Friday, August 03, 2012
 
sponsored by

Lincoln Writer's Club and Word Weavers Land of Lincoln will host workshop Tuesday

Send a link to a friend

[August 03, 2012]  Linda L. Allspach Sheehan, originally of Mount Pulaski, will be at Lincoln College on Tuesday evening to demonstrate how to use online tools to publish a book. All area writers and would-be writers are invited to this workshop.

Her presentation will be from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Room 104 of Gehlbach Hall on Hennepin Street

Sheehan has self-published two books: "Animals and More Animals," using Lulu.com, and "Five Cheetahs," using CreateSpace.com. They are the first two books in a series called "Grandma Goes to South Africa."

At the workshop, Sheehan will use her computer and a projector to show how to use these publishing websites; how to obtain, adjust and insert images into a manuscript; how to make a book suitable for Amazon; how to set a book price; and other self-publishing activities.

Linda and her husband, Dennis, grew up in Mount Pulaski and farmed in that area until 1994. They served 11 years as missionaries in Jamaica and Poland before joining a humanitarian enterprise -- a Howard G. Buffet Foundation agricultural research farm -- in South Africa. They are now located at a branch research farm in Arizona.

While in South Africa, the Sheehans encountered scores of unfamiliar animals and participated in new activities -- like driving a Gator (John Deere ATV) and fighting a bush fire. Linda longed to share these experiences with their grandchildren. She finally realized she could do that by arranging pictures and stories in book form.

[to top of second column]

Although she is producing this series of books with her grandchildren in mind, she has designed them as high-interest, informative books to be read by other children and used by schools and libraries. "Animals and More Animals" features large print and simple words for young readers. It also contains teaching tools like "new words" lists and questions about the story. "Five Cheetahs" is written for students in fourth through sixth grades, with in-depth information and a conservation message.

Area writers with a story, some information or a message to share are invited to the workshop to learn how to publish as many or as few books as they wish.

[Text from file received from Celia Milslagle]

< Top Stories index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching and Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law and Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health and Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor