In anticipation of my subsequent book signing, I created a few promos for fun. In truth, the first one I made had a mistake, so I corrected that mistake and made another. I took this opportunity to change the soundtrack to learn what type of music people responded to more. The jury is out, but I am curious about what you think. I also challenge you to find the mistake in the first video. Your feedback is constructive.
Thank you for reading my blog. As you guessed this is more of a plug for my event in Denver. The next installment will be more about the book Leaving Cleveland. Please share and subscribe for the latest updates.
Leaving Cleveland book tour began in April in , where else. but Cleveland, specifically at Mac’sBack Bookstore on Coventry. It was a great success and a lot of fun meeting old and new friends.
A short video of the book signing at Mac’s Backs Book Store in Cleveland Heights, Ohio , April 27th 2923
Support your local Bookstore.
It is fun to find out that my book is now in bookstores around the country. Locally it can be found at the historic Boulder Book Store
Or at the bookstore ( books with a purpose) Bookmarks in North Carolina.
Of course if you prefer the big box stores it is also available at Target…really!!! says it’s sold out but they will order one for you ..or of course the virtual megastore Amazon… only 3 left in stock…
Later this month I will be pitching my book to 130 Jewish Center around the United States to garner a spot with them to talk about my book…This is set up by the Jewish Book Council, since 1943. After that they will post my book on their site that, according to them receives 30K a week…which me luck…
Mark Your Calendar for June 17, 2023. That is when I will be doing a book signing at Barnes and Noble in Denver at their Glendale Store..
I will leave you with another video of the incredible Kate Siegrist reading from my book..this is part 1 and only 1 minute long…part 2 will be in the next blog.
Thank you for your support and please share with all your friends and family…
Happy Mothers Day to all those amazing Mothers, Grandmothers, Aunts, Caretakers and those who help children grow up to be safe and healthy…
This is an excerpt from my final Kickstarter campaign update:
It is hard to believe this part of the journey is over but a new one begins. It is now time to promote the book, the best I can and if you would be so kind you can help.
You can tell your friends about the book , personally or through social media. Once you have read the book please reveiw the book on Amazon; GoodReads; Barnes and Noble and whereever you buy your books. If you know of any book clubs or are a part of one suggest this book for a reading.
Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions or ideas. I will be in Cleveland Heights on April 27th at book signing at Mac’s Back Book Store click on thislink for the details. It will be fun and sort of home coming. I will post images from the event on Facebook or my blog www.leavingcleveland.blog
I suggest you subscribe to my blog for the latest updates. I will be doing a signing in couple weeks in Denver for the Society for Photo Educators, my first signing.
In May, I will be officially part of the Jewish Book Councilwhich means my book will be featured on their site and I will have a permanent Author page on their site. They recieve over 500,000 viewer a years and have a subscribtion of over 60,000 readers. There might even be an opportunity for me to book tour through them.
As I have said from the very beginning this would never have happened without your generous support. Thank you Thank you Thank you for helping me and, to be corny, make my dream come true.
I feel like I am running a marathon and they keep moving the finish line. Most of the anxiety is anticipating the arrival of my book in the mail. It was suppose to arrive on Friday, today is Saturday, but was delayed and now the arrival date is Tuesday. That said, everything is moving in the right direction. The book can now be preordered on Amazon or Bookbaby or any of your favorite bookseller.
Here is something I learned about selling books on Amazon….it is about the click . So even if you don’t purchase the book if you click on it on their site, Amazon keeps track of the clicks. The more clicks the book receives, the higher the ranking of the book and the more books they will have in stock for immediate shipment. So PlEASE check my book on AMAZON.
One other exciting piece of news is that I have been accepted into the Jewish Book Council with my book Leaving Cleveland. What that means is I will be put on their roster of Authors and might even be selected to go on books tours later this year to talk about my book. They have a membership of 70,000 dedicated readers. I am still in the process and will talk about this more, later.
I will be doing 2 book appearance. The first one is in Denver at the Society of Photographic Educators conference on the 18th of March. I am still waiting on the details and will put in in my next post. The second book appearance will be in Cleveland Heights on April 20th atMac’sBack Book Store from 5 to 7.
There are a couple of other things I am waiting to hear about, one is that Cleveland Magazine is interested on writing an article about my book. I have sent them the E-Book and am awaiting to hear from the writer. The other is a long shot, but the Cultural Editor of NPR asked me to send her my book, “to take a look.” So a lot of exciting things happening and keeping my fingers crossed.
