The Last Column
by Mike Johnston
The Sunday Morning Photographer a photo.net column:
September 11th, 2005
Good Morning once more!
This week marks the last installment of "The Sunday Morning Photographer." It
has endured more than three years and well over 100 separate columns, and given its modest
aims I think I am justified in calling it a success. I'd like to extend my thanks to the
various web hosts and translators who have done so much to help make it a success, and to
the many regular and occasional readers who seem, by and large, to have enjoyed it.
Although it's impossible to please "all of the people all of the time," I hope I
have ranged widely enough to have been of some usefulness to each of you at least
occasionally.
I will be concentrating on my newsletter, and, as soon as I'm finished with the
fulfillment of back orders of The Empirical Photographer, future book projects.
I'm currently working on two books. One is a slender "in-plain-English" how-to
manual called "How to Self-Publish a Book of Digital Photographs," and the other
is a somewhat more ambitious book tentatively titled "GO CLICK: How Photographers Get
Better At What They Do." Naturally, I also have other book ideas percolating.

Coming soon...well, coming sometime: A book to help you make your own book.
Both of these upcoming books cover not just the nuts and bolts, but process issues,
aesthetics, and background information as well. There is currently no publication
schedule, but I hope you will bookmark my Bearpaw Bookseller site
(http://www.lulu.com/bearpaw) and check it for new content occasionally. Of course, I will
also alert the host sites of SMP whenever new books are published, in the hope that they
will pass the information on to you.
The next issue of the newsletter features a "Visual Tour of Contemporary
Photography" - my picks from among some of the photographers now doing significant
work.
If you've been a fan of "The Sunday Morning Photographer," my thanks, and may
you always have good light!
Best regards, Mike Johnston
SMP archives