Shepherd-10 fantastic book lists for August

What's new for August?

  1. My 10 favorite book lists for August!

  2. Traffic + top 3 business updates...

  3. What am I reading/doing? 

My 10 favorite book lists for August!

I learned from a young age to question everything. The law always interested me, but I was an impatient high school graduate who instead completed a journalism cadetship in Sydney, Australia. I always loved police reporting and the ability to get inside the ‘real’ story where few others could. There is a certain pleasure observing the lives of (witting or unwitting) criminals and an element of “there by the grace…” too! I’ve always empathised with the underdog and the Drug Grannies were indeed just that. I believed there was more to their story. Earning their trust was important. I threw myself into their fight – more an activist than a journalist!

- Sandi Logan

I taught for more than 26 years in classes ranging from first grade through college. No matter the age of the students, I used children’s books to introduce topics in history. I never shied away from using a picture book with older students and often found they were more engaged in a picture book than in an article. I also used historical fiction as a hook to lure students into picking up a related non-fiction book. In fact, historical fiction was the gateway that taught this writer of 13 nonfiction children’s books to love non-fiction history. 

- Rebecca Langston-George

I am a Harvard- and MIT-trained physician-scientist, and I am drawn to research problems that bridge the basic and the practical – how a better understanding of cells and tissues can inform new therapies for cancer and other diseases. As children, we are all scientists – mini-hypothesis generators trying to make sense of the world. I suppose I never outgrew that curiosity.

My list of best science books credits writers who bring to life the excitement that comes from looking at the natural world in a new way, a spirit that I try to emulate in my own writing. I hope you enjoy these books as much as I have!

- Ben Stanger

My name is Mary Bryant Shrader, and I'm the creator of Mary's Nest, a YouTube channel and corresponding website devoted to teaching approachable traditional cooking techniques using whole ingredients to help everyone become a Modern Pioneer in the kitchen. I take a simple step-by-step approach to help home cooks of all abilities cook simple, healthy meals using every last scrap of food to work towards creating a no-waste kitchen. I live in the Texas Hill Country with my sweet husband, Ted, and our lovable yellow lab, Indy. 

- Mary Bryant Shrader

I spent 34 years writing for daily papers, most of them at the News & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina. I’ve also freelanced for numerous magazines, primarily about music, while hosting a podcast and writing the occasional book. Through it all I’ve had a particular fascination for the music business and its peculiar ways, especially record companies. The industry’s darker side was the subject of my first book way back in 2000, the novel Off The Record, which was a notebook dump of thinly fictionalized war stories I’d accumulated over the years. The record business is the subject of my latest book, too, although it’s a much more positive story.

- David Menconi

I'm a writer, lecturer, biologist, ecologist, and two-time Fulbright Scholar (to India and Malaysia). I'm now a fiction writer, but I’ve always been a storyteller who writes in a historical framework. While I feel an almost compulsive obligation to keep faith with the facts, my main objective is to tell a story—as dramatically, suspensefully, and entertainingly as I can. My first non-fiction book, Papyrus: the Plant that Changed the World was featured as a clue on Jeopardy. It tells the story of a plant that still evokes the mysteries of the ancient world. My most recent book, The Pharaoh's Treasure is about the origin of paper and the rise of Western civilization.

- John Gaudet

I am a Research Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Stony Brook University learning/teaching/researching mathematics/algorithms/puzzles. In these fields, I have published a book, published 15+ papers in conferences/journals, been granted a US patent, won two Outstanding Paper Awards, taught 10+ courses in 25+ offerings, and have supervised 90+ master's/bachelor students. I am a puzzle addict involved in this field for 25 years and puzzles are my religion/God. Puzzles are the main form of supreme energy in this universe that can consistently give me infinite peace.

- Pramod Ganapathi

I’m the author of the novel The Good Ones, published by Harper Books earlier this year. I grew up in a beautiful and somewhat isolated part of the country, the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, and it’s still my favorite place to set my fiction. When I began writing crime fiction, I knew I wanted to balance telling compelling stories with creating a sense of place and interesting characters to inhabit it, and I’ve learned so much from these writers about how to do that. 

