Saturday, December 31, 2011

Wanna Be in Print?

All the buzz is about e-books, but we can’t forget print. With that in mind, I came across a good article on self-pubbing your book in print form. It’s not too long, but the author, Kim Komando, offers tips on publishing your own book.

She list three print-on-demand sites: Lulu.com, Blurb.com and CreateSpace.com, then tells you the basics about each and their good and bad points, as she sees them. She also touches on the cost of using each. In her opinion, CreateSpace wins price-wise over the other two, but she warns that you also need to check other factors specific to your book.

She then goes into marketing and how each site rates on getting your book out to the public – and points out that once you self-publishing, you have to do the marketing and you’ll have little help, unless you’re willing to pay for that.

I think the article is a pretty straight-forward breakdown of the ins and outs. So, if you’re thinking of doing your own print book, give it a read. I’d love to hear what any of you would like to add.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Book Review: Game Face

Over the holidays, I downloaded and read Game Face by Mark Troy. Game Face is a collection of 8 short stories featuring Val Lyon, plus a sample chapter from Pilikia Is My Business, the novel Troy wrote which stars her. (If you want to know how to pronounce “pilikia,” just read the preface in Game Face.)

One great thing about Game Face is that through this book, we get to know more about Val Lyon. The thread tying all the stories together, other than that they each star Val, is that they all focus on some type of sport. Some people may think female PIs aren’t believable because … how tough can a woman be? Read Game Face and Val will show you.

Game Face will allow you to see deeper into Val Lyon. Even if you don’t plan to get Pilikia Is My Business, each story in Game Face stands alone and each one shows Val in a different sport, from skydiving to open-ocean canoe racing to beach volleyball to professional basketball to golf to rodeo to surfing. As a bonus, they’re all set in Hawaii! Plus, in one of the stories, you get to meet Moon Ito. Troy refers to Moon as Val Lyon’s “sidekick.” Since reading Pilikia Is My Business and the short story Teed Off in this book, I think of him as a brick wall – one I would not want to run into. ‘Course, I would not want to get crosswise with Val either. I would, however, like to read another book about her. Hint, hint.

Kindle

Amazon

CreateSpace

Smashwords

I give Game Face a rating of Hel-of-a-Character.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FTC Disclaimer: I know Mark Troy online and as a friend. I also was invited by him to speak at a workshop/conference put on by the Brazos Writers. None of this influenced my review. Another thing that did not influence me was his bio, or “About the Author,” in the back of the book. I was impressed, though. He served in the Peace Corps in Thailand, attended graduate school in Hawaii, and is now an administrator and researcher at Texas A&M University. But, hey, I have a bio, too. I swam as a mermaid, I went to graduate school in San Marcos, Texas, and there’s a teeny bit of a chance I might get to go to Hawaii this year. If it happens, I’m going to look for Val and Moon. See if they know what’s holding up the next book in the Val Lyon series.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

E-book Pricing

GigaOm wonders if publishers are missing the point on e-book prices. Lately, I’ve seen lots of people asking the same thing.

Publishers signed a deal with Amazon that allowed Amazon to cut prices if they wanted to. But they signed a deal with Apple that allowed the publishers to control their e-book prices. So…while Amazon cuts prices and sells many copies … publishers keep the same books at a higher cost on Apple and sell fewer copies. Meanwhile, independent authors publish their own books and usually set their prices low when they can and sell more copies.

According to the GigaOm article, publishers “claim that consumers are actually willing to pay more for the e-book version of a novel because of the convenience and other features that they get with an electronic edition…”

And yet, in the same article, a reader said:
Q: It’s hard to justify the purchase of e-books that are priced at $10 to $15 when you can buy the real book on Amazon used for $2 or $3. EQ

And here’s another kick in the gut for publishers:
Q: … high prices for mainstream e-books could easily convince more readers to try self-published novels from authors using Amazon’s Kindle publishing platform — since many of them are priced at $5 or cheaper. EQ

Of course, you and I out here in the real world already know that independent authors of e-books are making serious headway into the top sales figures already.

