Archive for the ‘News and Notices from the Writing Trenches’ Category

News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #32…

Friday, August 10th, 2012

#183:  Welcome Brits!  The newsletter “Publishing Poynters” pointed to the following stat:  eBooks are outselling pBooks now at Amazon/UK!  I have noticed an uptick in interest among Brits for my eBooks.  That’s understandable.  Many of my books are international in flavor.  Perhaps I should say, “Welcome international readers!”  Although I’m partial to Jameson’s and other fine Irish whiskeys, I think the whole UK rocks.  In fact, all of Europe rocks.  I have fond memories of my sojourns there.  It’s natural that this propagates through my books, from London’s Trafalgar Square to Barcelona’s Botanic Gardens to Paris’ Rue Rivoli to Brindisi’s port (have fun associating these with my different books).  I know readers love to revisit sites they are fond of too.

That’s why I must apologize for an enormous gaffe that I can’t seem to fix.  I recently entered some of my books in an eBook directory, eBook Heaven, and entered dollars for the prices.  Senior moment?  Whatever.  I know, of course, that prices there are in pounds.  All I had to do was go to Amazon/UK and search for my books.  Since I can’t even remember the prices in dollars, I went to the U.S. Amazon site instead—big gaffe.  (By the way, my website takes the reader to the U.S. Amazon site—Brits and other UK people, French, and others should adjust accordingly.)

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #31…

Friday, July 27th, 2012

#176:  Review.  For those readers who didn’t read my review of Carolyn J. Rose’s Through a Yellow Wood, you should.  It’s the sequel to her Hemlock Lake.  I’ve added her book to the “Steve’s Bookshelf” page on my website.  In my review, I nitpicked the title.  Let me officially apologize to Carolyn here.  Poetry is not my forte.  She informed me that the title is similar to a line from Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken.”  Frost’s poem considers choices in life and is therefore appropriate for this excellent mystery.

#177:  No attacks from the mommy-porn troops?  I was expecting some for my mini-review of the Fifty Shades trilogy last Wednesday.  Yes, I know, reading tastes are completely subjective, but I’m incapable of understanding the popularity of these three books.  Similar books used to come in plain, brown paper wrappers—hard to do with eBooks, I guess.

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #30…

Friday, July 6th, 2012

#171:  Inexpensive summer reading?  For Kindle users, check out my entire catalog on Amazon.  For Nook and other non-Kindle users, remember that Full Medical is on sale in Smashwords’ Summer/Winter promotion at 50% off.  You will need a coupon and your code is SSW50.  Better yet, buy the entire “Clones and Mutants Series” (Full Medical + Evil Agenda) for hours of entertainment and excitement—another type of roller coaster, perhaps.  For young adults and adults young at heart, try The Secret Lab—also a bargain at $0.99, either on Amazon or Smashwords.  For hardcore lovers of trade paperbacks, you will find those on Amazon too.  Happy summer!

#172:  Good plot, good acting, and good music.  Moonrise Kingdom is a quiet but intense little movie even when the action picks up.  Two young kids learn how to love, but this is not like a young adult novel.  Well, maybe, because the adults are the flawed personalities here.  Bill Murray and Bruce Willis shine as they take their acting to another level.  I have two regrets:  I would have liked to see a book where the character studies in the movie were made more profound as one can only do on the printed page; I would have also liked it to be a bit less predictable.

About the music:  My first taste of classical music was Orff’s Carmina Burana.  As with literature, I developed an appetite for the unusual early on.  I can’t remember when I first discovered Britten’s Noye’s Fludde, but it wasn’t long after Orff’s masterpiece.  In keeping with my rebellious nature, I didn’t hear Britten’s better known Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra until much later in high school.  Moonrise Kingdom uses both Britten pieces in a clever fashion.  The singing of the Victorian naval hymn “Eternal Father, Strong to Save” from Noye’s Fludde occurs as the hurricane floods the tiny New England island where the story takes place.  Perfect!  Maestro Britten must be smiling.

#173:  LOL, OMG.  Are people reading more?  If I remember correctly (computer woes have numbed my brain—see #174), Fifty Shades will be the first eBook to hit 1,000,000 in sales on Amazon.  (I believe someone else has sold more than 1,000,000 books, but he or she had several books.)  Are people taking better care of themselves?  The eBook about the OMG diet has taken off and earned its British author a juicy publishing deal.

In fact, both the answers to the questions above are “No!”  People who read perhaps are reading more—inexpensive eBooks and eReaders have made reading easier—but people who download Fifty Shades or buy it in trade paperback format are not reading.  They’re giving into their S&M curiosity, a pornographic voyeurism in non-visual format.  In addition, the OMG diet is a fad and definitely not recommended to improve your health.

Of course, the morning ice bath in the OMB diet might help you cool down after a sizzling night of turning the pages of Fifty Shades.  Or, maybe the latter should be on the list of non-fiction bestsellers as a how-to book?  In that case, the morning ice bath might definitely be required.

#174:  For writers and readers with blogs:  Are you using WordPress?  I recently upgraded to 3.4.1 and the editors “More” button stopped working.  Returning to the previous version seems counter-productive because the upgrades are more in the line of security patches.  However, the WP forums are mute about this problem.  If you have any info about this, drop me an e-mail, please.  Otherwise, readers of my posts will continue to see the full page.  I like the “More” button on other blogs because it allows me to read a bit before deciding to read the whole post.  I assume my blog readers feel the same way.  If so, I apologize—but maybe you’ll find some rewards in those unusually pithy endings?

#175:  Boycott of the new Tom Cruise movie?  Will you join me in this?  After umpteen novels about the iconic Jack Reacher, I’ve developed a mind’s-eye image of Lee Childs’ protagonist, even with Lee’s sparse prose.  I’m surprised Mr. Childs went along with it (maybe he had no choice?), but Tom Cruise is about as far from my image of Jack Reacher as any male could be.  What’s he going to do?  Wear foot-high elevator shoes and shoulder pads and mess up that pretty face?  I doubt it.  This is one movie that I definitely won’t see!  If you feel the same way, join my boycott.

By the way, I call the boycott “Steve Moore’s Anti-Cruise Missile.”  I never thought Tom could act.  Minority Report, a favorite Phillip K. Dick story of mine, was ruined by his acting.  Jamie Foxx stole the show in another movie.  I went to War of the Worlds and he and the screaming kid ruined that for me too.  I didn’t go to any of the Mission Impossible movies, but just their trailers confirmed his lack of acting ability.  Hollywood casting people have exhibited their stupidity by featuring him in too many thrillers.  But casting him as Jack Reacher?  C’mon people!

In libris libertas….     

News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #29…

Friday, June 29th, 2012

#163:  The free promo is over but Pop Two Antacids… is still a bargain!  The Fathers’ Day promo of Pop Two Antacids and Have Some Java is over.  (If you missed it, you can still download the book—only $0.99 from Amazon.)  I thank all readers who downloaded it…enjoy!  I’d like to send a special thanks to European readers.  Detectives Chen and Castilblanco are New Yorkers first and foremost, but they often resonate with readers across the U.S., Canada, and overseas, so welcome!  Mystery, suspense, and thrills seem to be universal.  I hope all readers enjoy these stories as much as I did writing them!  By the way, you can share more adventures with Chen and Castilblanco by downloading the novels The Midas Bomb and Angels Need Not Apply.

#164:  Not free, but 50% off!  You might recall that Full Medical is back on Smashwords.  Just for readers using Nook, iPad, Sony, and other non-Kindle eReaders, it’s also on sale!  50% off from July 1 through July 31.  This sale requires a coupon and your coupon number is SSW50.  See the Summer/Winter sale on Smashwords (winter for the southern hemisphere, of course).  Note that Evil Agenda is about the same price.  Why not buy the entire “Clones and Mutants Series”?  You’ll have many hours of enjoyable and exciting summer reading!

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #28…

Friday, June 15th, 2012

#157:  New!  Look for Pop Two Antacids and Have Some Java.  My new short story eBook anthology will be released exclusively on Amazon KDP Select.  Free over this Fathers’ Day weekend—this Saturday, Sunday, and Monday.  If you enjoyed NYPD detectives Chen and Castilblanco in The Midas Bomb and Angels Need Not Apply, you will enjoy these new cases starring the detective duo.  And, if you were reluctant to buy the novels, this is a painless way to meet these two crack detectives!  You will learn more about them and enjoy the thrills and suspense as they unravel some strange cases.

Either free or priced at $0.99 after Fathers’ Day weekend, this collection is inexpensive entertainment to take with you on summer vacation.  Enjoy!  (For those in the know, Castilblanco pops Tums to counteract the acid from the coffee.  Tums are to him like lollipops to Kojak.  I don’t mind using product names in my stories—be assured that these are not paid advertisements!  Nevertheless, I thought it was appropriate not to put a product name in a title.  What do you think?)

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #27…

Friday, May 25th, 2012

#153: Last gasp for relevance or a really neat idea?  Esquire Magazine recently announced that it will start publishing eBooks devoted to “men’s fiction.”  Besides the question in my subtitle, there are two other questions that jump to my mind here:  (1) Why in the world would an author want to (a) bury his struggle for name recognition in the shrouds of an irrelevant magazine and (b) let them rake off the profits to earn the measly royalty percentages that big publishers pay?  (2) What the hell is men’s fiction?

