Thursday, July 24, 2025

Do Authors Really Need To Network?

 


Some people are great at networking. They are outgoing, talkative, funny, interesting, energized, and always coming off as someone you could be friends with. But even quieter people can be good at networking, and as an author, having a good network can be the key to your success.  

You actually may need to build up several kinds of networks. For instance, one may simply be a network of those in book publishing, from editors and literary agents to authors and professional associations. These are the people through their positions, connections, ideas, or encouragement, who can help you get published.  

Another network that you might need is the one that relates to your subject matter. Let’s say you wrote a book about how to lose weight, and you are a nutritionist. You want to keep your professional profile high by being in touch with other individuals and organizations related to the health and fitness field, from doctors and gym trainers to hospitals and nutritionists. Eating disorder experts, and other related people, even former patients (if appropriate), will be in your network.  

Lastly, you want a network of potential readers -- these are people who fit your targeted profile of anyone who would need or want your book. So, who would buy your book?

  • Anyone seeking to lose weight - the overweight, obese, and post-pregnant women, etc. 
  • Anyone looking to maintain their weight loss - athletes, the formerly overweight, people recovering from an incident that caused temporary mobility issues, etc. 
  • People who have diseases and conditions that require a special diet - diabetics, cancer patients, people with heart disease, IBS sufferers, those with food allergies, people with back or knee injuries, etc.  

You can establish and build your network in many ways, including: 

  • Attend networking-specific events. 
  • Meet people at gatherings of specific types of people.
  • Get introduced to others by people you know. 
  • Connect online through social media platforms. 
  • Find directories or listings and cold-call them. 
  • Meet people in one arena (like at a church) and then find out they or someone they know is actually the kind of person you want to be connected with. 

So, how do you build up a network?

 

1.      Don’t be shy. Talk. Introduce yourself. See an interaction as an opportunity, not as something you merely do or tolerate. 

 

2.      Ask questions, learn what they do, who they know, and what circles they travel in.

 

3.      Follow up. Do email people or connect on social media after you have met them. Stay in touch. 

 

4.      People network with you if they think you can help them, if it pleases them to help you, if you are interesting, if you make them think or laugh, and sometimes, just because you are attractive.

 

5.      Keep good notes and hold onto contact information. Jot down useful bits of information so that you can call upon it later. 

 

6.      Utilize people in different ways. Someone may be of use to you because they:

 

·         Know information that can help you 

·         Can introduce you to people who can help you 

·         Are in a position to directly help you

·         Can be emotionally supportive to you 

·         Offer really good advice or ideas 

Networking is a two-way street. Be willing to help others and give back/ pay-it-forward. Offer your brain, time, money, connections, resources, encouragement, and assistance to others and it will work its way back to you.

 

Do You Need Book Marketing Help?

Brian Feinblum, the founder of this award-winning blog, with over four million page views, can be reached at brianfeinblum@gmail.com  He is available to help authors like you to promote your story, sell your book, and grow your brand. He has over 30 years of experience in successfully helping thousands of authors in all genres. Let him be your advocate, teacher, and motivator!

 

About Brian Feinblum

This award-winning blog has generated over 4.5 million pageviews. With 5,300+ posts over the past 14 years, it was named one of the best book marketing blogs  by BookBaby  http://blog.bookbaby.com/2013/09/the-best-book-marketing-blogs  and recognized by Feedspot in 2021 and 2018 as one of the top book marketing blogs. It was also named by www.WinningWriters.com as a "best resource.”  Copyright 2025.

 

For the past three decades, Brian Feinblum has helped thousands of authors. He formed his own book publicity firm in 2020. Prior to that, for 21 years as the head of marketing for the nation’s largest book publicity firm, and as the director of publicity at two independent presses, Brian has worked with many first-time, self-published, authors of all genres, right along with best-selling authors and celebrities such as: Dr. Ruth, Mark Victor Hansen, Joseph Finder, Katherine Spurway, Neil Rackham, Harvey Mackay, Ken Blanchard, Stephen Covey, Warren Adler, Cindy Adams, Todd Duncan, Susan RoAne, John C. Maxwell, Jeff Foxworthy, Seth Godin, and Henry Winkler.

 

His writings are often featured in The Writer and IBPA’s The Independent (https://pubspot.ibpa-online.org/article/whats-needed-to-promote-a-book-successfully).

 

He hosted a panel on book publicity for Book Expo America several years ago, and has spoken at ASJA, BookCAMP, Independent Book Publishers Association Sarah Lawrence College, Nonfiction Writers Association, Cape Cod Writers Association, Willamette (Portland) Writers Association, APEX, Morgan James Publishing, and Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association. He served as a judge for the 2024 IBPA Book Awards.

 

His letters-to-the-editor have been published in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Post, NY Daily News, Newsday, The Journal News (Westchester) and The Washington Post. His first published book was The Florida Homeowner, Condo, & Co-Op Association Handbook.  It was featured in The Sun Sentinel and Miami Herald.

 

Born and raised in Brooklyn, he now resides in Westchester with his wife, two kids, and Ferris, a black lab rescue dog, and El Chapo, a pug rescue dog.

 

You can connect with him at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianfeinblum/ or https://www.facebook.com/brian.feinblum

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Interview With Author Daniel C.A. Christianson

 

 

1. What inspired you to write this book? I wrote the first draft of my book in seven months during the global covid pandemic between April 2nd-October 31st 2020. I had only previously written short stories but I set myself a goal of completing a full manuscript within that year to see if I had what it took to be a real writer and creator.  