What category are you in? Keep prices low for e-books? Keep them all high? Give authors more input into the pricing of their books when done via an agent or publisher? Should authors jump from the publisher’s ship and dive into the self-publishing Sea of E-books?

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Merry Christmas

I hope everyone has a wonderful, safe, happy Christmas.

Both of my kids will be home, which will make for a great Christmas. Every year, I make eggnog for Christmas Eve. And every year they groan and won’t drink it, no matter whether I buy it at the store or make it from scratch, whether it’s virgin eggnog or has alcohol in it (they’re both grown). They hate eggnog. So last year I gave up and made hot chocolate instead. Neither of them were happy. They wanted to know where the eggnog was. Turns out, they hate eggnog, but love the tradition of me trying to get them to drink it. So, we’ll be having eggnog tonight. It’s officially a Ginger Tradition.

What Christmas tradition does your family have?

Thursday, December 22, 2011

The Future of Textbooks?

The New York Times has an article about a textbook called Principles of Biology which may give us an idea of what textbooks will soon look like. First of all, it’s a digital-only book.
 The pages have some pizazz: they are replete with punchy, interactive electronic features — from dynamic illustrations to short quizzes meant to involve students rather than letting them plod, glassy-eyed, from one section to the next. Audio and video clips are woven into the text.
Not only those, but the illustrations are interactive.
 As students learn about the genetic code, for example, they can match amino acids to corresponding sequences on the double helix to understand how an entire protein emerges from genetic sequences.
Other publishers are experimenting along these same lines. For example, with the textbook “Calculus”:
Students can manipulate 650 interactive figures, including graphs of functions, derivatives, and integrals, as they learn the basics of calculus.
With another interactive tool, readers can binarize an image of Lady Gaga.

It seems to me that these new tools in digital textbooks could do a lot to draw students in to the lessons and, thus, learn more. I think I would have enjoyed these kinds of “books” back when I was in high school or college.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Amazon Bestsellers

I was a bit disappointed when I read an ad piece on Advert. Of the top 10 best-selling books on Amazon in 2011, only two were “independently” published.

Here is the list of those 10 books:
“Steve Jobs” by Walter Isaacson
“Bossypants” by Tina Fey
“A Stolen Life” by Jaycee Dugard
“The Mill River Recluse” by Darcie Chan
“In the Garden of the Beasts” by Erik Larson
“A Dance with Dragons” by George R.R. Martin
“The Paris Wife” by Paula McLain
“The Litigators” by John Grisham
“The Abbey” by Chris Culver
“Inheritance (The Inheritance Cycle)” by Christopher Paolini

Of those, only “The Mill River Recluse” and “The Abbey” were indirectly published via Kindle Direct Publishing and did not have a print edition.

Do you have a favorite eBook that you thought should have been a best-seller?

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Book Review: Raising Abel

 Raising Abel by Carolyn Nash is a memoir. It’s not her life story from birth to now. It’s more of a telling of a certain time in her life. Raising Abel covers the period of Nash’s life from when she adopted Abel until he is grown.

This book scared me. Made me laugh. Made me want to cry. Amazed me by Nash’s honesty and no holds barred way of telling her story. I may read it again, only this time, I’ll read more slowly instead of rushing to find out what happened next.

You get an idea of the story to come when you read the opening paragraph in the Prologue:
Abel came into the kitchen while I was scrambling some eggs. “I’m going to kill you with a big knife,” he said shyly.
Nash is brave. Her story is told without sugar coating – for her or for Abel. And anyone who believes a woman who adopts a child cannot feel the same depth of love for that child as a woman who gave birth to a child should read this book.

Amazon

Kindle

Raising Abel is the most honest memoir I’ve read. I most definitely give Raising Abel a rating of Hel-of-a-Story.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FTC Disclaimer: The author made this book available for me to download. Although I thought that was very nice of her, it did not influence my review. I was influenced by Carolyn Nash’s perseverance, her commitment to loving Abel, and her honesty not just about Abel but about herself. By the end, I wanted her to write the next story of her and Abel. I want to know where their lives go from here. I also want my family not to search the house for Christmas presents while I’m at Barnes & Noble wrapping gifts to raise funds for the Bess Whitehead Scott Scholarship Fund. To anyone not in my family, but looking for places to hide gifts, I recommend the freezer, the attic, the dirty clothes hamper, and the cleaning supply cabinet.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Déjà Vu

Today, I’m participating in the Déjà Vu Blogfest. This is my Déjà Vu All Over Again Post. If you’d like to read other such posts, click on the Déjà Vu picture in the sidebar.


Early one morning, I came into work, expecting it to be just another day of picnicking underwater, doing ballets and waving from the volcano at guests. When I got backstage, though, I discovered it was not to be just another day. Although we were having overcast weather, elsewhere, days ago, the weather had been stormy and rain had fallen in giant buckets. That “elsewhere” was where the springs at Aquarena Springs got its water. It rains there, filters down into the sub-levels and eventually rises in the hundreds of springs where I swam.

We were expecting a huge amount of water -- so much that all workers were assigned jobs to save the show area. The volcano and submarine could float, although they might lose some anchors. But… heavens to Betsy… Ralph(s) was in danger. Ralph, in case you’re just joining in on these tales, was Ralph the Swimming Pig, the most famous performer. (Don’t tell anyone, but there was always at least two Ralphs since, unlike human performers, Ralph wasn’t allowed to swim two shows in a row.) So Ralph and Ralph had to be moved to high ground.

At the time, we had two swans in the show area (someday I’ll tell a tale about them). They can swim, but since management didn’t want them to be able to swim right out of the show area in the high water, they had to be corralled and moved to high ground. Have you ever tried to corral a swan?

All kinds of stuff had to be tied down. Management wanted us to move the catfish that was older than sin and bigger than a zip car to a more secure place. If you think swans are difficult to wrangle, try moving a big ol’ bottom dwelling catfish. We got the swans moved, but not the catfish.

They wanted us to move the ducks, but, come on, ducks can fly.

Finally, the Ralphs, the swans, the volcano were all rescued or tied down or set free.

Then, we, the performers, were told to get in and swim the late morning show. (Shows you what the pecking order was.)

Being spring-fed, the waters in the show area were always crystal clear. That day, the water was so murky it was almost like trying to see through a wall. I could put my hand up about a foot in front of my and not be able to see my fingers. The girls moved ballet up close to the sub, did our moves, then held out our hands, hoping the guys holding the air hoses would spot our palms and give us air. The water was so cloudy the audience inside of the sub would not have been able to see us picnicking on our lily pads, so we took our picnic bags, swam right up to the sub windows, held on to the window frame and ate our celery and drank our punch. Then we turned and swam back toward the volcano, hoping we weren’t wandering off in the wrong direction.

After the show, we headed up top to wave goodbye to the audience as they exited the submarine. An audience that consisted of one man and his dog.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Deja Vu Blogfest

I’m sharing two things with you today.

First, come back tomorrow. It’s not my usual day to post, but I’m participating in the Deja Vu Blogfest. I’ll be posting a way-back post (or better known as a repeat post). If you click on the Deja Vu Blogfest picture in the sidebar on the right, you’ll be taken to a list of the folks participating in the fun. There are well over a hundred blogs to choose from.

Second, I got the funniest Christmas card from Kaye Publicity. On the outside there’s a picture of a woman with a young girl in her lap. The caption is:
Q: Sometimes when an agent and editor love each other very much, they have lunch. And that’s how books are made. EQ

Hope to “see” you tomorrow!