First, the question in the subtitle.  I don’t know if Esquire has an eZine edition (call it eSquire?).  Since it has a tradition of glossy fluff appropriate for doctors’ waiting rooms, heavy on the graphics and light on content, I don’t know if an eZine edition is appropriate.  I just know I wouldn’t buy an eBook just because it’s produced by Esquire.  Yes, I know they have a fiction tradition (notably the Napkin Fiction Project of 2007), but I still can’t get past the gloss.

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #26…

Friday, May 4th, 2012

#149:  Those readers who have read my Soldiers of God and, to a lesser extent, some of my other books, know I’m concerned with both kinds of terrorism, home-grown and imported.  In fact, Soldiers portrayed the dangers of the home-grown kind long before the DHS made it a priority.  In that book and elsewhere (including the articles in this blog), I have discussed the distinction between spirituality and fundamentalism.

Many people, from U.S. presidents to megachurch ministers, claim to talk to God, to have a one-on-one with the Old Lady who can explain everything science can’t possibly explain.  I always thought this was part of spirituality and, in some sense, admired people who could do it, although I knew the Old Lady had to be really good at multitasking to talk with everyone.  Now a new book by T. M. Luhrmann, When God Talks Back, paints this as something belonging to neither spirituality nor fundamentalism (by the way, the eBook breaks my price barrier since it’s priced at $14.99).  From what I understand about Mr. Luhrmann’s thesis, the person who talks with God is simply having a schizophrenic conversation with a section of his mind he or she has created and called God.

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #25…

Friday, April 20th, 2012

#145: What’s next on my agenda?  While I’ve been thinking lately that my muses have discovered tasers, torturing me and Donna Carrick of Carrick Publishing to release my next books, I want to slow down a bit and think about what my next releases will be.  I have a plethora of old and new ideas.  It’s good to reassess which ones I will follow through on in the immediate future.  Here are some of my thoughts.

I liked both my old character, the DHS agent Ashley Scott, and the new one, Mossad agent Judy Epstein—two strong women you will find helping detectives Chen and Castilblanco in Angels Need not Apply (although Judy works behind the scenes).  Perhaps they deserve a more important role.  That would be something new to explore in my writing.  Although I haven’t neglected writing about strong women—Dao-Ming Chen and the two agents named above are but three examples—sometimes a character grabs a taser from a muse and goes at me too.

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #24…

Friday, April 13th, 2012

#141:  In case you missed them:  Angels Need Not Apply, the sequel to The Midas Bomb, and Sing a Samba Galactica, the sequel to Survivors of the Chaos, have been released through Carrick Publishing.  Just in time for that school holiday with the children…ha!  Nevertheless, good spring and summer reading, whether on the porch with a mojito or at the beach with a piña colada.

#142: Wish I could spruce myself up as easily as Monkey C Media did my website!  Check it out.  The “Steve’s Writing” webpage was getting too long.  Like a good amoeba, it divided into “Books and Short Stories” and “Join the Conversation.”  New stuff:  All my glorious bookcovers—the last few eBook covers provided by Donna Carrick of Carrick Publishing—now line the RHS of the afore-mentioned new webpages; you’ll find two new pics of your favorite author (still from our trip to Ireland—there’s a theme here, as book critics say, and its alcoholic); and the contests have been simplified and reflect my current focus on eBooks.  BTW, I read somewhere that Google now emphasizes content for website ranking.  We indie readers and writers can help each other there—hence my comments in “Join the Conversation” and providing a pseudo-press kit.

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News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #23…

Friday, April 6th, 2012

#135: Two new eBooks for your spring and summer reading!  Angels Need Not Apply, the sequel to The Midas Bomb, pits your favorite NYPD detectives Chen and Castilblanco against terrorists and a Mexican cartel.  Castilblanco gets personal when an FBI agent’s son is murdered.  Chen steps out of her stoic oriental shell to have a hot and heavy romance.

Sing a Samba Galactica, the sequel to Survivors of the Chaos, is an epic sci-fi saga that takes you on a whirlwind tour around the galaxy.  Learn what becomes of Billy Clarke, the irascible Mayor of the New Haven colony in the 82 Eridani system; and Brent Mueller and Jenny Wong, last seen on Helene, a moon of Saturn.  Follow the high- and low-tech battles as Humans match wits with the xenophobic Tali invaders.  And more!

Both books are available at Amazon’s Kindle Select.  Angels goes for $4.99 and Samba for $5.99.  Download them now to have hours of entertainment just a point and click away.

#136:  Many kudos and many thanks again to Donna Carrick at Carrick Publishing.  The two new books mentioned above were formatted by Donna in record time.  She also did the covers (with a few inputs from me), turning a sow’s ear into a silk purse, to borrow the adage.  At the risk of overloading her with work (Donna and hubby Alex are both gifted and clever writers), I would like to recommend Donna and Carrick Publishing for your eBook releases—editing, formatting, and cover work.  (I also recommend that you read her and Alex’ books.)

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