I am super-thrilled to announce that today my book, The Adventures of JoJo The Small Town Hound: Vol. 1, Leesburg, VA and the Curious Case of Dog Money, is live in the world, available on Amazon.com for your enjoyment. Or that of your 7-10 year-old friends, more accurately.
The whole thing has been a fascinating experience, and I think the thing that's most fulfilling is the fact that I actually did something I'd envisioned. Only took 53+ years. Here's to the next one.
Roberto - seriously and genuinely impressed and happy for you. No small feat. Well, you might have small feet but this feat of getting the book published, not small. Rob's an author!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations Rob! You're an author. Pretty cool.
ReplyDeleteEasy with the foot talk, Danimal.
ReplyDeleteBest of luck to JoJo and Rob for successful launch!
one small step for small-footed man. one giant leap for dogdom.
ReplyDeletewe've sold two books! next step, profit.
ReplyDeleteAs the father of a soon-to-be 10-year-old I had to act swiftly before she ages out of your oeuvre. Glad to see I account for 50% of your sales.
ReplyDeletewe’re up to 5! up the charts with a bullet!
ReplyDeleteHearty congrats to GTB’s own version of Dr. Seuss!
ReplyDeleteI ordered a copy to share with my wife, who once had designs on writing books for young readers.
ReplyDeleteNow she's over 20 years into a teaching career that's kept her too busy to do it. It's the homestretch of her first year as a reading teacher, and her school is getting a new director next year. Perhaps JoJo will gently nudge her to get back to writing, so she can have some options if the new boss makes her want to change course.
Congrats, Author Guy. High five to you and JoJo and your illustrator.
ReplyDeleteWell done, Rob. Will recommend the town library buy a few copies, after I get my copy of course.
ReplyDeletejust purchased a copy-- expect an objective, unbiased review soon enough (two days shipping plus reading time-- and it's only 33 pages and I assume it contains pictures, so I should be able to finish it in less than a week).
ReplyDeleteand I am warning you-- since you ignored all my suggestions, the gloves are coming off for this evaluation.
yes
ReplyDeleteI just walked into my house after jumping in a taxi and leaving Maddie in Seville 30 hours ago. Long road home, could’ve been worse, and I’d go much further to see my baby.
ReplyDeletemazel Rob!
ReplyDeletei look forward to dave's criticism. i wouldn't have entered the arena without girding my loins.
ReplyDeletegross
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to the future 'We Defy Augury' podcast that delves into kids books, including this one.
ReplyDeletesmall town hound currently the #1 new release on amazon's children's american local history and #2 in children's u.s. history. blowin' up all over here.
ReplyDeleteDammmmmmn, robbie! Fantastic.
ReplyDeletei assume those’ll be short-lived rankings, but we’ll always have april 16.
ReplyDeleteAs a result I assume you'll never forget zdaughter's birthday.
ReplyDeletei hope you got her a book!
ReplyDeleterob, you can quit your day job now. oh, wait....
ReplyDeletewhitey herzog, shuffling off this mortal coil. pour some out for mark's memories.
ReplyDeleteWhitey was indeed the first manager I ever rooted for. Those mid 80's Cardinals teams were my true introduction to fandom. RIP to the White Rat.
ReplyDeleteIn other news, my wife has been on a cruise since Friday. She gets back tonight. Had a great time with my kid but god damn I couldn't be a single father.
I always rooted against Whitey Herzog since those Cards bested the Mets so much in the 80’s. The 1985 Mets won 98 games and watched the postseason on blurry tube televisions because Whitey’s team won 101. Would’ve liked to see that version of Doc in the playoffs. And man, if you rooted against St. Louis, you damn well hated the White Rat.
ReplyDeleteThen again, I came to have a weird affinity for that man, or at least his name. One of my oldest friends, a ridiculous guy we called Stiggs, was a rampant nicknamer. Stiggs was our HS QB and a goofball for the ages. When Whitney became Whitey among my knucklehead middle school and high school chums, Stiggs morphed it into Whitey Herzog, and in his brain, it stuck.
I moved back to town 20 years later and I’d be walking down the street and would hear “Whitey Herzog!!” from half a block away. It’d draw a look from newer friends, especially those that knew baseball. We lost Stiggs 7 or 8 years ago when he just didn’t wake up one day. A few of us organized a throwdown in his honor, and when I stood up to speak, a few of the old crowd shouted “Whitey Herzog!!” I don’t hate the White Rat any more.