I respect your privacy and will not rent, share or sell your personal information.

How a Seed Planted in a Blog Blossomed

Author Carol Bodensteiner appears on Des Moines, Iowa Channel 13 WHO TV to announce the launch of I Grew Up Country Day.

 

 

  1. This is terrific, Flora. I can feel a national day recognizing kids who ‘grew up country’ coming in the near future.

A few years later as I was browsing through my blog comments I  wondered what happened to Carol’s plans to start her own national day for kids who ‘grew up country’, so I emailed her in May 9, 2014. Here is the resulting email exchange:

Hi Carol,

Back in 2012 you commented on one of my blog posts

How to Create Your Own Day to Promote Your Book, Business or Cause

==============Your comment============
This is terrific, Flora. I can feel a national day recognizing kids who ‘grew up country’ coming in the near future.
====================================

Did you ever create this national recognition day?

I’m going to update and republish this article so I’m just wondering.

Warmly,
Flora

Within minutes I got this response from Carol.

Hi, Flora,

Nuts!  I didn’t! I guess I got so wrapped up in working on my novel, that it slid down the list.Now that you’ve brought it up again, I still think it’s a good idea. Could work for both my memoir and my novel.

I look forward to reading the update on the column.

Carol

Our exchange continued

Hi Carol,

LOL. I have many tasks that have slipped to the bottom of my list.

I ran across your comment as I was making a list of tasks for a
new VA I’m considering hiring.  I thought it would be fun to remind
visitors of comments they made on my blogs. You are the first so far.

We’ll see how far I’ll go with this idea.

I’ll let you know when I get to the update.

Happy Spring,

Flora
[Flora,]

That’s a good idea for staying in touch and building a relationship with your readers.

Here’s a new List I’m starting based on this conversation:

“Ideas inspired by reading blogs that I want to act on someday”  I realize there’s a structural issue in that list title, but I can’t figure it out.

Have a good weekend.

[Carol]

Ten months later I got an update from Carol via a Facebook message and the following exchange took place.

March 6, 2015

Hi, Flora,

I wanted to let you know the seed you planted has taken root. On Monday, March 9, at 2:00 p.m., Iowa Governor Terry Branstad will sign a Proclamation declaring March 18, 2015, “I Grew Up Country Day.” Author Shirley Showalter and I are launching an initiative to celebrate the country way of life and preserve growing up country stories.

 

March 6

Wow! How exciting to learn that you followed through with my “seed”.

[Flora]

 

Not only did Carol take this idea and plant it, but she nurtured it all the way to the Office of Iowa Governor Terry Branstad. Thanks to the efforts of Carol and her colleague, Shirley Hershey Showalter,  March 18th is now officially I Grew Up Country Day.

Congratulations Carol and Shirley!

It is my pleasure to share Carol’s post detailing how I Grew Up Country Day came about.

Visit Carol’s  Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/groups/IGrewUpCountry/. You’ll enjoy the memories shared there and perhaps be surprised at how familiar some of them are even if you didn’t ‘grow up country.’

Have you ever followed up on promising comments left on your blog? If so, share the results in the Comments. If you’ve never tried this idea, are you motivated now to check on some of your blog commenters?

Welcome

Article by Flora Brown

Five Inventive, Creative, and Gutsy Indie Authors Show Publishing Muscle

Hank and Lola at Private Lucky launch

A revolution is taking place in the publishing industry and indie authors are at the forefront. No longer satisfied to be confined or defined by others, writers eager to share their stories and lives with readers are finding creative, profitable and fun ways to express themselves. But don’t cross them. They aren’t afraid of speaking out when they’ve been wronged either. Here are five examples.

First Self-Published Bookstore Opens In U.S. Giving Unknown Writers a Platform

Caitlin White

When you’re a children’s or YA writer, it’s hard to find shelf space beside J.K. Rowling, Veronica Roth, John Green, and other major names in the industry — especially if you’re self-published. Gulf Coast Bookstore in Fort Myers, Florida, hopes to become a haven for local writers, as it opened this month as the first self-published bookstore in the country.

Author Shows Us How to Live the Gutsy Life

Sonia Marsh, author of From Freeways to Flip Flops

After living for a year in Belize that didn’t turn out as her family had hoped, Sonia Marsh returned to the USA,  endured divorce, but once her boys were independent she began reinventing herself.  While continuing to write for her blog and build her craft, she decided to combine her love of travel and language in a London-based Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages Certificate program. Although she was turned down when she first applied to the Peace Corps program, she took her mentor’s advice and reapplied immediately. On the very day she completed her TESOL certificate program, she was accepted by the Peace Corps to teach primary education in Lesotho, South Africa. Learn more about this gutsy author at http://soniamarsh.com/

Brave Author Gives Hope and Encouragement to Other Survivors in Town Where It Started

Kathy Pooler, author of Ever Faithful to His Lead

Kathy Pooler, author of Ever Faithful to His Lead, gives hope and encouragement to other survivors, such as when she gave the keynote speech at The Annual Chief’s Tea Domestic Violence Awareness Event in Trenton, Mo. This event was particularly significant because this is the town where she escaped to a basement apartment with her two young children to avoid physical abuse.