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Selling Print Books

It seems like all the news lately is about iBooks. But there is some interesting news about print books. The New York Times recently had an article about how publishers are giving print books a makeover in an attempt to boost sales – and just in time for Christmas.
 Many new releases have design elements usually reserved for special occasions — deckle edges, colored endpapers, high-quality paper and exquisite jackets that push the creative boundaries of bookmaking.
What publishers are doing is adding extras that might appeal to readers or making some books more beautiful and interesting.
For publishers, the strategy has a clear payoff: to increase the value of print books and build a healthy, diverse marketplace that includes brick-and-mortar bookstores and is not dominated by Amazon and e-books …. There are indications that an exquisitely designed hardcover book can keep print sales high and cut into e-book sales.
Publishers hope readers will see their enhanced print books and say, Now there’s a book worth buying and keeping.

How many of you are giving print books or Christmas? Are they regular books or special “beautiful” books? Or are you giving e-books?

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Definition of Success

Exactly what is success? I thought about that as I read a Wall Street Journal article about an author named Darcie Chan. This past summer her debut e-book, The Mill River Recluse, came out.
It has sold more than 400,000 copies and landed on the best-seller lists alongside brand-name authors like Michael Connelly, James Patterson and Kathryn Stockett.
That sounds like success to me.

And yet … she was rejected by a dozen publishers and more than 100 literary agents. So she e-published it herself. Then she went beyond just publishing it:
She bought some ads on Web sites targeting e-book readers, paid for a review from Kirkus Reviews, and strategically priced her book at 99 cents to encourage readers to try it.
Now, she’s receiving bids from foreign imprints, movie studios and audio-book publishers.
Multiple audio-book publishers have made offers. Six film studios have inquired about movie rights. Two foreign publishers bid on the book.
Sounds like success to me.
Ms. Chan is holding off on such deals, for fear they might sabotage a potential contract with a domestic publisher.
She wants the book to be published in print form.

What is her definition of “success”? What is yours?

Thursday, December 08, 2011

Book Review: Just Hand Over the Chocolate…

 The full title of this book is: Just Hand Over the Chocolate and No One Will Get Hurt. The author is Karen Scalf Linamen. I’m not exactly sure what genre it would be under: nonfiction, humor, memoir, advice, religion. What “label” is attached to it is much less important than that it’s a fun book to read.

She offers her own life (and occasionally a friend’s) as examples of times when things go wrong in your life, or you’re under stress, or you’re depressed, or you really would like to hide in a closet and eat chocolate. Then she shares how she overcame these times and bad days and how you can, too. Both Linamen and her stories are relatable. She talks about pretty much everything, from depression to the delivery room, from taking risks to holding grudges, from forgiving to finding a mentor.

Just Hand Over the Chocolate and No One Will Get Hurt will make you laugh occasionally and smile often. Linamen is funny and, at times, courageously honest. Reading this book won’t keep bad things from happening in your life, but will give you ways to cope.

Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Powell’s

I give Just Hand Over the Chocolate and No One Will Get Hurt by Karen Scalf Linamen a rating of Hel-of-a-Writer.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FTC Disclaimer: This book was sent to me, not by the author, nor by the publisher, nor by a publicist, but rather by Kathi Oram Peterson. Thank you Kathi. Getting the book from Kathi did not influence my review. I was influenced by being able to open the book to almost any page and find something wonderful, like this on page 159: “Now, you have to understand that I once bought greeting cards for my friends that read, “I gave up jogging because it was bad for my health.” The inside of the card explained: “My thighs rubbed together so much my underwear caught fire.” (My own disclaimer: I did indeed open the book and choose a paragraph at random.) As I said, Linamen is totally relatable. And apparently using my thighs to amuse her friends.

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Who Will Survive?

Hilary Melton-Butcher sent me the link to an interesting blog post written last month by Kirsten Winkler. Winkler discusses the future of libraries and bookstores. She feels bookstores and libraries are becoming the collateral damage of the eBook revolution. She, like most of us, hope they survive.