- Polly Stewart

As a writer, designer, and technologist, I've always been fascinated by the extraordinary potential of the internet. It’s our species' greatest invention to date, giving us powers our ancestors would have only dreamed of. But I'm equally aware of its darker side. We now live an inordinate amount of our lives in spaces controlled by algorithms that have strange agendas. A key part of my work is exposing how the subtle designs of our online spaces can dramatically change our emotions, making them much more contagious. By translating these insights into understandable narratives, my goal is to foster digital resilience, and help us take back some real measure of control of our digital lives.

- Tobias Rose-Stockwell

In the 1980s I was bullied for playing Dungeons and Dragons. Kids like to bully each other, but this was different: The bullies felt they had been given a moral license to pick on D&D players because pastors, talk-show hosts, and politicians were all claiming it was a Satanic, anti-Christian game. Those claims were my first inkling that adults did not know what they are talking about. After getting a PhD in the sociology of religion, I was finally able analyze and articulate why religious authorities felt threatened by a simple game of imagination.

- Joseph Laycock

And here are 3 random bookshelves you might be interested in! 

Traffic + business updates

For July, we had 423,000+ visitors and 563,000+ pageviews. That is up 228% over the previous year. 

Traffic from Google was flat in July. That is part of the process, but always a bit frustrating (as search traffic has been flat since January). 

For a big-picture perspective:

  • In 2022 we had 1.8 million visitors.

  • In 2023 we've already had 2.9 million visitors (through July)! Woohoo! 

My goal for 2023 is to reach one million monthly visitors. 

Top 3 business updates

#1 - What are we building in August?

I had hoped to start working on the new front page and improving search, but we realized we needed to get the work done for the new "best books of 2023" format, launching publicly on November 1st. 

So we are now working on implementing that new format. Once we finish that, we will improve the search and the front page.

Here is what the page will look like for authors and super readers who want to share their "3 favorite books read in 2023". 

And here is the category page that is also almost 99% done. 

#2 - Improvements to stats

We switched a bunch of tracking over to Plausible.io, as I despise GA4 (it is incredibly powerful but requires you to spend hundreds of hours to make it usable). Plausible is missing a lot of key features, but they are privacy-centric, and I hope it improves over time. 

We also took over bookstores' click tracking. We had been using Genius Link, but they didn't know how to screen bogus clicks, and I decided to save the money. And if we run this ourselves, we can better understand what areas of the website are converting from browsing to buying. We use CloudFlare to know which bookstores to serve to which visitors. 

#3 - Vacation & thinking about what to build next

For August, I am biking from Bordeaux to Paris to Mont Saint-Michel. It is about 1,200km, and I just finished nine days of biking. I am taking two days rest outside of Orleans. Bike tours are extremely fun, and I highly recommend them. Feel free to contact me if you want any suggestions/tips. 

I am using this time to think about the best path forward for Shepherd. I must fund it through December 2024, as we will unlikely have positive cash flow by December 2023. So I am deciding what features I want to build in the next 15 months and what has the best chance of increasing traffic/revenue. I am also doing everything possible to reduce costs to lower our burn rate, as I have little savings left. 

What am I reading?

What have I been up to?

I took my son on an overnight bike touring trip while we were in France in July. He is 6 years old and biked a total of 57km over two days. We had a blast :). 

I hope you are having a great summer! I am about 600km into my own bike ride
Ben

P.S. My son biking through an amazing rail trail outside of Salet in France.

 

Can you help me create a better book website for readers?

An anonymous supporter is matching everything we raise this month, so if the time is right, it means your membership counts 2x this month! 

For $49 dollars a year, you keep us independent and creating the book website that readers and authors deserve. 

This is hugely important as I am currently funding this with my savings, and I need your financial support (if able). 

  • We have special perks for readers who join (and more coming). Add free browsing is coming with user accounts soon! Plus you can take part in the upcoming "best 3 reads of the year" alongside authors!

  • 100% of your membership goes toward new features (Ben works for free).

  • Ben will work incredibly hard for you and echo your name through the ages! 

Hit reply and ask me anything. 

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