For two days I have been mulling over how to honor my long-time friend Danny Mitchell who will be laid to rest tomorrow. Danny was such a strong supporter of education and a true community leader who gave of his time and money to many causes. To honor Danny, I have decided to take a leading role in raising money to support two programs that use the literary arts to help both at-risk kids and high school students.
Two programs of the Alabama Writers Forum are making the world a better place by using the literary arts to help kids grow into better adults. Writing Our Stories is a national model program developed for adjudicated youth that takes place year round at the Department of Youth Services in three programs at two campuses where our students are incarcerated. We hire and put writing teachers into positions to teach these young people creative writing, then we publish anthologies each year of their work. The program is being spread to public schools and other states as a model of how to help these young people help themselves by gaining communications skills and learning that their voices matter. This program saves and improves lives, helping these students reenter society and become productive.
Another program that is needs our support is the High School Literary Arts Awards. I am personally funding a scholarship in my mother's name to honor her and recognize excellence in student writing, helping encourage a new generation of writers.
Please join the new Century Club that I am starting to get 100 concerned people to help with these educational ventures. To join is simple and requires only two things, just pledge to raise or donate $100 this year and agree to post your involvement in social media such as Facebook, Twitter, Google+ or other social media. Thanks all, and will get us 20% of this year's goal.
Of course, we won't raise the $50,000 needed this year or the $100,000 needed next year with small donations alone, so please pledge larger amounts if you find yourself in a position to do so. But if you have other charities and causes that are your primary interest, even a $35 membership will help enormously and I will be very grateful for any amount donated.
We are running the campaign through Razoo to make it easy. Please join the Century Club of the AWF or just donate what you feel you can:
1. Click on this link to see how to donate quickly and easily and whatever amount makes sense to you. http://www.razoo.com/story/Alabama-Writers-Forum
2. Post on your social media.
That's all it takes to make a tremendous difference and impact real lives.
Thanks so very much for helping me support this great cause and improve or even save lives, while honoring a person who truly made a difference in the world.
Philip
Philip Shirley's blog covers book news, fiction, writing, publishing and related topics. Along with anything fun I want to write. (The former blogs under Fiction Highway, telling what it was like to publish a first book of fiction, is still down there somewhere.)
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Author appearances for book clubs
Would your book club like an author appearance or Skype talk? Let me know if you might. Here's a recent article where I was interviewed about what books are on my nightstand that tells a bit about what I read in addition to what I write.My nightstand books
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Alabama book signing road trip Aug. 16 for The White Lie
I'll make an Alabama road trip to sign The White Lie this weekend in Cullman at Deb's Book Store on Saturday morning, 9-11. Then hurry on to Birmingham area to sign at Little Professor in Homewood 1-3. Hope to see lots of friends.
Monday, August 11, 2014
Soap star Antonio Sabato Jr picks up The White Lie
A friend sent me this picture from a recent party where Antonio Sabato Jr, star of such great soaps as General Hospital and Melrose Place, picked up a copy of The White Lie. He was in town shooting an episode of his new show on home improvement called "Fix It and Finish It." See this You Tube clip.
Wednesday, August 6, 2014
Bay St. Louis, Miss. Book Signing on Aug. 9
Hope to see you at the great Second Saturday event in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, on Saturday August 9, 2014, at Bay Books starting at 5 p.m.. I'll be signing The White Lie and perhaps on of the few remaining first editions of Oh Don't You Cry for Me.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
On My Nightstand article from al.com
A new series based on interviews with authors about what they are reading has been launched on al.com, created by Jessica Sawyer Rigby. I was fortunate to be selected for the first article:
Monday, July 21, 2014
TWL makes top sellers listing
The White Lie made it to number three on the "Mississippi Reads" listing in The Clarion-Ledger on Sunday, July 20, behind Greg Iles' Natchez Burning and Lisa Howorth's Flying Shoes.
Monday, July 14, 2014
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Book launch this week
The first scene of The White Lie was written in 1998. Once outlined and in draft form the book sailed along fairly quickly. It was a learning experience. A regional press wanted the book a couple of years later and I worked with their editor for a long time, but eventually internal company problems caused them to decide not to publish the book. I put the manuscript in a drawer, moved on and finished three other manuscripts and published two books--a collection of short fiction (Jefferson Prize finalist) and a cultural history of baseball with David Magee (Triumph Books published it). Then Mindbridge Press wanted this book and we edited it once again. Now we're two days from release on July 10 at Lemuria Book Store in Jackson, Mississippi. 5 signing, 5:30 reading. A long journey for a book. I'm ready to see what folks think. A couple of good reviews have surfaced so far.www.philipshirley.com
Monday, June 30, 2014
New book giveaway on Goodreads
The last giveaway had hundreds of entries so I thought I should give away a couple more books, so go register if you want to try to win one.
