2nd at 2:00 p.m. and Romina’s book will be available for sale. Centennial events are also planned in Ohio and California. Updates will appear in my future blog posts.

The Best of Times, the Worst of Times

This week’s posts start year two of the Booked blog. When I started this weekly blog, I joined an exploding universe on the internet. In the blogosphere, it is the best of times, it is the worst of times.

Whatever your interest or question is, there is a website blog waiting for you, just a mouse click away, no matter where in the world you are. All you need is internet access to get a boatload of free information. That’s the best of times.

However, there is no true oversight on the internet. People can make almost any claim without penalty. And they do. Frequently. That’s the worst of times.

For authors and booklovers, blogs can be either a boon or a bane.

Marketers advise authors to create their own website with a blog to promote their books. Companies offer services to create websites, many for free (although you may have to pay a maintenance fee or face having the website dropped). While authors might be advised to regularly update their blogs with useful content, no one advises how challenging that can be. Or how to draw people to their blogs. Can’t tell you how many blogs get sidelined within a year or are so poorly produced that they drive away potential book buyers.

Blogs are an effective way that businesses draw people to websites promoting products or services. Caveat emptor: buyer beware. If the blog or site make claims or promises that look too good, too easy or too inexpensive to be true, they likely are. If a blogger tells you one product or service is much better than all the others, make sure that blogger doesn’t have a financial interest in the service he or she is promoting. Can’t tell you how many authors have fallen into this trap, only to later bemoan losing money and time on a publisher, editor, agent or marketer that failed to produce promised results. It’s okay for a blogger to promote a product or service, as long as he or she is upfront about it.

Authors: if you want to find the real deal, look for actual examples of produced work. If possible, talk to people who have used the product or service you are interested in. Educate yourself about the processes and costs involved. Knowledge is power.

On the best-of-times side, there are many wonderful blogs that offer insights to books, authors and the many ways books are brought into the world. Blogs expand opportunities to discover great books that haven’t made the best seller lists, the major media book reviews or the front displays at bookstore chains. The Booked blog is one of them.

I plan to continue bringing you weekly blog posts for the love of books and reading. If there is a topic you would like to see covered, please leave a comment for me. Meanwhile, I invite you to visit the past 52 weeks’ worth of Booked blog posts as I welcome you to the start of another great year. It’s the best of times.

Footnotes

Booked is much more than a weekly blog. The very popular Booked author interview/book review webcasts that launched last year went on a hiatus in September. They will resume later this year with some very exciting news. Stay tuned for updates. Meanwhile, please visit the Book Excerpts page of the Book.ed website to learn about the books and authors that have appeared on the shows, then watch the shows in the Booked Archives.

The Fallacy of “Best Books of the Year”

I have a bone to pick with the concept of “best books of the year” lists.

To begin with, there is no concurrence about what books comprise the top 10 in any category. Books get rated in many ways, including by sales, by genre and by critical review.

Booksellers such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble issue their lists based on their own sales data. The established arbiters of literary achievement, such varied media as the New York Times, NPR and Forbes, present their own critics’ annual list for your consideration. Some websites will offer their readers’ top ten favorites based on online votes. Some lists are specific to a genre while others embrace all genres. The Daily Beast aggregated 40 major lists to offer “a ranked ultimate guide” based on critics’ lists – a list from lists.

Regardless of which lists are consulted, rankings of “the top books of the year” help guide readers to books that have achieved recognition for a variety of reasons. All well and good as far as that goes.

Here’s my issue: these widely publicized lists routinely omit self-published books and almost all books published by small presses. The lists are dominated by the few big traditional publishing houses with hefty promotional budgets and access to booksellers’ coveted store positions. Meanwhile, many thousands of fantastic self-published and small press- published books remain in obscurity. The authors who write those marvelous works are denied the financial support they need to continue producing quality books while booklovers are denied the treasures these books offer.

As you peruse the various lists of “Best Books of the Year”, remember that there is more than meets the eye. Much more. Certainly, you should consider reading some of the books on those coveted lists. But don’t cheat yourself of the rewards of great self-published and indie books. You’ll find some of them (along with more traditionally published books) at the Booked website. That’s a good start.

Another excellent source worth checking is the list of Indie Book Award winners (you’ll find Echoes of Earth on their award list; a book excerpt and interview with author L. Sue Baugh can be found at Booked). A third source for finding independently published gems is the Independent Publishers IPPY Awards list.

