I just got word that Amazon.com has started shipping copies of my book about Jefferson’s moose, the Internet, and how they’re connected. So now I join the ranks of published authordom, and I can start doing what every other published author of whom I’m aware does once his/her book hits the streets, namely obsessively tracking the sales ranking on Amazon . . . It’s quite astonishing that a small cottage industry has emerged to let authors keep a watchful eye on the ever-changing Amazon numbers — sites like Title Z, Rankforest, Sales Rank Express, TicTap, and dozens of others, at which you can plot, graph, compare, track, etc. etc. the hourly-updated sales figures. The process has, I’m told by others who’ve been through this, an oddly hypnotic power . . .
I’ll spare you more book promotional hoopla — I’ve already used up some VC space doing that (see chained posts), and there’s a book website with more info. You can order the book here (if for some inexplicable reason you hadn’t already ordered a copy). It’s a good read — I can promise you that you’ll learn something interesting about Jefferson you didn’t know before, and something interesting about the Internet you didn’t know before, and a connection between the two you hadn’t made before. As they say: “Guaranteed, or your money back.” [Which always makes me ask: Are those alternative options?]
And Washington, DC VC-ers, please note — I’m going to be talking about the book at a Cato Institute “book forum” event at noon on February 4th; Clive Crook of the Atlantic (and the Financial Times) is going to be a commentator, and it should be a fun event. If you’re in the neighborhood, do come.