Showing posts with label Tweet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tweet. Show all posts

Monday, March 4, 2013

The Daily Chronicle




By Mark W. Danielson

Once upon a time, newspapers were a primary source of information frequently titled The [name your city] Chronicle or The [name your city] Times.  But with changing times, many newspapers are also chronicled in e-format.  A side benefit is our own lives are now documented through the social media.  

Now before anyone gets upset, mull over the positive side to this.  Thanks to the social media, we now have a continuous record of how we lived our day, thus in a very real sense our e-mail, text messages, and tweets have created an unedited autobiography in more detail than we ever imagined.  Assuming you don’t delete these e-mail, one day your kids might actually gain a sense of who you were and why you made your decisions.  Of course, if you have things you don’t want them to see, you had better password protect them or delete them.

I have written before about my only link to my globetrotting Indiana Jones photo/journalist grandfather is his writing.  Without Maynard Owen Williams’ written text, I would never have known that he dined with Laurence of Arabia or that he was among the first to enter the newly discovered King Tut’s tomb.  Granted, most of us lead far less exciting lives, but through e-mail we at least leave a record. 

For years I tried to get my father to write his autobiography, and in recent years he actually did work on it, but as with most people he passed before ever completing it.  Still, I have a daily chronicle from the daily e-mails we exchanged over the last fifteen years and that is far better than nothing.

Recently I decided it was time to trade e-mails for storage space, but I wanted to permanently preserve my conversations with my father.  To do this I opened a Word document and then starting with the oldest e-mail, copied and pasted its contents, backed it up with a flash drive, and then deleted it.  The process was tedious and slowed even more when I included photos I had attached to the e-mail, but since these photos were referenced in the text it was necessary.  To do this I had to first view it, save it, call up the saved photo, copy it, and finally paste it into the Word document. 

In the end my unedited chronicle totaled 652 pages and over 347 thousand words, which equates to three long novels, or four to six novellas.  Now I have a good record of my father’s and my daily lives preserving many priceless memories.  At some point I will edit this document and save the posterity-worthy pearls.  Most likely, I can narrow it down to the size of a single novel.  In the meantime, I will leave it for a rainy day when I want to reflect on my father’s wisdom and that is indeed something to look forward to.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Those Elusive Reviews

By Beth Terrell

Awhile back, Jean mentioned a famous author who sent out 50 review books. He attributed much of his book's success to this. Then Chester, one of my heroes, told me he'd done the same. Thus armed with advice from Those Who Are In the Know, I obtained 50 review copies and proceeded to search for 50 places to send them.

It's not as easy as it sounds. I got off to a quick start, because Chester kindly gave me a few names and addresses, and as always, I shamelessly dropped his name. Then I added to my list by Googling "mystery reviews" and "mystery reviewers" and also by offering ARCs (Advance Review Copies) to the first five people on the DorothyL list who emailed me asking for one. One, Theresa de Valence, wrote a lovely review and posted it to the listserve. Our own Pat Browning was kind enough to read a copy and give a review. My list grew, then shrunk as I went to review sites only discover that some were defunct, some only reviewed books by the BIG SIX, some only reviewed books published by Lulu or Createspace, some had long lists of reviews but no discernible way of submitting books, and so on. I searched for more, and my list grew again. I sent emails to some Amazon reviewers and one to a reviewer I found on Books'n'Bytes. All of them bounced, sending me scrambling for more recent email addresses. Many of the sites and reviewers I queried simply never replied. Maybe they have a backlog and will get to me eventually.

On the other hand, I checked back on the Thrilling Detective site and found my protagonist, Jared McKean, listed under "Detectives M-Z." That was a serious thrill, especially when I clicked on the link and read, a very nice review that began, "This Nashville cat just may be worth watching." Sending a thank-you note to the reviewer immediately went on my to-do list.

By the way, Chester's Greg and Jill McKenzie are there too, but Sid Chance isn't on the list yet.

Within a few weeks, I'm sure I'll have sent out 50 or more review copies. Will it make a difference? Well, it certainly couldn't hurt. With each online review, my search engine stock goes up. It's even better if I link to the reviews, and better still if I can find some kindly folks to link back to me. My husband thinks I'll be lucky if I ever reach a point where I make as much from my books as I spend trying to promote them. He may be right. Personally, I'd love to move comfortably into the black. But the only way to get there will be to build a readership one Tweet, one Facebook post, one review, one precious reader at a time.