DENTON WRITERS LEAGUE
FIRST EDITION
APRIL 2006 VOL. 17 NUMBER 4
DWL Home Page: http://byjoni.com/dwl
If you would like a copy of the newsletter e-mailed to you
instead of through the US post,
please contact George Avera or Joni Latham-joni1957@verizon.net.
WHERE WE MEET AND WHEN
The second Saturday of every month, at the
Denton Library-North Branch
- click here for map
3020 N. Locust St (corner of Windsor St & N. Locust St)
Denton, TX
General Meeting 10:30 a.m.
Lunch at Noon at the
Evergreen Super Buffet
- click here for map
1006 W. University Dr
Denton, TX 76201
NEXT MEETING: APRIL 8, 2006
Guest Speakers
April 8 - Gloria Oliver
May 13 - Jeff Criley Meeting will be in Library Staff Meeting Room
June 10 - Dusty Rainbolt
July 8 - Rie Sheridan
August 12 - TBD
September 9 - Roxanne and Cat Conrad
October 14 - Diane Fanning
November 11 - TBD
December 9 - Lillian Stewart Carl
2007
January 13 - TBD
February 10 - Suzanne Frank
GUEST SPEAKER
Gloria Oliver lives in The Colony, Texas in her own corral round up with her husband, daughter, three cats, and hyper ferret. She is the author of the novel In the Service of Samurai, and Vassal of El, both in the Fantasy genre. Has also had the short story "The Bubbas of Troy County" included in the Yard Dog Press anthology The Four Bubbas of the Apocalypse, as well as three flash stories in the anthology Small Bites. When not busy working with numbers at work, she enjoys reading, writing, watching movies, Japanese Anime, trying to learn Japanese, and making her mind mush by translating Japanese comics.
FEBRUARY MEETING RECAP
Crystal Wood talked about the upcoming North Texas Book Festival (Sat April 22 at the Civic Center from 9am to 4pm) and handed out an article by Patricia L. Fry on how to make book festivals work for you. In a nutshell, here's what the article suggested:
Jim Matheson informed us that the Denton Mini Mall has set up a shelf for local authors to display their books. All of our published authors might go check it out.
How the Book Review System Works
By James A. Cox
A good review placed in the
hands of the reading public by a competent reviewer is the most effective and
least expensive publicity/promotion instrument available to the independent
publisher. But the chances of getting your book reviewed can be drastically
reduced if you do not understand what you are up against and do not take steps
to improve your odds.
The Midwest Book Review receives approximately 50
books a day, Monday through Saturday. That works out to around 1,500 titles a
month. I encourage PMA members to identify themselves as such when they submit
their titles for review because Midwest Book Review has a policy of bumping
small presses and PMA members to the top of the review list – a significant step
when the line is 1,500 titles long!
Other book review publications or
programs (with the possible exception of The Independent Publisher) do not have
a deliberate policy of giving preference to the small press publisher, so it's
always important to keep track of those reviewers for whom your book (by virtue
of its theme, subject or publisher status) will have an edge over the other
submissions received by that reviewer.
It's my job as the
editor-in-chief with a roster of 38 reviewers to produce four library
newsletters and two book review magazines each month, a weekly half-hour
television show and a monthly short-wave radio broadcast. It is also my
responsibility to initially sort out the books submitted for review and to make
the review assignments, collect the reviews from the assigned reviewers, and
then edit them into our publications and/or programming.
I post these
reviews on thematically appropriate websites, newsgroups, and online bookstores,
and I send them (by computer disk) to be included on an interactive cd-rom for
corporate, academic, and public library systems. Incidentally, this internet
business takes one full working day each month to accomplish. Then I must send a
tear sheet or review script and a cover letter to the publisher, notifying him
or her that the title was featured and the various venues in which the review
appeared. This process takes about eight working days to accomplish.
Of
the more than 1,500 titles a month received, about half (750) are assigned, and
only around 450 are reviewed. That's about one-third of the total submitted.
