Copyright

IMG_1688Copyrights are important.  I really believe that.  But it sort of bit me in the butt today.  I ordered poster prints of some of my book covers to be printed at Walmart.  I went to pick them up and was told I couldn’t because I needed copyright paperwork for them.

Now, I don’t mind that Walmart is playing copyright cop.  Like I said copyrights are important.  All the art I use in my book covers is purchased legally (or I hired out the work to someone I know followed all legal requirements). It took me only a couple of minutes to get the paperwork together once I was back home.  Then I had to take it down there to be photocopied, and return home with my pictures.  The problem is that I had to make an extra trip in what is today 117 degree (F) heat.  I don’t know what that is Celsius, but it’s pretty damn hot.

They had my phone number with my order.  How about a heads up that I needed to bring paperwork with me so that I didn’t freaking melt in my car!  After all, they didn’t ask me for any paperwork the last three times I was in to do the same thing.  Well, after all, I do have to say that Walmart did a good job with my prints, so all’s well that ends well.  But I’ve been home over an hour now, and I’m still sweating up a storm!

The Value of Free

Mark Coker at Smashwords gave his yearly presentation about ebooks.  You can see it here.  One of the facts in the presentation was that free ebooks are downloaded about 91 times as often as ebooks that people have to pay for.  Therefore, free ebooks can be a great promotional tool for authors.  I can tell you from experience that this is the case.  So far, I have sold about 7,548 copies of His Robot Wife.  To date, His Robot Girlfriend has been downloaded 457,259 times.  I think that the downloads of His Robot Girlfriend help the sales of His Robot Wife, but I can’t be sure about that.  What I am sure of is that His Robot Girlfriend has pushed my name out there as a science-fiction author.  How else can I explain it when I see His Robot Girlfriend (undeserved as it may be) on lists of sci-fi books that include Fahrenheit 451, Hospital Station, I Robot, and other greats.

I have four books that are free downloads.  His Robot Girlfriend was written to be a free download.  I has between writing and editing the book that became Senta and the Steel Dragon books 1, 3, and 5.  I thought it would be a good idea to get my name out there and help drive interest in my writing.  That succeeded in spades.  Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess was just written for myself.  I decided to post it later.  When the reception was positive, I wrote Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress.  I didn’t think about writing any more of his story for a few years.  Those three books are so widely available that they’ve kind of taken on a life of their own.  I wrote Brechalon as an introduction to Senta and the Steel Dragon, and though I’ve played with selling it for 99 cents, I’ve finally decided that it’s more valuable if it drives any sales of The Voyage of the Minotaur.

Over the years, I’ve offered other books free for limited times, just after publication or as part of the Smashwords biannual promotion.  I’ve been thinking about writing another free sic-fi book– a good possibility might be Nova Dancer– either free or free for a while.  Six months maybe or a year.  I have a while to think about that possibility, since Nova Dancer isn’t on my schedule yet.  The whole idea for me though is to make money in 8 to 10 years.  I certainly don’t mind making enough money to pay a bill or buy a new iPad now, but I’ve got a paycheck now.  Ten years from now I’ll be a retired teacher and a full time writer.  If giving away a book now, built up my reputation enough to ensure book sales in 10 years, that would be a really good thing.

Update: Patience is a Virtue

PatienceThur 6-27: I’ve been writing all morning, finishing chapter 13 and working my way through chapter 14.  Just two more after that.  Sometimes the number of chapters changes between the outline and the rough draft, but in this case, I think they will stay the same.  I’ve still got almost a week until my self-imposed deadline for the draft, and I’m feeling pretty confident about finishing.

I also just updated the Previews page with a better description of the book.  Of course, I’ll still have to work on that later, but the blurb is the last thing to worry about.

Sat 6-29: All right.  I’ve just finished chapter 14 and am already working on chapter 15.  It’s feeling pretty good.  Now I have to write “the big thing” that I have both been looking forward to writing and dreading at the same time.  It was supposed to be the end of chapter 14, but instead, it’s going to be near the front of 15.  Once I get that done, the rest will just fall together.

