Posts

Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - Nothing So Broken (Richards)

Image
  Chris Richards' book,   Nothing So Broken , reached  #182 in Vietnam War biographies, #99 in disability biographies, and #194 in Vietnam War History. Book description:  In the shadow of loss, a path to healing begins. Chris Richards grew up in a small New England mill town, where life was tough and loyalty ran deep. At just 19, his world was shaken when a close friend was left permanently disabled by a devastating accident. At the same time, Chris’s father began to show troubling symptoms linked to his service in the Vietnam War—unseen wounds that would slowly unravel the man he once knew. The weight of watching two people he loved unravel under the strain of trauma and physical decline left deep scars—ones Chris carried silently into adulthood. For years, he buried his grief and fear, never imagining that one day, facing his own crisis, he would turn to their stories for strength. This powerful and moving memoir explores the enduring impact of trauma, the qui...

Why the Golden Gate Bridge Draws People in Crisis — and Whether Passersby Can Help

Image
  The Golden Gate Bridge is one of the most photographed places in the world — a symbol of beauty, engineering, and the sweep of the California coast. But it has also become one of the most well‑known locations associated with suicide attempts. That contrast — breathtaking beauty and profound despair — is part of what makes the bridge such a powerful and complicated site. Writers, clinicians, and first responders have tried to understand why this particular place draws people in crisis. A View Through the Fog adds to that conversation with two deeply respected chapters from someone who has stood on that walkway, face‑to‑face with would‑be jumpers. The book doesn’t sensationalize. It humanizes. Why the Golden Gate Bridge Becomes a Destination Researchers and crisis workers point to several overlapping factors: Symbolic power The bridge is iconic. For some, it represents a dramatic, decisive ending — a place where the internal struggle becomes external. Accessibility Until t...

A Publisher's Conversation with Authors: 🌿The Long Tail Has a Pulse

Image
  How a Decades‑Old Book Keeps Whispering Back Every author knows the thrill of a new release: the launch, the buzz, the early reviews, the first royalty statement. What we talk about less is the quiet, stubborn afterlife of a book — the way it keeps moving through the world long after we’ve stopped expecting anything from it. Sometimes that afterlife arrives as a tiny, almost comical royalty deposit. A few dollars. A few cents. A reminder that somewhere, someone found your book. Maybe they searched for it. Maybe they stumbled across it. Maybe they were handed a used copy by a friend. But they read it — and that matters. The long tail of publishing isn’t glamorous, but it’s real. Books don’t disappear when the marketing stops. They drift. They linger. They get discovered in unexpected places. They find new readers in new decades. And every once in a while, they send up a little flare: I’m still here. For authors, that pulse is worth noticing. It’s proof that our work has a lif...