Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Date: 23-Nov-05
From: News Center Publications, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Subject: December Caribbean Memo

Dear Friends:

Admittedly, one of the most difficult world challenges, even for those blessed with knowledge and experience in public office, is to know how to communicate political reality beyond one's own borders. It's the same in San Juan, Puerto Rico; Paris, France; Brussels, Belgium; or Washington, DC.

The point was dramatically driven home in mid-November by former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who spoke to Arab students in DUBAI of the United Arab Emirates [UAE]. The former president talked to them the same way he would have at the University of Arkansas.

While Clinton had every right to question U.S. and coalition policy in Iraq, the Arkansas native addressed Arabs the same way he would Americans. In other words, American students are equipped with U.S., cultural, language and political skills to grasp what Clinton had to say. At best, the UAE group was confused. It would have been the same if an Arab leader had engaged Americans in Arabic about Iraq in the United States.

And it's that kind of cultural, linguistic and political challenge we at News Center Publications attempt to address in our five historical-political novels set in the Caribbean and Latin America. But they're not limited to the Western Hemisphere. These believable books go anywhere internationally to tell the story.

Our most recent, `Chile-New York' and four others, can be found on the News Center Publications WebSite [www.natcarnes.com]. There's another way. By going to
www.amazon.com, you are treated to a sample chapter and a visual view of each novel's cover. front and back. Once on Amazon, click on books, then `author' before writing in the name `Nat Carnes' and click again.

We can be viewed on other Internet locations as well. Just type in `Nat Carnes' in the book section of Alibis.com and Barnes and Noble [bn.com]. We are also on three search engines. Again, place the name `Nat Carnes' inside an AOL, Compuserve or Google seach box and click.

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home