DENTON WRITERS LEAGUE
FIRST EDITION
April 2008 VOL. 19 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-George Avera-george.819471@verizon.net or Joni Latham-joni1957@verizon.net.


WHERE WE MEET AND WHEN

The second Saturday of every month, at the

Denton Library-Emily Fowler Branch - click here for map 
502 Oakland 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

NEXT MEETING: April 12, 2008


Guest Speakers

May 10 - Jeremy Smith
June 14 - Joe O'Connell
July 12 - TBD
August 9 - TBD
September 13 - Jeff Crilley
October 11 - TBD
November 8 - TBD
December 13 -  TBD

GUEST SPEAKER

Dr. Jim Rogers
For 40 years Dr. Rogers worked in public education as a teacher, coach, administrator and executive director. Upon his retirement in 1996, he started Rogers Publishing & Consulting, Inc., which currently has two book publishing imprints, Rogers Press and Zone Press-http://www.zonepress.com/. Rogers has written two novels, The Rock and The Kangaroos, and Taking the Dream to Prairie Point, as well as two children's books and several poems and songs. Rogers Publishing has published more than 30 books by 25 authors, with a focus on Texas stories written by Texas authors.

Randy Cummings
Mr. Cummings has a lifelong background in writing, editing and design, having worked as a newspaper journalist for 18 years and for seven years serving as a magazine associate editor. He has been the Sports Editor of two Texas newspapers, including the Denton Record-Chronicle, and his work as a freelance sportswriter has been featured in several Texas newspapers as well as Texas Football magazine. Before joining Rogers Publishing, Mr. Cummings also worked as a college athletics media relations specialist.


PROJECT FOR 2008

As of today, we have only received one submission.  Please submit your stories, essays, and poetry as soon as possible to allow for enough reading time.  The deadline is June 30, 2008.

The Denton Writers League is accepting submissions from local writers for a new anthology.

Submission Guidelines:

Any story, poem or other written work submitted must be your own original work. You must own the copyright and all publishing rights. The author retains ALL RIGHTS to his/her work.

Submissions are open to all genres except erotica, please keep it PG13. Also, works promoting racial hatred or violence, sexism or homophobia will not be accepted.

There is no minimum word count required. Short stories and non-fiction pieces are limited to 7000 words. Poems are limited to 50 lines.

Submissions must be double-spaced using Times Roman font and saved in either RTF or WORD format.

Send submissions as a RTF or WORD attachment to dwlsubmissions@verizon.net with [SUB] title in the subject line. Snail mail submissions will be accepted for those who do not have access to a computer but communications will be delayed to due the staff not being able to contact the author by e-mail. Send snail mail submissions to DWL Anthology, 810 Egan St, Denton, TX 76201. Multiple submissions are acceptable but not simultaneous submissions.

Submissions will be accepted beginning January 15, 2008 and ending June 30, 2008.

There is no reading fee, but if your work is selected for publication, you are required to become a member of the Denton Writers League since the Anthology is a league project with the contents written by our members. The fee to join to League is $15 a year. We meet the second Saturday of the month at the Emily Fowler Library from 10:30am to noon.


Self-Publishing: Dispelling the Misperceptions, Reaping the Rewards
Award-Winning Book is Practical Tool for Non-Fiction Authors

By Melissa Leedom

Self-publishing: a phrase with a boatload of baggage, evoking stereotypes of vain, amateur, would-be authors, desperate to see their work in print at the cost of shoddy production value. Not to mention nearly losing their shirts as they purchase a garage-full of books they'll never be able to sell. Stories carried recently in the Wall Street Journal, USA Today and other national publications, have related such tales of woe as if they were the only side to the self-publishing story.

Certainly, self-publishing has meant all of this to many people, but Peter Bowerman, author of the award-winning The Well-Fed Self-Publisher: How to Turn One Book Into a Full-Time Living (Fanove Publishing, 2007, $19.95; www.wellfedsp.com), as well as two other highly successful volumes for freelance writers, is living proof that a self-published work of non-fiction can not only garner respect and critical acclaim, but can also be a financial success.

The Well-Fed Self-Publisher contains advice on producing a book indistinguishable in quality from those produced by major publishing companies, in addition to packaging Bowerman's knowledge on product and brand promotion gathered from nearly 30 years of personal and professional experience. Exhorting his readers to shed their "starving artist" self-image - the "fundamental belief that you don't really belong" in the big leagues - Bowerman stresses that the key to sales and marketing success is a sharply focused, targeted marketing plan, and work, work, and more work to implement it.

"If you want to see a roomful of right-brained author-types sweat," quips Bowerman, "just say the words 'sales' or 'marketing'." But "S&M" he contends, is not an elusive or overly complicated beast. Success depends largely on employing the same proven strategies over and over again.

The Well-Fed Self-Publisher reveals how little most traditional publishing houses do to promote individual titles. "By doing a better job of marketing and promoting your title than a publisher ever could or would, you can make far more money from your book than you ever would with that publisher." Bowerman even backs up his strategies with a 100-page ebook "toolbox" (the Well-Fed SP Biz-in-a-Box): templates and ideas for producing marketing documents such as letters, press releases, websites, samples—an arsenal of concrete, useable tools authors can personalize when going public with their books.

Bowerman is his own best test-case for the success of his methods: with over 50,000 copies of his books in print, he has built a franchise that has made him self-supporting for the last five years – no small success by anyone’s standards. Having learned from his first two books, the award-wining Well-Fed Writer titles, that readers want information spelled out in detail, he doesn’t just tell them that they need a good press release or an ezine; he provides step-by-step information on how to produce them. And, in The Well-Fed Self-Publisher, he outlines tools and strategies so that virtually anyone willing to put in the time and elbow grease can duplicate his success. As advertising icon David Ogilvy explained, "It is useless to be creative unless you can also sell what you create."

