What have I done? For sure not enough, but here's my list.
1. I had some flyers made for the two upcoming book signings. I have attached a copy of the flyer for one to be held in Albuquerque at Gruet Winery on 7/28/12 from 12-4 on the blog. The other one, at East Mountain Grill is getting external press.
2. Re: that. On Tuesday this week I was interviewed by The Independent, the local paper for the East Mountains and Estancia Valley. I was interviewed about the writing of the book and the upcoming book signing at East Mountain Grill on August 4, 2012 from 11-3. That was cool. The article comes out next week.
3. On Wednesday I brought a copy of the book and a press release for the Gruet Book Signing to the Albuquerque Journal and left it for Journal Sunday Book editor David Steinberg to peruse. I never heard back. Oh well.
4. Thursday got my GIANT poster made that I'm going to use for the book signings and book fairs. It is 4 feet by 3 feet and looks FABULOUS. Let me know what you think if you come by any of those events.
5. Was contacted by the East Mountain Telegraph who also want to do an article about the EM Grill book signing. I have not spoken to them yet.
6. Did my first blog post on a blog called Laeland which is a crime blog http://laemonie.wordpress.com/. I used some of the things I learned in my criminal investigations class at CNM to write the post. It will be online starting August 4, 2012.
7. Spent the week going to Albuquerque libraries and senior centers giving them copies of the flyers.
If anyone would like a jpeg of one or both of the flyers to hand out to your friends and associates, let me know and I will email it to you. My softball team is going to get hit up on Monday night.
Once again I thank everyone that has helped us so far. We appreciate it and look forward to seeing as many people as can make it to the book signings.
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Sunday, July 15, 2012
A Lot Has Happened in a Month
It's been a little over a month since the book was first published on Kindle. Then a couple of weeks later it came out in paperback. In hindsight it all happened really fast. But when it was happening, it all seemed so very slow. I had no way to be patient. Maybe I will be able to be more patient with the next book.
I'm getting myself on the six year plan. In six years I want to have sold a million copies. Only about 17 authors have sold a million copies of one book so naturally I'm thinking I will be one of them. Of course, at this point I'm not exactly a household name, except in my household, but I have confidence.
Everyday I try to make a least one positive step towards my goal of selling a million. Today was a rather weak day. So far I have only added a new picture to my Goodreads author profile, connected this blog to the same author profile, and connected my facebook fanpage to my Goodreads account. Plus I twittered about my paperback giveaway. Plus I posted a picture of one of my fans reading the book on Facebook.
Yep, it's all about social media. I still have many other things to do towards that end but that will be on other days.
There was a column written by Leslie Lithicum in the Albuquerque Journal about life imprisionment today. I am going to respond to the column, not because I disagree with it but I want to give her my point of view. I agree with the Parole Chief that life should mean life when a convicted murderer is sentenced. I will post my letter here after I write it just in case the Albuquerque Journal does choose to publish it.
I'm getting myself on the six year plan. In six years I want to have sold a million copies. Only about 17 authors have sold a million copies of one book so naturally I'm thinking I will be one of them. Of course, at this point I'm not exactly a household name, except in my household, but I have confidence.
Everyday I try to make a least one positive step towards my goal of selling a million. Today was a rather weak day. So far I have only added a new picture to my Goodreads author profile, connected this blog to the same author profile, and connected my facebook fanpage to my Goodreads account. Plus I twittered about my paperback giveaway. Plus I posted a picture of one of my fans reading the book on Facebook.
Yep, it's all about social media. I still have many other things to do towards that end but that will be on other days.
There was a column written by Leslie Lithicum in the Albuquerque Journal about life imprisionment today. I am going to respond to the column, not because I disagree with it but I want to give her my point of view. I agree with the Parole Chief that life should mean life when a convicted murderer is sentenced. I will post my letter here after I write it just in case the Albuquerque Journal does choose to publish it.
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Crime Victims Deserve Respect Too
In our society, if an armed soldier goes off to war and receives a horrible injury because the "other side" is trying to capture, attack or kill him or her, that soldier is then hailed as a hero, and rightfully so. On the flip side, if an unarmed citizen walks down the street and is captured, attacked, or killed, that citizen is considered an unfortunate crime victim and is all too often ingnored and even shunned by society. The victim now makes others feel uncomfortable. The "incident" is discussed only in whispers for fear of upsetting the victim or it is not discussed at all in the belief that if you don't talk about the bad thing, the bad thing won't happen to you.