2. What exactly is it about- and who is it written for? It is about the journey I made crossing Russia along the Trans-Siberian Railway from Vladivostok-Moscow in May-June 2019. The narration follows the protagonist D on his physical journey but then the psychological journey begins along with a spiritual transformation. It is dedicated to N, the great love of the Protagonist's life. She gave rise to the birth of those words.  

3. What do you hope readers will get out of reading your book? I hope readers of my book when reading my words will feel they are travelling along that journey across Russia with the Protagonist and will be immersed into such tranquil and raw landscapes. I hope they will connect with the lone traveller who sets out without any goal other than just living in the moment and experiencing the wild and rugged nature of our planet. I hope they might feel the pain of the Protagonist in pining for his lost love as love is a universal theme of human connectivity.   

4. How did you decide on your book's title and cover design? The very first Trans-Siberian Railway journey began from Vladivostok Station in the Far East and so I decided to begin my journey there and called it East to West. For the book's cover I wanted a silhouette of the protagonist situated outside of the train but immersed into the natural landscapes of Siberia. If the readers will gaze their eyes to the top of the billowing smoke they will catch the faint image of a human face. This image is the protagonist's lost love and he is looking over and across the landscape for her.  

5. What advice or words of wisdom do you have for fellow writers- other than run? I encourage writers if they truly believe that they wish to dedicate their lives to being a writer then they must put their art at the core of their lives and every other facet of their lives must form around their life as a writer. They must read and write every day without fail. It must be a true and honest undertaking of a life that is solitary, introspective, challenging but filled with desire and passion. 

6. What trends in the book world do you see- and where do you think the book publishing industry is heading? I see more and more people listening to audiobooks with a very busy work and social life. I also see a return to the Short Story as a reader can get through multiple stories in one sitting even with such a busy life. 

7. Were there experiences in your personal life or career that came in handy when writing this book? Yes, because I went on that journey across Russia I knew what it felt like to gaze upon the largest, oldest and deepest lake in the world at Lake Baikal. I got to experience the magnificence of Siberia and was able to tap into such memories and feelings when writing my narrative. I understand what it feels like to lose the Great Love of one's life and so I used such suffering to weave my narrative into such a universal theme of broken love. 

8. How would you describe your writing style? Which writers or books is your writing similar to? I do not think that I have a particular style of writing as yet because this was just my first completed book. I am beginning my apprenticeship as a writer and I feel that it will take about ten completed books before I will know what my particular style is. My first book is based on a Non-Fictional journey but with fictional narratives interspersed throughout as my goal was to write a piece of art through literature. The writers that I am most enamoured with are the Russian Writers of the 19th century and specifically those of Anton Chekhov, Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Lev Tolstoy. I also feel deeply connected to the writings of Franz Kafka, Gustave Flaubert, Marcel Proust, Simone De Beauvoir, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jack London, Kahlil Gibran, Rene Rilke, Ernest Hemingway, Sylvia Plath, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, John McGahern, F.Scott Fitzgerald, John Steinbeck, Nikolai Gogol. I am enjoying this early stage of experimenting with characters and narratives. I will try different styles and then hopefully I will find the one style that encapsulates my persona.  

9. What challenges did you overcome in the writing of this book? I wrote my entire manuscript in longhand and when it came to typing it onto my computer I did lose a significant portion of my writing and so I had to write a few scenes from scratch that tested my resolve and patience. Following the completion of my book Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24th 2022 and I deliberately delayed sending my manuscript to publishers as I thought that readers would not be interested in a title set fully in Russia.   

10. If people can buy or read one book this week or month, why should it be yours? My book is in paper, e-book and audiobook format so it gives readers a wide choice if they decide to choose my book. My book, although bleak and pessimistic at some moments, is also a book with a very positive and universal appeal. It challenges the reader to focus on their own lives by delving inwards and finding the core of who they are and what they should be doing to live a more authentic life.  I plan on writing four books in a series that will tell the backstory to East to West so if the readers were to choose my book then they will in the future have four further books to choose to read as a backstory to the train journey across Russia. 

About The Author: He is a man of solitude. His world is that of the quiet and distilled. Each night, he sits at his desk as the clock strikes midnight. He journeys inward to that bottomless pit of conflict, prompted by memory, in search of an image fused by the imagination in order to reveal truth through character and the creative narrative process. The words become sentences and they are formed. And so it all begins. This was his first attempt and successful completion of a full-length book. His name is Daniel C.A. Christianson. For more info, please see: www.danielcachristianson.ampbk.com 

 

Do You Need Book Marketing Help?

Brian Feinblum, the founder of this award-winning blog, with over four million page views, can be reached at brianfeinblum@gmail.com  He is available to help authors like you to promote your story, sell your book, and grow your brand. He has over 30 years of experience in successfully helping thousands of authors in all genres. Let him be your advocate, teacher, and motivator!

 

About Brian Feinblum

This award-winning blog has generated over 4.5 million pageviews. With 5,300+ posts over the past 14 years, it was named one of the best book marketing blogs  by BookBaby  http://blog.bookbaby.com/2013/09/the-best-book-marketing-blogs  and recognized by Feedspot in 2021 and 2018 as one of the top book marketing blogs. It was also named by www.WinningWriters.com as a "best resource.”  Copyright 2025.

