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- Shepherd shares 10 amazing book lists for June!
Shepherd shares 10 amazing book lists for June!
What's new for June?
New front page design...
My 10 favorite book lists for June!
Traffic + top 3 business updates
What am I reading/doing?
New front page design...
I am playing with a new design for the front page (as we get ready to add genre and age data to it, search, and other areas of the website in July).
Hit reply and let me know what you think!
My 10 favorite book lists for June!
I’m a U.S. Air Force Fighter pilot who has dedicated my life to the subject of decision-making. When flying, my job is to make thousands of decisions on each flight, often with limited information and lives on the line. My calling now is to share the lessons that I’ve learned with the world to allow them to make better, quicker decisions, and to have more confidence in their thinking.
I’m a long-time Alaskan (and former Alaska writer laureate) with a passion for my place—its people, environment, and history. I’ve always read widely in its literature and have watched it mature from superficial “last frontier” stories into a complex and diverse wealth of authentic and well-told stories. Since 2015 I’ve reviewed books for the Anchorage Daily News and have made it my business to know and support the growing Alaska writing community. Alaska is particularly strong in nonfiction writing while fiction (other than mysteries and short stories) has been slower to develop, and I’ve chosen to highlight five examples of novels that present truths through imaginative leaps.
My fascination with underwater adventure began as a teenager, when I accompanied a Russian expedition to the deepest archaeological site on the planet. I descended three miles deep into the Bermuda Triangle aboard a Soviet-era submersible to explore a mysterious wooden shipwreck inadvertently discovered during the search for astronaut Gus Grissom’s lost space capsule Liberty Bell 7. Since then, I’ve contributed to a number of historic shipwreck discoveries, including World War II treasure ships, lost Nazi U-Boats, Admiral Balchen’s HMS Victory, and the treasure steamship SS Connaught. These adventures and others serve as the inspiration for my novels.
My world is motivated by food: what to eat, when to eat, where to eat. At least since I was 12, when I was diagnosed with Type-1 diabetes. This is when I learned the “boring” things like carbs, fat, protein, and fiber. Scrutiny of my diet, and the food I ate, became a passion and finally my career. Not only in what I buy at the grocery store or put on my plate, but in the topics I write about. For me, food comes with its life-sustaining compliment: Insulin. How will techno foods be processed in my body? This question drives me to understand future foods at a molecular level, and then to share what I’ve learned in my writing.
I like books driven by characters who ride the same emotional rollercoaster as we all do in real life. Characters who love the wrong people or who lose the people they were right to love or who fail to match the norms expected by society. Characters I can empathise with, root for, and learn from. A fairytale happy ending is not necessary and can detract from the magic of a book. But I do like to be left with a feeling of hope. If a fictional character can learn to approach life more positively, then maybe I can too! This is what I try to achieve in my own books.
I have been enthralled with the natural world since childhood, but it was not until I had enjoyed a career as a theatre director, that my life changed course and I became a professional beekeeper. My new job took be across the rooftops of London, managing bees and hives for The Bank of England, Kensington Palace, The London College of Fashion, Heathrow Airport, Bloomberg, and many others. Now I run a small environmental charity, The Bee Friendly Trust, helping to make the world a little more hospitable to honeybees and some of the many other pollinators that make human life possible.
I’m a reader and writer of thrillers, especially espionage, but I also love literary fiction, including contemporary writers like Kazuo Ishiguro, Mohsin Hamid, and Amor Towles. And I enjoy reading classic writers including Gogol, Dostoyevsky, and Kafka. So, when it comes to reading thrillers, I gravitate towards those that are very well written, with precise prose and evocative imagery. This is my crossover list of the best five spy thrillers for readers of literary fiction. If you’re a literary reader interested in dabbling in a bit of espionage, these five books would be a great place to start.