A note of interest: some bestselling books started out as self-published works before they were picked up by traditional publishers. Titles you might recognize include The Joy of Cooking; The Tales of Peter Rabbit; The Celestine Prophecy; John Grisham’s first book, A Time to Kill and Tell My Sons (you’ll find a book excerpt and interview with co-author David Murray at Booked).

Recommended

The holidays are coming, a great opportunity to give the gift of books! In addition to The Survival Girls, you can learn about a variety of wonderful books at the Booked website. Visit the Book Excerpts page to read a snippet from each book and watch interviews with the authors in the Archives. From the Booked site, you’ll even find an easy link to order any book listed.

All Roads Are Connected

No single decision you ever made has led in a straight line to where you find yourself now. You peeked down some roads and took a few steps before turning back. You followed some roads that came to a dead end and others that got lost at too many intersections. Ultimately, all roads are connected to all other roads. – Dr. Deepak Chopra, Physician, author, teacher and businessman.

A vision I had just over one year ago, for an innovative way to connect authors and their books with booklovers, became reality on July 8th, when Booked launched the debut of my webcast shows. The shows are the third and brightest jewel in the Booked crown, joining my eight-month-old website that offers Book Excerpts, a weekly Blog, useful links and other features.

In just eight weeks, Booked webcasts quickly established a large audience in the U.S. and abroad. Several of the books I reviewed won prestigious awards or were best sellers. The genres and formats are varied and the authors have fascinating backstories they shared with my viewers. The feedback from authors and viewers alike has been incredibly rewarding and I look forward to the road ahead for all of us.

My road has taken an unexpected turn in the past week. Some urgent family matters have sprung up that must be tended to. I must take a hiatus from my webcasts for a few weeks to take care of my family. Anyone who has a family understands this decision. That does not make it easier for me to step away from Booked webcasts, which I love doing.

I will continue to do my weekly blog. Authors, editors, publishers, agents, bookstores, and anyone involved with bringing books to readers are encouraged to get in touch with me through my website at www.bookedwebcast.com. Although I will not broadcast new shows for a few weeks, I will be reading books and communicating with people in the industry as I plan for the resumption of my webcasts.

While I am on hiatus, you can catch up on any of the shows you may have missed by visiting the Archives at www.bookedwebcast.com. While you’re at the website, peruse the Book Excerpts and enjoy my timeless blog posts.

Acclaimed author Joyce Carol Oates noted that, “Reading is the sole means by which we slip, involuntarily, often helplessly, into another’s skin, another’s voice, another’s soul.”

Thank you to all who have supported Booked so far, and welcome to all newcomers. Please join me in the celebration of books!

When All Else Has Fallen

Love knows no limit to its endurance, no end to its trust, no fading of its hope; it can outlast anything. Love still stands when all else has fallen. – Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), French writer and philosopher, mathematician, physicist, inventor.

The book I introduced you to last week – New York Times Best Seller, Tell My Sons, by Lt. Col. Mark Weber with David Murray – gained national fame as a powerful, inspiring memoir of an accomplished soldier who was also a husband and parent, facing terminal cancer. Words like heroism, courage, leadership, integrity, and discipline are typically used to describe Mark. He was a soldier’s soldier who used General Douglas MacArthur’s famous 1962 speech to West Point cadets to frame a message to beloved sons he would never see grow to adulthood.

Mark’s honesty inspires me. I therefore confess an embarrassing misstatement in Part One of my webcast, which went online at www.bookedwebcast.com on August 19th. I inadvertently demoted Mark to the rank of Lieutenant. In fact, Mark Weber earned his Lieutenant Colonel rank by serving the United States of America with great distinction, a fact I was well aware of. My error is herewith corrected.

While I’m in this introspective confessional mood, I wonder if book reviewers (myself included) are missing the opportunity to identify this gallant memoir as a wonderful love story. In focusing on Mark’s remarkable military life, are we failing to give enough credit to his remarkable military wife? The relationship between Mark and Kristin Weber was not easily navigated. Through recalled scenes that are, at times, funny, frightening, turbulent or deeply touching, Mark’s memoir captures what marriage is really like, and how we should re-think our role in that partnership because marriage matters. The insights about marriage that Mark learned and left for his sons in this book can serve all of us well. We also gain even more respect for the sacrifices military families make every day so their loved ones can serve our nation.

