By The Numbers



You can catch my interview with Chronicles host Mark Eller
on BlogTalkRadio tonight at 6:30 PM Eastern here.
(The interview will then become available as a podcast.)


The Stats, So Far

In less than a week and as of 10:07 AM Eastern on May 28, 2009, Covenant has been downloaded 163 times over at Manybooks.net.

In less than a day since being uploaded, Appetite has been downloaded 71 times from Manybooks.net, and has gotten one more download as I've been writing this entry.

In less than three weeks (since May 8), my own Deviations website has received almost 350 visits (almost 600 page views) from 32 countries/territories on six continents (all but Antarctica).

I am thrilled and grateful to all the readers out there who are getting to know my work!

The Madness To My Method
(continued...)


Recently I posted this on a discussion thread, answering someone who was considering self-publishing through Amazon's CreateSpace:


What I'm leery of is that through CreateSpace and BookSurge, Amazon would control distribution of both paper and electronic formats. For example, two of the e-book formats I offer for my own work are MOBI and PRC, for use with for Kindle or Kindle-compatible readers. To convert to those formats, I used readily-available freeware, and people who want those formats can download the files directly from my website anywhere in the world (and now from Manybooks.net, which offers even more formats). In contrast, if Amazon published my book(s) through BookSurge or CreateSpace, they would have the exclusive right to format the work for Kindle (which Amazon owns). That means that they would control not only distribution there, but people wanting electronic copies of the book would have to buy it from Amazon exclusively. Distribution rights are becoming at least as big now as rights concerning ownership of text. There are self-publishing outfits, like Lulu, that will print books without taking distribution rights -- though one Lulu package gives them those rights.

As of February 2009, Kindle was still not being sold overseas, nor were downloads of new work available from Amazon overseas, according to this New York Times blog entry.

Comments following the Times blog entry refer to international laws as being part of the problem.

Exclusive control can also lead to unresolved technical problems. See, for example, this post.

Given the rate at which software changes, by retaining control of my work and its distribution, I also have full freedom to upgrade my files if I think it's necessary.

Here's a primer on what can happen to authors' rights, at Simon & Schuster, for example.

Also check out this post about Amazon's new Encore program....

All six of my books are registered with the U.S. Copyright Office (the final two are being processed, but registration begins the day the books, forms, and fees are received). All six have ISBNs that I register with Bowker (the exclusive U.S. Registration Agency for ISBNs) prior to release. Currently, those ISBNs do not get me into major distribution channels, but they do get me into the system.

Lightning Source works with publishers and with individual authors solely as a printer. In this case, the author becomes the publisher. I'm currently looking into what they have to offer, particularly because they are linked to global distribution channels. Needless to say, I'm still learning my way around a constantly moving target.

I also recently posted this comment on Deatri King-Bey's blog entry, Unrealistic Expectations, in which she listed unrealistic expectations held by writers and asked her readers for more. I wrote:

1. Do not assume that a publisher or agent will accept your work, even if it is of high quality. “Fascinating premise, excellent writing, but we don’t think it would sell” is not an unusual rejection. Small presses are more likely to accept works that “don’t fit.”

2. Do not assume you will get money from a small press. Check them carefully and re-check regularly. Take, for example, what happened to romance publisher Triskelion here, where author properties are being held up in bankruptcy court; or my own cautionary tale here.

3. Do not assume that publishing behaves like other industries and tries to keep up with inflation. The same major magazine that bought a story of mine in 1984 for $450 recently bought a story of just about the same length for … $450.

4. Do not assume that to be a full-fledged writer, you must concentrate only on writing and writing courses. See author Crawford Killian’s excellent post, “The Education of a Writer,” here.

5. And read Marge Piercy’s powerful and empowering poem, “For the young who want to,” here.

6. Do not assume the industry makes any sense at all. I made $350 in 1986 from a sonnet (14 lines) and $375 in 2007 from a 500-word article, and have gotten contributor’s copies for pieces on which I’ve worked much harder.

7. Do not assume that being highly successful guarantees anything. Borders chose not to stock the latest novel by bestselling author Lois McMaster Bujold (who was Guest of Honor at last year’s Worldcon). Read about it here.

8. Do not assume that freebies don’t count. My book reviews for one magazine that paid only in contributor’s copies (and copies of the books I reviewed) were responsible for getting me a $30/hr writing gig with a major consulting firm back in the late 80s.

9. Do not assume that formatting doesn’t count. Read William Shunn’s formatting guide here. THEN check your individual market to see what its editor wants, because not everyone follows the standard. One story (for which I was paid $125 last year) had to be submitted in single-spaced 14-point Arial. I’ve heard editors on a panel say they’ve rejected works because the people submitting them did not follow directions. If you use the print version of Writer’s Market and the market you’re interested in has a website, check the website. If the print and web specs disagree (and I’ve found instances where they have), don’t be afraid to contact the publisher for the correct instructions.

