“Kick” free promo results as of 7:54pm EST

I’m feeling pretty good.  My little experiment turned into the best free promo I’ve had yet, with no actual marketing on my part other than Facebook/Twitter and my blog.  Thanks to everyone who downloaded their copy today.

Be sure to tell your friends if you like it 🙂

top_100_free

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Freebie Wednesday

kelly_lebrockOn a lark, I made “Kick” free today, with zero promotion. My only other free promos were both promoted: I notified various websites about it, and they posted it on their front page or emailed subscribers about it. A lot of work, hitting-up about 30 different places, each with their own ways to submit to them, each with their own guidelines, etc.  Some were paid spots with no way of telling how well that money worked for me (typically, $5-$20).

The first promo I did, shortly after release and zero reviews, got me about 700 downloads.

The second promo, 3 months later with about 15 reviews, got me at/around 3000 (about 2800 on the first day, and a severe drop-off after that).

So I’m curious what happens today.

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On The Topic Of Reviews And Conspiracies

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Monthly reading subscription for eBooks? Sounds interesting…

http://www.pthylton.com/streaming-books/

 

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Fogland Episode #2 — The Harbinger of Gloom Street

Fogland is a fascinating literary project by Mark Capell, author of Cafe Insomniac.  Lindy Moone was the one who tipped me off about Mark’s book, last Fall, and today she has a Fogland story over on his site:

The Harbinger of Gloom Street

So what, exactly, is Fogland?  In Mark’s words:

FOGLAND is going to be a series of weekly podcasts. Each episode features a short story from a different writer.

But there’s a link.

Every story is set in the world of FOGLAND. This is a mythical town where, owing to its geographical location, fog descends on over two hundred days of the year.

Writers can either expand on characters and story lines in previous episodes of Fogland or create new ones in their stories. And it can be written in any style. The title must include a Fogland street name (which the writer devises).

When each episode has been written, I record it and distribute it on the weekly Fogland podcast.

At the end of the podcast, listeners are encouraged to explore other works by the featured author.

At the same time, the author can publish the text version of their story in online stores.

The author can charge for that book or go the perma-free route. It’s up to them. They can also embed the podcast on their own website and use it for promotion, or elsewhere.

Mark Capell is calling on all authors who are interested to write stories for upcoming Fogland episodes, and I must admit it has piqued my interest. Between writing a sequel to “Kick” and cage fighting for guns, gold and diamonds, I may not have time.

We’ll see 🙂

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Interesting writing blog

Just making a note for myself (and YOU) about a neat writing blog I went to, with videos. Something to look at.

http://www.pthylton.com/

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Food ‘Experts’ Wrong Again

“Let them eat rice cakes,” our government told us…and we did.

Dot2Trot's avatarDot2Trot

Image courtesy of Stuart Miles and FreeDigitalPhotos.netImage courtesy of Stuart Miles and FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Is it me, or is today’s modern food science all crap?

Yesterday I found an  article which addressed seven foods, specifically. These seven foods were considered healthy long ago, then deemed bad for us, and now healthy for us to eat again. I’m glad the article dispels the myths about these healthy foods, of course.  But it bothers me that it doesn’t address why, over the last 50 years, these foods fell out of favor in the first place.

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Great Indie Books #3: Cafe Insomniac, by Mark Capell

Please welcome Mark Capell to the “John L. Monk List Of Indie Authors Who Actually Don’t Suck And Who, In Fact, Kick Ass” list. Nobody goes on this list unless they fulfill the following criteria:

  1. Professional, nearly flawless editing.
  2. Memorable, quality writing.
  3. Good story.
  4. They meet a few additional requirements.

“Cafe Insomniac” is a strange, cozy, left turn from reality, somewhat reminiscent of Neil Gaiman, and yet very much its own unique story: timeless, mysterious, and more than a little dangerous. And fun.  I loved it.

Follow the link on the left under “Great Indie Books” to read the blurb and/or buy the book.

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The Tipsy Lit Hangover Effect

Duncan Swallow discusses the joys of prompted posts.

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Greenhouses And Fish

I’d like to do something like this one day.

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