Sunday, June 29, 2008

FREE E-Book - what a great "loss leader" idea!

You know how stores lure you in with good sales and while you're in the store you see other stuff you want/need and end up buying more than the sale items? The sale items are known as loss leaders because the store usually doesn't make any money on them, in fact they usually lose money but the store still comes out ahead on the profit they make from the non-sale stuff that people buy.

Of course "loss leader" was the first thing that came into my head when I saw this offer from St. Martin's Press for two free e-books written by Julia Spencer-Fleming. I'd never heard of her before but I thought what the heck, they're free books so if I don't like them it's no loss, right?

Like all writers, I love discovering a new "favorite" author and Spencer-Fleming is going on my author BOLO list. The two e-books are the first two books in Spencer-Fleming's Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne series. Clare Fergusson is an Episcopalian priest and, as Clare explains it, she's chaste (meaning not have sex) not celibate (meaning not allowed to marry). The whole priest/celibate thing adds a touch of humor to Clare's encounters but also, interestingly enough, adds to the sexual tension between Clare and Russ VanAlstyne, the local police chief. Clare is automatically held to a higher standard than your typical heroine because she's . . . well . . . a priest.

Russ isn't your typical hero either. He wears glasses, has bad knees and is at least 10 years older than Clare. And as a Vietnam vet, he still carries baggage.

Spencer's website bills her work as "novels of Faith and Murder for readers of literary suspense". I'm hooked. I read the second book of the series - A Fountain Filled with Blood - first. I'd have to rate it as an excellent mystery with strong romantic elements. In addition to the scrappy Clare and wounded warrior Russ, the story held my interest because I couldn't figure out whodunit until the very end. And, Spencer-Fleming didn't wrap it up with a neat bow at the end, which is why despite the strong romantic elements the story doesn't qualify as a romance. The bad guy wins . . . sort of, and will no doubt show up in another story in the series.

Now I'm off to read the first book in the series - In the Bleak Midwinter. The free e-book offer is over, but it's well worth the $7 a piece for the books!


Sunday, June 22, 2008

More About Politics

I'm sorry. I just can't help myself. When I started this blog the goal was to promote my writing and build a name for myself as a writer. Writing related stuff only.

Boring.

No, writing isn't boring. I love to write. But I'm not one dimensional and it seems somehow . . . disingenuous to limit myself to blogging about writing especially given the political and economic environment of today. There are so many interesting things going on in the world.

So. no more one-dimensional blog for me. Politics. Religion. The economy. Stupid criminals. You name it, it's all fair game.

Pesky Surveillance Measure Gets in the Way of Running for Re-Election


From the June 21 (Saturday) edition of the The Wall Street Journal in an article written by Siobhan Gorman and titled Many Democrats Object as House Passes Spying Bill.

The House voted 293-129 for a compromise bill setting new electronic surveillance rules that effectively shield telecom companies from lawsuits arising from the government’s war on terror. The measure now moves to the Senate, where it is expected to win approval.

“Despite broad opposition from Democrats, the party’s leaders concluded Congress had to pass a surveillance measure. They faced an August deadline, when previously authorized
surveillance orders would begin to expire. Conservative Democrats in tough re-election races were clamoring for a bill. Party leaders wanted to pass the surveillance bill, so they could move on to issues where they would have more election-year traction, such as the economy, congressional aides said.

Still, 128 Democrats voted against the bill. Rep. Holt said the compromise measure "permits massive warrantless surveillance" and contravenes Fourth Amendment protections against unwarranted search and seizure. The compromise bill turns the notion of innocent-until-proven-guilty on its head and "alters the relationship between the government and the people.

Let me get this straight. In their rush to get the pesky surveillance measure out of the way so they can move on to issues that will help them get re-elected, the House passed an electronic surveillance bill that Rep Holt (Democrat from New Jersey) says “permits massive warrantless surveillance” and violates our Fourth Amendment protections against unwarranted search and seizure.

It’s not the surveillance measure that’s got me riled up. Well, it does but that’s a whole ‘nother blog post. It’s the rush to sweep this pesky issue under the rug so conservative Democrats in tough re-election races can have more appealing issues to wave before the voters’ noses.

What are we paying these people for? To get re-elected? Or to represent the people and run the country?

I’m one of those folks that held out hope when the Democrats took Congress in 2006 that our elected representatives would get back on track by putting the country ahead of their political careers and personal interests.

Silly me.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Networking - It Isn't About You

This link was shared on one of the writer's loops to which I belong. It's an interview with Stephanie Palmer - a consultant to creative types who are looking for help in getting their work in front of the right people. Of course, she's written a book Good in a Room: How to Sell Yourself (and Your Ideas) and Win Over Any Audience.

I find it interesting that some of the points she makes are the same strategies used by folks who are good at business development (in the professional services world thats a more PC term for sales).

Stephanie talks about building relationships. Real networking isn't about meeting people that can help you - it's about looking for ways you can help the people you meet. The end result is people that are willing to help you. It's about building genuine relationships where you see the person as a person not a stepping stone on the way to achieving your own goals.

How many of us miss this key point in our quest to meet the folks that will help us achieve our goals?

And how many of us eschew selling ourselves because we think that's our agent's job? True, it is your agent's job to pitch you work, but you still have to sell yourself to readers and editors and reviewers and so on and so on.

I can't tell you how many times in the last year I've heard (or read) authors with scorn in their voice talk about how they shouldn't have to market their work. Marketing's a dirty word it appears. But as a wise old friend of mine once said, sometimes you have to blow your own horn because nobody else is going to blow it for you.