Part Two of my interview with Tell My Sons co-author David Murray goes online at www.bookedwebcast.com on Monday, August 26th at 8 PM, EST. We talk about what happened to Mark and his family after the book was published. You will learn insights that have not been revealed in any other interviews. You’ll also hear about David’s interesting, varied, sometimes quirky, very popular solo writing. You’ll come away from the show understanding why Mark chose David as his co-writer and what David learned from Mark during their collaboration on Tell My Sons. If you’ve missed Part One, you can find it in the Booked Archives on my website. When you visit the website, be sure to also check out the Book Excerpts page to read a sample of the book and find links to some of Mark Weber’s interviews.

Where Does “It” Come From?

“He fed his spirit with the bread of books.” That soulful sentiment comes from American poet Edwin Markham (1852 – 1940). By the time of his death,Markham amassed a huge library of 15000+ books. This collection was bequeathed to Wagner College’s Horrmann Library, at Staten Island, New York.

Most noted for his poem, The Man with the Hoe, Markham recognized the enduring power of books to transform us. Books are the repositories of the human spirit, a reflection of our complex selves, a roadmap connecting our past with our potential.

I’ve often heard writers say, “My book wrote itself. It started out as my concept but took on a life of its own.” Sometimes a character redirects the plot. Sometimes the plot morphs into something unexpected with a different denouement for a character. It’s as if a spirit speaks through the writer to tell a story that has to be told. In my own writing, that experience is felt as goosebumps, a tingling up my arms and across my shoulders, as if some other “presence” was slipping through me.

The phenomenon of a spirit directing a book is not restricted to the realm of fiction. This past week, author Sue Baugh’s interview on Booked told how her magnificent book, Echoes of Earth, went from a project to identify the earth’s oldest rocks to the revelation of how the origins of our planet exist in each of us today and what the earth can teach us. . . if we listen. You can find Sue’s interview in the Archives at www.bookedwebcast.com.

Tell My Sons by Lt. Col. Mark Weber, the next show on Book.ed, is another example of a book that had to be written. Mark Weber was “chosen” to write it. You may know of Mark and his amazing book through national interviews and news stories. Tell My Sons, an inspirational memoir with remarkable wisdom we can all apply to our own lives, made the NY Times Best Seller list. It has been acclaimed by such diverse, notable people as Mitch Albom (author of Tuesdays with Morrie), Walter Mondale (former U.S. VP), John Elway (Pro Football Hall of Fame), General Babakir Zibari (Iraq’s chief of defense), General David Petraeus (U.S. Army, retired; former director of the CIA) and actor Robin Williams, among many others.

Sadly, 41-year-old Mark Weber lost a valiant 3-year battle with cancer three days before Father’s Day this year. In his last year of life, Mark transformed his lifelong personal journals into Tell My Sons with the help of co-writer David Murray. With a devoted wife and three young, adoring sons, Mark had to choose how to spend his very limited time. I believe it was that “spirit” that worked through Mark, telling him he had a story that needed to be told. While Tell My Sons began as a legacy to Mark’s children, it took on a life of its own. We are all richer for that.

The spirit that worked through Mark to get a story told was severely challenged by his death since he was no longer available to promote the book. Out of sight, out of mind rules in the book world. But the spirit that worked through Mark isn’t giving up! Come watch my interview with Tell My Sons co-writer David Murray to hear the incredible back story of this transformative book. The interview goes online at www.bookedwebcast.com on Monday, August 19th at 8 PM, EST. In conjunction with the show, the Book Excerpts page at the Booked website offers links to see some of Mark Weber’s interviews.

If you’ve already read Tell My Sons, you will gain new appreciation for it after watching my interview with David Murray. And if you haven’t read the book yet, you will certainly want to!

“There is a destiny which makes us brothers; none goes his way alone. All that we send into the lives of others comes back into our own.” – Edwin Markham.

It’s About Time

“Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour. Sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute. THAT’S relativity.” This astute observation about time comes from a distant cousin of mine, Albert Einstein (yes, that Albert Einstein).

Time, that elusive man-made concept that confounds us! With a sense that time keeps gaining momentum, we often find ourselves looking in the rearview mirror of life, or preparing to meet a future rushing toward us. We seem to be losing the ability to live in the present and, with it, opportunities to use it well. Authors complain that it’s hard to find time to write while readers lament the lack of time to indulge in leisure reading.

Animals don’t care about time. Just think how your dog greets you the same when you walk through the front door, whether you’ve been away for five months or five minutes. Animals live in the present. So do children. But by the time we reach adulthood, humans measure everything in terms of time’s relationship to us — and there never seems to be enough of it.

Earth knows better. And, according to L. Sue Baugh, author of Echoes of Earth: Finding Ourselves in the Origins of the Planet, it has plenty to teach us — if we listen. What started out as an artistic project with colleague Lynn Martinelli to document the world’s oldest rock and mineral sites turned into an amazing 10-year journey that Sue shares in an interview on Booked, available starting Monday, August 12th at 8 PM (EST) at www.bookedwebcast.com.

A winner of the prestigious Nautilus Award, three Ben Franklin awards from the Independent Book Publishers Association, and the Next Generation Indie Book Award, Echoes of Earth will transform how you view time, our incredible planet, and your place on it. This gorgeously illustrated, scientifically grounded, lyrically expressed book is quite unlike any I’ve ever seen.

During my ½-hour interview with Sue, you’ll see some of the awesome sites she visited — the oldest and most remote places on earth. You’ll also hear some of her incredible adventures as “the power, clarity and beauty of those sites radically changed the course” of the book’s original goal.

The newest edition of Booked is shown on Watch Now and in the Archives, while all previous shows remain available in the Archives. And while you’re visiting the Booked website, check out the Book Excerpts page where you can purchase any book reviewed on my show. To find out more about Echoes of Earth, visit www.wildstonearts.com.

Feeding the Hunger to Heal Oneself

My long-time (25+ years) pen pal in England marvels at my openness when writing about the most personal aspects of my life. Diana was brought up with the British stiff upper lip approach to life whereas I am ready to hop onto a therapist’s couch at the slightest twitch. I grew up in the culture of Oprah Winfrey and Dr. Phil. Whatever one might think about those media icons or the dozens of other American confess-and-be-healed talkathons, they’ve unmasked masses of the walking wounded looking for a path to healing – providing solace in sharing the lessons learned at the school of hard knocks.

Well beyond talk shows, self-help has found a welcome home in publishing. It’s estimated that more than $1 billion in self-help books sell every year. They sell in numbers large enough to be included in the New York Times Sunday Book Review, where best-sellers are listed under “Advice, How-To and Miscellaneous.”

As popular as self-help books are (perhaps magnified by the anxious times we live in), they have their critics. Anyone can hang a shingle proclaiming he or she can help you. Anyone can publish a book proclaiming it will help you.

Sandra Dolby, a retired professor of folklore at Indiana University read 300 self-help titles as preparation for her own book, Self-Help Books: Why Americans Keep Reading Them (University of Illinois Press, 2008). Her take on this genre is, “Reading them is like going to a trusted friend to ask for advice, and listening to them tell you what they think you should do and why it would be a good thing. Most people like the idea of self-education and discovery, which is encouraging.”

I come down somewhere in the middle on self-help books. Books that address our challenges with helpful advice deserve our attention. At the same time, caveat emptor – buyer beware. Check a book’s reviews and the reviewers. Peruse the chapter headings. Read some of the advice. Does it resonate with you? Each book is like a potential new friend: it must stand on its own to prove its worthiness.

One form of self-help comes from victims who became victors. There’s comfort in seeing a successful path forged by others who precede us. Wounded? Survive! Thrive!!! is such a book. It is a collection of true accounts by 101 women who faced a variety of crises yet reclaimed their lives – and who share what they learned along the way. Most contributors are not professional writers but they candidly divulge their personal stories to help others, men as well as women. As Dolby suggests, “Reading them is like going to a trusted friend.” The book also offers a list of resources.

To learn more about Wounded? Survive! Thrive!!! and hear one woman’s incredible story, watch my Booked interview with “stolen” adoptee Ellen Miller, starting Monday, August 5th at 8 PM (EST) at www.bookedwebcast.com.

The newest edition of Booked is shown on Watch Now and in the Archives, while all previous shows remain available in the Archives. And while you’re visiting the Booked website, check out the Book Excerpts page where you can purchase any book reviewed on my show..

Test-Driving Books – On the Road

We tend to think of creative writing as something to read, to ingest through the eyes. But, as I wrote in last week’s blog, most of us hear voices in our head when we read. Our brains translate what our eyes see into words we “hear”.

Writing that is meant to be spoken (think of speeches) is approached a bit differently from writing that is expected to be read with the eyes. Speeches that sound good also read well. But what seems good in print doesn’t always sound good when spoken. You can test this yourself by picking up a handful of novels and randomly reading passages aloud. See if the writing holds up when you speak it.

The best writing, in my opinion, satisfies when read and spoken. This is why writers, especially of fiction, are advised to read their work aloud, either to others or in solitude. That exercise often turns up awkward, unrealistic dialogue, repetitive verbiage or other weaknesses that need improvement.

