At some point along the evolutionary line - at the B.C. point - (Before Computers), I worked as a publicist. Back in the dark ages when press releases were typed on your manual Olivetti and handed or air mailed to an editor who had the piece typeset, printed and pasted onto dummies sent to the printers. Maybe the piece made it to print or was picked up by radio and television.
Along evolutionary line of technology, I chose as much as possible to stay in the dark, preferring to paint, draw, and read real books, rather than to engage in these endeavors on a computer. As a result, I get pretty stuck in the technological web surrounding the promotion of Suitcase Filled with Nails.
I still find email amazing. Although I’m on it, through the help of a 15 year-old boy who’s on Facebook 24/7, I still don’t understand Facebook. Yet all the cutting edge agents (who ignored my book) swear every author needs to be on Facebook and Twitter at least, along with owning a website and blogging, Whew! Talk about screen time.
I already had a website, yvonnepepinwakefield.com. I signed into the social media swamp where I spend lost hours trying to muck myself out of failed uploads, down loads, reloads, information access crucial to marketing Suitcase Filled with Nails. This is why I need a publicist, someone with techno savvy, someone who knows how to wade through and around the swamp.
The mother of the 15 year-old, did though help me set up my blog, suitcasefilledwithnailsauthorcloud which lead me to read other blogs, like the one I found on a Linkedin update and read because it was posted by Nina Amir, an editor of Suitcase.
Nina is a professional editor, proposal consultant and writing, blogging and book coach as well as the author of the forthcoming book, How to Blog a Book, How to Write, Publish and Promote Your Work One Post at a Time (Writer's Digest Books April 2012), (http://www.writenonfictionnow.com) Through Nina’s blog I stumbled upon How to Get Your Book Reviewed, a site promoting a book by Dana Lynn Smith addressing ways to gain publicity in today’s techno market. The book is available in PDF, Kindle, Nook and paperback.
I went on-line (these days I’m rarely off-line). I tried to order the paperback because I’ve developed a chronic case of screenitist, and one more dose of a screen would do me in. Only the same credit card I’ve used on Amazon before wouldn’t take and after twenty minutes of trying to get it to take, I took the dog for walk instead.
I spend more time getting lost in the muck and meeting dead ends on the computer than I do goals. The dog is well walked.