Winkler notes that a lot of libraries are lending eBooks. Personally, I like that. It will help them stay relevant. I still worry about bookstores, though. She talks about those stores where the owner or employee knows books and can direct you to exactly what you’ll like. We used to have stores like that. My favorite was owned by the wonderful mystery author, Jan Grape. She was that kind of person. She knew mystery and she knew (and still knows) every big mystery author in the U.S. But she and her husband retired. Unlike Winkler, I don't know of any big chain stores now with that kind of personnel. Certainly not B&N or the other big names.

And I really don't like Winkler’s idea that if I buy an eBook in a bookstore for my iPad, the publisher can track me via my cell phone. She sites it as a possible way for bookstores to make money:
For the economic model, there could be revenue share based on location, e.g. if a customer decides to buy an ebook when he is inside a bookstore or library, the device would know this due to GPS and location awareness and therefore the publisher would share revenue the same way as with physical books.
'Course the publisher could probably track me via the iPad, too, as I sit in my living room dowloading. I harken back to the days of Down With Big Brother, which didn't work then and won't work now.

Link over and read the article. There’s also a video to watch. Both of them have some interesting points. Thanks Hilary!

Saturday, December 03, 2011

Can The Author Say No?

There was an interesting article on BBC News Technology this past week that involved the author Ray Bradbury and his famous book, Fahrenheit 451, which has sold more than 10 million copies. His contract with his publisher was about to expire. His publisher was willing to sign a new contract, but only if Bradbury agreed to include the e-rights to his book.

Bradbury said no. He’d said no before when Yahoo wanted to put his books into eform. He, in fact, said: “Prick up your ears and go to hell.” Now his publisher was pressing him.

It came down to Bradbury sticking to his guns, but losing his contract because his publisher said no e-book rights then no contract. Or giving in, signing the new contract, and having his books become available on eReaders, adding to the spread of technology, something he does not like.

In the end, he chose contract over taking a stand.

That may sound like a cop-out, but what would you do?

Thursday, December 01, 2011

Book Review: The Temple Mount Code

 The Temple Mount Code is a thriller. Charles Brokaw, who wrote The Temple Mount Code, is a New York Times bestselling author. This is the third in Brokaw’s “Code” series. Before this, he wrote The Atlantis Code and The Lucifer Code. But this is the first book I’ve read by him.

The story starts off with Professor Thomas Lourds heading to a dig in China. He’s not there very long, just long enough to make a discovery, before he heads off to Jerusalem at the request of a friend. And from there to the end of the book, it’s a race to stay alive and save people around him. Oh, and to find what everyone is looking for and willing to kill for … Mohammad’s Koran.

The dig in China is very interesting, but once Lourds heads out to find his friend who seems to be in trouble, the pace and action races. It reminded me of The Da Vinci Code, as far as the scholarly knowledge Lourds has, but it also reminded me of a thriller movie with the fast pace, chases, fights, and exotic settings. Since Professor Lourds has starred in Brokaw’s other books, you can guess that he will survive, but it’s all bets off on everyone else. There are also some formidable women in the book. I especially liked Miriam.

Lourds is smart like Robert Langdon, can fight like Jason Bourne, and loves like James Bond. Roll them together and you’ve got a moo-vie! (That’s my prediction, anyway.)

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Powell’s Books
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FTC Disclaimer: The Temple Mount Code was sent to me by Alexis Saarela with Forge Publicity. That did not influence my review. Although I have to admit, it’s cool to get a book sent to me from New York. But not as cool as getting a book all the way from South Africa, which I did when Lauri Kubuitsile sent me her book! As you can surmise, I like books set in new-to-me locations. Although… The Temple Mount Code takes you to places you’d probably rather not go in real life. Places even scarier than a college dorm bathroom.
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