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| Bucolic Burnham Park, Chicago, Illinois and scene of the crime in Identity: Lost. |
You may not know it but a lot of indie bookstores are struggling, like many other small businesses today. Competition from "big box" stores is part of the problem but the economy and online giants like Amazon have also taken a chunk out of the hides of some of the fragile mom and pop stores. Although I am having two signings with Barnes and Noble (one in Kierland Commons in Scottsdale, AZ; the other in downtown Chicago at the B&N--DePaul Bookstore), I have made a definite attempt to promote my book at independent stores.
The perfect world for an author, I suppose, is that all different types of stores compete on equal ground together, each carving out their respective niche in their local neighborhood. Either way, having the opportunity to meet people in person at the local bookstore or library is extremely exciting for me. Frankly, it’s nothing short of a dream come true.
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| My three girls...Irish-Italian beauties. |
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| The author (l) with # 1 son. |
Once my kids heard this Italian phrase they had an “aha” moment, realizing for the first time that it’s in their father’s DNA to make things up, creating a challenge for them the listener to figure out what the real story might be in his storytelling techniques. They believed I had found a perfect outlet—the writing of fiction—for my own propensity in unknowingly practicing the fine art of quasi fatti, obviously an inherited character trait deeply entwined in my DNA.
So, I hope they're happy that their old dad found an outlet for his "almost the truth" style of storytelling. I share with you very soon the result—IDENTITY: LOST. Available in hardcover and Kindle, June 14 from Oceanview Publishing. Cover by Foster Covers.
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| IDENTITY: LOST, available wherever fine books are sold, June 14, 2011. |




As parents, we're so used to being proud of our kids . It must be nice to have them be proud of YOU for a change!
ReplyDeleteLet me know how that feels - my kids still think I'm a dork. :)
Heidi,
ReplyDeleteMy kids don't think I'm a dork. More just weird, I guess, or quirky, or maybe even a bit odd. You'd have to ask them for the best definition and I hope you'll see them at Changing Hands on June 11 and you can do just that. Let me know what they say. I think they're very proud, yes, and that is very heartwarming, but I still get those looks from them that say, "Dad, I can't believe you just said that."