Thank You Reviewers of Ravenscraig in the UK

Ravenscraig coverFew things are more gratifying to a writer than to have someone say they like your story. Readers who share their comments about what they like, what they found lacking and what they are recommending to the world is the lifeblood of an author’s career.  We learn from the criticism and we are encouraged by the praise. 

This may seem like a small thing, but it remains remarkable because there are thousands of books sold before a review is posted.  I’m talking about your neighbor, your sister, your co-worker here, not the big time reviewers in newspapers and bloggers who get books in advance of publication.  It’s the reader who buys the book or who is given a copy by a friend, or borrows it from the library who matters.  A choice is made. A book enters your life to occupy your time for days. If you hate it you will drop it in four minutes.  But if you like it, you become invested in the world of the characters.  You come to know the people in the story and you develop opinions about them. Sometime you fall in love and it is sad when the book ends and you feel that the story should have gone on, just a little bit longer, or that there should be another book, or an entire series.

Once in a rare while, a reader feels compelled to share their thoughts.  That is gold for areviews writer.  For me, this has made all the difference and has created the desire to write the sequel to Ravenscraig. (This next one will be all about art forgery in 1914  being sold to millionaires in New York.)

Next time your book club gets together, ask your members how many books they read in a year, and ask how many reviews they have written in their lifetime.  It’s true that those who take the time to post those reviews are very special indeed to the authors.  Even the big names are likely to read your words when you post those reviews. 

So it is that I send out a big thank you today to the readers that have found Ravenscraig and have been moved to write a review.  Writers live off the kind words of people who love our stories. We know that not everyone will get what we are saying, but for those who do, there is no greater joy than a fab review on Amazon.  It drives us to keep going, despite it all.

So to Mazza who posted this review in the UK, I can only say thank you so much for your enthusiasm and for sharing your thoughts.

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Thank you Mazza!

Happy weekend everyone.

And by the way, if you want to send me a note, I will certainly write back to you.  You can write to me at sandikaltner@aol.com. Or connect with me on Twitter @SandiAltner.

Also please see the reviews on Amazon.com

Ravenscraig email L

Ravenscraig 100th Amazon Review

Sandi AltnerFew things are more gratifying for an author than to have people tell you they like your story.  Whatever you may think of Amazon and its dominance of the ebook market, I can tell you that there is a huge benefit to being able to hear from Amazon reviewers who take the time to share their thoughts on the books they’ve read.  Like many authors, I appreciate and read every review.

It takes a long time for a book to gain traction and to become known.  The reviews help people find books that are in the area that they like.  Ravenscraig is a family saga, historical fiction, with romance, a Canadian immigration story and of interest to people who like social history and particularly the Titanic.

So it is with delight that I saw the 100th review of Amazon appear this weekend.

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The 100th review was written by Mary K. from Minnesota who gave Ravenscraig 5 stars. Thank you, Mary!

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Here are some of the other comments from Amazon reviewers.

Click here to see more Ravenscraig reviews.:)

reviews

Readers Review Ravenscraig

Perhaps the greatest enjoyment in writing a book is getting notes from readers who are touched by the book.  This weekend I received two special notes that I would like to share.

The first is from Heidi, a friend from my early days in radio in Winnipeg.

“I lent my book to my 82-year old father who just returned it today. He’s a German immigrant who was a Wpg transit bus driver his entire working life in Canada and spent many a year driving in the north end. He LOVED your book, and that’s high praise from someone who doesn’t have English as his first language.”

The second note is from someone I only know by reputation for her fantastic Deli on Corydon in Winnipeg, Marla Bernstein of Bernstein’s Deli. (I’ve edited the note to be sure there are no spoilers.)

Hello Sandi,

I finished your wonderful book this evening on the way home from the lake . As  a Jewish Winnipegger I knew that I would love RAVENSCRAIG from the first time I heard about it…(I actually do not remember if it was a review in the Jewish Post, or Free Press, or CBC Radio).

Having Grandparents who immigrated here from Eastern Europe about  20 years after your Ravenscraig  characters came to the Golden Land I can appreciate the Jews who were the first and how horrible it was for them at the beginning. By the time my Family arrived here I would think  that a lot of groundwork must have been done and although poverty stricken they must have had more of a support system in place than your immigrants did.

I love the story of the allotment of acreage for those willing to farm. I love the story of the Zigman Family.

Ravenscraig is a wonderful saga. It even prompted me to take a slow joy ride through Armstrong’s Point, which I have never paid much attention to in the past.

Thank you Sandi for providing me with such a good story.

