Cedar Valley News
May 4, 2026
The Front Porch Has Been Open All Year
By Teresa Nikas
The calendar on the wall says June 5 is one month away. I have been at this desk for a year.
Most of you know me as the editor of Cedar Valley News. Fewer of you know the town existed before this newspaper did. Fewer still know where Cedar Valley itself came from.
It came from a novel.
Quiet Echo was a book before it was a podcast, and before any of us wrote a word for this paper. The town in those pages was already there — its streets, its families, the deli on Main Street, the park where the farmers’ market sets up on Saturdays. Caleb was there. Maryam was there. The Khans and the Larsons and the Olsons were there, working out what it means to live next door to people you did not grow up beside.
What this newspaper has done, for a year, is walk those streets one day at a time. Monday is mine. Tuesday belongs to George at the deli. Wednesday Lars stops in from the hardware store. Thursday Chloe brings her sharper eye. Friday Dan speaks the way a man speaks when Sunday is on his mind. Saturday Aisha writes as a physician and a mother. Six writers. Six days. And you on every one of them.
We did not invent the town. We let the town keep telling us what was happening.
Some of you found Cedar Valley first in the novel and came here looking for old friends. Some of you found us here without ever having read a word of Quiet Echo. Both are welcome.
The front porch is open. Come sit with us.
We have written that line at the bottom of editorials all year. I wrote it the first time without thinking much about it. By the end of the year, it had become the truest sentence I know.
On June 5, this run of editorials turns one. On June 21, a new book will arrive. It carries the title From the Editor’s Desk: What Democracy Looks Like When It Actually Works. It gathers what we have written this year — the small arguments, the local stories, the moments when a stranger turned into a neighbor, and the moments when one did not. It is a record of a year in one American town.
The book is also the start of something. Cedar Valley does not stop on June 5. The people you have come to know are going to keep living. Children are going to grow. Some couples will marry. Some will not. Someone will get sick. Someone will not come back. The country will go through whatever it goes through, and Cedar Valley will go through it the way small American towns do — slowly, in pieces, on porches, at kitchen tables, in the quiet of an early morning desk like this one.
I plan to keep a record of the year ahead. So does this newspaper.
I have not asked you to do anything. I am not going to. You will find the book where you find books. The editorials will keep arriving in your inbox the way they have for a year. The porch will stay open.
What I will say is this. When the book lands in June, and you read about people you have come to know — the ones whose names you recognize before the second paragraph, the ones whose voices you can hear without looking at the byline — you will not be reading about strangers. You will be reading about the town you have been living in for a year.
I am the editor here. I have my own opinions. But the work of this newspaper is not mine. It belongs to the people who read it. It always has.
The front porch is open. Come sit with us.
Welcome to year two.
Cedar Valley News has a Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. Tell us what you have read this year, who you have come to know, and what you hope to find on this porch in the year ahead. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy
This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor.

This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. Author Campaign Method (ACM) of sales and marketing is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authorpreneurs who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for them.
Release Party
Web Presence
Book Signings
Facebook Profile and Facebook Page
Active Social Media Participation
Ebook Cards
The Great Alaska Book Fair: October 8, 2016


Costco Book Signings
eBook Cards

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Jim Misko Book Signing at Barnes and Noble
Cortex is for serious authors and will probably not be of interest to hobbyists. We recorded our Cortex training and information meeting. If you’re a serious author, and did not attend the meeting, and would like to review the training information, kindly let us know. Authors are required to have a Facebook author page to use Cortex.
Correction:
This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. ACM is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authors who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for serious authors, but a burden for hobbyist. We don’t recommend ACM for hobbyists.

We’re the only publisher we know of that provides authors with book signing opportunities. Book signing are appropriate for hobbyist and essential for serious authors. To schedule a book signing kindly go to our website, <
We hear authors complain about all the personal stuff on Facebook. Most of these complaints are because the author doesn’t understand the difference difference between a Facebook profile and a Facebook page. Simply put, a profile is for personal things for friends and family; a page is for business. If your book is just a hobby, then it’s fine to have only a Facebook profile and make your posts for friends and family; however, if you’re serious about your writing, and it’s a business with you, or you want it to be business, then you need a Facebook page as an author. It’s simple to tell if it’s a page or a profile. A profile shows how many friends and a page shows how many likes. Here’s a link <> to a straight forward description on how to set up your author Facebook page.



Mosquito Books has a new location in the Anchorage international airport and is available for signings with 21 days notice. Jim Misko had a signing there yesterday. His signing report included these words, “Had the best day ever at the airport . . ..”



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