Goodreads Giveaway of THE WHITE LIE
Goodreads Giveaway of THE WHITE LIE
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Book Trailer for The White Lie
Here is the first book trailer for my novel The White Lie that will be released at Lemuria Books in Jackson, Mississippi on July 10. Will also be signing the next day at LoDa ArtWalk in Mobile on Dauphin STreet 6-9. And on Dauphin Island 25- on that Saturday, July 12, at Mac'n'DD's Emporium. Please stop by....http://bit.ly/1tTyDps
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Book giveaway on Goodreads

The White Lie by Philip Shirley. Giveaway ends June 20, 2014. See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter to win
Saturday, May 10, 2014
The twin tugs of marketing a new book and writing one
The White Lie is now in the hands of the publisher Mindbridge Press. The Advance Reading Copies have been sent to numerous reviewers at places like Library Journal and Kirkus with the hope and wish they will find the book worthy. If you are publishing with a small publisher, make sure they schedule time to get gallies off 12-15 weeks ahead of release date. A few writers have agreed to read the book and provide blurbs if they like the work. Early news is that they seem to like it. It's a waiting game for reviews and blurbs, but mostly for the July 10 release when I can start making the circuit of bookstore signings, conference talks, and readings. As I sit here on a Saturday afternoon overlooking the reservoir, I'd love to be one of those boaters I see. I'd also love to be editing the other novel I recently finished and looking for an agent or publisher. And the other voice in my head insists that I do something to help make sure The White Lie finds readers.
So let's recount the day and see what I did:
Start with a couple of beers and hamburger at the Cherokee Drive-in with my wife & another friend. Check.
Ride around with the top down to put off working. Check.
Stop by Lemuria Bookstore to talk to Johnny about the book launch July 10. (confirmed.) Check.
Ask Johnny to see if Ingram has the book listed for sale yet to bookstores. (It does!) Check.
Walk the dog for the second time, to put off working. Check.
Spray the poison ivy in the garden to put off working. Check.
Update my Philip Shirley personal web site to list the two signings that were confirmed this week. Check.
Edit copy on the website. Check.
Open the file on a short story draft and write a paragraph or two. Check.
Reread a piece of flash fiction to see if it got better sitting idle in the file. (Nope.) Check.
Look up a couple of bookstore addresses to ask Mindbridge to contact for signings. Check.
Look up bloggers who might be interested in reviewing the book. Check.
Read the tutorial on Contribute 2 so figure out how to change leading in the website. (No luck). Check.
Send my publisher an email about the timing of the digital version release. Check.
Open another file to see if any of the half-started, dead-end short stories speaks to me today. (Nope) Check.
Get another beer and imagine selling thousands of copies of The White Lie. Check
Consider editing The Graceland Conspiracy manuscript. (considered, dismissed) Check.
Look up my blogs to see how long it has been since I blogged. Oops, too long. Check.
Write this blog about what book publishing feels like. Check.
So let's recount the day and see what I did:
Start with a couple of beers and hamburger at the Cherokee Drive-in with my wife & another friend. Check.
Ride around with the top down to put off working. Check.
Stop by Lemuria Bookstore to talk to Johnny about the book launch July 10. (confirmed.) Check.
Ask Johnny to see if Ingram has the book listed for sale yet to bookstores. (It does!) Check.
Walk the dog for the second time, to put off working. Check.
Spray the poison ivy in the garden to put off working. Check.
Update my Philip Shirley personal web site to list the two signings that were confirmed this week. Check.
Edit copy on the website. Check.
Open the file on a short story draft and write a paragraph or two. Check.
Reread a piece of flash fiction to see if it got better sitting idle in the file. (Nope.) Check.
Look up a couple of bookstore addresses to ask Mindbridge to contact for signings. Check.
Look up bloggers who might be interested in reviewing the book. Check.
Read the tutorial on Contribute 2 so figure out how to change leading in the website. (No luck). Check.
Send my publisher an email about the timing of the digital version release. Check.
Open another file to see if any of the half-started, dead-end short stories speaks to me today. (Nope) Check.
Get another beer and imagine selling thousands of copies of The White Lie. Check
Consider editing The Graceland Conspiracy manuscript. (considered, dismissed) Check.
Look up my blogs to see how long it has been since I blogged. Oops, too long. Check.
Write this blog about what book publishing feels like. Check.
Sunday, February 23, 2014
THE WHITE LIE scheduled for release July 2014
My novel The White Lie is scheduled for release from Mindbridge Press July 2014. Galleys are now being set for Advance Reader Copies. If you are a reviewer who is interested please contact Mindbridge at the email on their website www.mindbridgepress.com.
