Two stories regarding booksellers, publishers, Amazon, and readers crossed my path in the last two days. The first went relatively unnoticed. The second, however, dominated the news feeds of both Twitter and Facebook. I'll start with the first. An author posted a story on her Facebook page about Barnes & Noble cutting back on Simon & Schuster titles. She made a comment about fellow S&S authors: ""So many authors I know are being affected, and are scared for their careers." I was struck by this comment. Scared for their careers? B&N has refused to stock Amazon Publishing books from the get-go, and I'm doing fine. In fact, my career is thriving at the moment. I was naive to the fact that, as a fellow Amazon author pointed out, "Many. . .mid-list author(s). . . who sell primarily in print format do not have much of an ebook readership. In fact, they are having great difficulty cultivating ebook buyers. Their sales are frightening dependent on B & N placement and promotion." The second story was about Amazon acquiring Goodreads. Everyone, it seemed, had something to say about it, and the reactions to the news were mixed. Some saw this as a savvy acquisition, while others worried that Goodreads would suffer the same fate as Shalfari (also owned by Amazon). Others went a step farther and shut down their Goodreads accounts. A high school friend who owns an independent bookstore, added this latest turn of events to her long list of reasons for her disdain of all things Amazon. So what do these two stories have in common? Amazon. Amazon continues to be a polarizing company--some say they're innovators, while others say they're corporate imperialists. Some say they're killing the book industry, while others say they're saving it. Truth be told, I have misgivings about the Goodreads acquisition. My misgivings have more to do with how reviews-obsessed the author-reading community has become (this is tied in to my opinions against grading, and would warrant a separate blog post), and whether Amazon's acquisition (who pioneered the reviews-ratings algorithm) is going to exacerbate that. But in terms of piling on Amazon as hellbent on taking over the world, I can't help but get a little defensive. Because, as Hugh Howey said: The reality is that everyone I know at Amazon, from top to bottom, loves books. They love readers. They love authors. I think this permeates the company because of the passion Jeff Bezos holds for all things book. He has made it a goal to get more people reading and more people writing than at any time in human history. Because of Amazon (largely Amazon), more people are making a living at writing than ever before. This has been my experience as an Amazon author from day one. And, given the situation with Barnes & Noble and Simon & Schuster (as well as with AP authors and other problems), I can't help but think that a company that blames Amazon for its demise seems to be doing an excellent job of driving its customers there. But here's what it really comes down to for me: I love books. I love bookstores. And libraries. I love Amazon (and Amazon Publishing) for making it possible to do what I love and make a living from it. I love my Kindle. I love to read. I love to write. I love readers. I love writers/authors. I love interacting with both. We still need bookstores. What neither Goodreads nor Amazon can give us is human interaction, face to face contact between readers and readers, writers and writers, and readers and writers. As an author, I need that personal interaction not as much from a business perspective as much as a creative and psychological one. Community is vital to almost any profession. Social networking has broadened what community means, but it still can't match human contact. The reality is that book commerce has changed. It's time to stop complaining about and resisting it. If bookstores are to remain in business (and I want them to), then they've got to INNOVATE. They've got to find ways to maintain that human touch, that community and service readers and writers crave, while still making a profit. They've got to be more than booksellers now, without abandoning their love of and commitment to books. They've got to find new and better ways to do that, ways that don't rival Amazon but complement and supplement it. It's not about rooting for one over the other. It's not about taking sides. I want that for them, and for me, more than anything. And believe me, I've been racking my brains trying to figure out how to do it. I haven't come up with the solution yet. But I'll keep trying. Hello Elisa Lorello Blog Followers! My name is Jennie Shaw and this is my very first guest blog post! Wohoo! Since I’m a total stranger, I guess it makes sense to tell you a little bit about myself. Well, first off, I live in New Brunswick, Canada and yes, I really do say “eh?” often. I spend my days writing women’s fiction, compulsively painting my nails, and wishing for winter to be over (which doesn’t seem to be anytime soon, boo). As I’m a writer of women’s fiction, Elisa and I connected through Twitter during a #ChickLitChat (Thursday nights at 8pm EST, you should totally join us). After discovering we have similar senses of humour, I read her debut novel Faking It. And then Ordinary World. And just yesterday, I finished Adulation. Suffice it to say, I love Elisa’s writing, so when she suggested we do a guest post swap, I was all over it (moderately intimidated, but all over it nonetheless). The topic for our swap is one that’s near and dear to my heart: Literary Crushes. I know, right? BEST GUEST POST TOPIC EVER! Back in the day, I had a series called Monday’s Literary Hotties but it’s been a very long time since I’ve delved into the swoon-i-ness so I’m super psyched about it. Mostly because I’ll be discussing one of my favourites: the incredibly charming and super-hot Gilbert Blythe from the Anne of Green Gables series. Now, there may be some of you who are all: “Err, who the heck is that and what the hoo-ha is Anne of Green Gables?” so if you’re one of those people, stop what you’re doing right now, get on Amazon or run to your nearest library and start reading. Seriously. I can wait. *files nails* *bakes cookies* *plays Just Dance 4* Okay, so now that you’ve finished, we can get started... Isn’t Gilbert the best male character of all time? Hint: The answer is YES. But just in case you haven’t read the series (yet), I’ll break down the reasons for my bordering-on-obsessed-longing crush on Gilbert Blythe. Mmmmmmmm…..this is a still from the Anne of Green Gables movie and I applaud the casting department as he’s pretty much exactly how I pictured him.
