Book Royalties Down Slightly

I just received my book royalties for this quarter.  They are down slightly from last quarter and down quite a bit from the quarter a year ago.  On the plus side, just enough there to get myself a new iPad.

The real story is that I need to get the next His Robot Wife book completed.  I remember reading something by a fantasy writer, I think it might have been Piers Anthony, to the effect that he came up with many great ideas but didn’t write them until they were sold to a publisher.  I can’t follow his example for several reasons, but it seems stupid not to be working whole-heartedly on the one book I know will sell well.  So I’ve been working on it this week.  It may even hop the line ahead of books that I had planned to finish first.

Misc.

I just got back from three days of fun in California.  My wife and both kids and I rarely get together all that often, but we spent two days at the beach and one at Knott’s Berry Farm and had a great time.

Just before I left, my beloved iPhone went all wonky on me.  I’m getting it replaced as we speak, since it’s still in warrenty.  I’ll let you know how that goes.

I’m just about to get my quarterly royalty check and am looking forward to replacing my iPad 1 with an iPad 3 (aka The New iPad).  This will be especially pleasing, since my last two quarterly checks went entirely to Uncle Sam, as he was of the opinion that I owed him more taxes.

His Robot Wife just sold its 8,000th copy.  It might not be a really major milestone, but it’s pretty cool to me.  I can’t wait till it hits 10,000.  Sales have slowed, but its still my best-seller– averaging about 400 per month for the past year.

Motivations: Women of Power

Once again, this is the new cover for Women of Power which graces the updated version.

I got the idea for Women of Power from Feedbooks.com.  Feedbooks was one of the early sites to get great ebook downloads (though I think it has suffered a bit since they went commercial).  One of the great things among their original books back in 2009 (that lately seem to be all erotica) were fan-fiction commics– mini books with comic book covers that were prose inside.  They were mostly based on DC characters like Batman and The Teen Titans.  I decided to try my hand at writing one of those.

There was a whole club and web organization which assigned which books each writer was working on.  That seemed like a whole lot of trouble to me.  Plus I just like to go with my own characters, so that’s what I did.  I made up All American Girl and Skygirl and patterned their descriptions after some cover art I purchased for the “comics.”  I wrote and posted the first two “issues,” but by the time I had finished “issue” (read chapter) three.  I decided that I wanted to make it a full novella.  I set it aside and didn’t get back to it for two years.

You can still find issue 1 of Women of Power at Feedbooks as a free download.  I took issue 2 down because it was significantly different than what became chapter two in the book, and I didn’t want people reading the former and then jumping into chapter 3 of the latter and getting lost.

On a side note, my son and I have just plotted a sequel to Women of Power, with some ideas that I just love.  I really want him to write it with me, because otherwise it may be a while until I get to it.  If that’s the way it turns out, it will be my first co-written work.

Double Down by Vicki De Leo

My friend and fellow writing group member Vicki De Leo has recently published Double Down.  I was happy to have played a very small part in her writing process by throwing in my two cents during our group readings.  Here is the description.

Valerie Peterson, Director of Human Resources for the Royal Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, is called back to work one night when security finds one of her employees murdered in her office. She discovers that before she died, the woman she knew as Monica, managed to institute a blackmail scheme in which she implicated Valerie as a co-conspirator.
While her career spirals out of control, her love life heats up. Still bruised from a disastrous first marriage, Valerie finds herself torn between the safety and comfort she feels in one man’s arms and the passion she feels for another.
When her home is burglarized, and her life threatened, she must accept that someone thinks she knows something worth killing for, possibly someone she works with every day, forcing her to reexamine the motives of everyone around her.
To complicate the matter further, the police arrest the one person Valerie is sure couldn’t have committed the murder. Her job and her life in jeopardy, Valerie decides to dig into Monica’s past hoping to find some clue to unmask the real killer.

Follow this link to find the ebook on Smashwords.