Mon 7-1: I’m already into the last chapter.  I finished 15 this afternoon and I expect to finish this chapter by the end of the day Tuesday.  Then it’s time for the first revision.

Smashwords Summer/Winter Promotion

It’s that time.  For the entire month of July, Smashwords is having their yearly promotion, featuring literally thousands of books at great savings.  From now until 7-31-13, you can find all kinds of gems.  Of course many of my books are on sale there as well.

You can pick up Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing Hoverbike at 100% off– Free.

Astrid Maxxim Cover

Blood Trade and Princess of Amathar are 50% off– just $1.50.Blood Trade

Princess of Amathar

The Voyage of the Minotaur, The Dark and Forbidding Land, and The Drache Girl are all 50% off– just $1.50 each.

The Voyage of the Minotaur

The Dark and Forbidding Land

The Drache Girl

The Young Sorceress, The Two Dragons, and the Many Adventures of Eaglethorpe Buxton are on sale 25% off– just $2.24 each.

youngsorceressformobileread1

 

The Two Dragons

 

Eaglethorpe Buxton Mini

Follow this link to Smashwords, or follow the individual links on the book page.

Notes on Blood Trade

Blood TradeBlood Trade was the book I was never going to write– a vampire book.  I’m not even that interested in vampires.  I don’t find them sexy, intriguing, or usually even worth noting.  I appreciate what writers have done with vampires over the years.  I like Bram Stoker, Sheridan LeFanu, and Joss Whedon.  But I wasn’t going to write about vampires.

So every two weeks, on Tuesday, for weeks and weeks, I would go to my writer’s group– which at the time met at Border’s Bookstore.  They would give us a table and chairs in the middle of four counters filled with vampire books.  Finally I decided I would write a vampire book my way.  The vampires wouldn’t be sexy, or intriguing, or attractive.  They would be monsters– dark, scary killers.  I of course forgot that sometimes dark, scary killers have a sort of inherent attractiveness.

In the end, I finished Blood Trade and in some ways, it is my favorite book.  For one thing, I think it is one of my best plots.  Some of my stories have fairly simple plot lines and others don’t come off as well as I wanted.  Blood Trade does.  I also love the characters that I ended up with.  I say ended up with, because characters usually grow as I write them.  I think they almost always end up better than I expected.  If plots are my weak point,  I think characters are my strong point.

Xochitl McKenna: An Irish, African, Hispanic, Army Ranger turned stripper turned tattoo model turned private detective, with a deep hatred of vampires.  She started out pretty complex, but got more so as I wrote.  Anger, deep self-loathing, borderline alcoholism, and kleptomania.  And the best thing of all was that it fit so tightly in her back story that it made sense.

Lance Rizzello: Dirty cop, rapist, mob enforcer.  A complete and total sociopath who is out for no one but himself.

Dominic Zielinski: FBI Agent, former Navy SEAL, and someone with serious OCD.

I had three great characters, and I honestly thought about throwing out the vampires altogether, but I didn’t.  I started to write and the story got darker and darker with each chapter– so much so that I had to go back and rewrite the first four to make them fit the latter part of the book.  In the end, I couldn’t help adding a lovable vampire character.

Novelyne Cavendish: Vampire.  A tiny Irish woman, around 150 years old or so.  Hates drinking cow’s blood, so sticks with human.  Hasn’t killed any little children in months.

But to make my story work, even the good vampire had to be pretty evil– or at least pretty dark, at least sometimes.  So there you have some of my thoughts about Blood Trade.  I guess a writer telling you how much they like their own book is a lot like a cook telling you how they like their own food (I’ve been watching a lot of Gordon Ramsay this summer).  But if it sounds interesting to you, I would appreciate if you would read it.  You can find links in yesterday’s post, as well as the Books page.