(source: http://sjaejones.com/blog/2010/literary-crushes-part-ii/) One of the reasons I have such a mad crush on Gil (I can call him Gil because we’re old friends) is because of the amazing way he treats his love interest, Anne Shirley. As you’ve all read the books *stares* you know that Anne is a perfect mix of confidence, insecurity, strength, and vulnerability, who Gil, to reference Bridget Jones’ Diary, “likes very much as she is.” And you’ve got to love a guy who doesn’t want to change a complicated woman. *swoons* In the beginning of Gil’s courtship, Anne isn’t super into him (yeah, I don’t get it either) but he’s super persistent and conducts his pursuit with such innocence that it only makes Gil hotter (if that’s even possible). Plus, he rescues Anne—legit rescues her—when her boat sinks in the lake! And he’s selfless, putting Anne’s needs ahead of his own when they’re adults. He’s also a bit of a jackass, and I like my men with a certain degree of jackass-i-ness. Not too much, mind you, but enough to whip out a cocky half-smile now and again. And boy, can Gil do a cocky half-smile (oh em gee, Ilovehimsomuch). Did I mention that he also grows up to be a doctor? A DOCTOR! Come on people, what more could you possibly want in a literary crush? The only way he’d be sweeter is if he were made of honey. Or covered in honey. Which I would probably lick off…okay, this post is getting out of hand so before I overstep any boundaries, I’m just going to stop. Ha! Besides, I think that I’ve made my point, right? So how about you? What are some of your literary crushes? And thanks so much to Elisa for doing a guest post swap with me; it was a lot of fun! If you’d like to read more from me, or read about Elisa’s Literary Crush, you can find my blog at: http://wellshutthefrontdoor.blogspot.ca. Even though I'm known as a women's fiction/chick lit author, I tend to read books outside that genre. So it seemed reasonable that I would feature such an author(s) as well. This is probably about as far from my genre as I've ever strayed, but that's what makes it so interesting! Here's one more guest post using the blog hop questions, by author Michael Tinker Pearce and his wife, Linda Pearce.
Michael Tinker Pearce and Linda Pearce are a husband-and-wife writing team from Seattle, WA. Michael is a knife and sword maker and Linda was an IT professional and project manager for over twenty years. You can read more about them here. This is their first full-length novel. Q: What is the title of your book? A: 'Diaries of a Dwarven Rifleman' Q: What genre does your book fall under? A: In some ways we've bent the fantasy genre pretty hard here, though in other ways it's classic heroic fantasy, so I think that if I had to classify it that would do. Q: Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition? We actually never considered a movie-version of this book and none of the characters were written with the idea that an actor would play them. I really don't want to answer this because I want readers picturing the characters themselves, not imagining how a specific actor or actress might portray them. Q: What is a one-sentence synopsis of your book? A: Louis L'Amour meets JRR Tolkien Q: How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript? A: I spent a year building the world in my head, but once we actually started writing it took roughly three months. Since it was being edited and proof-read as it went along the final draft was actually ready the week after the first draft was finished. Q: What other books would you compare this story to within your genre? A: This might be a failure to read enough on my part, but I cannot think of any. This is a medieval-ish fantasy novel written by the rules for 'hard-science' science fiction. Everything in the book is scientifically plausible except the 'magic,' but even that follows 'science-like' rules. To complicate things even further the main character is very much a Louis L'Amour hero; Determined, honest, deeply competent and not overly introspective, but not perfect or invulnerable. Q: Who or what inspired you to write this book? A: Somewhere in the lore of 'Warcraft' there was a mention of 'regiments of Dwarven Riflemen.' That stuck in my head and one day the title 'Diary of a Dwarven Rifleman' popped into my brain. Everything else proceeded from questions that this brought up, like 'Why are the dwarves the only people with guns? Where do they live? How do they survive? Where did they come from?' Q: What else about your book might pique a reader’s interest? A: It's a different take on Dwarves, goblins and humans. The book has strong, likable characters, a bit of romance, lots of action. The hero, rather than personally saving the day, contributes to the book's resolution just by being who he is. The book also tackles some interesting and atypical problems and issues for a fantasy novel. Q: When and how will it be published? A: We actually published on February 26th, 2013 as a Kindle eBook and a Print-on-Demand Trade Paperback through Amazon.com. Author Kristen Tsetsi and I decided to pull a little "blog hop switcheroo" in which we'd exchange the same series of questions and