General Chit-Chat > Likes and Comments



It's nice visiting with kids. We've had our daughter here since before Xmas. She leaves tomorrow morning to go back to college.


Some of you know that I'm the author of a vampire novel, Lifeblood, which was supposedly reprinted earlier this month by a "press" called Inked in Blood. Last night, another Goodreader sent me massive evidence that this operation is a scam, run by a many-aliased con artist who preys on writers. (Fortunately, he signed his "contract" with me under a bogus name, so it has no legal force.) I'm going to be occupied for the next little while in removing my book from his website, and minimizing the damage done to me and to others by this fiasco. So, if I'm otherwise silent for awhile, don't worry about me --I'm still here, and still avidly interested!







Mark, on posting things you've written, Goodreads does let you do that, but there are a couple of catches. First, you can't just attach a saved electronic document that you have to the window on the Goodreads site that opens up when you want to post a writing; instead, you have to re-type the whole thing into the window, and then "post" it. Second, there's a space limit, expressed in number of allowed characters. I know a lot of writers who count their page numbers on stories, and most computer programs will count words; I don't know anybody or anything, outside of Goodreads (and Twitter :-) ) that actually counts characters. So you never know if Goodreads will post a whole story --I suspect in most cases it won't, unless you break it into small component parts, or write "flash" fiction.

There used to be a small bookshop called Redshaws in Lichfield but they ended up closing down - in an interesting and bizarre twist of fate I ended up taking over their lease for my own shop in the mid-2000s. High strangeness indeed!



So I'll keep rambling...
What's everyone up to?
I'm up to my neck in deadlines and fighting an uncooperative muse and a whole slew of self-doubt.
Please, please, please, cheer me up! *grin*
xoxo


Zee, on the bright side, even though deadlines are a pain, the reason you have a deadline is that you also actually have a publisher who's signed a contract! Believe me, a lot of less successful authors wish they were in that situation, deadline and all. :-) I can't help you out with an uncooperative muse, though I wish I could. (Muses originated in ancient Greece; my theory is that the muse of "tough gal" fiction must look a lot like Xena. :-) ) But on the subject of self-doubt, let me just point out that, out of 46 reviews for your first novel in the Corpus Brides series, every one of them rated it four or five stars! That should tell you something encouraging about your abilities. :-)
By way of update on the challenge I reported on above in message 23 (back in June of last year) to buy two brand-new books a year from physical bookstores, I did meet that goal in 2011. I'm on the way to doing the same in 2012, having bought my wife a hardcover copy of Inheritance for Mother's Day. (That series has a male protagonist, but it does offer an action heroine, too, in the person of Arya the elf --whom you don't want to challenge to a sword fight.) Hope some of you will join me in this!
Next month, I'll be off to Florida (Palm Beach Atlantic Univ.) during the week of June 10, for a college library conference. And in June and July, Barb and I hope to be visiting her side of the family for one or two weeks, though plans are still in flux. While I'm off on these jaunts, I'll have limited access to the Internet, so won't expect to be on Goodreads much. So if there are times this summer when I seem to have dropped off the face of the earth, that's where I'll be. :-)

I just finished reading a 6 book series that starts with The Crown Conspiracy. I ARC read 4 of the 6 books, which was fun & enlightening. Anyway, it has a few very cool heroines in there. Two start off rather slow & while they never turn into Xena, they are quite kick-ass in their own ways. One does have quite a Xena moment. Since the setting was Medieval, I thought it was very well done, almost realistic.


Inkjets just dry up or expire too fast for our usage now & they're too expensive. Many cost over $100 to replace the ink cartridges on & they typically have to be replaced yearly or they go bad. Several people here at work have come to the conclusion that it is cheaper to buy a new printer than replace ink cartridges in their old one! That seems crazy, but it's true.
Laser's have come down a lot in price, so it's made them worthwhile. Color all-in-ones are expensive, about $700 for a decent one, but a decent color laser is only $250, about what I paid for a B&W all-in-one. If you look around for specials, you can often find a B&W laser for under $100, as cheap as an inkjet.

Werner, enjoy your summer! Sounds like you got a packed itinerary.
And thanks for your lovely words about the ratings. And lol, yup, I know a deadline means the book is nearly through the door. I just wish life would cooperate better. It's winter where I live and I'm already down to the second cold this month. Not conducive to having a functioning brain, sadly...
Hope you all have a lovely weekend! What's everyone up to? We're taking our boys to the movies to see Battleship
xoxo


Still not out of the woods but getting there. :)
Hope everyone's doing great, though!

But Amazon managed to upset me today. They sent me an email of books for Xmas presents. Cool! I open it up.

For Him

For Her
Seriously? I hope that becomes a public relations nightmare for them.



What amazes me is how few younger people seem to think it's a big deal. Is sexism such a thing of the past that they're no longer as sensitive to it? Was it such a big deal that we're over sensitive to it?

If sexism was completely a thing of the past, it wouldn't show up in promotions like this one from Amazon. It's alive and well, though more underground than it used to be. But because it's underground, and young people today pretty much assume it's in the past, they're not as apt to connect the dots or read between the lines to recognize it. If Amazon had said in its e-mail, "We know women are too dumb to be interested in books about Jefferson," most young people would be outraged; but they miss the unstated implication, because they can't imagine that it could be there, in "enlightened" 2012.
I'll be the first to post, with the observation that I'll be gone on vacation all of next week (starting on Monday) and won't have much access to the Internet. So, I'll be offline for the duration --but looking forward to getting back a week from tomorrow!