Category Archives: Scribbles

Alizee

3alizeeI may turn this into a photo blog yet. Meet Alizee, French singer, and uh…

Image

Pink primrose and mint

Pinks

What Billy Joe Shaver said after he was acquitted

“Well, I’m sorry this whole thing happened, and I’m just hoping we can become good enough friends where he can give me my bullet back.”

We’ll leave it up to Scott, who posts Shaver’s picture atop his blog page, whether it’s true or not.

San Jacinto Day

Hardly noticed by the politically-correct news media nowadays (don’t want to make the Hispanics mad, etc.), this anniversary of the Texian victory over the Mexican army of dictator Santa Anna, and his capture, still resonates with lovers of Texas history.

After all, as they say, “the modern destiny of Texas began” 174 years ago today. Meanwhile, part of the old battleground, ever crowded by the Houston Ship Channel and the petrochemical industry, is being threatened by development.

Quoth the Raven: 404

A literary funny (above) from the Old Grouch, a commenter at Dustbury.

Let Me Review Your Book

I’ve done it for some mainstream publishers. I will do it for indie ones, too.

Check out my previous free reviews for Forge Books, Turner Publishing Co., and Bright Sky Press. All I got was a free copy. Just like the big boys get. And, no, I did not report it to the FTC and I won’t until newspapers have to do it, too.

I know how hard it is for POD and small press authors to get reviews these days. Newspapers are cutting back on book review sections or eliminating them altogether. News magazines, likewise. Even when they were going full throttle, getting them to give you a shot was chancy at best.

Heck, getting them to give a big publisher a break and a review was (and is) more problematic than the big publishers like to admit. Today, they don’t know what to do. Nowadays, the best way to sell a book is not at the corner bookstore (independent or chain) but on the Internet at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or Alibris. But first the readers have to know you’re out there and that means advertising at places with high hit counts like this one.

But once you’ve drawn them to your book page, you really need something to distinguish it, with your story summaries, from all the others that have similar copy. After you’ve had family and friends leave their five-star reviews (which aren’t taken very seriously, by the way, by the average book seeker), you’re pretty much stuck. Yes, you can hire a review done by, for instance, Feathered Quill Book Reviews of Goshen, Massachusetts, which will post it on Amazon for you.

I did that for my short-story collection Leaving the Alamo, Texas Stories After VietnamFeathered Quill’s reviewer did a nice, detailed job. Not just a pocketful of generalizations like you’d get from some other services I’ll refrain from naming here. But FQBR set me back $50, and in this game that’s cheap. Some of the big dogs charge up to $500.

You probably will need to do a FQBR, too, as well as hire some of the other more expensive services. But, in addition, you can let me review your book free of charge. All I need is an email to scribbler at texasscribbler dot com with an attached e-copy of your book.

You know, a PDF. If it looks like something I want to spend six or more hours reading, I’ll email you back with an address where you can send me a free, reviewer’s hard (or paper) copy—-just like Big Media does it.

After I get that, I’ll email you with a date when you can expect me to finish a review and put it on your Amazon or other book page. I can also include a Microsoft Word printout of the review, under the heading of Cavalry Scout Book Reviews, of Austin, Texas, if you want a news release to photocopy for your other marketing efforts.

So give it a try. You can’t beat the price.

When the cops lost all respect

It was back when they first developed SWAT teams and started dressing military style and carrying auto rifles and driving tanks. Like this one. You might think all that armor and extra firepower made them more formidable. They thought so.  Some of them still do. What it really did was make them contemptible, just like the fascist police in the dictatorships. It is, as rare reader jdallen says, the mark of a government that is afraid of its citizens. And they return the favor by distrusting the government. As they should.

Via Mouth of the Brazos.

UPDATE:  Waco was the most obvious and public manifestation of this problem:  “One of the most significant trends of federal law enforcement in the last fifteen years has been its militarization…and similar trends at the state and local level.”