Astrid Maxxim for Schools

You may have noticed a new tab on the main page entitled “Astrid Maxxim for Schools.”  I plan to offer Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing Hoverbikes free (for the electronic ebook) to any teachers and schools who would like to use it.  I will also have a new digest-size paper edition available at cost for teachers and schools.  I plan to also offer a downloadable study guide and more.

I haven’t yet finalized all the details, but if you are a teacher or know one, who would like to use this book for your students either as a class assignment or a reading option for your students, please feel free to contact me.  Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing Hoverbike has a Flesch-Kindaid Reading Level of 5.0.

Motivations: The Voyage of the Minotaur

The Voyage of the Minotaur was actually the second novel that I wrote– sort of.  As I mentioned the other day, it was originally the first part of a very long novel– almost 400,00 words, about 850 pages.  I was almost done with this book before I even had a working title, but settled on The Steel Dragon, and this of course later became Senta and the Steel Dragon.  The three parts were originally called– Expedition, Colony, Dominion.

After the book was done and had gone through editing, I decided that it was just too big and had to be split into three parts.  So part one became The Voyage of the Minotaur.

Several things influenced me to devise this story.  A friend had encouraged me to self-publish Princess of Amathar, and the success of that book, minor though it was, encouraged me to write a second.  Lord of the Rings had just come out and so I was already thinking of a three part fantasy story.  I had also just read Stephen King’s Dark Tower series, and remembered his notes about it being his Lord of the Rings.  Finally, I had recently watched James Michener’s Hawaii.  Putting this all together with several non-fiction books I had recently read about colonial imperialism (particularly Britain in Africa), and I came up with the story outline for Senta and the Steel Dragon.

I wanted a story that told about colonialism over a long period– in this case about ten years.  I had thought about how badly native people were treated by the colonial powers and wondered just how much worse it would have been if those natives were an entirely different species.  I already had a world map that I had created a few years earlier when I had toyed with the idea of writing a role-playing setting.  All of this went into the mix.  I also used the setting I had created twenty years before for a few fantasy vignettes I had written– the otherworldly place that people visit when they use the magic drug opthalium.  Throwing all this into the mix, I just started writing.  It took 14 months to write the drafts for what became three books.

Smashwords Summer Winter Sale

It is that time of year again– time for the Smashwords Summer/Winter sale.  All through the month of July, there are great deals on ebooks at Smashwords.  Some of my books are there on sale and some are free, so if your collection isn’t complete, now is the time to stop by.  Here’s what is on special this month.

Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing Hoverbike (Reg. $.99) Free

Princess of Amathar (Reg. $2.99) Free

Voyage of the Minotaur (Reg. $2.99) Free

The Dark and Forbidding Land (Reg. $2.99) $1.50

The Drache Girl (Reg. $2.99) $2.24

And as always His Robot Girlfriend, Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess, Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress, and Brechalon are free.

Find links to all these books here.

Floating in the Ether

It’s funny what you find hidden in the depths of the Internet.  I was trolling around looking for some Nevada history and found this on the Las Vegas Sun website.  The description is as follows:

Students at B. Mahlon Brown Junior High School spend part of their class time Oct. 13 listening to representatives from different political parties. The activity was used to enlighten students about the differences between parties and teach them the importance of politics. They will be holding a school-wide vote prior to the elections to see how their opinions compare to those of the nation.

The guy standing on the stairs (the fat one with the white pants and no tie) is me.  It says Oct. 13, but it doesn’t say what year.  Judging by how much hair I had left at the time, I would say it’s 2008.

Chuck Jones Experience

While my son John and I were adventuring at Circus Circus Adventuredome, we saw that the hotel was hosting The Chuck Jones Experience, so I just had to go.  Chuck Jones (creator of the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote among other things) has long been a hero of mine.

It was on the expensive side ($20), but we got a 2 for 1 coupon with our entrance to Adventuredome.  I probably would have paid anyway.  They had Mr. Jones’ desk, his Emmy, many of his drawings, animation cells, and paintings; screens running his animated works, and more.  I really enjoyed it.