Weekly Self-Published Book Review: Coach Can Fitness Fun

Book reviews are a great way for self-publishing authors to gain exposure. After all, how can someone buy your book if he or she doesn’t know it exists? Paired with other elements of your book promotion strategy, requesting reviews is a great way to get people talking about what you’ve written.

When we read good reviews, we definitely like to share them. It gives the author a few (permanent) moments of fame and allows us to let the community know about a great book. Here’s this week’s book review by Midwest Book Review:

 coach can fitness fun

Coach Can Fitness Fun

Mike Alexander

Publisher: Outskirts Press

ISBN: 9781432742645

“Coach Can Fitness Fun” gives lots of tips to kids about how to live healthier lives by playing with friends and different sports that they can also find to be lots of fun to play. Some of the lessons are the importance of drinking water and eating vegetables and other foods as well as getting the proper amount of sleep. Parents of young children should read “Coach Can Fitness Fun’ as well to help reinforce the positive messages of the author.

Friday Conversations With A Self-Publishing Writer 6/27/14

TYPE FASTER!

Last month I attended an awards banquet for authors.  I was so excited to see such a variety of unconventional writers being recognized.  These were folks who wrote with passion, flamboyance and flare that could only come from their pens.  They inspired me!  Then, a few days later, I recalled a quote from one of my favorite authors, Isaac Asimov.  Remember him?  He’s the American author (and professor of biochemistry) who “saw” the world and universe in such unique ways and reached millions of readers through his science fiction books.  To writers then and now, Asimov spoke clearly these words of encouragement:  “If my doctor told me I had only six minutes to live, I wouldn’t brood. I’d type a little faster.”

Asimov has given me another level of encouragement, too; one that has pushed me (personally) outside of the genre box that first enclosed me.  He wrote in multiple genres: science textbooks; popular science; essays; mystery; scientific science fiction and social science fiction.  And he also wrote literary criticism pieces.  So for those of us who have painted ourselves into a corner—think again.  The gift of writing we’ve been given has many functions!  We need not be “nailed” to one genre!

When trying to encourage a friend (writer) several months ago—sharing the concept of not being “pegged” as only one type of author—I found myself stopping mid-sentence and then changing the subject.  This particular friend was not hearing what was being said.  Her mind was SET.  She was a Romance Writer and that was all there was to it.  And (sad for me), she believed that the only avenue of publication for her work was with the main-street publishers—the Houghton Mifflins and Random Houses.  She had sent her manuscript and was waiting.

So it is, my friends, that as I write today’s blog, I am hoping you can see beyond the “blinders.”  Look to your writings and re-discover them!  What other genres do your topics suggest?  My friend’s romance novel could have easily been enhanced with historical references and possibly action/adventure/mystery.  Plus, her own experiences in the writing craft could be expanded into articles for writers’ magazines and ezines.  Plus…Plus…Plus!

AND, don’t miss the opportunities of partnering with a self-publisher and their professional teams of layout designers, editors, marketing experts, etc.  You will, of course, need to research the one’s labeled as “the best” or “fastest” or “least expensive.”  QUALITY of product is what you’re looking for and having the personal power to make your own decisions is a great PLUS with these companies.  Their self-publishing “business” is a “service” business that has become a true blessing in the lives of authors and readers, today.

So…type faster!  Let those ideas flow!  Get the books published and hold your dreams in your hands.

Royalene ABOUT ROYALENE DOYLE: Royalene Doyle is a Ghostwriter with Outskirts Press, bringing more than 35 years of writing experience to authors who need “just a little assistance” with completing their writing projects. She has worked with both experienced and fledgling writers helping complete projects in multiple genres. When a writer brings the passion they have for their work and combines it with Royalene’s passion to see the finished project in print, books are published and the writer’s legacy is passed forward.

Weekly Self-Published Book Review: The Last Buffalo

Book reviews are a great way for self-publishing authors to gain exposure. After all, how can someone buy your book if he or she doesn’t know it exists? Paired with other elements of your book promotion strategy, requesting reviews is a great way to get people talking about what you’ve written.

When we read good reviews, we definitely like to share them. It gives the author a few (permanent) moments of fame and allows us to let the community know about a great book. Here’s this week’s book review by Midwest Book Review:

 

The Last Buffalo

Ed Kienzle

Publisher: Outskirts Press

ISBN: 9781478709442

“The Last Buffalo” by Ed Kienzle is a book about 12-year-old Wyman and his uncle Little Kettle on their adventure to save the buffalo. It all started when Wyman was born and Little Kettle proclaimed him keeper of the buffalo. He made sure that from the start Wyman loved the buffalo. When Wyman started getting dreams about a mysterious buffalo that he could not see, Little Kettle and Wyman set off to Yellowstone Park, a ten hour drive from where they live, to see if they can save the buffalo that have been getting shot when they cross the border. They also want to find the meaning of his dreams. Along the way he finds allies in the most unlikely of places. Will he be able to save the buffalo or will the ranchers get the best of him and kill the buffalo that cross the border of Yellowstone? Read and find out.
The characters were easy to relate to and enjoy. There were not too many or too few and each one had a distinct personality that was easy to like. My favorite character was Wyman who had trouble at school since everyone was bullying him because he was the keeper of the buffalo. He was adventurous and enjoyed nature. He also was nice and easy to be around.
I would recommend “The Last Buffalo” by Ed Kienzle to people who like adventure and action. I think all people young and old would like this book. I could not put this book down until I finished it. It was smoothly written and easy to follow, making it an easy read.