 

For the past three decades, Brian Feinblum has helped thousands of authors. He formed his own book publicity firm in 2020. Prior to that, for 21 years as the head of marketing for the nation’s largest book publicity firm, and as the director of publicity at two independent presses, Brian has worked with many first-time, self-published, authors of all genres, right along with best-selling authors and celebrities such as: Dr. Ruth, Mark Victor Hansen, Joseph Finder, Katherine Spurway, Neil Rackham, Harvey Mackay, Ken Blanchard, Stephen Covey, Warren Adler, Cindy Adams, Todd Duncan, Susan RoAne, John C. Maxwell, Jeff Foxworthy, Seth Godin, and Henry Winkler.

 

His writings are often featured in The Writer and IBPA’s The Independent (https://pubspot.ibpa-online.org/article/whats-needed-to-promote-a-book-successfully).

 

He hosted a panel on book publicity for Book Expo America several years ago, and has spoken at ASJA, BookCAMP, Independent Book Publishers Association Sarah Lawrence College, Nonfiction Writers Association, Cape Cod Writers Association, Willamette (Portland) Writers Association, APEX, Morgan James Publishing, and Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association. He served as a judge for the 2024 IBPA Book Awards.

 

His letters-to-the-editor have been published in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Post, NY Daily News, Newsday, The Journal News (Westchester) and The Washington Post. His first published book was The Florida Homeowner, Condo, & Co-Op Association Handbook.  It was featured in The Sun Sentinel and Miami Herald.

 

Born and raised in Brooklyn, he now resides in Westchester with his wife, two kids, and Ferris, a black lab rescue dog, and El Chapo, a pug rescue dog.

 

You can connect with him at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianfeinblum/ or https://www.facebook.com/brian.feinblum

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Why Do We Write & Read The Books That We Do?


Authors write books for many reasons: God told them to; they want people to learn from their experiences; they have resources to help others; they want to entertain others; it’s their legacy or a passion project; they believe they have a grasp of the truth that others should embrace; it’s cathartic and therapeutic; to improve lives or change the world; to start or support a movement; and on and on and on.  

In addition to the many reasons an author writes what they do, there are as many reasons why readers read the books that they do. How do we marry the two and line up the author with the exact type of reader that would match perfectly? 

Readers consume books for a wide variety of reasons, including the following: 

·         To learn something that they want to know

·         To consume knowledge in a random but curious way

·         It was assigned by school

·         It is needed due to work or one’s personal life, ie a book that explains how to do something. 

·         To escape to a life, place, or world so different from theirs

·         To laugh and be entertained

·         To explore new ideas or ways of living 

·         To compensate for something missing in their life 

·         To understand history 

·         To pursue a deeper understanding of a faith 

·         To see beautiful images/art  

The list goes on. 

Authors write for a reason and readers read for a reason. There’s a need or a desire that must be fulfilled by both sides.  

With the millions of books that are published each year - and the tens of millions published in previous years - we have two problems: 

  1. How do we, as a authors, find a way to write a book that is better than what’s been published?

 

  1. As a reader with all of these competing titles, how do we discover what exists and select the best option? 

Many people buy books that are recommended to them, either from professional reviewers, a friend or family member, or a trusted source. We also need to have a discovery process through other means -- social media, speaking engagements, advertising, book awards - as well as be able to randomly stumble upon a book online or in a store.

 

But what truly drives one to make a purchasing or reading decision? Are really good books going unread while far less deserving ones are getting lots of attention?

 

Are writers merely writing books that they want to write - or are they looking to truly fill a need or close a void?

 

Do writers even know of or take in account the competing books in their genre when penning their story?

 

For authors to succeed, they will need to market their book aggressively, whether the books is good or bad, or even if it’s needed or not. That’s the tricky thing.

 

More books that are unnecessary, not good, or not any better than existing ones are crowding the marketplace and causing readers to buy books that in the end, are not serving them best. It will take greater self-control on the part of writers not to release mediocre or inferior books - and it will take more consumer education and awareness of how to evaluate their options and to seek out the better books.

 

Do You Need Book Marketing Help?

Brian Feinblum, the founder of this award-winning blog, with over four million page views, can be reached at brianfeinblum@gmail.com  He is available to help authors like you to promote your story, sell your book, and grow your brand. He has over 30 years of experience in successfully helping thousands of authors in all genres. Let him be your advocate, teacher, and motivator!

 

About Brian Feinblum

This award-winning blog has generated over 4.5 million pageviews. With 5,300+ posts over the past 14 years, it was named one of the best book marketing blogs  by BookBaby  http://blog.bookbaby.com/2013/09/the-best-book-marketing-blogs  and recognized by Feedspot in 2021 and 2018 as one of the top book marketing blogs. It was also named by www.WinningWriters.com as a "best resource.”  Copyright 2025.

 

For the past three decades, Brian Feinblum has helped thousands of authors. He formed his own book publicity firm in 2020. Prior to that, for 21 years as the head of marketing for the nation’s largest book publicity firm, and as the director of publicity at two independent presses, Brian has worked with many first-time, self-published, authors of all genres, right along with best-selling authors and celebrities such as: Dr. Ruth, Mark Victor Hansen, Joseph Finder, Katherine Spurway, Neil Rackham, Harvey Mackay, Ken Blanchard, Stephen Covey, Warren Adler, Cindy Adams, Todd Duncan, Susan RoAne, John C. Maxwell, Jeff Foxworthy, Seth Godin, and Henry Winkler.

