Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 3, Volume 8 | Page 15

HOW TO DO IT FRUGALLY AND O THER V ALUABLE A DVICE C AROLYN H OWARD -J OHNSON With this issue we welcome Carolyn Howard-Johnson as a regular columnist with her How To Do It Frugally column...in other words Carolyn will give you wonderful tips on how to save money as you develop and market your books. Book promotion (and life!) has changed since The Frugal Book Promoter was first published in 2004—particularly in ways that have to do with the Web, but in other ways, too. Carolyn, an award-winning author of poetry and fic- tion, draws on a lifetime of experience in journalism, public relations, retailing, marketing, and the marketing of her own books to give authors the basics they need for do-it-yourself promo- tion and fun. I added a new section to the second edi- tion of my book The Frugal Edi- tor because ampersands seem to be so pop- ular these days. It’s especially important for editors and those who publish books to both know a little about their history, how to use them, and how readers of Lynn Truss’s famous zero-tolerance approach to grammar might view them. So, I thought I’d share this excerpt with you, even though it’s only one tiny part of presenting our- selves and our books in the most profes- sional light possible. AMPERSANDS: PRETTY IS AS PRETTY DOES The ampersand is a real pretty little dude, but it isn’t a letter nor even a word. It’s a logogram that represents a word. Its history goes back to classical antiquity, but interesting history and being cute are no reason to overuse it in the interest of trying F ALL 2018 to separate one’s writing from the pack. Better writers should concentrate on the techniques that make a difference rather than gimmicks that distract. Here are some legitimate uses for the ampersand. The Writers Guild of America uses the ampersand to indicate a close collaboration with a writing (or other) partner--closer than a situation in which one writer is brought in to rewrite or fix the work of an- other. For those in the know it is a conven- ient way to subtly indicate that one writer has not been brought in to rewrite or fix the work of another. Newspapers, journals and others choose to use it when they are citing sources. That’s their style choice, not a grammar rule. In similar citings, academia asks that the word and be spelled out. Occasionally the term etc. is abbreviat- ed to &c,