Scots-Irish Band

I’m in a Scot’s Irish band. I play guitar, and sing a little (basically to let the lead singer rest). We call ourselves Angus Doubhghal; those two names are for two Scottish heroes. I’ve written a couple of original songs for us, and intend to write more. We’re playing at the Riverboat Festival in Columbia, LA, this Sat. If you want a pic of us in our kilts, write me, rickeyp@bayou.com. Wish us luck.

Book marketing

Marketing one’s book(s) is only one aspect of the author’s business. Yes, with a POD publisher, you do have to work hard, but even with the more “traditional” publisher (which are becoming more and more untraditional) you must work hard to promote your work. Booklocker has been so good to me–better royalties than many “traditional” publishers. I’ve made a form for bookstores (will be glad to send it to you if you email me, rickeyp@bayou.com) and I’m trying to pack in a busy summer doing signings and readings. More on this later.

5 More Days of Kids

I know it sounds pathetic, but I’m actually counting down the days of school left. I’m a tired, frazzled teacher.

Every year about this time I tell myself this will be my year–for some reason I think of years as beginning with the school term instead of Jan. I have an AP certification workshop to attend this summer, and a Gifted symposium to attend–that will be two weeks of my summer shot. Nevertheless, I had a good summer for writing last year, and intend to do the same this year. School also will be beginning at 8:30 instead of 7:30 next year, so I can finally get back into the writing routine that works best for me–writing two hours every day first thing. Since Bastrop is 25 miles away, I must get up at 5 AM just to get to work on time at 7:00. Yep, I think next year is THE year.

A long week

Last week I obtained a table at the Louisiana Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. It also turned out that I was asked to be the featured speaker. It seems their plans for a speaker had fallen through at the last minute. I made some sales, and got some good publicity for m book.

Monday, I drove to El Dorado. Arkansas, after school and did a reading. I read “The Taking of Jim Limber.” That story always seems to work well, and it also unsettles people to know that it is based on a real historical incident. I also approached two library systems and one independent bookstore to set up signings.

This Saturday, I drove to Savannah, TN where some other Southern patriots had gathered to raise money for a Confederate monument. I stopped at five stores along the way. You get the idea. I gave them a discount form I use for them to order books and went through my “buy back” policy. Lots of work to do in this brutal business.

Marketing Story

I intend to use this blog as a record of how I market my new book, Stories of the Confederate South. Perhaps my stories will help you with your own marketing. Since I have such a targeted (though huge) Southern market, I’m going to Leesville, LA, this weekend for the State Convention of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. I’ve negotiated a table, and I think sales will be pretty good. I can also use this as an opportunity to do some pre-publicity for my children’s book that Pelican is publishing. I’m also doing a reading next Monday night in Eldorado, Arkansas. So, off to pack. Be back Sunday.

Teachers, moonlighters, and summer

At Bastrop High School, a rural school here in Northeast Louisiana, I teach two classes of gifted high school English, two classes of honors English, and two classes of “regular” students. There’s only fourteen school days left this year. I know because one of my students made a countdown calendar on one of the chalkboards and has been counting down for us. I’m ready for the summer. This will be only the second summer I’ve managed to have “off” in my eleven years of teaching. All the other summers were either spent going to school fulltime or working odd jobs trying to make ends meet, or a combination of both. I cringe when I hear people talk of teachers having all that time off, and I have a conniption fit when I hear talk of year-round school.
First of all, at least here in Louisiana, teachers are nine month employees. That means we’re paid for nine months, and that salary is stretched out over twelve months. I’m not sure where Louisiana ranks now in teacher pay, I just know we’re close to the bottom. I know the money’s not enough to make a dignified living. This is why so many teachers have to moonlight. And many moonlight year-round. I do. I edit books, play in a Scot-Irish band, and try to sell the books I write. And some summers, I’ve done carpenter work, worked for Waste Management, worked in a funeral home, and a score of other odd jobs. (If you want some interesting writing ideas, make a list of all the jobs you’ve ever had.)
Regarding summer: In the face of tougher teacher standards, teachers need the summer to take university courses. Of course, I realize many go to school year-round. Some attend university classes at night, even if they have worked all day with the brain-numbing tasks related to teaching. Then they take care of their family and homes, get all the papers graded (trivia question: how long does it take to read and grade a class set of 25 essays?), and finish all the assignments for their college class. They return to school the next day, try to do a decent job teaching, and do their best to somehow manage to move all the rocks (busy work) that politicians and administrators mandate be moved. Pardon the rant. I’m tired today. Maybe that’s why I’m venting. But maybe I gave you something to think about as well.

An Author in Search of an Agent

I’m searching for an agent to represent my next novel, Blood Diamonds of the Lost Bazaar. The writing business is so brutal these days, that I’m looking for Agent-someone to help me. So, yesterday I queried 18–none from New York, deciding to query those agents in the next agent marathon. (I don’t know why I did it that way; maybe it’s a weird sort of psychotic grouping) Anyway, I spent several hours drafting the query letter, gathering agent addresses from Novel and Short Story Markets, addressing envelopes, etc. I needed to be writing, but here I was draining energy and time and spending a fortune in copies and postage–just to query. Ach!

My Reading Log

In a used bookstore in 1998, I purchased Louis L’Amour’s Education of a Wandering Man. A great read. His remarks caused me to realize more than ever how travel or journeys or adventures can provide fodder for a writer’s stories. I was raised (I never grew up, I guess) in Dallas, Texas, and I had seen L’Amour’s books on the bookshelves of my parents, relatives, and other people we visited. He may have been the first popular author I ever knew about. I read several of his books at an early age, yet in 1998, the stories took on new meaning because I felt like I knew the man who wrote them.
L’Amour had one intersting habit he developed during those Depression years when he was hopping trains, traveling from one job to another. He kept lists of the books he read each year. I decided to imitate that practice, and my little book diary lists the books I’ve read every year since. It’s the closest I’ve come to keeping a diary or journal in any systematic way, and a good tool for my writing ideas and self-analysis. I think the book diary is also a legacy I can leave to my children. Maybe it will help them understand their somewhat mad, writer-father. More on this topic later.

English Teacher

I’m an English teacher. At last, the standardized testing is over. English teachers dread this time of year. The state mandates, plus the President’s “every child has a behind act” (I stole that from someone at a gifted symposium) take a heavy toll on teachers throughout Louisiana. Perhaps that is why we still refer to the Graduate Exit Exam (GEE) as the “LEAP” test–it is the time when teachers are tempted to “leap” from windows. At a rural, north Louisiana high school, I teach two classes of freshman honors, two gifted English classes, and two classes of regular students. I’ve also taught freshman composition at the university (University of Louisiana at Monroe) for eleven years. But, more on that later.