 

His writings are often featured in The Writer and IBPA’s The Independent (https://pubspot.ibpa-online.org/article/whats-needed-to-promote-a-book-successfully).

 

He hosted a panel on book publicity for Book Expo America several years ago, and has spoken at ASJA, BookCAMP, Independent Book Publishers Association Sarah Lawrence College, Nonfiction Writers Association, Cape Cod Writers Association, Willamette (Portland) Writers Association, APEX, Morgan James Publishing, and Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association. He served as a judge for the 2024 IBPA Book Awards.

 

His letters-to-the-editor have been published in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Post, NY Daily News, Newsday, The Journal News (Westchester) and The Washington Post. His first published book was The Florida Homeowner, Condo, & Co-Op Association Handbook.  It was featured in The Sun Sentinel and Miami Herald.

 

Born and raised in Brooklyn, he now resides in Westchester with his wife, two kids, and Ferris, a black lab rescue dog, and El Chapo, a pug rescue dog.

 

You can connect with him at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianfeinblum/

Sunday, July 20, 2025

Interview With Author & Former Crime Reporter Walter Levis

 

1. What inspired you to write this book? 

The inspiration for THE MEANING OF THE MURDER stems from one of the most pivotal and haunting moments of my life: 9/11. I was in the Bronx with my three-year-old daughter—far enough from Ground Zero to be physically safe, yet close enough to feel the weight of what was happening. The eerie silence, the faint scent of something unnatural in the air, the fighter jets streaking across the sky—all of it made me realize how vulnerable we really were. Perhaps I was one of the so-called “naïve Americans,” but for the first time in my life, I felt the threat of war. We are under attack, I thought, and acknowledging this gave me a deep, unsettling helplessness. There was nothing I could do except protect my daughter and shield her from the images on television. Meanwhile, I knew that men and women in uniform—first responders—were rushing toward danger. 

That moment made me think of my father. During World War II, he volunteered as a paratrooper—not for the combat pay, but because he wanted to confront evil directly. He didn’t want to sit on the sidelines. On 9/11, I understood that urge. I wanted to take action. But how? That question stayed with me, and over time, it evolved into the driving force behind my novel. 

2. What exactly is it about — and who is it written for? 

At its core, THE MEANING OF THE MURDER is about what happens when ordinary people are thrust into extraordinary circumstances—when a family suddenly finds itself caught in the vast, unrelenting machinery of the global war on terror. The story delves into the uneasy boundary between criminal acts we recognize—murder, corruption, betrayal—and the far more complex, often invisible forces of political violence. Though I didn’t write this novel as a direct response to recent events, the questions it wrestles with have only grown more urgent. 

The reality of terrorism is that it blurs boundaries. Is it war? Yes—but not the kind with uniforms, frontlines, or declarations. Is it crime? Absolutely—but not for money, power, or revenge. Terrorism isn’t about stolen goods or turf wars; it’s about ideology. It’s strategic, symbolic—meant to send a message, not just commit a crime. That’s why both the soldier and the cop find themselves on the front lines. 

The fight against terrorism also involves banking—tracing financial flows to disrupt funding networks. This further complicates the boundary between military, law enforcement, and civilian life. And that’s the premise for my new novel. 

The Meaning of the Murder is about a Jewish family that unknowingly becomes entangled in terrorism when the father, a bank compliance officer, discovers that his bank is violating OFAC laws and funding terrorists in the Middle East. He alerts the bank’s top brass, but they ignore him. After struggling with the conflict between his position as a fully assimilated member of his professional community and his moral obligations as a man and a Jew, he turns whistleblower and goes to the DOJ. The night before his deposition, he disappears—leaving behind a wife and three daughters. 

Eliana Golden, the middle child, was thirteen when her father disappeared. Years later, after surprising her family by joining the NYPD, she meets a mysterious and alluring soldier—a man who is far more dangerous than Eliana, and everyone except those at the highest and most secret levels of the U.S. government, understands. And he knows exactly what happened to her father. 

What follows is a journey into the depths of America’s covert war against terrorism, but for all its geopolitical backdrop, the novel is ultimately intimate. It’s about love: between a father and a daughter, between sisters bound together by loss, and between a husband and wife trying to hold on to each other in the face of fear and doubt. These relationships aren’t sentimental—they’re fraught, tested, sometimes fraying. But they’re also resilient. I wanted to explore how love endures, not as a shield against violence, but as a reason to keep going in the midst of it. That’s the emotional core behind this book—and, I think, the deepest reason I felt compelled to write it. 

Who is the book written for? I see crime fiction as a genre not just of suspense, but of moral inquiry. I want to tell stories where crime is not only a puzzle to be solved, but a crucible that reshapes those who encounter it. Rather than focusing primarily on solving crimes, I want to confront the psychological and moral consequences of those crimes. For me, crime fiction is not only about bringing wrongdoers to justice but about reckoning with the cost of justice itself and the ways it changes those who pursue it. 

My ideal reader is someone who wants a crime story that pushes the boundaries of the genre—someone who craves suspense but also complexity, who reads not just for the "solution" to the mystery, but for the questions that remain. 

