Authors, Illustrators, and Artists at the New England Author Expo Part 2 (Pictures)

 

By Jason Harris

 

Welcome to the second entry with pictures from the 2014 New England Author Expo, which happened this past Wednesday night (July 30) in the Harborview Ballroom at the Danversport Yacht Club in Danvers, MA.

Author Nancy Madore.

Author Nancy Madore.

Find out more about Madore on her website here.

Author Dale T. Phillips with his book, Shadow of the Wendigo.

Author Dale T. Phillips with his book, Shadow of the Wendigo.

Find out more about Phillips on his website here.

Author L.E. Hastings with his book, You, Me and Everything In Between.

Author L.E. Hastings with his book, You, Me and Everything In Between.

Find out more about Hastings on his website here.

Author B.B. Boudreau with her book, The Frenchman.

Author B.B. Boudreau with her book, The Frenchman.

Find out more about Boudreau on her website here.

Author Kelly Ilebode with her book, Angel.

Author Kelly Ilebode with her book, Angel.

Find out more about Illebode on her website here.

Author Eric Dimbleby with his newest book, White Out.

Author Eric Dimbleby with his newest book, White Out.

Find out more about Dimbleby on his website here.

Author Joseph Ross holding his book, Fast Track for Caregivers.

Author Joseph Ross holding his book, Fast Track for Caregivers.

Find out more about Ross on his website here.

Dyan deNapoli a.k.a The Penguin Lady with her book, The Great Penguin Rescue.

Dyan deNapoli a.k.a The Penguin Lady with her book, The Great Penguin Rescue.

Find out more about deNapoli on her website here.

Author Deborah Swiss with her book, The Tin Ticket.

Author Deborah Swiss with her book, The Tin Ticket.

Find out more about Swiss on her website here.

Author Jack Beale with his book, Evil Intentions.

Author K.D. Mason with his book, Evil Intentions.

Find out more about Mason and his books on his website here.

Authors Stacey Longo and T. Stephens holding Stephens' book, Dante;s Cypher.

Authors Stacey Longo and T. Stephens holding Stephens’ book, Dante’s Cypher.

Find out more about Stephens on his website here.

Richard A. LaPorta, president of the American Authors & Publishers Guild and owner of Husky Trail Press.

Richard A. LaPorta, president of the American Authors & Publishers Guild and owner of Husky Trail Press.

Find out more about the American Authors & Publishers Guild here and Husky Trail Press here.

Author M.P. Barker holding her two books, A Difficult Boy and Mending Horses.

Author M.P. Barker holding her two books, A Difficult Boy and Mending Horses.

Find out more about Barker on her website here.

Author June Greig.

Author June Greig.

Find out Greig’s book, A Dog to Remember, here.

Artist/Illustrator Lisa Greenleaf holding up some of her work.

Artist/Illustrator Lisa Greenleaf holding up some of her work including John Greenleaf Whittier’s The Barefoot Boy.

Find out more about Greenleaf on her website here.

Artist S.L. Johnson.

Artist S.L. Johnson.

Find out more about Johnson on her website here.

Author N.E. Castle with her Loogie the Booger Genie series.

Author N.E. Castle with her Loogie the Booger Genie series.

Find out more about Castle on her website here.

Author Uzuri M. Wilkerson with her two books, Sweet and Sour.

Author Uzuri M. Wilkerson with her two books, Sweet and Sour.

Find out more about Wilkerson on her website here.

Author Rich Feitelberg with his book, Aure the Topaz.

Author Rich Feitelberg with his book, Aure the Topaz.

Find out more about Feitelberg on his website here.

Author Cheryl Lassiter with her book, The Mark of Goody Cole.

Author Cheryl Lassiter with her book, The Mark of Goody Cole.

Find out more about Lassiter on her website here.

Artist Libby Chase.

Artist Libby Chase.

Find out more about Chase on her website here.

Author Edith Maxwell with her book, 'Til Dirt Do Us Part.

Author Edith Maxwell with her book, ‘Til Dirt Do Us Part.