The crime victim gets no medals, no disability pension and no parades but does get the life long burden of shame. Shame in the sense that they survived and shame in the sense that somehow they brought the violence upon themselves.
The situation typically goes from something bad happened to me, to I am bad because something bad happened to me.
PTSD is an expected and understandable disabilty for war veterans. For crime victims, PTSD is oten considered a weakness. They are told to "get over it".
Soldiers, for the most part, volunteer and are trained and armed. They are to be commended for the service they provide to their country. Civilians, for the most part, are unarmed, untrained and never agreed to fighting an attacker to the death.
But sometimes they must.
The crime victim gets no medals, no disability pension and no parades but does get the life long burden of shame. Shame in the sense that they survived and shame in the sense that somehow they brought the violence upon themselves.
The situation typically goes from something bad happened to me, to I am bad because something bad happened to me.
PTSD is an expected and understandable disabilty for war veterans. For crime victims, PTSD is oten considered a weakness. They are told to "get over it".
Soldiers, for the most part, volunteer and are trained and armed. They are to be commended for the service they provide to their country. Civilians, for the most part, are unarmed, untrained and never agreed to fighting an attacker to the death.
But sometimes they must.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
The Book is Finally Up on Kindle
Wow. It has taken two years and thousands (and thousands) of hours to complete but the book is up on Amazon. It is also up on Smashwords, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Sony Reader, Apple iBookstore and the Diesel ebook store.
Now I've got to run it a flagpole and see if I can get anyone to salute it. Hopefully people will want to read this story and the story of Colene's survival - against ALL odds - and the stuggles that she encounters every day, relating back to that fateful night in 1981.
Now I've got to run it a flagpole and see if I can get anyone to salute it. Hopefully people will want to read this story and the story of Colene's survival - against ALL odds - and the stuggles that she encounters every day, relating back to that fateful night in 1981.
Friday, June 1, 2012
Apparently Formatting is NOT Instantaneous
I finially finished everything, everything on the book . . . EXCEPT the formatting . . . and I thought it would take one day to format but apparently formatters take the weekend off. I did not know that. I'm in the 24/7 world and I thought everybody else was too.
So just like every other day . . . I wait. Bums me out.
On the bright side, I finished enrolling myself for my 2 necessary ISBN numbers. That took awhile. Everything does. People look at me and think I'm goofing off on the computer all the time. Like I'm playing solitaire or something. No, I am not. It's work, work work. And what do I have to show for it?
I'm not sure.
Well, at least I am closer to fine. Just regular fine, not Joe Fine.
We will see what tomorrow brings.
So just like every other day . . . I wait. Bums me out.
On the bright side, I finished enrolling myself for my 2 necessary ISBN numbers. That took awhile. Everything does. People look at me and think I'm goofing off on the computer all the time. Like I'm playing solitaire or something. No, I am not. It's work, work work. And what do I have to show for it?
I'm not sure.
Well, at least I am closer to fine. Just regular fine, not Joe Fine.
We will see what tomorrow brings.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
30 Years Ago Today
Thirty years ago today, Michael Guzman was given the death penalty as his punishment for the savage, cold blooded murder of Julie Ann Jackson. The sentence was undone 4 years later. But the jurys' courage that day is to be commended and should be remembered. That jury understood the outside pressures but did the right things anyway.
Today I obtained a photo of that day, of that moment, from the Albuquerque Journal. That photo is the final piece I was waiting for to complete my book. Tomorrow the book goes to the formatter and then hopefully the day after that it goes on line. Then a week or two after that it will be a real three dimentional book. Like Carly Simon said, "the anticipation is keeping me waiting."
Today I obtained a photo of that day, of that moment, from the Albuquerque Journal. That photo is the final piece I was waiting for to complete my book. Tomorrow the book goes to the formatter and then hopefully the day after that it goes on line. Then a week or two after that it will be a real three dimentional book. Like Carly Simon said, "the anticipation is keeping me waiting."
Monday, May 28, 2012
A Book Trailer is the Way to Go
Looks like I'd better consider producing a video book trailer. That's what everybody does now, when they have a book to sell. I might have an advantage that perhaps other writers do not have, in that I have previously produced videos. But I have never made a book trailer before, so we shall see. My specialty which is being funny, doesn't really lend itself to a crime book and thus my dilemma. I am willing to take suggestions. Please send them in. Thank you, I'll be waiting by my computer.
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