3. What do you hope readers will get out of reading your book? 

I hope readers will come away reflecting on the complex relationship between love and violence, and be moved by the notion that violence stains not just the perpetrator but the whole of society. Violence is never just an isolated act; it ripples outward, altering everyone it touches. 

Many crime novels focus on the procedural—the forensics, the clues, the pursuit of justice as a linear path. But for me, crime fiction is not merely about solving a mystery; it is about reckoning with what violence does to the human soul. A crime is a rupture, a wound in the moral order. What interests me most is not only the pursuit of justice but the transformation that takes place in its wake. What does it mean to confront the worst in human nature? And what possibilities for redemption exist when we do? 

4. How did you decide on your book’s title and cover design? 

The book’s title comes from the epigraph that opens the novel—a passage from Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning. Frankl, who survived Auschwitz, published the book in 1946. I first read it in college, returned to it after 9/11, and again during the pandemic. Each time, it struck a deeper chord. The popular takeaway is that meaning can be found even in the face of suffering. But what moves me most is Frankl’s more subtle insight: we shouldn’t ask what the meaning of life is—we should recognize that life is asking us. Meaning isn’t something abstract to be discovered; it’s something we answer for. It’s personal, situational, and inescapably moral. Our lives, Frankl writes, are questions to which we must respond. 

The three sisters in my novel each struggle to make sense of what happened after their father disappeared. One sister represses the trauma; one is paralyzed by it; and one becomes obsessed with it. Each, in her own way, is trying to make meaning. For each, the meaning of the murder is different. 

That, for me, is the core of the book: meaning is shaped not only by what happens, but by who we are and how we respond. The relationship between moral responsibility and personal identity is not theoretical—it’s immediate, intimate, and unfolding.

As for the cover design—my talented publisher gets all the credit. All I did was say, “Yes!” 

5. What advice or words of wisdom do you have for fellow writers – other than run!? 

When I was a young writer in my twenties, hungry for advice, I read every issue of The Paris Review’s Writers at Work interviews. It was like visiting the Baseball Hall of Fame—Faulkner, Hemingway, Eliot, Pound, Beckett, Joan Didion, Toni Morrison, Margaret Atwood. The wisdom of the greats, right there on the page. 

So, whose advice did I take? A little from everyone, I suppose. But mostly from Saul Bellow. He once said, “To be a writer one learns to live like one... The main business is to find the most appropriate and stimulating equilibrium.” 

For me, that equilibrium has involved a version of the biblical passage: “…pay unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s, and unto God that which is God’s…” Hence, I’ve written for hire—journalism, PR, advertising. And I’ve graded thousands of student papers as a teacher. But beneath all that, I’ve held onto another of Bellow’s insights: “You are engaged, as a writer should be, in transforming yourself... There’s nothing that counts really except this transforming action of the soul.” This is a more mysterious bit of advice, but equally important to me.

What I think Bellow means by a “transforming action of the soul” is that writing seriously and steadily cultivates certain human qualities: a sensitivity to life, a capacity for wonder, an appreciation for complexity and paradox. I think Bellow’s point is that this part of the creative process counts perhaps even more than the success or failure of the finished product. 

Committing deeply to the process of writing has meant, for me, finding ways to write regardless of what else I have going on in my life. I take the “stimulating equilibrium” idea of Bellow’s to mean that writing should never be more important than “living.” The two have to coexist. So, for example, I learned to write in short spurts: fifteen minutes before bed, 30 minutes in a doctor’s office, or, one of my favorites, forty minutes on a bus from the Bronx to Manhattan. I was probably the only guy on the bus hoping for bad traffic! 

But I don’t want to joke about this too much. Finding thebalance between writing and living” is not easy, and I’ve struggled. There are times when I’ve binge-written, sitting at my desk for twelve-hour stretches straight through the night, barely registering the passage of time. And, to be honest, I’ve struggled with the role of alcohol in all of this, too. 

Overall, I think it’s a fair analogy to compare writing with physical exercise. If you exercise carefully and consistently, your body will get stronger. On the other hand, if you do it carelessly, there will be little benefit—and you might hurt yourself. Writing, when done with the right “equilibrium,” changes you—not just as a writer, but as a person. Bellow’s advice has helped me to keep my eye on that part of the process: the “transforming action of the soul.”

 

6. What trends in the book world do you see—and where do you think the book publishing industry is heading?


Fewer people seem to read—or at least that’s how it feels. I don’t know if that’s objectively true, but with all the modern technology—streaming platforms, social media, video games—the competition for attention is fierce. And yet, the need for stories remains. That’s what I focus on.

Stories are fundamental to being human. The technology changes. The formats shift. The cultural noise gets louder. But our need for narrative—our drive to make sense of experience through story—doesn’t go away. It’s how we locate meaning. It’s how we reckon with joy, grief, identity, loss. Stories are how we answer, in one form or another, the question: what does it mean to be alive?

 

I find the rise of audiobooks especially fascinating. In one sense, it’s the most modern way we “read”—but it also feels like a return to the origins of storytelling: the spoken word. Long before books, we listened. A well-read audiobook can be incredibly moving. A quick recommendation: Meryl Streep reading John Cheever. It’s a master class in tone, texture, and restraint.