10. Read, learn, research, do the work, and keep the faith. Heaven knows I’m still learning, and I feel as though I’m perpetually behind the curve.

I consider myself lucky. I came into writing with no expectations — my characters needed voice and I needed to give it to them. I started submitting stories when I was barely out of grade school, sending manuscripts by “Special Fourth Class” (what is now called Media Mail) because that’s all I could afford with my allowance. I didn’t want to be a writer “when I grew up” because I already was one, and whatever work I did supported the writing. I’ve been published (and collecting rejections) since the 1970s and still love what I’m doing.




Cover for Deviations: Covenant, Second EditionCover for Deviations: Appetite

Vol. 1, Deviations: Covenant (2nd Ed.)
Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite
Free downloads of both volumes here.



Go to Manybooks.net to access Covenant and Appetite in even more formats!

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License.


Oasis 22

Oasis Badge

Thanks to Juan Sanmiguel and the rest of the Oasis team for a terrific convention!

The day before Oasis, I returned home from errands to find a flock of ibises moseying around in the yard across the street.

Ibises in Light Rain 1

Eudocimus albus, Family Threskiornithidae. Says the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, "A wading bird of the deep South, the striking White Ibis is frequently seen on lawns looking for large insects as well as probing for prey along the shoreline."

Ibises in Light Rain 2

Adds eNature.com, "Around their colonies, ibises eat crabs and crayfish, which in turn devour quantities of fish eggs. By keeping down the numbers of crayfish, the birds help increase fish populations. In addition, their droppings fertilize the water, greatly increasing the growth of plankton, the basic food of all marsh life. White Ibises gather at dusk in spectacular roosts, long lines of birds streaming in from all directions."

In this video, the ibis with dark feathers on its side is a juvenile. One of the adults decided to check out the other side of the street and clearly wasn't impressed.

Ibises in a Neighbor's Yard, in Light Rain.


On Friday I drove to Oasis 22, hosted by the Orlando Area Science Fiction Society. At first I overshot the LaQuinta where I was staying, which wasn't difficult to do because it was tucked behind a Denny's. I pulled into an iHop parking lot to ask directions and came face to face with Tito and his lovely lady macaw, Scooby.

Tito and Scooby at iHop, Orlando

Tito works at the iHop. In a minute, Scooby and I were getting acquainted.

Elissa and Scooby at iHop, Orlando

Shortly thereafter, I picked up an education in Orlando's love of "No U-Turn" signs and got to see more of the city than I had planned, winding up at the Millennium Mall. I experienced deja-vu all over again as I again scooted down I-4, this time turning where I should have turned and settling, very briefly, into Room 253.

LaQuinta Rm. 253, Orlando

I shared this room and a sales table with Kathy Nappier. We had a roughly ten-mile drive to get to the convention hotel. My unplanned meandering led to my missing Kathy's arrival by just a few minutes. I did a quick shirt change, splashed water on my face, and high-tailed it to the Sheraton...

... and lost my way in torrential rain once I got off I-4 again. Pretty soon I was asking for directions for the second time that day, then wiping down my windows and mirrors because I was already having enough adventure without driving blind. By the time I reached the dealer room at the Sheraton I looked as though I'd just showered with my clothes on. Which I suppose I had.

Elissa at the Oasis Sales Table

I think I'm grinning like this because I plum survived the drive. My display included the paperback edition of Deviations: Covenant; e-books of Covenant and Vol 2., Appetite; 2009 Bram Stoker Award finalist Unspeakable Horror: From the Shadows of the Closet (Dark Scribe Press), which contains my story "Memento Mori;" IPPY Silver Medalist Riffing on Strings: Creative Writing Inspired by String Theory (Scriblerus Press), which contains my story "Arachne;" issue #14 of Hugo Award nominee Electric Velocipede, with my story "Hermit Crabs;" and cards advertising my upcoming interview (May 28, 2009, at 6:30 PM ET) on Chronicles (Blog Talk Radio), hosted by Mark Eller. My "Literary Busker" basket got a bit of response as well. In addition to selling paperbacks (yay!), I offered free CDs of the e-books and took a cue from street artists (buskers), who set out a basket for anyone who might want to respond to their performances with a bit of cash. That part was all purely voluntary, so I'd say my experiment with my own busker basket was a success.

K.L. Nappier at the Sales Table, Oasis

Kathy's display includes Full Wolf Moon (which I couldn't put down) and its sequel, Bitten (which I now have in my hot little hands), along with anthologies Twisted Tails II (with her story "The Thing Most Precious"), Twisted Tails III (with her story "Divine Messenger"), and Twisted Tails IV (with her story "Sex and the Emerald City").

