Richard Nixon once wrote that writing a book is
the greatest workout someone can give his brain.
No doubt he wrote that because he was that rarity among modern presidents: he wrote every word of all of his books himself.
For most normal people, the idea of writing a book seems like more than just a mental workout: it seems darn near impossible: a blinking cursor, and I'm supposed to sit there and unload my thoughts
coherently onto the screen?
The would be-author is up against so many enemies of his own making: self-doubt, perfectionism, procrastination, time management issues, and a whole lot more.
Well, although there's plenty of stuff I can't do that most people can, one thing I absolutely can do is write a book.
I have over
20 years of experience in this area, along with two New York Times bestsellers and a $50,000 book prize to my credit, and I've published with academic publishers, popular publishers, and even no publisher at all.
So you don't need to trust me when I assure you that I can help you turn what looks like a thicket of obstacles into a garden of delight.
I can take you from
anywhere you are now -- the idea stage, the writing stage, the editing stage, whatever -- all the way to a published book that people actually buy.
But so can plenty of other people.
The way I can help you that they can't is this:
I know where the real money is made.
Most people have no idea where the real money comes from when writing a book. They think: I'll write a book and retire on the royalties!
Okay, well:
(1) No, you won't; and
(2) Royalties aren't where a book really brings in the dough for you, if you know what you're doing.
As it happens, the
Woods Author Academy is on its Spring(ish) Sale right now, and you can save a bundle -- the fruits of my 20 years of experience have never come more cheaply:
https://www.WoodsAuthorAcademy.com
Tom Woods