Other trends are more disruptive. AI is advancing rapidly, and while I don’t believe an algorithm can replicate the depth of human storytelling, I do think we’re entering a period when writers will need to articulate more clearly what makes their work distinctly human. That’s a challenge—but also an opportunity.

 

At the same time, the growth of independent publishing has made the landscape more diverse, more accessible, and more dynamic. Writers can now reach readers directly in ways that were once impossible. But that also means more noise in the system. As the gatekeepers shift, the responsibility of curation falls more and more to readers themselves. That’s liberating—but also daunting.

 

Genre itself is evolving. I see more and more writers blending forms—true crime with memoir, literary fiction with suspense, thrillers with social commentary. And I think that’s a good thing. Readers are open to complexity. The lines between “entertainment” and “literary value” are less rigid than they once were. For those of us drawn to stories that grapple with moral ambiguity and emotional depth, that’s an encouraging sign.

 

In the end, I don’t know where the publishing industry is heading. But I believe the core of storytelling—the need to understand our lives through narrative—isn’t going anywhere. The medium may change, but the impulse is eternal. 

7. Were there experiences in your personal life or career that came in handy when writing this book?  

THE MEANING OF THE MURDER is grounded in two parts of my professional life: my years covering crime as a journalist, and my experience serving as an Auxiliary Police Officer with the NYPD. Both shaped the book in ways I didn’t fully realize until the writing was underway.

First, being a journalist. It’s a wonderful way to be “out in the world”—asking questions, chasing facts. On some days, I stood outside courtrooms, furiously scribbling quotes. Other days, I knocked on doors hoping the next of kin would give me a comment. I once trailed a probation officer making surprise home visits. Sometimes I went to the city morgue, and sometimes the state prison. I listened to victims, suspects, cops, attorneys, and mothers who would never again see their sons. And always—always—the job was to get the facts. A reporter, especially on the crime beat, lives by verification. No speculation. No filling in emotional blanks. It wasn’t my job to interpret a suspect’s expression or wonder what a mother whispered at her child’s grave. If I didn’t hear it, see it, or record it, it didn’t go in the story. 

As a novelist, the work is very different. I am free to focus on the inner life—and to use my imagination. Instead of seeking only the facts, instead of asking for a quote to capture what a person feels, I can step directly into another’s point of view and imagine what this person might be feeling right now. This power of the imagination—which makes empathy possible—is exhilarating, and deeply humanizing. In a certain sense, the craft of writing fiction is similar to what many actors say about their craft: the goal isn’t to perform a character but to inhabit them—to discover what it feels like to live inside another skin. That’s what fiction allows. It’s not about impersonation; it’s about immersion. And when it works, you’re no longer inventing a life—you’re listening to it. 

I still recall the moment many years ago in my journalism career when this distinction between the factual world of the journalist and the imaginative world of the novelist became painfully clear. I was interviewing Richard M. Daley, then mayor of Chicago, about his approach to crime. His father, who had served as mayor for twenty-one consecutive years, had been a famous “machine politician” known for his blatant practice of patronage and exchange of favors. As if to distance himself from his father’s legacy, the younger Daley had recently hired a team of squeaky-clean lawyers from elite schools to serve as city attorneys. The interview generated a successful article, but one detail that intrigued me never made it into print. The entire time we talked, the mayor was compulsively chewing gum—one piece after another, discarding each after only a minute or two. He went through an entire pack during our conversation. I never asked him about it because it wasn’t relevant to the article. But I couldn’t stop wondering—was this gum-chewing a nervous habit? A coping mechanism? Something entirely mundane like a bad taste in your mouth? That’s the kind of question journalism doesn’t always have room for, but fiction does. 

The novelist can embrace ambiguity, follow an emotional thread even when it leads somewhere uncomfortable. But this is important: the gears shift in both directions. I’ve been writing fiction now for many years, and the more time I spend in fiction’s imaginative interior, the more fascinated I become with exterior forces—the systems, pressures, and institutions that shape what people do. That interplay between inner and outer is at the heart of THE MEANING OF THE MURDER. 

My work as an Auxiliary Police Officer shaped the book, too.  I became an APO for a mix of reasons—some lighthearted, some deeply meaningful. On the lighthearted side: I thought it would be cool. I already knew cops from my time as a crime reporter, many of them were good friends. They were funny, adventurous, and full of great stories. I figured spending time in a police precinct would be a kick. 

Then there’s the uniform. In New York City, Auxiliary Officers wear nearly identical uniforms to regular officers, with only small distinctions in our patch and badge. We don’t carry firearms, but we do wear duty belts with radios and handcuffs, and we wear ballistic vests just like the regular police. Most civilians don’t notice the difference. The way people interact with you when they think you’re a cop is fascinating. I’ve had people thank me for being present at a bank or subway entrance purely because they see the uniform. Once, while stationed outside a synagogue, a longtime neighbor looked me right in the face and didn’t recognize me. She simply saw “a cop” and said, thank you for being here. She wasn’t thanking me she was thanking the uniform. 

That moment connects to the deeper reason I became an Auxiliary: to help. The role expands the NYPD’s presence, serving as the “eyes and ears” of regular officers. While we don’t investigate crimes, our training covers penal law, police science, defensive tactics, first aid, and arrest procedures. We can only make an arrest for a crime that occurs in our presence. But for me, the most meaningful part is bridging the gap between law enforcement and civilians. Many people only encounter police in tense or negative situations: a traffic ticket, a crime scene. But as an Auxiliary, I interact with people in everyday moments—walking to work, shopping, attending a parade. When I put on the uniform, I create an opportunity for someone to experience a police officer as polite, approachable, and respectful. 