Friday evening I caught this ferris wheel on pixel from the LaQuinta parking lot:

Fun Spot Ferris Wheel, Orlando, Florida


"Poetry Answers Art" was my first panel on Saturday, where I joined moderator Chris Ambrose, Bruce Boston, Marge Simon, John Tumlin, and Malcolm Deeley, all of us members of the Science Fiction Poetry Association. Photos from the panel will appear in the SFPA site's News section. We reconvened on Sunday morning for "Poetry Hour," a round-robin reading. In-between, I joined Marge, Malcolm, Glenda Finkelstein, Elenora Sabin, and Cheryl Wilson for "How to Make a World Believable."

And there was schmoozing to be had. Dinner with Marge, Bruce, and John on Friday night at the Sheraton; then with Kathy, William Hatfield, and William's wife Karen at Houlihan's on Saturday night. William and Karen sold jewelry next to us in the dealer room.

With Kathy Nappier and Gennita Low

Kathy and I pose with romance author Gennita Low, who with Kathy and others took the dais for the panel "Sookie, Anita, Bella, and the Vampire Next Door" late Friday night.

I was especially looking forward to seeing Paul Vincenti's latest and stunning painting "Calliope," the first of his Nine Muses series. I'd been following his progress with "Calliope" on Facebook and learned that he brings a newly completed "wet painting" to each convention he attends. And I got to see, once again, his awesome Four Seasons series in person. You can catch the quartet here.

(Another advantage of following Paul on Facebook is learning about videos like this one, in which he paints on the spot as pianist Jamila Tekalli performs Liszt's B minor Sonata at an artistic salon called Timucua. Wowowowowowow.)

I took my Ideapad with me, checking e-mail back at LaQuinta. Thanks go to Matthew McClintock at Manybooks.net for including Covenant on his site and providing even more download formats here; and to SFSignal for the listing!



Cover for Deviations: Covenant, Second EditionCover for Deviations: Appetite

Vol. 1, Deviations: Covenant (2nd Ed.)
Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite
Free downloads of both volumes here.



To access Covenant in even more formats, go to manybooks.net.

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License.

[end of entry]

Prepping for Oasis in Orlando

Free Rocket!
Taken at Oasis 20 in May 2007

I'll be at Oasis May 22-24. You can catch me sharing a dealer table with K.L. Nappier, and/or at the following panels:

Saturday, May 23, 10 AM: Poetry Answers Art
Saturday noon: How to Make a World Believable (originally called "Creating New Worlds"). I'm not on the schedule, but I've been welcomed to the dais.
Sunday, May 24, 11 AM: Poetry Hour

I'll have with me paperback copies of:

--Deviations: Covenant (First edition), Aisling Press. Free e-book downloads here.
--Riffing on Strings: Creative Writing Inspired by String Theory (Scriblerus Press), which contains my story "Arachne." Riffing on Strings is an IPPY Silver Medalist.
--Unspeakable Horror: From the Shadows of the Closet (Dark Scribe Press), which contains my story "Memento Mori." Unspeakable Horror is a Finalist for a Bram Stoker Award. Awards will be given this June by the Horror Writers Association.
--Electric Velocipede Issue #14, which leads off with my story "Hermit Crabs." EV has been nominated this year for a Hugo Award, which will be given at the World Science Fiction Convention (Anticipation, in Montreal).

That makes three stories appearing last year in publications that have either won or are up for awards this year. Not bad! :D

Cover for Deviations: Covenant, Second EditionCover for Deviations: Appetite
Vol. 1, Deviations: Covenant (2nd Ed.)
Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite
Free downloads here!

[end of entry]

You CAN Do This At Home!

My e-books are formatted for multiple e-book readers, but I don't have a reader, myself -- at least not yet. Thanks to Jeffrey A. Carver's website, I've been directed to places that supply free e-book reader and writer software. I've plugged the software into both my Thinkpad and my Ideapad.

One does not need an e-book reader like Kindle to read e-books. All the shots shown here were taken off my Ideapad screen.

When I started converting my work into e-books, my first stop after Carver's site was Mobipocket. There I created MOBI and PRC files suitable for Kindle and other readers. You can find the reader here.

Here's what the opening of Covenant (after the frontmatter) looks like on Mobipocket Reader:

Mobipocket Reader
Large view

My next stop was the highly versatile Calibre, with converters and viewers for multiple e-book formats. Here's what Calibre's main screen looks like:

Calibre
Large view

On Calibre I converted my MOBI file to EPUB (a much-liked format over at the MobileRead forums) and LRF (geared toward Sony readers). You can also get a Sony Library Reader here and access Stanza (for EPUB files) here.