One way for readers to test the satisfaction quotient of a book before committing to it is to attend a reading by the author. Increasingly, authors are arranging readings from their latest book as a way to market their work. These events are usually free and open to the public — at the public library or a neighborhood bookstore. Sometimes venues require a reservation and a fee – a secluded room in a restaurant, a literary conference or an arts retreat.

Large or small, free or with a fee, bare bones or full menu, there are opportunities to hear authors read their work throughout the year. You can find out about these events by checking your community newspaper and your library’s schedule of events, your neighborhood independent bookstore’s newsletter, literary periodicals that carry event news, or simply Google “author readings”.

I attended a recent book reading hosted by Janes Stories Press Foundation (JSPF). Three poets and one memoirist read from their contributions to JSPF’s fourth anthology, Bridges and Borders. Hearing lilting rhythms of poetry and a lightly accented poignant memoir directly from the authors added much to my reading of this evocative book.

You can learn more about the women behind Bridges and Borders – creative oral histories, both real and imagined — and Janes Stories Press Foundation by watching my Booked interview with JSPF president Shobha Sharma who is also a co-editor of the anthology. This thoughtful half-hour, exploring how women from a variety of backgrounds view the world and express it through their unique, personal writing, becomes available starting Monday, July 29th at 8 PM (EST) at www.bookedwebcast.com.

The newest edition of Booked is shown on Watch Now and in the Archives, while all previous shows remain available in the Archives. And while you’re visiting the Booked website, check out the Book Excerpts page where you can purchase any book reviewed on my show. To find out more about JSPF visit www.janesstories.org.

The Voices in My Head

If the name Evelyn Wood rings a bell, you are probably a child of the ‘60s or ‘70s. She was an English teacher who gained fame as the creator of a system to increase a reader’s speed by 200-500%. She coined the term Speed Reading and built a lucrative business around it. President Kennedy, a natural speed reader, brought her to the White House to teach his staff Speed Reading. The staffs of Presidents Ford and Carter also took her course.

I took a Speed Reading course many years ago. I failed. I tried. Really, I did. I practiced all the exercises and did increase my speed while maintaining comprehension. I used it to advantage when reading non-fiction periodicals and textbooks. But Speed Reading diminished the enjoyment I derived from reading fiction, poetry and anything written in beautifully expressive language.

A cardinal rule of speed reading is to banish the voices in our heads when we read (what scientific types refer to as subvocalization). But without the voices, I lost the pleasure of the reading experience. I could not have it both ways. I had to choose. When it comes to reading books, I welcome the voices in my head. What about you? What voices live inside your head?

Speaking of voices, come watch my Booked interview with author Al Zimbler as we laugh our way through a light-hearted half-hour, discussing his latest book, Broadway at 77th, and his previous three books. An improvisational actor who, at age 88, still has some of the clients he served for decades as a CPA, Al brings his wild and woolly wit to his humorous short stories and poems. You’ll get a taste (think corner deli or the diner down the street) of Al’s humor when his interview becomes available starting Monday, July 22nd at 8 PM (EST) at www.bookedwebcast.com.

The newest edition of Booked is shown on Watch Now and in the Archives, while all previous shows remain available in the Archives. And while you’re visiting the Booked website, check out the Book Excerpts page where you can purchase any book reviewed on my show.

Opening Acts

What a wonderful start for the Booked webcast shows! Thank you to everyone (from the U.S. and around the world) who have been watching and, especially, to those who took time to congratulate me and my team on our successful launch on July 8th.

Every Monday, at 8 PM (EST), a new show is featured on the Watch Shows page of the Booked website. The show is also streamed on UStream (with 50 million unique viewers of their shows every month). Don’t fret if you miss a featured show because it is always available at www.bookedwebcast.com and www.fenmark.net in the Archives.

If you are a new visitor to this Blog, I hope you will take some time to browse through the weekly posts since its inception earlier this year (more than 6,400 visitors and more than 95 registered fans so far). You’ll find a wide variety of fascinating topics relating to books, written in a light, reader-friendly style and supplemented with links to additional information. With the launch of our webcasts, my blogs will alert you to the next book review and author interview. Of course, I’ll continue to bring you news and fun factoids. So come along and read with me!

My debut interview with Renee James — talking about her multi-award-winning murder mystery, Coming Out Can Be Murder, her challenges in getting published, and how her own life experience as a transgender woman helped shape her novel – was so fascinating, we extended it to a second ½-hour interview. If you missed part one, visit my Archives page to watch; then check out part two, starting at 8 PM (EST) on July 15th. I promise you won’t be bored! To read an excerpt from Renee’s book, go to the Book Excerpts page on this website. If you like what you see and want to purchase the book, there’s a “Buy the Book Now” link.