Find out more about Maxwell on her website here.

Author Eileen Doyan with her book, Pet Tales.

Author Eileen Doyan with her book, Pet Tales.

Find out more about Doyan on her Amazon page here.

Author Connie Johnson Hambley with her book, The Charity.

Author Connie Johnson Hambley with her book, The Charity.

Find out more about Hambley on her website here.


 

 

You can follow the Expo on its Facebook page here or on Twitter (@neauthorexpo).

Editor’s Note:

For the people who I didn’t get your picture, I do apologize. I hope to see you at the next event so I can take your picture at that time.

Pictures from the 2013 Rhode Island Comic Con

By Jason Harris

The second Rhode Island Comic Con held at the Rhode Island Convention Center was a big success. The attendance for this year was around 33,000, which was close to 11,000 more than last year’s convention. There were some issues with pre-sale tickets and a few celebrities such as Anthony Michael Hall, Jett Lucas, and Nichelle Nichols weren’t able to make it because of the gunman who shot up Terminal 3 at the Los Angeles International Airport Friday morning. Nichols felt so bad about missing the convention that she has already signed on for next year’s convention.

Comic Con had the entire convention center this year so the organizers were able to make more room in the aisles so there was plenty of room to browse the vendor tables and get pictures of the cosplay that were on display around the entire convention. There were people dressed as characters from movies, television, comic books, video games and books.2013-11-01 23.29.47

C. Thomas Howell

C. Thomas Howell

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J. Jonah Jameson

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Julie Newmar

Julie Newmar

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Author Rob Watts with some Visitiors.

Author Rob Watts with some Visitiors.

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 Abby Sciuto of NCIS.

Abby Sciuto of NCIS.

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Burt Ward and Adam West at the Batman panel.

Burt Ward and Adam West on the Batman panel.

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Author Eric Dimbleby

Author Eric Dimbleby

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WWE wrestler and author Kenny Dykstra (Billy's Bully)

WWE wrestler and author Kenny Dykstra (Billy’s Bully)

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The Connecticut Visitiors (www.facebook.com/CTVisitors)

The Connecticut Visitors (www.facebook.com/CTVisitors)

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Jonathan Silverman

Jonathan Silverman

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Authors Erin Thorne, Stacey Longo, and Rob Watts at the Books and Boos booth.

Authors Erin Thorne, Stacey Longo, and Rob Watts at the Books and Boos booth.

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Danny Glover

Danny Glover

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Sarah Douglas

Sarah Douglas

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A member of the Connecticut Visitors

A member of the Connecticut Visitors

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WWE wrestler Kevin Nash.

WWE wrestler Kevin Nash.

The Dome of Sci-fi Saturday Night talking with Nicholas Brendon.

The Dome of Sci-fi Saturday Night talking with Nicholas Brendon.

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James Tolkan from the Back to the Future movies.

James Tolkan from the Back to the Future movies.

Jim Dyer of Fenham Publishing.

Jim Dyer of Fenham Publishing.

SWF wrestler Yukon Jack

SWF wrestler Yukon Jack

Nikki Clyne with some fans

Nikki Clyne with some fans

Survivor's Richard Hatch talking with author Stacey Longo.

Survivor’s Richard Hatch talking with author Stacey Longo.

Barf with author Rob Watts

Barf with author Rob Watts

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Ernie Hudson

Ernie Hudson

WWE wrestler Danny Davis

WWE wrestler Danny Davis

Author Stacey Longo with Sloth.

Author Stacey Longo with Sloth.

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Author Erin Thorne with some Steampunk characters.

Author Erin Thorne with some Steampunk characters.

WWE announcer/referee Howard Finkle

WWE announcer/referee Howard Finkle

Artist Seth McCombs.

Artist Seth McCombs.

Authors Rob Watts and Stacey Longo

Authors Rob Watts and Stacey Longo

Billy Dee Williams

Billy Dee Williams

Me with Leslie Easterbrook.

Me with Leslie Easterbrook. Photo by Stacey Longo.