And I would love to hear from you, what you thought of the book.  Drop me a line.  Thanks.

Blood Trade at iBookstore

Blood TradeVegas is going to hell– literally.  Werewolves run through the streets and the vampires are taking over.  Former army ranger/Goth tattoo model/private eye Xochitl McKenna doesn’t like it either, especially when it comes between her and her clients.  But are the vampires and werewolves the greatest threat, or is it something or someone much closer to her?  Warning: Adult Content.

Blood Trade is available wherever fine ebooks are found.  Get it now for your iPhone, iPad, or other iBooks device for just $2.99.  Follow this link for more info.

The Artificial Deadline

During the school year it was easy to explain whey I wasn’t getting as much writing as I wanted done.  I was working.  This summer, it’s not so easy.  That is not to say that I’m not getting more done than I was before.  I am.  I’m simply not getting as much done as I want. Some days I can sit down and whip out almost a whole chapter at one sitting.  Other days I struggle to get a paragraph done.  So, what do I need to do?

I’ve decided to give myself an artificial deadline.  I have a notebook in front of me, that has dates down the side.  In it, I keep track of what I’m working on and how much I’m writing.  I also keep track of book sales and story ideas in it.  So, I drew a dotted line across the page, just under 7-5-13.  I’m making that my deadline for finishing the draft of His Robot Wife: Patience is a Virtue.

I should be able to write that much.  I’ve only got about 12,000 words left.  I used to sit down and write that much in an evening back in college.  But then, back then, I had a deadline– a real one.  We’ll see if this gets me back on track.  Can’t hurt, right?

Women of Power for the nook

Women of Power NewThe life of a superhero is tough. All American Girl fights supervillains, alien invaders, and terrorists as she tries to get product endorsements and a magazine deal. That’s nothing compared to her private life though. She’s only just broken up with her super boyfriend Perihelion when he’s scooped up by Omega Woman, and now rival Skygirl has moved into her territory.

Women of Power is available for the nook digital reader and all nook apps at Barnes and Noble for just 99 cents.  Follow this link.

Broadband not so broad!

It's All Fun and Games until Someone Loses and iPad

At my house, we have the fastest/widest broadband pipeline that our local cable provider offers.  We need it.  We’ve got three computers, three tablets, two smartphones, two game machines, and two set-top boxes that all need internet connectivity.  And usually, it’s pretty good.  That doesn’t help however when there is a slowdown for the entire area.

We’ve been experiencing such a slowdown this weekend.  Our Netflix and Hulu plus keep stopping to buffer.  My pages don’t load completely on my web browser.  All that is bad enough, but local businesses are affected too.  It took forever to get gas the other day and at Subway, their register just completely gave up trying to take my gift card (a present from a student who says I’m “the bestest teacher ever”).  I ended up getting three footlong subs for free, but it didn’t make me happy.  I just felt kind of embarrassed about it.

Boy, I hope they get whatever transmitter or wire or server or whatever that is down, fixed soon.  I’m not afraid to admit it.  I don’t want to live a simple unplugged life.  I need running water and I need broadband!

Update: Patience is a Virtue

PatienceI finished writing chapter 12, and just like the last chapter, it took me five days.  That is it took me five days, if you consider writing away at 2:30 in the morning of the sixth day, to still be in the fifth day.

Unlike the last chapter, everything that was supposed to happen in this chapter did.  Well, almost.  A little dialog planned for chapter 12 has gotten pushed back to chapter 13.

I was also lying in bed last night and came up with a different way to do a particular plot point.  I had originally envisioned something happening a certain way, and now I’ve decided to change that.   Looking back on it, I think the original idea was kind of stupid– even though I was basing it on real events.  I think I would have been ‘jumping the shark’ for Patience and Mike, and I don’t want to do that, because lately I’ve been coming up with some other story ideas for them.

Anyway, three to four more chapters to go, depending on how they play out.  I’ll keep you updated.