That idea—bridging two worlds—is central to the novel. THE MEANING OF THE MURDER explores what happens when an ordinary, law-abiding family finds itself caught in the global war on terror. My experience in uniform gave me a firsthand understanding of how people perceive authority, how trust is built—or broken—and how quickly the line between safety and fear can blur. Those themes run through my novel, shaping its characters and moral dilemmas. 

Without my experience working as a crime journalist and volunteering as an Auxiliary Police Officer, I could never have written this book. Those experiences gave me both the outer scaffolding of the story and the inner questions that animate it. 

8. How would you describe your writing style? Which writers or books is your writing similar to? 

Describing one’s own style is tricky—readers often experience it differently than the writer intends. That said, I’ve been told that my first novel, Moments of Doubt, evoked a “Jewish Holden Caulfield,” and that it was written “in the darkly comic tradition of Saul Bellow and Philip Roth.” My new novel, The Meaning of the Murder, is quite different. One early reader said it reminded them of Richard Price—a writer I admire deeply. 

If I had to define my own style, I’d say I’m drawn to the tension between literary and genre fiction. That’s where I tend to live: in the space between emotional depth and narrative momentum. I want prose with soul and stories with velocity. Some days that balance tilts one way, some days the other. 

As for influence, I read widely—books are like food, and I need a balanced diet. A master like William Faulkner is one of the essential nutrients, so to speak. His ability to penetrate the mysterious inner life remains unmatched. Absalom, Absalom! continues to be a touchstone for me, even with its famously challenging style. 

At the other end of the spectrum, I find the well-crafted plots of popular writers like John Grisham and Gregg Hurwitz equally essential. The Firm, and Orphan X are, in their own way, tremendous achievements—precise, propulsive, and deeply satisfying. 

Then there’s the question of subject matter. The Jewish American experience is the story I was born into, and that makes writers like Saul Bellow and Philip Roth especially meaningful to me.

But inspiration isn’t the same as identification. I don’t feel particularly at home in any one tradition. I’m suspicious of fixed camps—literary vs. commercial, highbrow vs. accessible. That restlessness probably shapes how I write and how I read. 

There’s another way to talk about “style,” though—and that’s through what some people call a writer’s “crutch” or “tic.” I don’t love those terms—they sound pathological—but the idea is worth exploring. Every writer has signature patterns, whether driven by instinct, obsession, or craft.

Consider the opening of Hemingway’s famous story The Killers:
The door of Henry’s lunch-room opened and two men came in. They sat down at the counter.
“What’s yours?” George asked them.
“I don’t know,” one of the men said.
“What do you want to eat, Al?”
“I don’t know,” said Al. “I don’t know what I want to eat.”
 

Is this Hemingway’s “tic”? Or is it an effective repetition of simple, short, declarative phrases for rhythm and emphasis? Is his famously minimalist style a “crutch”? Or does this form of understatement serve the content of this story, in which violence and trauma exist beneath a container of restraint? 

Or consider this passage from Saul Bellow’s Herzog:
What is this curious vanity of mind? Why do we want to be kings over all things? Because it is not enough to be good or wise or witty or brave. You must understand everything and govern everything. You must have your hand on the rudder and steer the whole world.
 

This is a classic Bellow moment, in which a single character’s emotional state becomes a stage for civilizational self-examination. Is it a “tic?” Indeed, Bellow often uses rhetorical questions to push past the narrative and digress into moral or philosophical anxiety. And his “crutch,” if we must use the term, might be described as the loquacious, self-interrogating male intellectual.

Now, I know readers who dislike Hemingway or Bellow precisely because of these stylistic patterns. To me, though, these so-called “tics” and “crutches” are the very features that define their artistic identity. 

In my own work—especially in my new novel The Meaning of the Murder—I suppose my “tic” and “crutch” are the em dash and the moral reckoning, respectively. I like the jagged rhythm of the dash because it mirrors unfinished thought, rising urgency, or suspended emotion. Police work involves this kind of urgent and fluid pacing. My “crutch” would be a character facing a moral reckoning because for me crime stories have a kind of built-in gravity, a center toward which everything pulls. In my view, the most powerful engine in crime fiction isn’t a plot twist—it’s the emotional climax that arrives when someone must wrestle with guilt, justice, complicity, or forgiveness. 

Of course, if a writer is being lazy then, indeed, the terms “tic” and “crutch” are entirely appropriate. But I tend to assume that a writer returning to his or her signature style is just seeking that elusive place inside themselves where language meets conviction, trying to write as well as they can about what matters most to them. And let’s not forget—writing well is hard. 

9. What challenges did you overcome in the writing of this book?

One challenge I had to overcome was the complexity of the material. The novel deals with the machinery of the modern war on terror—how terrorist networks are funded, how intelligence is gathered, how legal and financial institutions intersect with national security. That meant I had to dig deeply into subjects outside my crime reporting expertise. I spent countless hours researching OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control) laws and compliance protocols, learning how international banking systems can be manipulated to launder money or move funds across borders without detection. I read declassified reports, studied whistleblower cases, and spoke with former bank compliance officers, federal prosecutors, and national security consultants. 

