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[NV7]⇒ Libro Free SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books

SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books



Download As PDF : SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books

Download PDF SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books


SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books

Disclosure – I know the author and am represented in the text, as well as quoted. But, big but, I had no idea that (= notes being taken and a book being written) was going on, nor was I aware of any of the author’s back story. All I was aware of was that this person owned and operated a bookstore in Longmont, Colorado, in the Spring of 2013. That said, I’m going to be brief.

This book is raw, shocking, disturbing, heart-wrenching, and unambiguous. Insurgent and emergent. You SHOULD read it (buy it); if you’re interested in the current state of writing, publishing, small business, homelessness, and/or family poverty in America. To be clear – I don’t condone all the behaviors’ acted out, positions’ taken, or choices’ made by the author, but it is a remarkable book. This “memoir” is audacious and honest; and the author, all of twenty-two years old when she wrote it, has something to say and says it well. She has a point. The fact that she wrote this book literally on the fly (see pages 88 and 89 – the best writing in the book!) is a statement in itself, and speaks to the author’s talent.

Buy this book (from Amazon) and read it. It is a quick read (=150 pages & <60,000words & costs < $12.00. $3. on Kindle.) Self-Published Kindling might just be the spark that ignites the fire that burns down the old and worn out, out-dated, book and publishing industry — a wildfire that roars through a dilapidated neighborhood. Well … at the least a harbinger – insurgent and emergent.

Read SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books

Tags : Self-Published Kindling: The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner [Mik Everett] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. A young family opens a unique bookstore to help independently-published authors tell their story. But as the traditional publishing industry begins to fall,Mik Everett,Self-Published Kindling: The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner,Brainfood Ltd.,0615852009,Fiction - General,Fiction Literary,Literary,Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books Reviews


This book made me cry and made me smile So well written - it’s an easy read but the people in it and their situations are so real. It hold a mirror up to our culture that isn’t so pleasant but left me feeling some kind of hope. I want to read more by this author.
A shocking yet pleasing read. Self publishing, small business ownership, writing, homelessness, it is all here in this book. It helps we see clearly things that we take for granted are out of reach for many people, specially when going homeless.
This book is a gem, it glows with the torch of the beats. I'm always on the look-out for my next memoir read, and this one was right down my wheel-house. Living off the grid, in the parking lot of a Wal-Mart of all places, all the while trying to get an indie bookstore in another part of town off the ground--I mean, what else do you need, mister? I fell in love with Mik's ability to capture a moment with pin-prick wit and humanity, as characters confronted with the economic downturn's new normal come and go. There are other books out there detailing the life and times of a typical bookstore owner, but none quite as gutty or with half as much heart as Self-Published Kindling. Next time I'm at a Wal-Mart, I'll never look at the parking lot and any attendant fringe-dwellers the same again.
Good book. Well written and let's you know how it is to survive for so many people today. It left me wanting to know what happened next to make sure they are okay because I have found myself invested in the story.
This doesn't strike me as in any way the novel it claims to be. But as a memoir of a family careening into homelessness and coping with all that it entails -- even as they keep struggling to make a go of their quixotic bookstore -- it's truly compelling. It captures the fury and despair of people sinking into poverty in a no-win economy, offered up with brutal honesty and mordant wit. Unfortunately, in some places in the second half the formatting suddenly goes kerplooey, and on the whole I'd say it reads like an unusually capable first draft. I got the feeling it really was typed out furiously as time allowed and then uploaded as a great howl at the injustice of the world, much as the main character can't resist writing a note in Sharpie on their apartment wall to shame their landlord when they are evicted.

I only picked this up because it was free and I was curious about the strange title. I didn't expect to get past the first few pages ... but it really held my attention.

Someone could make this into a really funny/tragic movie about life in America right now.
I couldn't stop reading until the very end. Ending is awesome btw, anything else wouldn't do. I have to think this through, now that I read it, but I already want to get as many other people to read this.

I wish author good fortune in his glorious life! )
I couldn't get enough of the narrator's voice, her way of thinking and seeing. Obviously, this is what we need from any narrator but it's not exactly easy to find. This book is a delicate outpouring of hard lived experience. It's the inside of a consciousness that receives from its environment with measures of beauty and consideration rather than with bursts of anguish.
It addresses class and gender in a 'today' kind of way. The mainstream doesn't have this kind of mother, this kind of child, this kind of motley family which includes not just the central characters but all the people they meet on the way. Lastly, the book addresses the state of literature and the realities of being a nobody writer. It's Jk Rowlings' world, and we're all just living in it. No matter how smart, beautiful, and disenfranchised your mind is, most of us are too busy getting drunk and working forty hour weeks to support writers that aren't producing the kind of pornographic content that we're used to. There's no laugh tracks in a novel. This book made me hurt, and made me grow, because I knew I was reading a new York times bestseller that was spun into being during a time when people sell their attention in exchange for cold comfort more often than donating it to worthy acts, worthy ideas, worthy books like this one.
Disclosure – I know the author and am represented in the text, as well as quoted. But, big but, I had no idea that (= notes being taken and a book being written) was going on, nor was I aware of any of the author’s back story. All I was aware of was that this person owned and operated a bookstore in Longmont, Colorado, in the Spring of 2013. That said, I’m going to be brief.

This book is raw, shocking, disturbing, heart-wrenching, and unambiguous. Insurgent and emergent. You SHOULD read it (buy it); if you’re interested in the current state of writing, publishing, small business, homelessness, and/or family poverty in America. To be clear – I don’t condone all the behaviors’ acted out, positions’ taken, or choices’ made by the author, but it is a remarkable book. This “memoir” is audacious and honest; and the author, all of twenty-two years old when she wrote it, has something to say and says it well. She has a point. The fact that she wrote this book literally on the fly (see pages 88 and 89 – the best writing in the book!) is a statement in itself, and speaks to the author’s talent.

Buy this book (from ) and read it. It is a quick read (=150 pages & <60,000words & costs < $12.00. $3. on .) Self-Published Kindling might just be the spark that ignites the fire that burns down the old and worn out, out-dated, book and publishing industry — a wildfire that roars through a dilapidated neighborhood. Well … at the least a harbinger – insurgent and emergent.
Ebook PDF SelfPublished Kindling The Memoirs of a Homeless Bookstore Owner Mik Everett 9780615852003 Books

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