Finally for all my Kickstarter supports, As soon as receive the books in the next two weeks, I will be signing and sending them on to you….hang in there.
Off to take a walk but please share and subscribe to this newsletter for the latest updates .
I wanted to express my gratitude to all of you who have supported my project ” Leaving Cleveland” and give you an update before we move on to 2023. I also wanted to have you read the first page of the book.
Where the book stands: My generous sister-in-law, Saudamini Siegrist, who has her Phd in poetry from NYU, offered to edit the book one more time before I send it to the professional proof reader at Bookbaby. Knowing her incredibly sharp skill as an editor, I could not pass up her offer.
So I have been very patient and thankful for her generous support. As of today she is 50% finished with the edit, she is also busy working with the country of Nigera on a project and just finised having an orginal play she wrote perfomed in NYC.
I am hoping she will complete her edit in the next month. At that point I will send it off to the proof reader which takes about 10 to 14 days. When I get it back from the proof reader and make the necessary final changes it will then go off to the Book designer/printer. I will let you know when that happens and the date of publication, which I am still hoping to be March 14th. I will take as much time though to ” get it right” the first time, so as the saying goes ” It is publsihed when it is published.” I made that up, but you get the idea.
A scary moment with the money: Now that I have your attention, as some of know I have created an LLC Boulder Point Publishing and a separate bank account to be sure the money raise will be only used for the book, it is also easier for tax purposes. Well, I also needed a debit card so I could pay Bookbaby directly for the printing and promotion. I received the debit card from the bank, activated the card with a PIN and two days later all the money $5200 disappeared from the account, pretty scary. I called the Bank and they confirmed the account was hacked and the money taken. This happen on a Monday and by Friday the Bank had put my money back into the account, Phew!!!! They would not tell me what actually happened but I can live with that…
As we move forward, I wanted to wish all of you a safe, happy and healthy holiday season and New Year. I have a lot to be thankful for and your support is one my big highlights of 2022. Next year will be the publication of the book. I am so excited to “put it out there” and excited for you to read it. As promised here is the first page of the book, edited:)
As we move forward, I wanted to wish all of you a safe, happy and healthy holiday season and New Year. I have a lot to be thankful for and your support is one my big highlights of 2022. Next year will be the publication of the book. I am so excited to “put it out there” and excited for you to read it. As promised here is the first page of the book,
I wanted out of Cleveland. Immediately after college I moved to Toronto, hoping to land a job as a news photographer, only to be told by the Toronto Star that I needed six months residency in Canada before I could be hired. I should have known this. I headed back to the US, driving southeast on Route 403, my Toyota Corolla hugging Lake Ontario to Niagara Falls, en route to Boston where I had a friend, Robert, who said I could crash on his couch until I found work. I had $500 in my pocket.
I drove straight through, from Toronto to Boston, without stopping. When I arrived in Boston, I met up with Robert who was living in an apartment near Harvard Square with his girlfriend Ivey and Felix, a semi-domesticated feral cat I was warned to avoid.
I had known Robert since I was 14. He had long blond hair, crystal blue eyes, and a swimmer’s body. Soft-spoken, confident, introspective, girls swooned over him, including Ivey who had moved from Finland to the States to live with him. He was everything I wanted to be. My mother would call it goy envy. Still, as opposite as Robert and I were, we connected. We both loved jazz and eventually formed a trio with Robert on congas, our friend Alex on standup bass and me on alto sax. We would jam in Robert’s attic for hours, smoking pot and pretending it was the 50’s, and we were the Coltrane trio. Robert’s father, a lawyer, would sometimes tape record our sessions and wait till we came downstairs to tell us how wonderful we sounded. His hipness freaked me out.
I spent two weeks in Boston looking for work, sleeping on a mattress on the floor and avoiding Felix as best I could. Eventually I picked up some freelance photography work through the Associated Press, photographing “weather shots” while I waited to hear from a couple of newspapers about a staff position. It seemed there were no real jobs to be found. With my money running out, I took a job as a waiter in the Seafood district at the Yankee Lobster. I was feeling pretty low and thinking maybe I should head back to Ohio and work for my dad. He owned an outdoorsman store in East Cleveland, which never made any sense to me since he was not in the least interested in outdoor activities. He spent all of his days inside, working ten-hour days, seven days a week.