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Tuesday, May 11, 2010
What are "emergency 911 interviews" with authors? I found this phrase twice in PR material about a book. If I make a 911 call, it will definitely NOT be to interview an author. How about you? What would constitute an "emergency interview" anyway?
"Oh, quick, I'm dying from lack of a quote from the author to go with this free book publicity. Call 9-1-1, stat!"
Well, they do call them "book doctors" so maybe this isn't so far off base as first glance suggests.
The publicity agent also asks that I "please everify the best street address so we can send you a package." Is that a new verb? Makes sense: "to everify" is to verify via electronic media. Right? I think what he really wants is for me to email him my street address.
9-1-1, help! I've been hit by runaway creative nonfiction.
Monday, May 10, 2010
Currently Reading
New books pop in more frequently these days. Like what? S&S sent the paperback of Alexis Wright's CARPENTARIA, the one about the Aborigines that I loved. It's a terrible print job, but a wonderful story to revisit. Why do publishers send the paperback editions to reviewers who have already published reviews of a book when it came out in hardback? If it weren't so good, I wouldn't even mention it here.
I asked the Free Press for WISENHEIMER by Mark Oppenheimer because in the PR it sounded funny (in a good way) and the author sounded a lot like me with the love of words thing. It's not and he's not. It's all about debating. Yawn!
Atria Books surprised me with WRITE THAT BOOK ALREADY! by Sam Barry and Kathi Kamen Goldmark, the Author Enablers at BookPage.com. I just started reading this one with some trepidation. It has a chapter about self-publishing. In fact, the book is about getting published, not about writing. The authors' breezy style is a bit off-putting, and the fact that they don't discuss getting an agent until chapter five, disquieting. We'll see.
Saturday, May 08, 2010
Thursday, May 06, 2010
Give it Away
Listen to this article
Give it away -- a concept that eludes the young, anal retentive, greedy and unsure. Trust me, there is no end to creativity, new toys or techniques. "Giving it away" enriches you, frees up the flow. It takes a lot of energy to hold on, to protect, to hide. Generosity enhances reputation and credibility, too.
Exactly what and how much to give away is unknown. It depends partly on what you otherwise offer for sale. Give it away until you're uncomfortable. Then give some more. Breaking through barriers brings pleasant release and satisfaction--what a paradox! The nature of the media are such that you can effectively provide only small bits of information at a time.
Let's get specific. I sell editing services to help others write well and get published. You want to sell a novel (establish a platform, sell books, connect with readers). He is a temporarily unemployed writer for print publications seeking a new job or assignments. We can all provide free information in our blogs and other social media, on our websites, in seminars and conferences and online communities without jeopardizing our incomes.
No one is not going to hire, buy or assign work because we shared our talents. I can tell others the elements of editing, but that won't enable someone to compete with my service or not need it. My abilities include years of experience and more knowledge than I could cram into, say, six years of blog posts. I give away articles on a single topic, not everything I know about how to write well. And many people just don't want to do the editing themselves. They'd rather write.
Fiction writers have unique voices that add value to their work. Discussing their writing processes, plot points, characterization or a story's background will not dampen interest from an agent, publisher or readers. Even if you give away a whole novel, you have more to write, right?
Similarly for nonfiction writers, explaining the finer points of interviewing, for example, won't enable others to instantly become crack reporters and snatch away jobs. You can also demonstrate your abilities to write well and to craft articles.
While you digest all this, think about the urgent need for writers to show mastery of electronic media. Old school is out. Open hands are in.
Wednesday, May 05, 2010
Rewrites & Resales
Rewriting is a major edit. It is also the source of additional income for freelancers who sell an original article. If you rewrite that piece, maybe giving it a new slant, you can sell it again as a different story. No, you don't just change a certain percentage, you rewrite the whole article, emphasizing a different aspect, drawing in unused research material, getting fresh quotes from experts.
Successful freelancer Marcia Peterson calls this "repurposing" articles in her "How 2 Successfully Repurpose Your Articles" on the WOW website. She says, "There are very few stories that fit only one market, so brainstorm all the possible angles..." and tells you how to:
Alter the original work for a larger or smaller market.
Explore new demographics.
Switch genres or styles.
Get creative.
Read the whole article and notice how she draws on resources and advice from other freelancers, providing examples of writers who succeed at rewriting their works and selling them to different markets. Why do it? You've already performed the basic research and are familiar with the topic--time saved is also money earned!
Tuesday, May 04, 2010
Review: A FIERCE RADIANCE
Listen to this article
Previously, I reviewed Lauren Belfer's debut novel City of Light, and liked it immensely because of its strong female main character. Her new novel, A FIERCE RADIANCE, comes out on the 15th of next month. Again this author delivers a character who will resonate with her readers: the charismatic Claire Shipley, a beautiful and talented photo-journalist for Life magazine during World War II.
She stumbles into the greatest story of her career when she is assigned to take pictures of the scientists at the Rockefeller Institute, working against time to develop life-saving antibiotics. This plot struck a personal note for my family: during the war, my parents' first baby died of an infection as their similarly sick cocker spaniel was saved by an experimental drug available only for animals--possibly streptomycin. In Belfer's book, the drug is penicillin. She, too, had lost a daughter to an infection from a minor scratch in the pre-antibiotics years.
Belfer’s historical exploration of the origins of these life-saving drugs, whose efficacy has since been reduced through over-prescription and the growth of antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria, echoes in today’s heated debates over antibiotic use.
A FIERCE RADIANCE is a thriller, a love story, a family saga, and a portrait of war-time New York. It depicts the tumultuous early days of World War II, when many feared that America would lose the war and they clung fiercely to their loved ones, because no one could predict what tomorrow would bring. It was a very different lifetime in America and Belfer offers a glimpse into it, a way of life that fewer and fewer of us experienced.