Friday Conversations With A Self-Publishing Writer 6/20/14

 

The 1st ENTREPRENEURS—WERE WRITERS

Entrepreneur—Executive Director—free enterprise thinker—risk taker—adventurist—YES, the writer fits all these definitions.  And these originaloriginals not only created “the story,” they self-published with their very own hands!  Of course, their books were actually visible to only a few who happened to travel along those rock-wall-paths (petroglyphs).  Today, we appreciate these first storytellers, journalists, event-of-the-day reporters from the perspective of ancient history.  And yet they continue demonstrating our very real human need to communicate; the desire to share hopes and dreams; to warn others of dangers; the necessity to tell our stories.  Authors today are carrying that legacy forward.

Each and every time I speak with a potential client (for ghostwriting or editorial consult) I am inspired by their story—the journey that carried them to the point of placing words on paper in preparation for publishing—their written hopes of sharing something of importance with others.  This is, indeed, a grand adventure!

My earliest un-official clients were my parents, who started working with me to create their memoirs.  Even though they’d shared a lifetime together, their perspectives were totally different.  My mother’s main focus was family—not just the “ancestry”—but her family.  Living in the historical time period of the Great Depression was the setting of her early childhood.  She was a coalminer’s daughter who took on the responsibilities of “parenthood” for four younger siblings, saving pennies she’d earned (at age 10 and beyond) to buy each one something special.  My dad’s perspective of those and later years was, of course, very different; I guess you might say it was from his “manly” point of view.  And yet, seeing their memories written out in a memoir not only gave them satisfaction, it also left a legacy of lessons learned for me, my children and grandchildren, and potentially countless future generations.

In these many years since my ghostwriting/editorial consultant career beginnings, the authors I’ve been associated with have covered numerous genres—from cookbooks to poetry to spiritual insights and true stories—each utilizing the communication tool of book publishing.  I can still remember a conversation shared during a writer’s workshop retreat that speculated about how personal computers “would hamper the ability of creative thought because writers would stop writing upon those wonderful legal-sized yellow tablets.”  The group was divided about 25-75 in that opinion; 75% certain that the “process of handwriting” was the key to developing worthwhile material.  Today, every one of them appreciates the “free flowing creativity” provided by computer and keyboard.

So it is that I see the partnership between author and self-publisher in much the same light.  As stated last week, the self-publishing entrepreneurs of today are now providing yet another most valuable tool for us.  They are coming along beside us so that we are more easily (and quickly) able to let our dreams—our inspired written creations—FLY!

Royalene ABOUT ROYALENE DOYLE: Royalene Doyle is a Ghostwriter with Outskirts Press, bringing more than 35 years of writing experience to authors who need “just a little assistance” with completing their writing projects. She has worked with both experienced and fledgling writers helping complete projects in multiple genres. When a writer brings the passion they have for their work and combines it with Royalene’s passion to see the finished project in print, books are published and the writer’s legacy is passed forward.

Weekly Self-Published Book Review: The Cult Worship and the Warriors

Book reviews are a great way for self-publishing authors to gain exposure. After all, how can someone buy your book if he or she doesn’t know it exists? Paired with other elements of your book promotion strategy, requesting reviews is a great way to get people talking about what you’ve written.

When we read good reviews, we definitely like to share them. It gives the author a few (permanent) moments of fame and allows us to let the community know about a great book. Here’s this week’s book review by Midwest Book Review:

 the cult worship

The Cult Worship and the Warriors

Maria Sanctissima Trinidad

Publisher: Outskirts Press

ISBN: 9781432776534

Professional nurse and devout Christian Maria Sanctissima Trinidad shares a chilling true story (names are changed to protect those mentioned) in The Cult Worship and the Warriors, written partly as a warning to readers of all faiths against the insidious pull of cults that may mime Christian faith, but in practice put other gods before the one true God. Maria tells of her personal experiences of being drawn into a small cult led by “God’s chosen teacher” that called its members Warriors. Gradually, Maria came to understand that the abuse, bullying, and even life-threatening humiliations of the cult were against the will of God. The Cult Worship and the Warriors concludes with a cautionary description of distinguishing features of cult leaders – notably their magnetism, and the common prevalence of negative character disorders among them, even psychopathy – and an explanation of why people are lured to join exploitive cults. “To be informed is to live a life and prevent living and keeping up to a deceptive cult standard that is both an insult to human spirituality and human intelligence. It is degrading in the sense that freedom of worship is stalled and hampered by a sick psychopath with no regard to society’s norm and standards.” A strong cautionary tale, The Cult Worship and the Warriors is highly recommended.