I hope everyone enjoyed the pictures.

Amazon Kindle’s Censorship Policies

Amazon Kindle’s Censorship Policies

by David L. Tamarin

With the advent of e-readers like the Amazon Kindle and the ability of individuals to ‘self-publish’, many people have been talking about a ‘revolution’ in publishing. Supposedly, independent authors with difficulties getting published by traditional publishers can now use Amazon Kindle to self-publish their stories or books and sell them directly to the people, without the middleman of a publisher.

Unfortunately, this is not a real revolution because of Amazon Kindle’s policies regarding what they will publish. While they publish a lot of fetish pornography, including incest porn, and even have e-books containing scanned pornographic images. they recently told me that they would not publish my horror short story, “What Did You Do To The Children?” due to content violations- namely that the story is pornographic and/or contains inappropriate content.

I’m a successful non-fiction author, a regular contributor to Girls and Corpses and the website www.severed-cinema.com/uglyworld. I have also been published in Rue Morgue magazine, Scars, Verbicide, NewEnglandFilm.com, The Independent, Serial Killer magazine, Six Word Memoirs of Love and Heartbreak anthology, Butcher Knives and Body Counts (essays on slasher films), horrornews.net, Red Scream, and dozens of other magazines, websites and anthologies.

My fiction is potentially offensive, and has caused me problems throughout my career. I’ve been at the center of multiple controversies surrounding the content of his writing. Because of frustration with traditional publishers, I decided to release my stories on Amazon Kindle, but immediately encountered a problem when three consecutive companies that format books for Kindle for a fee decided they would not format my first Kindle book because of the extreme and offensive content. Since then, that particular story was accepted into an anthology, and published, and I learned to format stories for myself. Now I face my newest adversary to being published: Amazon. They have stated it will not publish the my story, nor will it provide the specifics of why it made its opinion. I have appealed to Amazon, asking them to reconsider their decision, and on December 30, 2012, they affirmed their decision that they would not publish the story.

I’m exploring other publishing opportunities.

How Twitter is Helping Publishers

This article originally appeared on the website, http://publishingperspectives.com/.

#TwtrBkPty: How Twitter is Helping Publishers Reach 100,000 Readers 140 Characters at a Time by Rachel Aydt

Like gallery openings, one might stumble into a neighborhood bookstore only to find a casual book release party. Maybe there’s a few cheap bottles of Chilean red, some chat, and a little reading to go along with it. So what happens when you take away all of those elements, but still call it a party? The Twitter Party!

Virtual book promotions have been around since 2003, but Twitter could be a replacement for the traditional book launch and author tour.

“I got onto Twitter in early 2009,” says Bethanne Patrick, a blogger and writer perhaps best known now as @thebookmaven on Twitter (and contributor to Publishing Perspectives), “after I was in a car accident and had a broken leg. I had to stay put and sit still for so long. The orthopedic surgeon said I had serious ligament damage and so I couldn’t go out for lunch, or coffee for months . . . Twitter became a form of social life for me.”

No matter how and why publishing types find their way to Twitter, there’s one thing that’s certain. They’re there, and it’s burgeoning into a true scene of sorts, where publishers are beginning to throw Twitter party invitation hashtags down like bartenders soaping up their bar for a busy a happy hour.

Attending the Twitter Party for “@WkmnShorts”

“Meet up from 11-1 to celebrate this new imprint! We’ll be serving Twitterinis!”, promised one invitation I stumbled into recently. I did show up, in this case to an event organized by Workman Publishing to celebrate a new online imprint of short-form books, Workman Shorts. The event was hosted by Patrick, a brilliant move by Workman since Patrick could advertise the event among her devoted list of over 50,000 book-loving followers who participate in her popular weekly Twitter event #FridayReads.

Of course, what I found when I “arrived” at the party was myself, in a chair, still in my freelance life wardrobe wearing my “third-cup-of-coffee-pajamas”, waiting for the Twitter event to begin.