I taught myself to code back in 1994 while working the graveyard shift as a geologist in the environmental industry. My job consisted of sitting in a chair during the dark hours of the night in a shopping center in Stockton, CA, watching another geologist take samples from wells in the parking lot. A friend of mine suggested I learn to code because I liked computers. I don’t mean to make this out to be a “it’s so simple anyone can do it!” You need to have a relentless drive to learn, which is why I wrote my book, The Imposter’s Handbook - as an active step to learning what I didn’t know I didn’t know.
I ended up in financial journalism by happenstance (it was pretty much the only corner of the media world that was still hiring when I graduated in the early 2000s). But I fell in love with it. To understand the world, you have to understand money. Whether you like it or not, it is the hidden wiring that binds us all together. I’ve found that reading history books on finance and economics has helped me better understand what is going on today, so I hope the books on this list will help you do the same.
I grew up in a small town in the days before the internet and cable television, so books were my escape, and through them, I traveled to faraway places and learned about different customs and cultures. Later, I studied Chinese cultural anthropology and lived and worked in Asia for many years. Now, I write a series about a Chinese police inspector in the brutally cold far north province of Heilongjiang and use mystery stories to unpack some of the more fascinating and essential aspects of Chinese society, politics, and religion.
And here are 3 bookshelves you might be interested in!
Traffic + business updates
For May, we had 413,000+ visitors and 555,000+ pageviews. That is up 348% over the previous year.
Traffic from Google was flat in May. That is part of the process, but I am frustrated (as search traffic has been flat since January). I am working on a big round of improvements, and I trust that growth returns as I put in the work.
For a big-picture perspective:
In 2022 we had 1.8 million visitors.
In 2023 we've already had 2.1 million visitors (through May)! Woohoo!
My goal for 2023 is to reach one million monthly visitors.
Top 3 business updates
#1 - Your "3 favorite reads of the year"!
Background: In October, I will collect authors' & some readers' 3 favorite reads of 2023. And then publish individual and group results about what everyone is reading (learn more here).
Work is going well on the designs, and you can preview rough design ideas here. I am super excited about this format; this is something I've been doing personally for 10+ years, and find it fun + powerful.
#2 - Improveing UX + SEO
I am working to improve a ton of SEO & UX bits about the website, things like adding better schema, revamping the book section, improving navigation, and improving internal linking. As I get more of these shipped, I hope it will help accelerate our traffic growth via search engines (plus, happier users is always good).
#3 - Thinking a lot about the feature roadmap...
I've got a limited amount of money, so I am trying to think about what I am going to build over the next 6 months and how that helps me reach financial sustainability so I can keep this project innovating at the same pace.
What am I reading?
The Hero’s Way by Tim Parks - I am almost done with this one, and it was a fantastic mix of travel and history. Tim and his wife follow Garibaldi’s retreat in 1849 after his failed defense of Rome against the French army.
Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. I never read this classic and finally decided to jump in!
I am still reading Savage Peace: Hope and Fear in America, 1919. A fantastic history book.
What did I finish reading?
Footfall by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle - A super interesting book about Earth being invaded by baby alien elephant creatures.
Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson - A GIANT book about colonizing Mars. If you love hard sci-fi, you will probably like this book.
In Search Of King Solomon's Mines by Tahir Shah. A subject that has always fascinated me, and a fun read about his adventures.
What have I been up to?
I hadn't seen my brother in 5 years, and I got to visit him for 10 days in Cannes, France (for the film festival). He lives in China, so Covid put a real hurt on travel between the two of us.
He is in the movie industry and was on a team that won this year’s 48-hour film contest in Shanghai. They then got picked by the global 48-hour film contest as one of the best short films worldwide and were given free tickets to Cannes to do a screening in the short-film corner. They are working to line up funding for a feature-length horror film they have planned (a fantastic script about a dog gone wrong).
And this last weekend I took my son camping in a beautiful area of Spain.
Have a great week, and I hope life is going well for you!
Ben
P.S. From my trip with my brother to Cannes, France.
Can you help me create a better book website for readers?
Would you join our Founding Member program?
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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