Thanks for hearing me out ! Enjoy life ! When you are back in Winnipeg and you get hungry during the day I would love to invite you to my Deli for a sandwich and a bowl of soup,(another reason I love the Zigman family)>

Sincerely,

Marla Bernstein

Ravenscraig Praised in Winnipeg Free Press Book Review

Upstairs Downstairs in a Brash Winnipeg

The Manitoba Free Press (as the Winnipeg Free Press was known in its early years) played a very large role in the development of the stories for Ravenscraig.  Every archived page is available on line through subscription.  It’s an amazing resource that has afforded me both  inspiration and education in my research for the novel.  Imagine my joy in seeing the Saturday edition with a big positive review of Ravenscraig, written by Ron Robinson, a Winnipeg broadcaster and book lover.  He writes:

Welcome to Downton Abbey and Upstairs Downstairs with a Winnipeg twist.

Former Winnipeg journalist Sandi Krawchenko Altner has researched and written a wonderful Winnipeg-warts-and-all historical romance set mostly in the early 1900s. It’s a brash, two-faced Winnipeg, but still a recognizable one.

Thank you, Ron!

Click here to see the entire review in the Winnipeg Free Press on line. (Saturday, January 14, 2012).

By the way, I have started doing “Skype visits” to book clubs, which are great fun.  If your group would like to arrange a Q&A session to talk about Ravenscraig and the stories behind the fiction, I would be delighted to join.  Please write to me at Sandi.Altner@gmail.com.

Click on the image below to see the book trailer.

Ravenscraig Review: “Ravenscraig” provides fascinating insight into early Jewish migration to Winnipeg

Bob Altner, Sandi Altner, Mary Krawchenko, Lisa Lester, Sandra Altner

With four weeks on the bestseller list in Winnipeg, Ravenscraigis finding an audience among both family history enthusiasts as well as people who have a fascination with the Titanic and Winnipeg’s connection to the great disaster. I am grateful and so pleased that there is such a strong interest in stories about how the early immigrants managed in a city that was the fastest growing in the Dominion of Canada.

This week, Bernie Bellan posted his review of Ravenscraig in the Winnipeg Jewish Post and News saying it provides “a fascinating insight into early Jewish migration into Winnipeg.”

Where “Ravenscraig” excels, however, and no doubt why it has become an immediate best-seller locally, is in its description of Winnipeg at the turn of the 20th century and certain key events that are probably unknown to most readers.
For instance, a major typhoid outbreak in 1905 becomes a centerpiece of the novel. In her description of the horrible living conditions of the bulk of the immigrant population in Winnipeg, Krawchenko Altner does a fine job of evoking the misery that accompanied life for so many of our grandparents and great-grandparents.

At the same time the level of corruption in which Winnipeg’s Anglo Saxon leaders engaged is also quite astounding and is brought to life on the pages of this book. “Ravenscraig’ devotes a fair bit of space to the issue of red-light houses in the city and how it was that police and elected officials not only turned a blind eye to the prostitution that was conducted so openly, those same officials profited hugely from its practice.

Bernie Bellan is the editor of the Winnipeg Jewish Post and News, and has a particular affection for Jewish history in Winnipeg. When we talked last week I was delighted to discuss not only Ravenscraig, but also the work of his grandfather, Ruben Bellan, an economics professor who wrote a very informative history book that is in my collection of Manitoba rare books. Winnipeg’s First Century: An Economic History provides a solid road map of sources for those who are interested in further study of Winnipeg’s development.

Allan Levine, Sandi Altner

In his review, Bernie also mentions Allan Levine’s, Coming of Age: A History of the Jewish People of Manitoba. This is a fantastic work that is rich with detail and inspiring stories.  Allan has also written a most enjoyable series of historical novels set in Winnipeg that I heartily recommend. These are the Sam Klein mysteries.  Allan and I went to high school together at Garden City Collegiate and it was wonderful to see him at the Ravenscraig launch in Winnipeg. Allan’s latest book King, has also just been released.

Ravenscraig Launches to the Top of the Best Seller List

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What an amazing time we had in Winnipeg, launching Ravenscraig at the McNally Robinson Booksellers store on Tuesday.  I am so grateful for the warmth and enthusiasm that came from everyone who joined us and am just overwhelmed at the outstanding response in books sold.  Every book in stock sold on the night of the launch and the last books I signed carried the chill of winter air as they were brought in from the trunk of a car, held “just in case we needed more,”  with more cases headed to the store the next day.

Karen Black helped a great deal with inviting me to her afternoon drive show at CJOB, and I am very grateful that Style Manitoba Magazine profiled Ravenscraig in its current issue.

It was thrilling and wonderful and I couldn’t be happier that people are interested in a story about Winnipeg’s boomtown years a century ago when it was the fastest growing city in North America.

On Friday we learned we topped the best seller list at McNally Robinson, even edging out one of my favourite titles, “The Help”.   This has been one very memorable week.  My humble thanks to all who helped make this such a successful launch.