I can’t remember the last time I read a book a second time–except perhaps for Goodnight Moon.
But when our neighborhood book club decided to discuss The Sparrow, I was delighted to read it again.
Continue reading “The Sparrow”
Exploring Books, Life, and Writing
I can’t remember the last time I read a book a second time–except perhaps for Goodnight Moon.
But when our neighborhood book club decided to discuss The Sparrow, I was delighted to read it again.
Continue reading “The Sparrow”
Remember the running gag in Finding Nemo when Marlin the clown fish (whom others keep thinking will be funny) painfully tries to tell a joke? “Okay, a mollusk walks up to this sea cucumber, well he doesn’t actually walk, he’s just there, and he turns to the sea cucumber, and. . . Well, wait, there’s a mollusk and a sea cucumber and . . . Normally, they don’t talk, sea cucumbers, but in a joke everyone talks. So the sea mollusk says to the cucumber. . .”
Continue reading “Humor Is Serious Business”
I’ve seen the pattern all too often. We as a publishing committee are enthusiastic about a book because we see it as unique or because we are passionate about the topic or because it touches on a trend that it is rising. Then a year or two after publication we look back with disappointment. It didn’t catch on. There weren’t many readers as passionate about it as we were. It may have had fine editorial quality, but the experience left a bad taste in our mouths.
Continue reading “How a Weak Book Kills a Strong Book”
Bob Harvey, my former pastor, told the congregation in a sermon about the time he was on vacation at a lake, sitting in a giant inner tube when suddenly and unexpectedly he lost his balance and found himself upside down in the water, still stuck in the tube. As a man with a few extra pounds on his frame, he was unable to get out and right himself. While he was underwater trying to figure out what to do, he told us, he thought, You know, this will make a good sermon illustration.
Continue reading “Stories Are the Point”
Corporate planning is the butt of many jokes and the bane of many managers. But as folks in InterVarsity have said for years, “Aim at nothing and you are sure to hit it.” Tom Woll offers 35 pages on planning in his book Publishing for Profit, a book on which I’ve been offering a serial review. Woll covers a lot of territory. Here are some highlights:
Continue reading “Nobody Likes Planning”
Once I was invited to be part of a panel discussion during a conference. The panel went well, and I was ready to go back to the office to finish up some work I had there. As the moderator of the conference closed the panel he said to the group. “We’ll take a fifteen minute break now, and then for the next hour Andy Le Peau will be speaking to us.”
My worst speaking nightmare had come true.
Continue reading “Public Speaking Isn’t Life or Death–It’s Much Worse Than That”
“Never apologize for your reading tastes.” My local library uses that quote from Betsy Rosenberg as a motto. There’s a lot of wisdom there.
Continue reading “Never Apologize for Your Reading Tastes”
Here are the 2007 Andys, based on what I read last year:
Continue reading “The 2007 Andys”
Publishing consultant Tom Woll thinks a publisher needs to start by defining its niche. In an earlier blog I said I agreed. My wise friend, Al Hsu, commented on that blog that authors need to think the same way, but that “calling” might be a better way to think about it—a term that gives both focus and flexibility. This of course can be a helpful way for publishers to approach their work as well.
Niche (or calling) can be defined by:
Continue reading “Do You Itch for a Niche or Are You on the Leash of Your Niche?”
I read many manuscripts each year on the job, of course. Here are the books I read in 2007 after they were published, in the order I read them.
Continue reading “What I Read in 2007”