Take a moment to look at the sidebar of this Blog. You can register on the RSS Feed to follow my weekly posts with helpful reminders when the updates appear. You can even let me know what you think about my Blog, ask for future topics to be covered, or share information you think other readers would be interested in. After all, as I’ve always said, this Blog is for you!

Lights, Camera & Plenty of Action

Pop the champagne corks! After nearly a year in the making, the debut global webcast of Booked happens at 8 PM (EST) on Monday, July 8th. The book reviews and author interviews you’ve been waiting for will be just a mouse-click away, 24/7 anywhere in the world that you have internet access. You’ll be able to watch interviews, read excerpts and buy books via one very user-friendly website: www.bookedwebcast.com. The webcasts will also be available at other websites, including www.fenmark.net, and UStream.

As a writer moving in writing circles, I’ve learned that authors are very interesting people! And there’s almost always a back story to their book that is as interesting as the book itself. Meeting an author enhances the reading of their work. This is what my webcasts are about!

Booked will entertain, inform and enlighten you. It’s an innovative concept tying in modern technologies with time-tested communications techniques to connect authors and editors with booklovers. I invite you to join us on this exciting journey and let me know what you think. This concept is all about serving YOU!

For my debut show, I selected a multi-award-winning book that has broken new ground with a character that stays with you long after you’ve turned the last page. Bobbi Logan is the memorable protagonist-narrator in Renee James’ contemporary suspense/mystery/thriller, Coming Out Can Be Murder. Bobbi Logan, a sensitive, articulate transgender woman takes us on her personal journey as she transitions from a life as Bob Logan to her true gender. The very difficult, often heart-wrenching challenges she faces in her own life are entwined in the search for the brutal murderer of her best friend, another transgender woman. This page-turner takes place in and near Chicago, in evocatively-painted places that may be familiar or new to the reader.

The theme of “familiar” and “new” run throughout Coming Out Can Be Murder — in plot, place and character. Renee James brings years of editing experience to her forceful writing. She takes people, places and situations we may think of as “other than us” and helps us see the human qualities that make us more alike than different. She knows this well because she is a transgender woman.

Please join me for a fascinating book review and author interview with Renee James, starting July 8th at 8 PM (our shows are always available for viewing by visiting the Archives at www.bookedwebcast.com).

Big News from Booked

Could be!
Who knows?
There’s something due any day;
I will know right away,
Soon as it shows.*

I’m thrilled to report that Booked will debut its weekly half-hour video webcast on July 8th!

You’ve waited patiently. Now come the rewards. Every Monday, starting July 8th, Booked will present a lively new book review with an author or editor interview. From the moment the show is first broadcast, it will be available 24/7 from any computer with internet access. After one week as the featured show, it will remain available in our Archives. You’ll be able to find our shows at several websites, including (my favorite, of course) www.bookedwebcast.com and www.fenmark.net; also via UStream.

The Booked website will also debut a Book Excerpts page where you can find every book we’ve reviewed, easy to locate by the book’s cover, air date, title or author. Each excerpt will include a “Buy The Book Now” link, among other user-friendly features. You can go from watching an interview to reading an excerpt, or vice versa, then buy the book — all through the Booked website.

Booked is an innovative concept. Our marriage of new technologies with proven PR techniques is attracting great authors with noteworthy books that we present to booklovers around the world. The authors I interview have fascinating back stories that enhance the reading of their books.

As I writer, I know it is easier than ever to get books published but harder than ever to get read. Many worthwhile books get lost in a vast universe of 350,000 new titles annually. As a former award-winning public relations pro, I know how to build awareness among target audiences. As a booklover, I’m thrilled to find shining stars in the book universe and bring them to you.

Starting next week, this blog will feature details about upcoming shows.

Could it be? Yes, it could.
Something’s coming, something good,
Come on, something, come on in, don’t be shy,
Pull up a chair!
The air is humming,
And something great is coming! *

*with thanks to Stephen Sondheim whose lyrics from “West Side Story” I’ve borrowed and re-arranged

Writers Helping Writers

Accepting the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature, Ernest Hemingway said, “Writing, at its best, is a lonely life.” He was, of course, one of America’s all-time literary giants. But, despite his adventurous lifestyle, he was a lonely man who, in the end, took his own life.