then present them on each other's blogs. We modified the original blog hop questions slightly in order to make them more appealing for everyday readers and not writers only. And so, without further ado, here she is, talking about her novel Pretty Much True... Q: What is the title of your book? A: Pretty Much True... Q: How did you come up with that title? A: In Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut writes, "All this happened, more or less. The war parts, anyway, are pretty much true." I read that after I'd finished writing the story, and I thought, "How perfect!" The story, while a fictional account, is still very much true. Especially the war parts. Q: What was another title you considered instead, and what happened there? A: War and Peas was one. But I think I was about 3/4 of the way through writing it and feeling punchy at the time. I must have been, because there are no peas in the story. Vodka, a slice of cheese, and mayonnaise, yes, but no peas. Mia's not what you'd call a healthy eater. Q: What is your book's genre? Literary fiction, but only because it's hard to shelve anywhere else. There's love and romance and sex, but it's not a romance novel. The protagonist is female, but I don't know that I'd classify it as "women's fiction" - Mia's experience is not universally (nor uniquely) female. There's action, but it's largely internal, and suspense, but not the kind that has readers waiting for a killer to turn the corner. (Well, actually...I take that back.) Q: Which actors would you choose to play your characters in the screen adaptation that will most certainly be produced? Mia (the English professor-turned-cab driver): Ellen Page or Kristen Stewart. Enough said, probably. Jake (Mia's boyfriend, an Apache pilot in Iraq): Someone passably good-looking, but largely unknown. Donny Donaldson: Terry Kiser Terry Kiser Terry Kiser! I would pay him from my own checking account if I could afford him. Jake's mother Olivia: Kathy Bates. Olivia is annoying, a little flighty, and a steamroller. Bates in Fried Green Tomatoes immediately comes to mind. And I'd love a brunette Dakota Fanning to play the marriage-trapped (but wise) Denise. Except she might still be too young. Q: What is a one-sentence synopsis of your book? A: A professor-turned-cab driver afraid she'll never see her war-fighting soul mate again befriends a Vietnam veteran and a bad habit or two as her once-normal life becomes an exercise in long-distance relationship management, friendship avoidance, "couples" party handling, and war protest etiquette. Q: What relationship (between characters) is the most complicated, and what's complicating it for them? A: Mia and Denise, whose significant others are both at war, have the most complicated relationship. Although both are waiting, they're waiting for very different reasons, which creates increasing strain and distance while simultaneously forcing them together. They're also clashing personality types: Mia is reactionary and passionate, and Denise is almost infuriatingly calm and cool. Q: Who or what inspired the book's protagonist? A: Mia as the story's protagonist was borne of my experience, but she as a more complex person/personality was inspired by the things I believe many of us have inside, at one time or another, and are loathe to share or admit to. And I don't mean bad things, necessarily. Q: Fill in the blank: Readers who enjoyed _______ will also enjoy my book. A: Based on what readers have said: genre fiction, The Things They Carried, The Bell Jar, Paint it Black, or books by Margaret Atwood or Janet Fitch. Q: Who or what inspired the story? A: This is probably an obnoxious answer, but it was inspired by the need to tell it. Most of the stories I've told (in my short fiction) have been inspired by powerful (or subtle, but nagging) personal experiences, and waiting for my lovey love soul mate guy to make it back from Iraq alive was the most passionate, intense, surreal, aggravating, action-packed (emotionally speaking), suspenseful, exciting, and sorrowful experience I've ever had (or expect to have) in my life. How do you not write that story? Additionally, the larger "waiting" experience is one very few people know much about on a level that goes beyond what we see in the media. I'm nosy, and I assume others are, too, so I like to try to get behind curtains and invite others to see what I found. Q: What is your favorite line of dialogue a character delivers? (No context.) A: Donny (60-something man) says to Mia (twenty-something woman), "I'm old enough to be your daughter." Q: When and how will it be published? Missouri Breaks Press published it in September 2012. Pretty Much True... can be found in most online bookstores, is available for Kindle, and can be ordered from brick-and-mortars. The new craze in blogging right now is what's called a blog hop--one blogger answers a set of questions, then tags several other bloggers to answer the same questions, who then tags more, and so on. It's not unlike the current questionnaire I've been seeing on Facebook in which one person answers a set of questions about a given year, and then tags people in the post to respond and post.
