So Misguided

Plain words, uncommon sense

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Because Remembrance Isn’t Just About One Day

James’ mom and her partner Keith were at the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra on Friday night and Terry Kelly, a Canadian performer, was on hand to wow the crowd. What really brought the house to a standing ovation was his song “A Pittance of Time.”

Quote: From Terry’s website:
“On November 11, 1999 Terry Kelly was in a Shoppers Drug Mart store in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. At 10:55 AM an announcement came over the store’s PA asking customers who would still be on the premises at 11:00 AM to give two minutes of silence in respect to the veterans who have sacrificed so much for us.

Terry was impressed with the store’s leadership role in adopting the Legion’s ‘two minutes of silence’ initiative. He felt that the store’s contribution of educating the public to the importance of remembering was commendable.

When eleven oíclock arrived on that day, an announcement was again made asking for the ‘two minutes of silence’ to commence. All customers, with the exception of a man who was accompanied by his young child, showed their respect.”

Here’s the song he spun from that incident via YouTube.com.

Photography Contest

Jen at Canuck Librarian has an announcement about the Kitchener Public Library’s amateur photography contest.

The KPL has teamed up with the Record to host the contest. Deadline is Jan 31.

Three submissions per photographer.
Two age divisions: youth (18 and under) or adult (19 and over).

Winning entries will be published in an issue of The Record. Winning entries will also be displayed in the Concourse Gallery, lower level of the Main Library throughout April 2007.

The KPL has a number of cool community projects and contests. Do you live in Kitchener? Do you know how cool your library is?

Seen Reading

Julie Wilson has a cool project going on at Seen Reading.

She describes it like this:
Quote:
What Is Seen Reading?

1. I see you reading.
2. I guesstimate where you are in the book.
3. I trip on over to the bookstore and make a note of the text.
4. I let my imagination rip.
5. Readers become celebrities.
6. People get giddy and buy more books.

She’s also getting a lot of attention lately. BookNinja, Quill and Quire, the Anansi newsletter … the list goes on. I am quite happy to promote another book blog. I love them.

Anyone else have a favourite book blog?

Help WorldChanging Hack the Publishing System

I’m a little late on this but it’s still November 1 so if you’re into social change and want to help with a little experiment then read the post on worldchanging.com, then go to Amazon.com and buy their book today.

The plan is to use the internet and word of mouth to get enough people to buy the book today on Amazon to push it up in terms of sales rank. This will get the attention of Amazon, who will likely order more books, and will hit the radar of the indies too.

The plan is a little hit and miss on how the publishing industry actually works, but since I’m a tree-huggy, alternative girl, I want to buy this book, and, therefore, also want to support the enthusiasm of their plan. Since I’m a practical, hard-working bee in the publishing industry, let me explain where the cracks exist.

It is very smart to use word of mouth and generate lots of sales, even for a short period of time. Here’s the but …

1. You want to have lots of sales over a longer period of time, at least a week, not just one day. The perception is wow, they got a whole bunch of people to buy the book on one day. Great. But those sales likely equal the sales they would have gotten over a longer period of time. The pie doesn’t get bigger, the sales just all appear on one day. NOTE: I said this is the perception. Of course, you’ll sell more books because you’ve done an outreach campaign to educate people about your book. But you need to think about how to sustain the sales too.

2. Amazon’s bestseller list is influential to Amazon buyers and the publisher involved. A one-day blitz might get media attention or Amazon’s attention, but you want real long-term impact and, again, a way to sustain sales. Booksellers can return stock so you can do the blitz to get more orders but it doesn’t help you if they return them a month later.

3. Amazon ranks books based on sales over the previous hour. The ranking system is strange. I don’t know why authors keep checking it. It’s an interesting guide but so what if you were #1 for that hour and then #72 for the next hour and then back to #30,000 at the end of the day. That’s not the real data that Amazon looks at, or what a publisher or bookseller considers when making budget decisions.

What does work is the enthusiasm the WorldChanging Team has for the book, for giving readers a purpose and plan, for generating interest and publicity about what they are trying to do and for their book.

You can get attention. My point is simply do it for long-term benefit rather than a short-term media hit.

I recommend reading the comments after the post because there are some clever tips and information from other authors and book people about how to be even more effective than the one-day blitz, and how to be more effective in an indie shop. Read in particular what Maria Headley has to say.

Anyway, I’ve requested this book for my birthday but I’m not going to order from Amazon.com because even though I have a Canadian shipping address, they source US books. I want to support Canadian publishers and distributors so I order from Amazon.ca for hard to find titles and buy from my local shop.

Michael Winter Survives Inferno

Michael Winter, author of The Big Why and other books I’ve greatly enjoyed reading, has survived falling into an inferno. Speaking of the big why — why? Why was he near an inferno?

According to Quill and Quire, Michael was at the city dump, unloading some roofing from his room, lost his balance and fell into the open air inferno.

Quill reports: ‘Luckily for Winter, the usually deserted dump was not entirely deserted on this particular day. Sitting nearby, according to the author, was a solitary man enjoying some spirits who caught sight of Winter falling into the incinerator. ìHe saw me fall in, got help, opened the back doors [of the incinerator], and I flew out with my arm on fire,î says Winter.’
Quite an X-men story: Winter wrestles Inferno.

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