Tag Archive for 'Matthew Dicks'

Summer Almost Over, Most Writing Goals Accomplished

It has been a productive summer and I’m proud that I accomplished most of my writing and publishing goals.

I made my trade paperback novel Twenty-Five Years Ago Today available in ebook format, uploading it to Kindle and arranging for Smashwords to distribute it to multiple ebook retailers including Barnes&Noble, Sony, Apple’s iPad Store, Diesel and Kobo.

My children’s picture book The Flag Keeper went into production and now has a web site and Facebook page. I also collected wonderful back cover blurbs from Steve Van Buskirk, Director of Programs, VFW National Headquarters, and Mike Buss, Deputy Director, Americanism, American Legion National Headquarters.

I’m in the process of working on a large review mailing related to my reality TV show-themed mystery suspense novel Sink or Swim, which will be officially released New Year’s Day, 2011. Also this summer, I collected endorsements about the book from Stephenie LaGrossa, owner of GiGI Restaurant & Lounge, Philadelphia PA, Television personality and fan favorite Survivor: Palau, Guatemala, Heroes vs. Villains; Shawne Morgan, contestant CBS’s The Amazing Race 16 and entrepreneur; and Michelle Costa, contestant Big Brother 10.

I’ve also signed on as one of the moderators at a fabulous new message board forum called Bestseller Bound which connects readers and indie authors. Stop by and join the discussion.

In August, some terrific writers have visited the blog so far. We heard from: Matthew Dicks, Mary Deal, J.R. Lindermuth, Gerry Charbonneau, Suzanne Young and Patricia Gulley.

Coming up, we’ll hear from authors: Loni Emmert, Timothy Hallinan, Norma Huss, Avery Aames, Caitlyn Hunter, Barbara Ross, Kenneth Weene and Monica Brinkman. During the week of Sept. 12, I’ll host my first theme week “Fun With Food Week,” in which every post will tie into characters who enjoy cooking. Late September also marks the release of The Flag Keeper and a special giveaway. Stay tuned!

25 Years Ago Today: ‘Unexpectedly, Milo’ Author Matthew Dicks

I’d like to welcome Matthew Dicks today. I’ve had the pleasure of doing a couple of author talks and book-signings with Matthew, and very much enjoyed his first novel Something Missing. His second book Unexpectedly, Milo appears in bookstores August 3.

Matthew grew up in the small town of Blackstone, Massachusetts. He was a Boy Scout, a pole-vaulter, a bassoonist, and a proud member of his school’s drum corps, and he has the distinction of having died twice by the age of 18 before being revived by paramedics on both occasions.

He left home at 18 and worked in a variety of dead-end jobs until being robbed at gunpoint at the age of 23. This brush with death finally propelled him to college where he worked his way through school as a McDonald’s manager, graduating from Manchester Community College in 1996 and Trinity College with an English degree and Saint Joseph’s College with a teaching degree in 1999.

Following graduation, Matthew went to work as an elementary school teacher and has been teaching ever since. In 2005 he was named West Hartford’s Teacher of the Year and was one of three finalists for Connecticut’s Teacher of the Year. He also owns and operates a DJ company that performs weddings throughout Connecticut. His first novel, Something Missing, was published in the summer of 2009. His writing has also appeared in the Hartford Courant, the Christian Science Monitor, Educational Leadership and on the Washington Post-Los Angeles Times wire service.

Matthew, it’s great to visit with you again and congratulations on the brand new release of Unexpectedly, Milo. You’re obviously very busy in 2010. What were you doing 25 years ago?

MATTHEW: Twenty-five years ago I was a freshman at Blackstone-Millville Regional High School. That year was marked by the traditional hazing that took place by seniors against incoming freshmen, which culminated with the annual Freshman-Senior Get Acquainted Dance.

Refusing to wear the signs around my neck declaring that Seniors Rule and rejecting demands to clear the seniors’ lunch tables, I instead stood at the door to the school and handed out flyers that read Seniors are Wimps and wore buttons identifying specific senior classmen as being weak, cowardly and inferior. In retrospect, it would’ve been easier to go along with the hazing, but being a naturally defiant individual and a nonconformist, I refused to submit to these inane traditions and made my life exceedingly difficult.

For months, I was beaten repeatedly, and on one occasion, was sent to the hospital in an ambulance. I was locked inside equipment closets, handcuffed to the bumper of a bus, and had fire extinguishers shot at me. I was eventually suspended from school for “inciting riot upon myself.” This one-day suspension, specifically timed by the administration for my own protection, kept me from attending the Freshman-Senior dance.

Well, being a nonconformist must have given you lots of material to write about, Matthew! Read more about Matthew’s work on his web site and blog.

Check out his brand new book Unexpectedly, Milo, a hilarious and sneakily profound tale about a man whose behavior is truly odd, but also oddly relatable, on Amazon. Also check out Something Missing.

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