What I discovered is that fighting terror isn’t only about boots on the ground or intelligence in the field—it’s also about spreadsheets, algorithms, and legal loopholes. It’s about how systems meant to safeguard society can sometimes become complicit in its endangerment. Translating all of that into compelling fiction—without oversimplifying or overwhelming the reader—was one of the hardest things I’ve done as a writer. But also one of the most rewarding. 

The other challenge was penetrating the inner life of the characters. The story explores not only crime but also guilt, complicity, and the deep moral ambiguities that shape our lives. Finding the right voice—one that honored the gravity of the subject without veering into either preachiness or sensationalism—required many drafts, much reflection, and a great deal of listening. Many people in the military and law enforcement world spoke to me on the condition of anonymity, and their insights were invaluable. It was a privilege to have them open up to me. 

Their trust reminded me that writing fiction—especially about subjects as morally and politically charged as this one—requires not just imagination, but responsibility. The challenge wasn’t just to tell a gripping story. It was to honor the complexity of the real world, while creating characters whose whose private struggles could carry the emotional weight of a public crisis. In the end, the hardest part of writing The Meaning of the Murder was also the most meaningful: doing justice not just to the facts, but to the humanity behind the facts. 

10. If people can buy or read one book this week or month, why should it be yours?

If readers are choosing just one book to read this week or this month, I’d never presume to say it should be mine. But I can say why I hope it might be worth their time.


The Meaning of the Murder is, at its heart, a novel about people caught between public forces and private lives. In a time when questions of terrorism, moral compromise, and cultural identity have re-entered public consciousness in searing, heartbreaking ways, the novel offers a lens into how those forces play out in the life of one family. It’s a story about the cost of justice, the burden of truth, and the ways we try to love and protect each other in an age of uncertainty.


The book also explores how the line between police work and military action can blur—especially in the fight against terrorism. Bringing together a soldier and a cop, the story dramatizes that unsettling intersection. I think we all recognize that the world has become more and more violent. It’s disturbing and difficult to face, but we can’t look away. As we struggle to live peacefully in a dangerous world, we need to keep telling the stories of those whose job it is to keep us safe.

 

Ultimately, however, I hope the book speaks not only to current events, but to something timeless: the emotional consequences of living in a world where political violence can strike close to home—and where the line between duty and conscience is rarely clear. If that sounds like the kind of story a reader is drawn to, then I would be honored to have them spend time with this book.

About Walter B. Levis: He is a former crime reporter, lives in New York City. His articles have appeared in The NY Daily News, The National Law Journal, The Chicago Reporter, The Chicago Lawyer, The New Republic, Show Business Magazine, and The New Yorker, among others. He is the author of the novel Moments of Doubt. His short stories have appeared widely and have been chosen for a Henfield Prize and nominated for a Pushcart Prize. For more information, visit walterblevis.com.

 

Do You Need Book Marketing Help?

Brian Feinblum, the founder of this award-winning blog, with over four million page views, can be reached at brianfeinblum@gmail.com  He is available to help authors like you to promote your story, sell your book, and grow your brand. He has over 30 years of experience in successfully helping thousands of authors in all genres. Let him be your advocate, teacher, and motivator!

 

About Brian Feinblum

This award-winning blog has generated over 4.5 million pageviews. With 5,300+ posts over the past 14 years, it was named one of the best book marketing blogs  by BookBaby  http://blog.bookbaby.com/2013/09/the-best-book-marketing-blogs  and recognized by Feedspot in 2021 and 2018 as one of the top book marketing blogs. It was also named by www.WinningWriters.com as a "best resource.”  Copyright 2025.

 

For the past three decades, Brian Feinblum has helped thousands of authors. He formed his own book publicity firm in 2020. Prior to that, for 21 years as the head of marketing for the nation’s largest book publicity firm, and as the director of publicity at two independent presses, Brian has worked with many first-time, self-published, authors of all genres, right along with best-selling authors and celebrities such as: Dr. Ruth, Mark Victor Hansen, Joseph Finder, Katherine Spurway, Neil Rackham, Harvey Mackay, Ken Blanchard, Stephen Covey, Warren Adler, Cindy Adams, Todd Duncan, Susan RoAne, John C. Maxwell, Jeff Foxworthy, Seth Godin, and Henry Winkler.

 

His writings are often featured in The Writer and IBPA’s The Independent (https://pubspot.ibpa-online.org/article/whats-needed-to-promote-a-book-successfully).

 

He hosted a panel on book publicity for Book Expo America several years ago, and has spoken at ASJA, BookCAMP, Independent Book Publishers Association Sarah Lawrence College, Nonfiction Writers Association, Cape Cod Writers Association, Willamette (Portland) Writers Association, APEX, Morgan James Publishing, and Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association. He served as a judge for the 2024 IBPA Book Awards.

 

His letters-to-the-editor have been published in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Post, NY Daily News, Newsday, The Journal News (Westchester) and The Washington Post. His first published book was The Florida Homeowner, Condo, & Co-Op Association Handbook.  It was featured in The Sun Sentinel and Miami Herald.

 

Born and raised in Brooklyn, he now resides in Westchester with his wife, two kids, and Ferris, a black lab rescue dog, and El Chapo, a pug rescue dog.

 

You can connect with him at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianfeinblum/