Showing posts with label Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Publishing. Show all posts

Monday, September 16, 2019

Book Available on Amazon!


Thanks to all who came to the launch at the Newburyport Art Association on Saturday. It was a full house. And even better, a full house of people who listened intently, asked great questions, and bought books. I couldn't have asked for anything better. You can see how much I am smiling despite my somewhat precarious perch in between two chairs in the front row (3rd from the right).


If you missed the launch, you haven't missed the book. It's available on amazon as a paperback and an ebook. I have it set up that if you buy the paperback, you will have an option to download a free ebook after purchase. I think the ebook looks great on a tablet.
  
CALLIGRAPHY: HOW I FELL IN, OUT, AND IN LOVE AGAIN

An illustrated memoir of a sometimes all-consuming, always challenging, and ultimately freeing relationship with calligraphy over forty years. Susan’s story is about more than how to hold a pen and form letters. It is about growing up and growing older, questioning and slowly finding answers— an inspiring read for artists and non-artists alike.

8.5" x 11", 154 pages, 277 illustrations, full color cover and interior

Get your copy here: https://amzn.to/2kiWmFB

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Thoughtful Thursday-Learning from Art Lessons



I wrote Art Lessons to share what I have learned about making art over the last thirty-plus years. I have said about the book that I have only written what I know to be true. And now, having done the writing, I find that I am better able to absorb the lessons myself and act upon them.

It took me a long time to be able to comfortably say, "I am an artist." More and more I have become sure in my saying it and in my understanding the breadth of the identification. Being an artist means I make art. Being an artist means there is always a part of my brain and my heart that are engaged in the process whether consciously or unconsciously. Being an artist means that I approach everything with the same commitment to care and harmony whether it is writing a blog post, setting the table, or preparing a meal. And being an artist means that I need to find ways to structure my life so that I spend the most time I can doing creative work.

Last Saturday I attended the Independent Publishers of New England Conference in Southbridge, MA thanks to the encouragement of Pam Fenner of Michaelmas Press and the IPNE board. In the past I have attended events for publishers and found them informative but also overwhelming and discouraging to varying degrees. Happily, this time I left feeling positive and full of ideas. I'll be writing a series of posts about my experiences with publishing over the years, both with publishers and on my own, but the gist of the matter is that I want the control and the immediacy of publishing myself but when the book is done, I am ready to move onto the next project instead of promote the one I just finished. My goal for Art Lessons is to keep engaged and active with it while continuing with the rest of my work.

Art Lessons is a book I believe in. I think the content is valuable and I am pleased with it as an object. I like its size—small enough for a bedside table or my purse—

the intimacy of its words, and the simplicity of its cover. This belief, and my keeping Gertrude Stein's words which begin one of the essays: "Let me listen to me and not to them" in my mind, seem to be letting the releasing process flow.

My decision to do this book the way I have means that there is no place for it in a commercial context (except the Harvard Book Store where Paige M. Gutenborg, their book-making robot prints the book). The per book cost is too high to give percentages to bookstores or other retail outlets. To start, I am relying on the people who know me and my work online to begin the process. I have created a sales page on my website.

Because I want to encourage reading and conversation, I have a special offer to book and art groups, or any gathering of friends. If you purchase 10 copies of Art Lessons, I will do a free Skype or phone conversation with your group. If you do buy the book and like it, I would encourage you to help by letting your friends know about it and by writing a positive review on the Art Lessons page at the Harvard Book Store. Thanks always for your support. The feedback and connections I have made through the blog and other online avenues helped encourage me to write the book.

Preview and purchase Art Lessons
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