4/20/2006


April 2006: Lesley Thomas

Persistent author publishes and promotes her Alaskan tale

by Judy Griffin

Author Lesley Thomas refused to let publishing trials and distribution travails ground her novel Flight of the Goose: A Story of the Far North. The former Alaskan who now lives in Seattle told attendees at the Alaska Press Women lunch meeting on April 6, 2006, about her experiences launching her book in a lecture titled “How Flight of the Goose Flew: the Migration of an Alaska Book.”
Sales of Thomas’ novel, which integrates “the spiritual and mythical parts of Alaskan northern life,” have reached 1,000 copies. The novel is self-published by Far Eastern Press, a business founded in 2001 with her husband, Eric Oberg.

The protagonist of the novel is a feisty young Native woman in a Bering Straits village who practices shamanism, rejecting the Lutheran ways of her father. She falls in love with a man from another culture, an ecologist studying an endangered goose species and the effects of oil spills on bird habitat.

Thomas grew up on a salmon troller in Southeast Alaska and in rural communities in Arctic Alaska. Her family still lives in Nome. Knowledge of subsistence ways and Native culture, as well as training in arctic ecology, enabled her to weave together her lifelong interests in anthropology and mythology in Flight of the Goose. Thomas holds bachelor’s and master’s degree in East Asian Studies and English, respectively, and has worked in Alaska, Washington, Japan, Taiwan, Israel, and Norway.

The biggest obstacle in publishing is getting distributed in America, Thomas explained. She described rejection a decade ago by New York presses that saw her work as “alien” because she had grown up in Alaska. One company suggested she could make her work saleable by making the female lead a “softer, nicer” person and changing her sad ending to a happy conclusion.

Thomas’ grandmother had always wanted to publish, and the $3,000 she left to her granddaughter seeded Far Eastern Press. The self-published edition of Flight of the Goose was released in February 2005. In the fast-turning world of commercial book distribution, the novel is now “expired.” Said Thomas, “But if your book is self-published, it is never dead.”

Winning first place in the 2005 “Communicator of Excellence in Fiction” category from the Washington Press Association helped to attract buyers. Interest in shamanism has provided further sales impetus. Thomas also counts among her niches scientists, Alaskans, and most surprising, Lutheran missionaries. Mention on a gay web site brought another flurry of Internet orders.

When a member of the Alaska Press Women audience asked Thomas how she learned to write, Thomas replied that she had not finished learning to write. “Sheer volume helps,” she noted, as do repetition and throwing away much of what is composed.
To learn more about Lesley Thomas and read reviews of her novel, visit her web site.

4/11/2006


May luncheon: Marion Owen

Best-selling author Marion Owen will speak at APW’s May 4 luncheon about “Seven Tips for Publicity and Self-Promotion.” Winners in the student journalism contest, as well as scholarship winners, will also be recognized at this meeting.

It may be a dog-eat-dog world out there, but you can get the publicity and promotion that you would like, or know you truly deserve. Marion Owen’s methods combine high-tech communications with good old fashioned one-on-one communication — and they’ve netted her top-notch projects, exposure and awards. Learn about her techniques and discover how you, too, can get “ink” in any media you want. Whether you’re establishing a new career or looking for fresh visibility for an established one, you’ll find these tips helpful and inspiring.

Luncheon Information
Thursday, May 4
11:30 a.m.
Golden Lion Hotel
1000 East 36th Avenue
Anchorage

Lunch: members $16; others $18

Reservations: Email Thetus Smith a thetus@gci.net by 10 p.m., Monday, May 1, saying you want a reservation for lunch. If you will have guests with you, please include their names, too. Or you may call 274-4723 and leave a message.

More about Marion Owen
Marion Owen is a master gardener, photographer, entrepreneur, and New York Times bestselling author. She was recently honored with a Women of Distinction award by Soroptimist International of the Americas. And that’s just the tip of the carrot…

After eight years at sea as a seaman and merchant marine officer, Marion found a home in 1984 in Kodiak, Alaska. Switching her focus to the land, Marion became a master gardener and garden writer.

In addition to hands-on garden experience, Marion co-authored Chicken Soup for the Gardener’s Soul, which spent three months on the New York Times bestseller list Like the book’s subtitle, “101 stories to sow seeds of love, hope and laughter,” Marion embraces a win-win attitude in all she does.

In her published articles, the UpBeet Gardener newsletter (with subscribers in 70 countries), her award-winning UpBeet Gardener radio show (hear it at www.upbeetcommunications.com or as podcast on her blog at http://garden.blogware.com), and on her plantea.com Web site, Marion covers small business how-tos, healthy living tips, organic gardening, world events and trends, and environmental issues.

As the Fearless Weeder for PlanTea, Inc., Marion also developed and patented PlanTeaR, the organic fertilizer in tea bags; available online and in select stores (in Anchorage at Alaska Mill and Feed).

Marion’s world is also where she finds beautiful subjects to photograph, from snowflakes to underwater salmon. For almost 20 years, her award-winning images have been featured in or by National Geographic Traveler, Business Week, Better Homes and Gardens, TIME, ALASKA magazine and Pillsbury, Inc., to name a few.

A gifted teacher, Marion developed a popular series of photography and gardening courses through the University of Alaska. Students testify to her ability to apply life’s lessons to any subject or situation.

An entertaining and thoughtful speaker, Marion combines her motivational speaking and talents in presentations and workshops for small businesses, associations and trade shows, as well as addressing groups as a keynote speaker. Audiences find her inspirational, fun and thought-provoking.

Born and raised on Puget Sound in Washington State, Marion and her husband Marty enjoy exploring Kodiak Island on their boat through their business, Galley Gourmet, which provides gourmet dinner cruises and multiple-day trips. Marion loves to kayak, hike, make fruit wine, read, develop new recipes in the kitchen and, yes, weed!

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