Kidding! It doesn't work that way, although sometimes it seems like it. Certainly gestation takes forever.
Print and website presence to come, but you can already pick up this infant book on Kindle:
https://www.amazon.com/Mark-R-Hunter/e/B0058CL6OO
But don't you want to know what you're getting? Okay, here's the blurb I wrote for the book I wrote about columns I wrote, and no wonder my fingers are tired. It's being added for sale in various places that you can bet I'll talk about, at least all through Christmas season.
Who would have thought
the turn of the last Century would one day be ancient history?
In More Slightly Off
the Mark, Why I Hate Cats, and Other Lies, former newspaper columnist Mark
R. Hunter went back to collect his humor pieces from 2000 and 2001—the earliest
ones to be put on a computer. In DOS format ... on a floppy disk.
The amount of change in
just twenty years resulted in Hunter completely rewriting the columns, and inserting
his present self (and his dog, Beowulf, through pictures) into the work—mostly
to make fun of his younger self. Along the way Mark riffs on everything from
history to health, vacations, holidays, housework, and of course technology.
And weather. Because everyone talks about that.
In a more serious section
Hunter also tackles the 9/11 attacks … because those were the times we lived
in.
Some of the chapters
include:
Advice From the Clueless
I Ran Out of Excuses to
Write About Excuses
When Bad Cities Happen to
Good People
Civil War, Summer
Vacation—Same Thing
I Just Can’t Stand
Intolerant People
The Next Big Step in
Medical Disasters
And, of course: Age
Ain’t Nothin’ But a Number, But It’s a Really Lousy Number
Mark R. Hunter’s humor
column was published in newspapers for twenty-five years, and he notes there’s
little than can be done to stop him from collecting more of them in the future …
although state and federal laws are pending.
Mark R. Hunter lives in
small town Indiana with his wife/editor/book designer/cover artist/supervisor
Emily, their dog Beowulf, and a cowardly ball python named Lucius. Mark thinks
he's a Hufflepuff, but keeps testing Slytherin.
Bravo!
ReplyDeleteAs the kids say, IKR?
DeleteYou'll just have to accept the Sytherin into your household. Tweeted. Congrats on the latest book!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Delete