I feel very honored to do my part in increasing awareness about domestic abuse. The highlight for me was having an audience member say to me afterwards, “You have told my story. I need to read your book.”

Writers Be Warned: The Case Against Author Solutions (Part 3)

Mick Rooney

Author Solutions preys upon the dreams of authors by selling them expensive services that sound exciting but do not actually sell any books. Their defense: They aren’t being deceptive because they aren’t trying to sell books. Of course, for nearly 200,000 authors who have paid thousands (if not tens of thousands) of dollars to buy expensive services that promised to promote their books, Author Solutions’s indifference to book sales comes as more than a bit of a surprise.

Celebrating an American Hero Whose Life Lives Up to His Nickname Private Lucky

Story of Life of Hendrik C. Gillebaard (Hank) written by Melissa Guzzetta

Over ten years ago Melissa Guzzetta’s husband began making regular visits to videotape Hank Gillebaard recount his remarkable life with the intent of leaving a video account for his adult children. As Melissa and her husband learned more and more about Hank’s life, they realized that Hank’s story deserved a bigger audience. They decided to turn this amazing story into a book. When the potential of this compelling story escaped traditional publishers, Melissa decided to proceed as an indie author and so began years of interviews, visits to geneaology libraries, extensive research about World War II, aviation, and other relevant topics. The outcome is Private Lucky: One Man’s Unconventional Journey from the Horrors of Nazi Occupation to the Fulfillment of a High-Flying American DreamIn the photo above Melissa sits between Hank on the right and his wife, Lola, on the left at a recent reading.

Do you know an indie author with publishing muscle? Maybe you are one. Tell us about it in the comments.

 

 

 

To Publish Your Book You Must Start It

Courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

Courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

If you’re still hesitating to start or finish your book, it may be tough for you to imagine that someone is waiting for it.

But it’s true.

When I was working on the first edition of my book on happiness, over 4,000 books on the topic were available.

There were moments when I felt overwhelmed and intimidated. That was until my coach reminded me that while there were certainly thousands of books on my topic, no one could tell MY story.  Just as only I could write MY story, there was someone waiting to read it the way that only I could tell it.

This realization propelled me forward to finish my first edition. Now it’s pushing me to finish the 2nd edition of Color Your Life Happy: Create Your Unique Path and Create the Joy You Deserve.

The longer you wait to get started, the longer your readers have to wait to get the help, inspiration or joy your book offers.

If you’re in the Orange County, CA area and ready to let go of fear and intimidation, join me and other eager writers tomorrow in Santa Ana, CA

Let’s Kickstart Your Book Workshop.

Get the details and sign up now to get the individualized help you deserve.

Space is limited.

Writing My Mother’s Memoir: So Who Is She Really?

Today’s guest blogger is Denis Ledoux sharing his experience with writing his mother’s memoir. He’s the author of Should I Write My Memoir?: How to Start (The Memoir Network Writing Series Book 1) Learn more at his website.
Denis' mom is the one standing in center back.

Denis’ mom is the one standing in center back.

If you are like me, you know many details of your mother’s—or father’s—life. But there may be many vague relationships between this event and that event, between causes and effects. In other words, your parent’s life may end up seeming a mishmash of dates and facts and impressions and none of them blending very well together.

Being a person who has always been interested in family history, I considered myself aware of my mother’s and my father’s lives. Having worked with people to write memoirs, I wanted to be sure that I was not caught, as so many people have been, with not getting my parents’ story while the story was still available—which it wasn’t in my father’s case as he was deceased.

I begin to write

In 2009, I began to focus on interviewing my mother. Every few weeks (she lived in a different city), I would visit with her and get in a half hour interview. Since my mother was not primarily interested in preserving her life story (it was my interest), she was not committed to a beginning-to-end interview process. What I ended up doing was simply asking her questions—often in a conversation. Once back home, I would write down her answers to my questions.

My mother did not always sense that I was interviewing her for her memoir. Every once in a while however, I specifically had to inquire, “When was the date that you did this or you did that?” or “Which came first: this event or that?” In those moments, she became aware that I was continuing to write her memoir.

Tweet: My mom asked, “Why are you writing my memoir? Who will want to read it?”http://bit.ly/1dyT1Ju

She also might say, “How in the world are you going to find enough information to fill the pages of a book, even a small book?”

Since I was also working full-time at my company  Memoir Network, writing my mother’s book fit in around the edges of books that I was editing, coaching, ghostwriting. and teaching. In short, it fit around my income production. This process is not unlike how most people will write either their own memoir or the memoir of a loved one.

The memoir continues to grow

Over the next four years, I interviewed my mother and wrote text. When my mother gave up her apartment and moved into an assisted-living facility, I knew the leisurely pace at which I had been writing had to change. I applied myself to completing the memoir and set a time for finishing. I had wanted to get to a later point in her life as the ending.