At approximately 11 a.m., I typed in the hashtag #WkmnShorts, and suddenly the thread sprang to life. Three authors, Mindy Weiss, author of Your Dream Wedding on a Budget; Anne Byrne, the Cake Doctor herself, and Steven Raichlin, barbeque expert and author of the new Tailgating! book were going to be present to answer guest’s questions and talk about their projects.

“Hello @1000Places! Glad to see you here . . . definitely one of THE places to be! #wkmnshorts”, read one Patrick Tweet to an early arriver to the party’s thread.

The vibe of the party was certainly festive. There were tons of Welcomes and Hellos offered to various Twitter handles by Patrick, and some Workman publicists. Jokes were made about passing around the Twitterinis; there was even a recipe concocted, posted, and linked to in a Tweet posted by a Workman publicist.

People commented back and forth about one another’s locations, strangers chatted about the weather — envy aimed toward the guests from the south; a little peacocking from Southerners chatting with Tweeters from up north.

twitter

It was a crazy cold February, after all. Then came the book talk with the writers, who were systematically rolled out by the half-hour. By this time, my brain started to feel crowded and overstimulated . . . come to think of it, in the same way that I feel at crowded cocktail parties.

All of these new names swirling about, making my acquaintance, looking over my virtual shoulder to sidle up to the next new acquaintance. “Hey, don’t I know you from CosmoGirl?” I found myself Tweeting to a publicist I thought I’d worked with at one point in my former life as the magazine’s Research Director. She didn’t know me; that conversational thread dropped abruptly.

Social media as a marketing tool . . . since 2003

I’ve written about the social media life of authors before, for Publishing Perspectives. It comes as no surprise that authors have to get with the marketing program and jump into the virtual mix. As publishers continue to slash their marketing budgets, doing a “virtual book tour” can make a lot of sense. The idea goes as far back as 2003, when online marketer Kevin Smokler (@weegee — with 50,000 Twitter followers of his own) claims to have inaugurated the virtual book tour, then conducted through blogs.

Of course, it now seems obvious. Using social media is simply cheaper than sending someone out on the road, or if there is still an actual book tour, it can be an effective addition to the marketing plan. It creates a different kind of buzz: a community can gather no matter where they are. Maybe their newborn is sleeping and they live in Kansas. Or maybe they’re taking a lunch hour from a cubicle in Des Moines. Whichever it is, the long reaching connectivity makes throwing events on Twitter extremely attractive, not only for drumming up book publicity, but for creating a loyal following to an imprint.

That said, the idea — at least on Twitter — is a relatively new one and still needs some smoothing out. “Because this was the inaugural one, we had a few glitches,” said Patrick. “It’s a different set of technical process requirements in the virtual world; it’s not like, ‘What if the caterer doesn’t show?’”

Susan Orlean, @bookbday, and YA phenoms

Other writers who Tweet have jumped on the bandwagon. Susan Orlean (@SusanOrlean), who has nearly 110,000 followers, threw a Twitter party a couple of weeks back for her new book Rin Tin Tin. When I contacted Orlean via Facebook about her party, she described Twitter’s appeal. “The limits of 140 characters can be sometimes maddening but I was surprised by how complete my answers could be. I think Twitter has engendered a new compact way of communicating — not a perfect substitute for fuller conversation, of course, but you can be very efficient and actually say something. I like that challenge — to craft something in such a short space.”

Most writers are still in the dark about the Twitter party, but as they learn of them seem keen for their publishers to take a stab at it. Candace Walsh, co-editor of Dear John, I Love Jane (Seal Press, 2010), wants to get Seal Press on board sooner than later. “The next generation of book publicity is so plugged in to social media, and Twitter parties need to be a part of that strategy,” she told me.

That said, a few tech savvy publishers and writers have been on Twitter for ages now. Young adult author Mitali Perkins (@MitaliPerkins) is one of them. Over three years ago she launched TwitterBookParties.com (@bookbday) after realizing that social media could create a more festive environment for book releases.

