So I sent a copy of 99 Jobs to Mike Rose. He responded, and posted this review on Amazon: "This is a delightful book, full of engaging stories about work and working life. It is humane and warmly funny." He used a pseudonym to post the review, but he enthusiastically encouraged me to identify him and use the quote. Then he bought another copy and sent it to a craftsman-friend, who wrote back: "I've only read five paragraphs coming back from the mailbox and I'm already laughing out loud."
". . . a delightful book, full of engaging stories about work and working life. . . humane and warmly funny."Word of mouth, plus a couple of Amazon reviews, are my only publicity. A self-published book isn't going to get any help from the big media. You won't see 99 Jobs reviewed in the New York Times. Oprah won't be plugging it (though she might like it).
—Mike Rose, author of The Mind at Work.
If you've read 99 Jobs and happen to like it, please tell a friend. Maybe even post a review on Goodreads or Amazon. Help people find it.
A few days ago, the UPS driver delivered a package to my house and said, "Hey! I'm reading your book!" Somebody on the route had bought a copy for him. Made my day. I hope you all have a good one, too.
Joe check out this article about Studs Terkel's book 'Working' pub 1972.His compelling look at jobs and the people who do them now is a time capsule of the agricultural and industrial eras that preceded the Information Age. Jobs that don't exist nice article at Forbes.: http://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2012/06/12/why-studs-terkels-working-world-no-longer-exists/
ReplyDeleteStuds is another hero of mine. Thanks for the reminder. I've just now ordered a new copy of "Working" -- it's time to re-read it and I can't find my old copy.
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