However my mother’s ability to contribute to the story was diminishing. She had less of a grasp on specific details, on dates, on who was there and who did what when. I opted for a different end point than I had anticipated, one that was closer to the time of the text that I had already written. This proved to be a good closing point even if it was disappointing to three of my siblings whose birth did not make it into the memoir. (I mentioned them in an afterword.)

What did I get from writing my mother’s story?

I got acceptance of her life, a sense of who she was, and that who she was was just fine.

Tweet: Writing my mother’s memoir gave me the opportunity to get to know her in an intimate way. http://bit.ly/1dyT1Ju

Writing my mother’s memoir gave me the opportunity to get to know her in an intimate way that I had not had the opportunity to before. Her past had been vague; the setting of her life not at all clear; the sequencing of events haphazard at best.

There were a few occasions in my mother’s life when her response was a hero’s response, when she rose to the needs of an occasion that was difficult to live. She conducted herself well in those circumstances. That is a hero’s response. But the bulk of my mother’s life was yoeman’s work, pick and shovel work. It consisted of making a home, going to work, raising children and so forth. It was day-after-day work. Now this may be hero’s work of a certain kind but it turned out that it was a rather humdrum and ordinary sort of work. In a way, my mother’s life helped me to understand and to accept my own yeoman’s work.

In time, I produced a book I called We Were Not Spoiled: A Franco-American Memoir.

Finally, the hard copy was finished and I showed it to my mother.

Tweet: When she saw the memoir, she said “How in the world did you ever find enough to say about me to fill so many pages?” http://bit.ly/1dyT1Ju

As I wrote her life, one task that was important to me was to fit her life into a cultural, social, and historical context.

Large parts of the 208-page book have to do with her time, with cultural or historical events. For instance, there was a flood in her city in 1936. Briefly I wrote about that flood. There were developments in the political life of her city that affected her. I also dealt with these on occasion. There were historical contexts that made for why she lived where she lived.

Many details having to do with our ethnicity, details that distinguished her adaptation to American life from that of members of other groups, found their way into the book. My mother’s bigger picture was one that was familiar to me and it was not difficult to place her life in that larger context.

Because of this bigger picture, the book proved to be of interest to more people than my mother anticipated. We Were Not Spoiled: A Franco-American Memoir has been sold on Amazon and has attracted comments either in the review section or in emails that people have sent me saying, “You wrote my mother’s life! How did you know her so well?” This, of course, is a fun note to receive.

Tweet: Whether you are writing your own memoir or somebody else’s I urge you not to put the task off. http://bit.ly/1dyT1Ju

Go ahead and commit to writing. The benefits are well worth the effort that you will have to expend.

Good luck.

 

===========

Please note that some links on this blog may be affiliate links.

Orange County Self-Publishers and Indie Authors, Join Our Meetup

readytogetpublished

 

After talking to many aspiring self-published/indie authors in Orange County, I became convinced there was enough interest to justify a meetup focusing on the business of self-publishing.  That’s why I created OC Self-Publishers and Indie Authors on the Move.  To join this meetup, visit http://www.meetup.com/OC-Self-Publishers-and-Indie-Authors-on-the-Move/

This group is for you if you’ve

  • spent months or years creating your novel, memoir, or nonfiction masterpiece, but not sure how to publish or make money from it
  • heard that self-publishing is the fastest way to get your book published and sold, but you don’t know where to start
  • you need a platform, but have no idea what that means or how to get one

Our main meetups will take place monthly at the Microsoft Store in South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa starting Friday, April 10th from 10AM-11:45AM. The Store is located on the lower level between the carousel and Corner Bakery.

In addition to our main free meetup, I’ll announce other free and paid events to help you advance your writing/publishing endeavors.

Discover the 10 New Rules of Publishing and How They Benefit You

Publishing was already changing at the start of the 21st century, but during the last decade there has been rapid change and growth. In our first meeting we’ll discuss the 10 new rules of publishing and how they’ve turned things in your favor.

Space is limited (no joke!) so reserve your spot right away  to get live consultation on your self-publishing questions.

All aspiring authors welcome! I’ll buy the coffee and the muffins, you bring your questions for this and future meetings.

This meetup fills quickly, so be sure to RSVP early.

Once again: SPACE IS LIMITED. If you discover you can’t make itm be courteous to others who would like to attend and please keep your RSVP status current. You can always come back to this meetup and change your status from ‘yes’ to ‘no’ with just one click. Help us keep an accurate count of who is attending. Thanks!

Get Started Before the First Meetup

In the meantime, how about introducing yourself on the meetup page.  How could this group most benefit you? Where are you in your publishing journey?  Fiction? Nonfiction? Genre? What is your biggest writing/publishing challenge?

Be sure to upload your photo to your profile so when we can see your lovely personality shining through.

Download a copy of a free ebook I’ve prepared for you, A Manifesto for Aspiring Authors. Sign up to get it now at https://coloryourlifepublished.com/landing/welcome

To join the OC Self-Publishers and Indie Authors on the Move meetup, visit http://www.meetup.com/OC-Self-Publishers-and-Indie-Authors-on-the-Move/