Compared with other book review publications or programs, that is a
significantly high ratio of books sent to books reviewed.
Those that did
not make the initial cut for review failed to be assigned because they either
came from the major presses and got bumped in favor of small presses, came in
the form of galleys and we only consider finished books, had truly inferior
covers, were subjects for which other titles filled that month's quota of a
given topic, were missing publicity releases, had been flawed in the
printing/book production process, or were damaged in transit (The post office
seems to have improved lately, but still, about 1 in 20 book packages sustains
some degree of damage, ranging from minor to catastrophic).
Those books
that make the cut for review assignment but for which no reviews were eventually
published fall into one of the following categories:
James A. Cox is the editor-in-chief of the Midwest Book Review, which produces four monthly book review library newsletters and two monthly book review online magazines ("Internet Bookwatch" & "Children's Bookwatch"); produces and hosts the weekly half-hour television show "Bookwatch" in Madison, Wisconsin (first launched in September, 1978 and now the oldest public access television program in Wisconsin); is an on-air book radio review columnist for KNLS Bookwatch, which is broadcasted via shortwave radio to Europe, North & South America, and the Pacific Rim; and is a regular contributor of advice and commentary for two internet discussion groups dedicated to the small press publishing community: "Publish-L" and "PubForum".
Reprinted from Wheatmark Bookpublisher.Com (formerly BookZone Pro), http://www.wheatmark.com
CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS
Weatherford College's Fourth Annual Books 'n Authors All That Jazz will be held April 29 from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm at Weatherford College in Weatherford, TX. Registration deadline is Friday, March 24, 2006. There was no website or cost for the conference on the e-mail I received. It says to call or e-mail Linda Bagwell if interested. Phone number 817/598-6274 or e-mail lbagwell@wc.edu
On-Line Writers resources
Author's Network-for writers about writing based in Europe, but interesting-
http://www.author-network.com/
AuthorSpeak at the Dallas Library -
http://dallaslibrary.org/authorspeak/authorspeak.htm
Copyright Forms- http://www.loc.gov/copyright/forms/
Dallas Screen Writers- http://www.dallasscreenwriters.com/
Denton Public Library - http://www.cityofdenton.com/pages/library.cfm
Glimmer Train Press, Inc.-A quarterly magazine of about 260 pages of literary
fiction - http://www.glimmertrain.com/
Lulu.Com - A Self-Publisher -
http://www.lulu.com/
National Association of Women Writers - http://www.naww.org
National Writers Union - http://www.nwu.org/
Para Publishing Website - a good writing, publishing, and promotion source - http://parapub.com/getpage.cfm?file=/homepage.html&user=#user
Preditors and Editors-a resources to check out agents and publishers http://www.anotherealm.com/prededitors/
Ralan's Webstravaganza-speculative fiction resource http://ralan.com/
Society of Children's Writers and Illustrators - http://www.scbwi.org/
Texas Coalition of Authors, Inc. - http://www.texasauthors.org/
Texas Writers League - http://www.writersleague.org/
The Market List-the online resource for genre fiction writers http://www.marketlist.com/
The Novelist's Workshop-essays and advice on how to publish your book- http://www.monash.com/writers.html
Writer's Exchange - http://www.writers-exchange.com/epublishing/
Writer's Market - http://www.writersmarket.com/index_ns.asp
Writers Net-source for information for writers, editors, agents, and publishers - http://www.writers.net
Writing-World.Com - http://www.writing-world.com
There are multitudes of writing resources available on the Internet. Go to any search engine and ask for writer's resources, writer's markets, writer's contests, writer's conferences, etc
DWL OFFICERS:
President Joni Latham ( joni1957@verizon.net) - 940/243-5200
Vice President June Powell - 940/565-1013
Treasurer Joseph Marino
Newsletter George Avera ( georgeavera@copper.net)
- 940/382-8161