Here's a brief description: Dejected advertising executive Peter Brantley is carjacked when a drug
bust goes bad. Facing death as a witness who knows of the fleeing dealer, Peter
crashes his car and leaves the unconscious criminal on the side of a rural
road. Peter keeps the gym bag of cocaine left in his car to get even with the
drug dealers by ransoming the drugs back—with no intention to deliver. With a
marriage on the rocks and depressed over his brother’s death from a drug
overdose, Peter and his wife Mary Beth go against the odds to face a ruthless
drug kingpin and a drug task force leader who are both closing in. Mary Beth,
who is fighting temptations of infidelity, uses this zany plan and her support of
Peter to salvage her marriage. When Peter and his cousin are seriously injured
during an ill-fated attempt to con the drug dealers, Mary Beth emerges as the
unlikely hero to make sure the drug dealers can never harm the couple again.
Friday, April 16, 2010
wonderful found poetry
This sign was hanging above an artisan who sits long hours each day tying knots (2500 per square inch) in silk rugs in china: Mind Your Head.
I think this requires no further comment.
I think this requires no further comment.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Three years later
On November 30, 2007, I sent the final manuscript (I thought) to Jefferson Press for OH DON'T YOU CRY FOR ME. With that, the blog Fiction Highway came to an end, which was intended to follow what it was like to publish a first book (even though I had some publications before that). I was beyond wanting to write another word about the experience. Not that it was bad. It was in fact wonderful, and I had a great editor who made it so. But losing three stories from the collection, then re-writing thousands of words on deadline took its toll.
So anyway, the book came out in the spring of 2008. I made the regional circuit speaking at conferences, doing readings at libraries and bookstores, signing books, and generally doing what I could to promote the book while running an ad agency 50 or 60 hours a week. Once in awhile I look on Amazon to see if some relative or friend or distant new reader has bought a copy....
Soon I jumped into the next book, non-fiction about the 125 year history of Louisville Slugger baseball bats. David Magee and I wrote and published the book for release in April 2009, so we squeezed a couple of years work into about six months. Triumph (of Random House) wanted the book and produced a gorgeous book with about 170 photos.
So after two successful (a relative term, meaning I'll keep my day job) books, I find that not much has changed in my life. I still prefer fishing to work, but work takes most of my time. And I write when I can (Sunday afternoon like this, 6 in the morning, etc.). Right now, I'm writing a novel about Elvis and trying to help the fans of his understand what really happened during the last couple of years of his life. I've researched this one for 10 years and been writing almost that long, in between other writing projects!
So anyway...I have three blogs with hungry mouths, so I'll move on. For you writers and wanabe writers, remember that writing is a process, not a destination. The books come and go, and they are wonderful to see birthed, but the next day there is still another blank page (excuse me, that dates me, I meant screen) waiting to be filled.....
So anyway, the book came out in the spring of 2008. I made the regional circuit speaking at conferences, doing readings at libraries and bookstores, signing books, and generally doing what I could to promote the book while running an ad agency 50 or 60 hours a week. Once in awhile I look on Amazon to see if some relative or friend or distant new reader has bought a copy....
Soon I jumped into the next book, non-fiction about the 125 year history of Louisville Slugger baseball bats. David Magee and I wrote and published the book for release in April 2009, so we squeezed a couple of years work into about six months. Triumph (of Random House) wanted the book and produced a gorgeous book with about 170 photos.
So after two successful (a relative term, meaning I'll keep my day job) books, I find that not much has changed in my life. I still prefer fishing to work, but work takes most of my time. And I write when I can (Sunday afternoon like this, 6 in the morning, etc.). Right now, I'm writing a novel about Elvis and trying to help the fans of his understand what really happened during the last couple of years of his life. I've researched this one for 10 years and been writing almost that long, in between other writing projects!
So anyway...I have three blogs with hungry mouths, so I'll move on. For you writers and wanabe writers, remember that writing is a process, not a destination. The books come and go, and they are wonderful to see birthed, but the next day there is still another blank page (excuse me, that dates me, I meant screen) waiting to be filled.....
Friday, November 30, 2007
What Now?
The stack of revised manuscripts stands more than a foot tall. And that does not include revisions of the individual stories. At work, I often return writing to various members of the staff who think of me as a hard-ass when it comes to editing (I'll not go there in discussing what else they call me).I always tell them I'm just as hard on myself when it comes to a red pen. The day before Thanksgiving I met with my editor (though he's left for another job) and publisher and agreed to spend the next four days making one last revision. I did, logging some 40 hours thinking, editing, typing, proofing. Sent the ms early on Monday. An hour later I contacted the publisher and said there was one story I still needed to revise again. I bought another day, and worked that night until 11 and again the next night to make a final set of revisions, then sent the finished ms.
Next step: galleys for reviewers and proofing.