I disagree with his assumption that writing only comes to those who acquiesce to a lonely life. Creating literature begins long before the commitment of words onto paper or into computer. The very act of writing invites voices and characters into one’s mind that take on their own life. While writers need time alone to contemplate what is churning in their minds, interacting with the world is how writers spend most of their time.

One of the most helpful activities writers can – and should – engage in is connecting with other writers. Absorbing the energy of other creative minds, getting feedback on works in progress and getting support when progress feels thwarted pays off in big dividends: possibly financially, usually creatively, always emotionally.

Fortunately, the internet has broadened opportunities for writers to connect. From almost anywhere in the world, we can find similar-minded individuals and groups that meet in person or via the internet. Writing groups may specialize in a genre or be open to all literary forms. Some are free and some charge a fee.

One such group, Jane's Stories Press Foundation (JSPF), is an international organization promoting emerging and established women writers, focusing on women under 25, over 50, and women of color. Programs include online writing circles and an annual writers retreat. Member Kamala Sarma says, ” Jane’s Stories Press Foundation has helped greatly in unblocking the writer in me, truly liberating!”

The Off Campus Writers Workshop (OCWW) has offered a weekly group meeting in Winnetka, Illinois for more than 60 years. Writers gather to hear acclaimed speakers address every conceivable genre and hone their writing skills. OCWW president Brenda Rossini says, “We have thrived because of the program’s excellence, a focus on essential cogs in the writing wheel, and, most important, the bonhomie and creative exchanges amongst our speakers, members and guests.”

Midwest Writers Association (MWA) is a networking base for experienced, professional non-fiction writers. Although their members work across the media spectrum, many write books that benefit from the same interaction sought by fiction writers.

Meet-up groups for writers have popped up all over. Finding one that suits a writer’s particular interests is a mouse click away.

I would be happy to help promote any writers support group through my blog. If you lead one, please let me know by clicking on “Book●ed Revealed” at the top of this page and follow the contact link. Please provide details in the message section.

Writing, at its best, can be a lonely life. But it doesn't have to be.

From Obstacles to Opportunities

As noted in last week’s blog, I went to Boston for my son’s graduation. While there, I visited the legendary Harvard Coop in Cambridge. Being in a place so filled to the brim with books and other treats for bibliophiles, I was reminded of a scene in the 1984 comedy-drama film Moscow on the Hudson where Soviet circus performer-turned-defector Vladimir Ivanov (Robin Williams) visits his first U.S. supermarket. Confronted with rows upon rows of various toilet paper choices, he is overwhelmed and faints. That’s how I felt at the Harvard Coop: all that artistry with stories, language, facts and imagination tucked into these magical things called books! I couldn’t buy all of them but how could I choose from among so many temptations?

Away from the obligations and distractions of home, I also leisurely dipped into the New York Times Book Review. It reviews only 2-3 percent of the books that are submitted, only books published in the United States and available through general-interest bookstores, and generally not self-published books. I marveled at the variety of new works that were elevated by appearing in the Review. Those books would soon find their places alongside the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves at the Harvard Coop, other stores around the country, and countless internet bookseller sites. But what about all the great books they didn’t review?

As daunting as it is for readers like me (and you) to choose books in which to invest our time, money and attention, imagine how challenging it is for most authors to get us to choose their books. This challenge is amplified many times over for newer authors, who have not developed a following. Like the Hollywood studio system of yesteryear, the publishing industry that rolled out new authors with national promotions and nurtured their careers no longer exists.

There is a lot of literary talent left in the shadows because most authors are not marketing-savvy. With the emergence of self-publishing services alongside an increase in small publishing houses, authors have new avenues to get their work published. But being published does not automatically equate with selling books, as many a disillusioned novice author has discovered. Authors must maximize their marketing efforts if they want to sell their books.

After months of anticipation, I am happy to announce that my webcast show Book●ed is about to go into production, with a global launch date coming this June. The show will be a lively, entertaining half-hour introducing authors and their recently published books. A new edition of Book●ed will debut every week and then be available 24/7 on our website, as well as other websites and social media. The marketing mix offered to authors is unique among literary webcasts. To find out more about the webcasts and follow our guests, please visit www.bookedwebcast.com. Don’t forget to sign up for email reminders of our weekly blog updates. If you’re an author with a great recently published book, check my website for submission guidelines.

Boston Shout-out

No blog entry this weekend. I will be in Boston for the May 3rd graduation of my son from Northeastern University. With a mother’s pride, I congratulate Ian Vincent Delmar, who earned a Bachelor of Arts in International Affairs — Magna Cum Laude!

