Our Man in Abiko, who laboured at the same Great Metropolitan Newspaper that I did for many years, though at a different time than I, is someone I have known slightly for some time now. I came across his eponymous blog looking for other expat bloggers in Tokyo and we discovered out mutual employment history rather by accident. He has been a supporter of the Woodshed for several years now and
even posted some of my Sunday sermons way back when. On a personal level, Our Man was very supportive and encouraging when I was transitioning from "Staff Writer"to "layabout expat" and then to "former expat."
In other breaking news, the aformentioned Quakebook put together by Our Man and his team, to which I contributed in my small way, is now a bona fide best seller.
I had faith that the Twitter-germinated
#Quakebook would do reasonably well, but in its first day of release it has already zoomed to
#7 #6 on the
Amazon non-fiction charts. I realize that I am merely riding the coattails of the established heavy hitters like William Gibson and Yoko Ono and the authorial young guns like Barry Eisler and Jacob Adelstein, who have already made their best-seller bones, but my name is there in the table of contents and
my piece is mentioned in the editorial descriptions for the book listing.
As of yesterday, the ebook was available for Kindle.
You can get free apps for your smartphones and computers to enable you to read it without laying out for a Kindle Reader. Amazon is donating its services to host and distribute the book on Kindle, so 100% of your money is going to the Red Cross to help people in Japan in the wake of the massive earthquake and tsunami that struck at 2:46 p.m. on March 11.
Go. Buy. Now. Help Japan.
#quakebook featuring Scala & Kolacny Brothers and Kings of Leon from
Quakebook on
Vimeo.
Update:
My Virtually Speaking Sunday:Maple Syrup Edition interview with Our Man in Abiko can be found here.