Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Calling all writers – help needed

Writers

Hello there,


Thanks for looking at my blog.


I feel a little awkward about asking for help from strangers on the internet but I hope that my request won’t annoy you too much. All too often the internet is used by people trying to get into your wallet or purse. I sincerely hope that you won’t place me into that category.


I am a journalist and writer. Over the years I’ve written a number of books that have been published by the likes of Headline and Penguin. One of these books sold a lot of copies, another sold not many copies at all but received glowing reviews from everyone who read it. This year I thought I would give self-publishing a try.


Naturally, I did all the relevant searches pertaining to what one is supposed to do with a self-published book. There’s a lot of helpful advice out there. That’s for sure.


Having done so I spent weeks and weeks contacting reviewers. I must have contacted over a thousand potential reviews and managed to get 26 reviews in total. I contacted newspapers who knocked me back because I wasn’t with a recognised publisher (the long letter I wrote to the editor of The Guardian questioning this archaic attitude never received a reply). I contacted TV and appeared on radio. I contacted bloggers. I dramatically increased my Twitter followers. In other words, I did everything one is supposed to do to promote a self-published book. It’s hard work. If you, too, are a writer or indeed any kind of artist I’m sure you understand exactly what I’m talking about.


Now I want to try one more thing and I need your help…


To celebrate the launch of my kids books Johnny Nothing in paperback (via Createspace) I am currently running a Kindle Countdown Deal. If you’re not familiar with this a Kindle Countdown Deal is basically a heavy price reduction that goes to its original price after a period of a week.


What I would like you to do, my fellow, is buy the book in Kindle format.


At the moment the book is 99p in the UK and around 1$ in the US.


I think you’ll agree that it isn’t going to cost you an arm and a leg. Furthermore, if you buy it and don’t like it simply drop me a line and I will Paypal you back your money. I’m not asking you to do this to make a huge profit for me.


So why am I doing this?


I’m doing this because – and you will accuse me of being self-deluded – I genuinely believe that Johnny Nothing is good. If I can get only a small proportion of my followers on Twitter and WordPress to buy the book it will enter the bestseller charts in Amazon (Like you, I’m amazed at how few copies of a book you need to sell in order to do this).


Once Johnny Nothing is in the bestseller charts then other people may start to buy it. From that point on the book will sink or swim depending on its quality. If people like it they will encourage others to buy it. If they don’t like it I might end up looking like a prat.


There’s another reason why fellow writers might want to support me in this idea: If it works for me it could work for you. And I would be more than willing to help other writers who need a push.


Thanks for reading.


Ian


Here are links to the UK and American version of Johnny Nothing




Here is a link to a very good review of Johnny Nothing:


http://ift.tt/1uVfhDG


And another:


http://ift.tt/1pKYLiz


And another:


http://ift.tt/1pKYLiz


And here’s a link to a bad review of Johnny Nothing:


http://ift.tt/1uVfhTW




Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Excerpt from Johnny Nothing – the funniest kids book since American Psycho

20140222-095121.jpg

More shameless self-promotion. To celebrate the fact that my little kids book ‘Johnny Nothing’ is finally available in paperback here’s an excerpt in which the MacKenzie family go on a round the world trip and encounter lots of really dreadful puns.


Chapter 10 – Holiday

Now that the MacKenzie family was rich the world was their lobster. ‘I’m going on a trip!’ announced Felicity MacKenzie a couple of days after her latest spending spree. ‘And since it’s school holidays Johnny can come too. Say thank-you, Johnny.’

‘Thank-you,’ said Johnny weakly.

So the family packed up their belongings: Mrs. MacKenzie took four large trunks full of clothing, make-up and baked beans (in case she didn’t like foreign food). Mr. MacKenzie took two medium sized suitcases crammed with copies of the Racing Post, electronic gadgets and cans of lager (in case he didn’t like foreign beer). Johnny took a Sainsbury’s carrier bag stuffed with a few comics, some pencils and a change of underpants.

The trio boarded a plane to Paris in France. The grown-ups sat at the front in first class, sipping champagne and eating posh caviare sandwiches. Johnny sat at the back of the plane in economy class. There he read his comics and tried to ignore the chorus of howling babies that surrounded him. (Most airlines make it compulsory that there is at least one howling baby in the cheaper section of the plane. The idea is to encourage passengers to pay extra to go and sit in the expensive section of the plane. For long haul flights they try to ensure that there is at least three howling babies per passenger.)

When they got to Paris it took Mrs. MacKenzie only a day or so to get bored with the French. She objected to the fact that most of them didn’t speak English. And when her attempts at speaking French failed she grew restless. (In other words, she did what most English tourists do when they are abroad – she spoke English, only slower and louder than usual and expected everyone to understand what she was going on about.)

After copping an eyeful of the big tower in Paris she insisted that the family get on another plane and go somewhere better. Over the next couple of weeks they flew all over the world at tremendous cost. But nowhere was good enough for the MacKenzies:


• They went to Amsterdam but found the Dutch tulippy.

• They took a slow boat to China but they were bored to death by the time they got there.

• They went to Coventry but the locals wouldn’t talk to them.

• They flew to Warsaw but found it an eyesore.

• They found Cuba dull (although everyone else seemed to be Havana good time).

• They went to Egypt but the pyramids were like a prism.

• They went to Sao Paulo but thought the Brazilians were nuts.

• They sailed to Costa Rica but it Costa fortune.

• They got hungry in Hungary.

• So they had turkey in Turkey.

• And then chicken in Kiev.

• And crackers in Caracas.

• And visited a Deli in Delhi.

• They got thirsty in Chertsey.

• So they had high tea in Haiti.

• Then drank iced tea in the Black Sea.

• They went for a wander in Rwanda.

• Something went wrong in Hong Kong.

• They weren’t bowled over by Moldova.

• They found Chile too cold.

• They bought perfume in Cologne.

• Mr. MacKenzie had a very painful accident in Bangkok.

• They found Nuremberg a trial.

• They thought that Guinea was fowl.

• They went to a party in Toga.

• Things got vicious in Mauritius.

• They saw sea shells sitting in the Seychelles.

• They watched the Gaza Strip.

• They heard the Galway Bay.

• They saw the Colorado Springs.

• They got lost on the way to San Jose.

• They bought new pyjamas in the Bahamas.

• They couldn’t settle in Seattle.

• They got catarrh in Qatar.

• It was not so great in Crete.

• In the end they simply flew back to France – they had nothing Toulouse.


Back in France Mrs. MacKenzie declared that the rest of the world was boring. That it was dull. That it was overrated. That the food was funny. That in future she’d be taking her holidays back in England. They boarded one final plane and ended up in Weston-Super-Mare. There Mrs. MacKenzie spent a contented week sitting indoors watching the rain and complaining about the English weather, the English food, the price of alcohol, how ugly the tourists were and about how foreigners were taking over our country and should go back to where they belonged.

She smothered herself in fake tan, not forgetting to brown her eyelids. She fed lit cigarettes to the seagulls. She wore a ‘Kiss Me Quick’ hat that terrified her fellow holidaymakers. She hogged the karaoke machine. She lost hundreds of pounds playing the slot machines on the pier.

She had never been so happy.


If you fancy purchasing Johnny Nothing it’s really cheap and available at:


http://goo.gl/WTyNRV


http://goo.gl/Z7KwEL




Monday, 15 September 2014

My book is being pirated — am I bothered? No.… Help yourself.

20140222-095121.jpg Yesterday someone pointed out to me that my kids book, Johnny Nothing, is available to download for free on some dodgy website. This has happened to me a few times with other books in the past but it’s a first for Johnny Nothing.


Am I bovvered? Not at all. Let them have it. Let them read it. Let them hopefully tell people about it who also download it. Who knows whose hands it might fall into?


There are so many reasons why I cannot and will not start bleating on about people downloading my book. Probably the chief one is hypocrisy. And whilst I am not overjoyed that people are stealing my work without paying for it (believe me, I’d much rather get paid) I’m not going to waste my time trying to stop it.


So here’s the dodgy link: http://ift.tt/1m80tyh


It’s a bit of a scam because you have to sign up to download, which I have not done. Maybe you will. Alternatively, Here’s the links if you do want to get the book legitimately and buy me a beer in the process:


http://goo.gl/WTyNRV


http://goo.gl/Z7KwEL




Thursday, 21 August 2014

Glyn Leach – farewell to a boxing stalwart

In the last few years so many people I know have died that I seem to be in a constant state of shock. Friends, colleagues and family: they’ve all been dropping like flies. Heart attacks, cancer, Motor Neurone Disease – fate, it seems, has no trouble in coming up with different ways of killing us all. And none of them are pleasant.


This week yet another friend of mine died. His name was Glyn Leach. He was only fifty-four-years-of-age and best known to the world of boxing as the long-standing editor of Boxing Monthly. I hadn’t actually seen him in person since 22 November 1990. I remember that date because it was the day that Margaret Thatcher resigned from government. It was also the day that I was sacked as editor of the magazine’s sister publication Boxing Weekly.


But what I’m about to write is not about me. It’s about Glyn, and Bola, and Jon, and Anna, and my father. And other people who shall remain nameless. People who have in some way touched me, been important to me. And Glyn was one of them.


Let me take you back to 1989. The dark, dusty, internet free days of 1989. It’s seems impossible to me that I’m talking about a quarter of a century ago. Not because it really does seem like yesterday but because I can still smell and taste that decade on my fingers and toes. I’d just walked out on a job as boxing reporter for the Sunday Sport and been invited to come and work for the company that published Boxing Monthly. Although the magazine was still in its first year the publishers were full of confidence and ambition. They were in the process of launching a weekly edition. They wanted me to edit it.


The operation was run from a suite of rooms above a newsagents in Notting Hill. Glamorous it was not. The place smelled of piss. The one solitary toilet was a health hazard, as was the owner of the company who operated a revolving door policy. Staff were in and out of the building on a daily basis. New faces replaced old with alarming regularity. It was sometimes difficult to remember the names of the people you were supposed to be working with.


Masterminding the chaos was Edward Crawshaw, a charming ex-public school rogue who was an accountant turned art dealer. At his side was Barry Hugman, a boxing statistician and editor of the British Boxing Yearbook (who one ex-Boxing Monthly editor – now Eurosport commentator – once cruelly claimed ‘put the chin in Hitching’).


I turned up on my first morning in the job to find that I was the only one there. There were no other staff members. It transpired that there had been an argument a day earlier and all the staff had walked out. To better things, I might add. Eventually Crawshaw and Hugman appeared and brought with them some new staff members. There was Chris, a university graduate from up north, and Lee, a recent school leaver (who still happens to be one of the funniest people I have ever met). Neither of them had any experience of running a weekly paper. Neither of them had ever had a solitary word published – not even in the school magazine let alone the national press. And I was only a child myself – not yet twenty-five. It was clear that difficult times were ahead for us all.


A couple of weeks later Glyn joined the cast. From what I remember he had been regularly corresponding with Barry Hugman in the hope of getting a start in boxing journalism. Hugman had apparently invited him to his house and given him a subbing test, which Glyn had passed. What sealed the deal was Glyn’s offer to work for free.


I don’t much recall Glyn’s entrance: Boxing Weekly was only days away from launch and we were all too busy to welcome a new arrival with any pomp and ceremony. Glyn just rolled up his sleeves and helped out where he could. Even then it was clear that Glyn was a grafter. He was prepared to live in the Boxing Weekly offices if that’s what it took. And he frequently did.


I may be wrong but I think that I had the privilege of editing the very first piece that Glyn offered to Boxing Weekly. If I recall correctly it was about Frank Bruno. It was a little rough around the edges but Glyn quickly and quietly improved, becoming an accomplished writer and commentator on boxing.


I spent a year at Boxing Weekly and it was most definitely the hardest year of my life. Unless you have ever been in this situation it is difficult to understand just how tough it is to run a weekly paper. It really is like being on a treadmill. After the euphoria and relief of completing the paper in the early hours of a Saturday morning it was back to the grindstone: the planning meeting on Monday morning, the allocation of tasks to staff members and freelancers, the continual worry that the pages might not be filled, that photographs might not turn up. The constant threat of legal action from managers, promoters and boxers.


And when the day’s work was over, more work. This time spent attending the fights that would be reported in next week’s issue. Attending them to such a degree that I personally began to resent the sport of boxing for the demands it was placing upon me. The scrambling to achieve deadlines, the constant worry.


What made things harder for Boxing Weekly was the paucity of funds that were provided for the editorial team. We really did live from hand to mouth. On too many occasions contributors and suppliers would not be paid and instead of working on the paper I would find myself engaged in lengthy telephone conversations attempting to placate creditors. Even worse, staff members would often not be paid, myself included. It was the ultimate slap in the face for all the work that we had been putting in.


Of course there were laughs. Sometimes episodes of manic laughter when all of us would get drunk and offload the strain that we had been going through. Our habit of calling everyone ‘matey’ for no apparent reason. The time Lee called up Paul McCartney in the middle of the night and swore at him. The time all the computers were removed from the office by men in crash helmets as we worked. The time a drunken Kirkland Laing crashed the offices knocking over everything in his way.


Yes, there were laughs. But those laughs were mainly overshadowed by the constant grind. Grind like nothing else on earth.


The reason I talk about all this is because Glyn experienced this grind for over a quarter of a century. I lasted a year before I was burned out but Glyn, being the grafter that was, carried on and carried on. And carried on.


He carried on when he arrived into work one morning to find all the computers gone and along with them all the staff. He carried on when the magazine went bust, obtaining a bank loan and purchasing half of the magazine outright. He carried on when the internet arrived and everyone in the world was suddenly a published writer. He carried on when paper was superseded by pixels. He just carried on. And for the succeeding generations of boxers and boxing fans it was as if he had always been there and would be forever.


A few years ago Glyn and I got back in touch. We became FB friends and began exchanging messages and emails. We planned to meet up and have a few beers. But it never happened. In one of our very last FB exchanges Glyn told me that he was arranging a lunch with another former Boxing Monthly editor, the kind and knowledgable George Zeleny. But now that, too, will never happen.


Now twenty years older, Glyn and I had other things in common. I was on the verge of having a hip replacement and he had just had one himself. I wanted his advice. Earlier this year Glyn surprised me by telling me that he had suffered a seizure, in which he had collapsed but made a full recovery. Except for the fact that he found it difficult to concentrate when he was working. In retrospect, alarm bells should have been ringing then and perhaps they were. In the March issue of Boxing Monthly Glyn confessed at length to feeling the strain of that continual grind in an editorial that was completely out of character for him.


The outpouring of grief and sadness on Twitter and on the many boxing sites that now proliferate has been genuinely moving for me and those who knew Glyn. And this is my own way of saying goodbye, of tipping my hat to someone who always commanded respect. You made a difference, Glyn, and although you’d no doubt be laughing at the the sentimentality of that last statement, an awful lot of people are already missing you far too much.


Ian Probert 2014