Let’s Get Graphic

When I was a kid, comic books shared shelf space with more serious literature. Black Beauty and Little Women were flanked by the likes of Archie, Superman and MAD Magazine (which originated as a comic before it morphed into a graphic magazine to avoid the strictures of the Comics Code Authority). Most of us read comics, either casually or loyally, when we were young. As we left childhood, we graduated to “real” literature — books without drawings. The emergence of graphic novels has, unfortunately, been dismissed by many of us as just another form of comics.

Some graphic novels are like fast food: easy to consume, not meant to be memorable. But many graphic novels are worth a closer look. Beyond Japanese manga or DC and Marvel comics, some graphic novels are true works of art in every sense. When the author is also the illustrator, we see with the author’s eyes rather than with our mind’s eyes. For traditional readers, this takes getting used to. The effort is rewarded because we can imagine what the author wanted to convey through design as well as words; when text is limited, graphics must convey to us what a character is thinking or what action is taking place.

The best graphic literature – novels and non-fiction — are on par with the best traditional literature. Maus aka Maus: A Survivor’s Tale — My Father Bleeds History by Art Spiegelman recounts the dark history of the Holocaust, depicting Jews as mice and Germans as cats; it won the 1992 Pulitzer Prize. Other graphic works of note were subsequently adapted into well-received movies. They include Iranian-born Marjane Satrapi’s autobiographical novel, Persepolis, about her childhood during the country’s Islamic revolution (a 2007 Cannes Film Festival winner and Oscar nominee); V for Vendetta (a 2005 film adaptation of the 1982 graphic novel by Alan Moore and David Lloyd); and 300 from the graphic novel by Frank Miller. Two graphic novels made the short list to win the prestigious 2012 Costa Book Awards, one of the UK’s most prestigious and popular literary prizes: Bryan Talbot’s graphic memoir Dotter of Her Father’s Eyes and Jeff Winterhart’s Days of the Bagnold Summer.

My Book●ed webcasts would certainly welcome any submissions from authors of graphic literature to be interviewed on my show. Meanwhile, don’t dismissively walk past the shelves of graphic novels at your library or book store. If you look closer, you just might find an artistic masterpiece.

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly About Self-Publishing

Bowker, the company that manages ISBNs and bibliographic information for books published in the U.S., confirmed last October what most of us already knew: self-publishing is on a strong, upward trajectory. Between 2006 and 2011, the number of print and e-books self-published annually jumped an impressive 287%. Of nearly 346,000 print books published in the U.S. in 2011, self-published titles accounted for 43%. In addition, Bowker counted 87,201 self-published e-book titles – not including the many e-books that don't have ISBN numbers.

The availability of self-publishing is good news for writers who are increasingly frustrated by the dwindling opportunities with traditional publishing houses and the limits of small, independent publishers. It's good news for readers who want a broad selection of reading options. It's good for my unique, new Book.ed venture that provides a wide variety of effective, cost-efficient marketing opportunities for authors and others in the publishing community.

In the brief time since Book●ed started inviting authors and editors to submit their published work for a possible review on our weekly webcast (to debut this Spring — visit our website for more information), at least half the books received were self-published. The quality of writing and attention to detail in these books hover between the sublime and the ridiculous. (Cue the haunting whistler.) Here's where I get to The Good, The Bad and The Ugly about self-publishing. Pay attention aspiring authors!

Down every alley and around every corner you'll find a company that would love to publish your work. They'll try to entice you like an internet matchmaking service because they know you'’re hungry for success. Most of us wouldn'’t marry after the first date nor turn our child over to the first nanny that walks through the door, no matter how attractive or affordable they appear to be. So don't casually tie your reputation to a publisher you know nothing about. Don't give away your baby just because someone says they'll make it a star. Don't let fancy clothes or fancy claims corral you into something you'll later regret.

Like Forrest Gump's momma said, “Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're gonna get.” Except that you can get an idea of what you're going to get when you take that big bite out of your wallet to hire a company to publish your book.

Start paying attention to self-published books already on the market. Note the ones that present well, with crisp editing, free of typos and grammatical errors. Check lists of award-winning self-published books and notice the companies that produced them. They are likely to produce a good product for you, too.

Self-publishing used to be referred to as Vanity Press. While their capabilities have advanced, be realistic about what self-publishing can – and cannot – do for you, and be prepared to do your part to achieve success. Most houses offer a range of services; make a list of your priorities: decide what's most important for them to do, what you'’re prepared to pay and what you are capable of taking on yourself.

Remember: Getting your book published may be the final step of your writing journey bit it is just the first step of your journey to being read.