Also: a Web site. This blog may soon disappear, or perhaps it will be appended to the new web site. I've been waiting on the Web site until I had the book listed for sale. Now it it, so I am working this weekend on Web site copy and navigation architecture. Hoping to go live the first week of January with that, so the blog may migrate over, or simply be linked. Not sure.
Also working now on finalizing a few appearances and working on others for signings, readings and panels at conferences for 2008.
Next step: galleys for reviewers and proofing.
Also: a Web site. This blog may soon disappear, or perhaps it will be appended to the new web site. I've been waiting on the Web site until I had the book listed for sale. Now it it, so I am working this weekend on Web site copy and navigation architecture. Hoping to go live the first week of January with that, so the blog may migrate over, or simply be linked. Not sure.
Also working now on finalizing a few appearances and working on others for signings, readings and panels at conferences for 2008.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Link added for purchase
I've added the link directly to Amazon to purchase the book at the pre-distribution pricing. They'll ship in late March maybe, but most likely on April 1, 2008 or so. Be sure to leave me a message on the blog if you want me to send a signed book plate for free. I'll be happy to inscribe books to anyone you like, if you want to make a book gift. Thanks. Philip
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Amazon listing for book
The book has been listed in amazon.com. Just go there, type in Philip Shirley and scroll down. You can get the regular Amazon discount plus an additional 5% if you purchase now. And if you buy two you can get free shipping. If you buy, email me and let me know and I will send you a signed bookplate to make it a signed first edition. If you want it warmly inscribed to you or others as gifts just let me know what names to use when you email me. Be sure to include your mailing address.
I also noticed that two people had listed my 1981 book, Endings, for sale at a good price if you like poetry. There are only a few of these first editions left in print.
An interesting thing: Amazon turns in their sales, so they are "counted" by the industry. But they only count up to five books per sale, so if you order six it would only count as five. And, the sales that are pre-sold all count on the first week of books shipping, so anything that is sold now will help the book get off to a great start because all sales are reported that first week. Good stuff to know if you have a book upcoming.
Don't forget...they don't charge your card until the book is available, which will be after they ship to the sellers on March 1, 2008.
I have lots more to report on my meeting with the publisher this week in Chattanooga, but for now I have a big deadline. Final edits by Monday!.....Thanks, Philip
I also noticed that two people had listed my 1981 book, Endings, for sale at a good price if you like poetry. There are only a few of these first editions left in print.
An interesting thing: Amazon turns in their sales, so they are "counted" by the industry. But they only count up to five books per sale, so if you order six it would only count as five. And, the sales that are pre-sold all count on the first week of books shipping, so anything that is sold now will help the book get off to a great start because all sales are reported that first week. Good stuff to know if you have a book upcoming.
Don't forget...they don't charge your card until the book is available, which will be after they ship to the sellers on March 1, 2008.
I have lots more to report on my meeting with the publisher this week in Chattanooga, but for now I have a big deadline. Final edits by Monday!.....Thanks, Philip
Saturday, November 10, 2007
The Final Lap
On Friday I began a last read of the ms. My editor Henry O has left Jefferson Press to work for an ecumenical press, where I'm certain he'll be successful. (Good luck Henry, and thanks for your caring edits.) I have his final red lines and comments, and will review them one last time before a final run-through of edits and then calling the ms complete. I finished rewriting the last story and will review it tomorrow before sending to a friend for one last outside opinion.
I had to laugh when Henry called to let me know he'd left the press. Three years ago a regional press agreed to publish a novel ms of mine, which they contacted me to ask to see. After the owner of the press called me at home one Sunday night at 9:30 to say he loved it and would start a contract the next day, I assumed everything was rosy. I worked with the editor they assigned for a year, during which time the acquisitions editor left and the publisher had a major illness. When all was said and done the book was not released. For a fleeting moment I have to admit my heart rose into my throat last week during my conversation with Henry. Not again, I thought. Don't worry he said, this is a done deal and everyone who has seen the book is excited about it.
This time things will work out, and the catalog copy and cover are out the door. I'm meeting with the publisher the day before Thanksgiving to discuss final plans and marketing ideas....will keep you posted on that.
I had to laugh when Henry called to let me know he'd left the press. Three years ago a regional press agreed to publish a novel ms of mine, which they contacted me to ask to see. After the owner of the press called me at home one Sunday night at 9:30 to say he loved it and would start a contract the next day, I assumed everything was rosy. I worked with the editor they assigned for a year, during which time the acquisitions editor left and the publisher had a major illness. When all was said and done the book was not released. For a fleeting moment I have to admit my heart rose into my throat last week during my conversation with Henry. Not again, I thought. Don't worry he said, this is a done deal and everyone who has seen the book is excited about it.
This time things will work out, and the catalog copy and cover are out the door. I'm meeting with the publisher the day before Thanksgiving to discuss final plans and marketing ideas....will keep you posted on that.
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