Bowerman's conversational, approachable style, a quality much praised by his readers, arises from his perception of himself as a fellow traveler. "I'm just like you,” he says. "I don't like to work any harder than I have to, and I certainly don’t have it all figured out. But The Well-Fed Self-Publisher provides all the how-to stuff delivered through the filter of someone who’s made a healthy living with his books. That has to count for something."

Stressing that self-publishing success is far more a function of process than aptitude, The Well-Fed Self-Publisher turns stereotypes on their ears. Because self-publishing authors retain complete control over their product and the outcome of their sales and marketing activities, Bowerman suggests that self-publishing, not a traditional publishing house, should be an author’s first choice.

Writers who enter the process armed with the information provided in this volume do so with the knowledge that self-publishing is an eminently viable option, albeit one requiring a tremendous amount of effort (and a fair amount of working capital) at the outset. Done properly, though, it is, indeed, possible for an author to transform a non-fiction book into a full-time living.

# # # #

Contact Information:
Melissa Leedom
prperson11@yahoo.com
http://www.forgive490.com


Dreamin' in Dallas
Plano, TX - April 5
8:30 am - 5:00 pm
Southfork Hotel

A day of workshops, inspiration, and networking.


On April 4, at 7pm the conference kicks off with a booksigning that is open to the public. Admission to the booksigning is free. A portion of the proceeds will benefit Southern Collin County Habit for Humanity Women’s Build.

DARA/NTRWA/
Yellow Rose Members
Others
  • Early Registration (postmarked by 2/15/2008)
  • $90.00 $110.00
  • Late Registration (postmarked after 2/15/2008)
  • $110.00 $130.00

    *REGISTRATION IS LIMITED AND CLOSES Saturday, March 15, 2008

    *REFUND POLICY: No registration refunds will be issued after March 10, 2008. Refunds requested prior to that date will be assessed a $15 processing fee.


    POETRY CORNER

    Poetry Group
    3rd Saturday
    10:00 am
    Emily Fowler Library
    502 Oakland St
    Denton, TX

    Open Mic Night
    4th Wednesday
    7:00 pm
    Recycled Books
    200 N Locust St
    Denton, TX


    ANNUAL CONVENTIONS
    *******************************************************************************************************

    CONVENTIONS

    Convention                   Month    Place                    URL             

    ConDFW                   Feb     Dallas, TX       http://www.condfw.org/
    Texas Frightmare         Feb     Dallas, TX       http://www.texasfrightmareweekend.com/lifetype/
    AggieCon                 March   Bryan, TX        http://aggiecon.tamu.edu/
    Dreamin' in Dallas       April   Dallas, TX       http://www.dallasromanceauthors.com/conferences/
    ApolloCon                June    Houston, TX      http://www.apollocon.org/
    ConMisterio              July    Austin, TX       http://www.conmisterio.org/
    Conestoga                July    Tulsa, OK        http://www.sftulsa.org/conestoga/
    Armadillo Con            August  Austin, TX       http://www.fact.org/dillo/
    Mythcon                  August  Norman, OK       http://www.mythsoc.org/mythcon37.html
    Bubonicon                August  Albuquerque, NM  http://bubonicon.home.att.net/
    Fencon                   Sept    Dallas, TX       http://www.fencon.org/
         A comprehensive list of other conventions    http://www.fencon.org/links.html#calendar
    World Fantasy Con        Nov     Austin, TX       http://www.fact.org/wfc2006/  


    On-Line Writers resources

    Author's Network-for writers about writing based in Europe, but interesting- http://www.author-network.com/
    Copyright Forms- http://www.loc.gov/copyright/forms/
    The New Covey Cover Awards - http://thenewcoveycoverawards.blogspot.com
    Dallas Screen Writers- http://www.dallasscreenwriters.com/
    Denton Public Library - http://www.cityofdenton.com/pages/library.cfm
    Fort Worth Book Blog - http://booksblog.guidelive.com/
    Glimmer Train Press, Inc.-A quarterly magazine of about 260 pages of literary fiction - http://www.glimmertrain.com/
    How Stuff Works - Want to know how something works, try this link - http://www.howstuffworks.com/
    Lulu.Com - A Self-Publisher - http://www.lulu.com/
    MeetUp.Com - A place to find MeetUp groups in your area  - http://www.meetup.com/
       Jeff Crilley's DFW Do-It Yourself PR Group - http://freepublicity.meetup.com/1/
    National Association of Women Writers - http://www.naww.org
    National Writers Union - http://www.nwu.org/
    Northeast Texas Writers' Organization - http://www.netwo.org/
    Para Publishing Website - a good writing, publishing, and promotion source - http://www.parapublishing.com/sites/para/
    Preditors and Editors-a resources to check out agents and publishers http://www.anotherealm.com/prededitors/
    Printing for Less - Good prices and I understand good product - http://www.printingforless.com/index.html
    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/
    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
    Vista Prints - inexpensive business cards, postcards, etc - http://www.vistaprint.com
    Writer's Exchange - http://www.writers-exchange.com/epublishing/
    Writer.com - on-line classes and other writer's information - http://writers.com/
    Writers' League of Texas - http://www.writersleague.org/
    Writers Net-source for information for writers, editors, agents, and publishers - http://www.writers.net
    Writing-World.Com - http://www.writing-world.com 
    Writing.Com - Community for readers and writers of all skills levels and interests - http://www.writing.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) - 940/382-4865
    Vice-President  Kelly Christiansen
    Newsletter      George Avera (
    george.819471@verizon.net) - 940/
    387-8315

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