Archive for October 2011

News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #5…

Friday, October 28th, 2011

#29:  I was very pleased to see The Secret Lab appearing on Holly Hook’s bargain eBooks list (my book is #354).  For avid readers, this is a wonderful list of inexpensive but worthwhile eBooks—ideal for giving e-stocking stuffers to your favorite person(s) for the holidays, for example.  For writers, if your eBook is priced low enough, Holly’s list is a good place to list it—it will help you build your platform.  The URL is: http://bargainebooks.blogspot.com.

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What will become of Iraq?

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

Indeed, what will become of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Iraq and Afghanistan?  The problem with nation building is that it makes two assumptions:  (1) That the representative governments found in Western democracies offer useful models for governing human beings; and (2) people coming out from under the yoke of a strongman dictatorship will want to adopt some form of government based on one of these models.  I contend that these two assumptions are wrong.

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #4…

Friday, October 21st, 2011

#21:  There was an interesting frontpage article in Monday’s N.Y. Times about Amazon going into the legacy publishing business.  Well, not really.  What I gleaned from the article is that Amazon has a secret board of editors who cherry pick from all the self-published books, both trade paperbacks and eBooks, and offer some contracts.  The conditions of the contracts are also secret.  No agents are involved, but authors can get advances.  The slushpile here is all self-published material found on Amazon.  (See also #28.)

This is yet another nail in the coffin of the legacy paradigm and the legacy publishers are running scared.  They probably shouldn’t worry just yet, but it doesn’t help when they punish an author who has gone the legacy route for one book self-publishes another (the case is also mentioned in the same article).  The legacy publishers’ control of bookstores has already suffered—every bookstore that closes provides additional nails for their coffins.  Exciting times.  We authors are wondering how it will all shake out.  Readers can only expect to gain by the changing paradigm (more books to choose from).  The bottom line is that only authors and readers are needed in tomorrow’s publishing world.

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #3…

Friday, October 14th, 2011

#15:  Joe Konrath has spoken about the gate-keeping mentality of agents.  It’s obvious, of course, why they don’t like eBook self-publishing.  Joining the ranks still propagating the myth of legacy publishers (this myth states that an author needs an agent, editor, publisher, and publicist, although the agent only gets you out of the slushpile and to the publisher, and the publisher rarely helps you with marketing, while all four reduce your royalties to nothing), the author will find many reviewers.  Among these, one will find those who concentrate on “literary fiction” (they generally also refuse to consider anything self-published—I refrain from giving examples, some of them very well known).

This sort of snobbishness is exactly what I was talking about in my blog post “Writing for Readers”—these reviewers comprise the old boys’ club of literature.  Of course, I’m biased too!  I think “literary fiction” is a genre name that is snobbish all by itself since it implies that all other fiction is not literary.

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Writing for readers…

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

I generally am happy to see a WD in my mailbox (that’s Writer’s Digest, in case you’re wondering if I’m missing an M).  Nevertheless, I’ve always thought the apostrophe is misplaced and lately there has been this nagging suspicion that their editorial board just doesn’t get it.  Joe Konrath has a better perspective on the industry (unfortunately, his participation in his blog is going on a hiatus).  However, he doesn’t get it completely either.

WD still propagates the myth of legacy publishing (this myth states that an author needs an agent, an editor, publisher, and publicist, with one of the Big Six providing the first two of the last three, the agent taking a hefty cut just for getting an MS , short for manuscript, beyond the slush pile where all unagented MSs go, and the author generally providing his or her own marketing–in other words, he or she can contract the publicist.  Joe and others like Barry Eisler have shown that the Big Six publishing houses are now built on sand and moreover have their heads buried in it.  Sure, they’re trying to invade and control the new digital paradigm, now revolutionized by eBooks, but they’re choking—they still live their myth and are making badly formatted eBooks at exorbitant prices (one that I will not name created a mini-scandal when people started complaining about formatting and price).

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #2…

Friday, October 7th, 2011

#8:  Look for my short story “The Bridge” in the October edition of eFiction magazine.  I highly recommend this eZine to every reader…something for everyone!  It is available online for free and as an inexpensive Kindle subscription on Amazon (the latter has a free trial offer).

#9:  The Perseus Books Group has announced a new eBook formatting service.  As I understand it, this service will primarily be offered through agents to authors they are representing, but MAYBE to some indie authors.  Duh!  I’m sure indie authors will rush to use this service.  Whoops!  They still have to find an agent.  Since every agent is wondering what to do in this digital revolution when authors really don’t need them, I suppose this is a bow to that disappearing profession.  Don’t get me wrong—all that agent expertise is very valuable.  However, this is not the place for it!

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Steve Jobs, Mr. User Friendly…

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

I never met the man, although I can say he was very much a part of my life—for most of my life as a scientist, at least.  He was the consummate snake-oil salesman, giving most people what they needed and convincing them they needed it whether they knew they needed it or not.  While that need was often a fix to satisfy an addiction to new technology—in other words, a perceived need, as a child needs new toys—there is no doubt that he was a genius in bringing to market many user-friendly devices that have changed how the world uses computers.

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Scientists and politicians…

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

On Tuesday, I received an “urgent alert to the APS membership:  funding cuts to NSF, NIST.”  Let me translate the acronymese.  APS is the American Physical Society.  I’m a member.  Although I am now a full-time writer, I used to be a physicist, among other things (people have called me many things, in fact).  NSF, of course, is the National Science Foundation.  NIST is the lesser known National Institute of Standards and Technology (the name is a late addition, probably to get more funding—it used to be called National Bureau of Standards).  The issue is that the Senate Appropriations Committee, that august body of mostly senile and small-minded thinkers who often sit in the Senate for a lifetime, has proposed cuts to both NSF and NIST in its FY 2012 budget for Commerce, Justice and Science agencies.  (Since NIH, the National Institutes of Health, does research for the drug companies, I’m not sure whether they’re a commerce or science agency, but they weren’t mentioned by APS.)

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