“When my book Secret Keeper came out in 2009 (Random House), I realized that it was a big day but nobody really knew it.” She decided to pull together her large network of YA authors and illustrators to change that. She’s now created a huge base of Twitter followers who celebrate books’ releases on Twitter the day they’re released — she calls this the “book’s birthday.”

Her model is slightly different than Workman’s; rather than set up specific times where writers interface with readers, she simply sets up auto Tweets that announce new books on the day that they’re released, subsequently creating a rippling retweeting frenzy (RT’s, for you Twitter newbies). “We probably have hundreds and hundreds of people who RT new books on the books’ birthdays now. I always try to send them to indiebound.com or to the author’s website to support the writers. But if the authors only list Amazon and not any other indie bookstore, I’ll link to the publisher’s page. I don’t want to become an Amazon portal.”

Publicists are realizing that they can also drum up more sales and boost the event’s festivities by Tweeting links during the party to previously planned external pages — in Workman’s case, to recipes from their new books, essentially offering bite-sized excerpt teases — or drive them to an e-commerce purchase point.

Says Jocelyn Kelley, a book publicist who is a frequent book commenter on The Oprah Winfrey Show, “Twitter parties are a relatively new strategy but are proving fruitful in both generating more followers and increasing your book’s exposure on Twitter. For example, bestselling young adult author Lisi Harrison is hosting a Twitter party for her newest release, A Tale of Two Pretties. She is cross promoting the Twitter party on her highly trafficked blog as well as through her publishers site.”

Patrick, who is working with other publishers to set up further Twitter Parties, is striving to find a way of making the experience even more social, but is a natural hostess. In one of her early-in-the-party Tweets, she posted:

“I’m chatting with w @sraichlen, but @annebyrn, @mindyweiss, and @1000places are all here — keep mingling! #wkmnshorts.”

Read a couple of those per minute and you may find yourself either down with the party — or sporting a headache, depending on your TT — an acronym I just coined for Twitter Tolerance.

“Ultimately, we all want the same thing, to get our books into the hands of readers,” says Perkins. “I feel like in this day and age we have to celebrate each other’s books. It has to be about each other.”

Readers Rule

This article originally appeared on Bob Mayer’s blog, http://writeitforward.wordpress.com/.

Readers Rule: The Ultimate Gatekeepers of Publishing and the Rise of the Author by Bob Mayer

Not long ago I wrote a blog about how authors were the gatekeepers of publishing, and I still think they are in that they control the quality of the writing, but the ultimate gatekeepers are readers. The ones who buy books. No author can survive without readers. They pay our bills. They are the arbitrators of success by investing their time and, more importantly, their money.

With all the confusion going on in publishing right now (the NY Times just had an interesting article on how Amazon is a quickly growing presence), it comes down to this simple equation that has been ignored for decades in publishing (note how the Amazon exec says almost the same thing): Writers produce the product, readers consume the product. At Who Dares Wins Publishing our motto is: Lead, follow or get the hell out of the way.

Publishers for too long focused on distributing to consignment outlets, aka bookstores, rather than selling to readers. Now that they no longer control distribution for eBooks, that’s changed drastically. Readers are free to find whatever books they want and could care less if Random House published it or Godzilla. They care about the quality of the writing and the quality of the book. No reader ever walked into a bookstore and said “Give me the next Random House.”

The bottleneck now, as I noted two blogs ago is finding the writers and books that readers like. Placement is critical. A good author that a reader can’t find, isn’t going to last long.

With this in mind, a group of authors who have had the acknowledgement of readers via sales (the ultimate determiner), by selling at least 100,000 eBooks, and most having had great success also in print, have banded together to form Readers Rule.

Right now we have bestselling authors:

J Carson Black

L.J. Sellers

Joe Nassise

Ruth Harris

And moi, Bob Mayer.

We’ve put together a web site that we’ll be expanding soon with bells and whistles such as giveaways. Right now though, you can quickly get an idea of what each author writer on their individual pages which also have direct buy links to Amazon and Barnes and Noble.

This is just a beginning of the rise of the Author. We know how valuable readers are.

In essence: Readers Rule.