Here's what the EPUB file looks like on Calibre's reader.

EPUB Viewer in Calibre
Large view

Then it was on to the Microsoft Reader website to create a LIT file. That conversion required the use of MS Word. But even if you don't have Word, you can get the reader, download a LIT file, and click on the file in your directory. It will open in the reader automatically.

Microsoft Reader

Large view

I accessed the Dropbook utility (for PDB files, readable on Palm and other handheld devices) and its free eReader here. This is what the reader looks like:

Palm eReader
Large view

My downloads are also available in HTML for direct reading off a browser, and in PDF for reading on Acrobat Reader.

My site includes a link to Ebookhood for iPod conversions. Covenant takes up 139 iPod notes. The formatting leaves a bit to be desired, especially since italics don't show up. Impractical from my standpoint, but still pretty cool.

Covenant on iPod

Being able to read e-books also gives me access to a large library of free resources. Here are a few, in addition to the MobileRead forums cited above:

Drs. Cavanaugh eBook Libraries
Feedbooks
PDF Books
eBooks4Free
Diesel eBooks
SF & Fantasy Books Online
WOWIO Free Books
Book Glutton
ManyBooks.net


Cover for Deviations: Covenant, Second EditionCover for Deviations: Appetite
Vol. 1, Deviations: Covenant (2nd Ed.)
Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite
Free downloads here!

[end of entry]

Riffing on Strings Receives IPPY Silver Medal

Readercon, Broad Universe Table
Riffing on Strings at the Broad Universe table, Readercon, July 2008.

Riffing on Strings: Creative Writing Inspired by String Theory (Scriblerus Press), which contains my story "Arachne," has won an IPPY Silver Medal. Details here.

"Arachne" originally appeared in the Dec. 1988 issue of Aboriginal Science Fiction. Writing it was a fabulous ride that I blogged about here.

The anthology includes fiction, poetry, essays, artwork, and a play. Congratulations to editors Sean Miller and Shveta Verma and to all contributors! Ordering info here.




Cover for Deviations: Covenant, Second EditionCover for Deviations: Appetite

Vol. 1, Deviations: Covenant (2nd Ed.)
Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite
Free downloads here!

Seen on Sunday's Walk

Magnolia Blossom

Magnolia blossom.

Storm Clouds With Pine

Storm clouds with pine.

Manatee Says Please Recycle

Manatee says, "Please Recycle." This dumpster sits beside an auto repair shop around the corner from our local post office.




Cover for Deviations: Covenant, Second EditionCover for Deviations: Appetite

Vol. 1, Deviations: Covenant (2nd Ed.)
Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite
Free downloads here!

Appetite Live for Download!

Cover for Deviations: Appetite
Incorporates this shot from June 2006.

Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite, is now live! Download it for free here -- or download Vol. 1, Covenant, here. My current plans are to release Vol. 3, Destiny, this December.

And tune in on May 28th at 6:30 PM ET to hear me on Blogtalk radio. I'll be Mark Eller's guest on Chronicles, a joint project of The Write Stuff and Shadow Play Entertainment.

My travels this year have decreased due to various life events, but I still plan to make it to Oasis, the annual convention sponsored by the Orlando Area Science Fiction Society, May 22-24. Panels I'm scheduled for will include "Poetry Answers Art" and "Poetry Hour," and I've been asked to be on the dais for "Creating New Worlds."

Deviations Display
A display for my sales table.

Deviations CDs
CDs containing both Covenant and Appetite.

I'll have for sale copies of the paperback version of Covenant, Riffing on Strings: Creative Writing Inspired by String Theory (Scriblerus Press), Bram Stoker Award finalist Unspeakable Horror: From the Shadows of the Closet (Dark Scribe Press), and issue #14 of Hugo Award nominee Electric Velocipede.

Award-winning author K.L. Nappier will join me at the sales table, and I am looking forward to snagging a copy of Bitten, the sequel to Full Wolf Moon. A werewolf tale set in a Japanese internment camp during World War II, Full Wolf Moon caused me to stay up well past my bedtime because I couldn't put it down. It's an action piece/thriller that also makes you think.




Cover for Deviations: Covenant, Second EditionCover for Deviations: Appetite

Vol. 1, Deviations: Covenant (2nd Ed.)
Vol. 2, Deviations: Appetite
Free downloads here!

Raven Throne - Tenyu Skvoz' Smert' (2008) (Raventhrone (Blr)) (320 KBPS)





Genre: (Melodic) Black Metal, Pagan Metal
About: Very nice, fairly straightforward Black Metal with Melodic and Pagan influences. From Bulgaria. Very good Production Quality. If you like these genres you will like this.

Download pt 1
Download pt 2