Last week I was tagged by two different authors-- Alice Osborn, North Carolina poet and teacher, and Craig Lancaster, author of 600 Hours of Edward and more. The questionnaire was about works in progress; but given that I'm superstitious and don't like to talk about my works in progress, I chose to write about Adulation instead, especially given that we're just coming out of Oscar season, and the Kindle edition is on sale right now. To continue the blog hop, I'll be both tagging writers as well as featuring them here all week. Please scroll to the bottom to learn more about these terrific authors and their equally terrific books. Q: What is the title of your latest book? A: My most recent title is called Adulation, published in November 2012. (The Kindle edition is currently on sale for $1.99 during the entire month of March.) Q: Where did the idea come from for the book? A: I had wanted to write a novel about a fan who meets her longtime idol ever since I saw the original lineup of Duran Duran perform in 2005. In 2010, I had the pleasure of meeting Aaron Sorkin following a Q&A at an advanced screening of The Social Network in Durham, North Carolina. I had interacted with Sorkin on numerous occasions via a Facebook discussion forum prior, but it occurred to me at the moment he shook my hand that had we met under other circumstances—a coffeeshop, a university lecture, through friends, etcetera—and he wasn’t “Aaron Sorkin, famous award-winning screenwriter,” this was a guy I would give my phone number to, perhaps even ask out on the spot. The what-if was born that night: what if a fan and her idol meet and it turns out they’re more than just compatible, but meant for each other? Can it work out, or has fame and fortune gotten in the way? Q: What genre does your book fall under? A: I market is as commercial women's fiction. Q: What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition? A: Oooh, I always get stumped on this question! Lately I’ve been thinking Ben Affleck would make a good Danny Masters, especially if he grew his hair out the way he did for Argo. I think I’d want someone relatively unknown to play Sunny Smith. And Jim Parsons has to play Georgie Spencer. Q: What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book? A: When attention-craving, celebrity screenwriter Danny Masters meets spotlight-avoiding, bookstore employee Sunny Smith, both must make a decision to give up the things they want to hold on to most to be together, or whether they can. Q: Is your book self-published or represented by an agency? I’m currently under contract with Amazon Publishers, and I love working with them. Q: How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript? A: I wrote about half of the novel during NaNoWriMo 2010; I wrote the rest during winter, spring, and summer breaks from teaching, 2011. Q: What other books would you compare this story to within your genre? A: Not a book, but the Nor Ephron film Sleepless in Seattle, Tracie Banister’s novel Blame it on the Fame, and Jennifer Weiner’s The Next Best Thing. Readers of Christopher Herz’s Hollywood Forever might also like Adulation, although the story is rather different. Q: Who or what inspired you to write this book? A: See my above story regarding Aaron Sorkin! Although I want to make clear that Danny Masters is not based on Sorkin—at most, he’s had what I call “a Sorkinesque career.” Any similarities after that are coincidental. Q: What else about the book might pique the reader’s interest? The story is told in alternating POVs. Danny Masters is written in third person, and Sunny Smith is written in first person. The alternating POV enhances the dynamic of the story, and shows the parallels of Danny’s and Sunny’s lives so that even though they’re living on opposite ends of the country, they’re somehow rather close to one another. When you find yourself feeling lazy or ‘blocked’, how do you force yourself to get past it? Curl up in a fetal position on the couch and watch re-runs of The Mentalist… Seriously, I either freewrite (mostly about how bad the writing is, although eventually I can psych my way past it) or put the work down temporarily and read or watch something else. Despite the fact that I’m a novelist, I find myself inspired by a lot of screenwriting. If whatever I’ve picked up is really good, it inspires me to get back to my own writing. COMING THIS WEEK Tuesday, March 5: HEATHER GRACE STEWART is a Canadian author, journalist and speaker. Her most recent works are a book of poetry, stories and photography called Three Spaces and a screenplay for Kindle, Kobo, ibooks and more, called The Friends I've Never Met. She speaks at universities about the new world of e-publishing and following your passion. Wednesday, March 6: KRISTEN TSETSI is the author of Pretty Much True, which earned a mention on NPR. You can learn more about her here. Thursday, March 7: MICHAEL TINKER PEARCE and LINDA PEARCE are a husband-and-wife writing team from Seattle, WA. Michael is a knife and sword maker and Linda was an IT professional and project manager for over twenty years. You can read more about them here. Their first full-length novel is Diaries of a Dwarven Rifleman. Saturday, March 10: NICOLE McLERNON writes because there are stories in her head that have to come out. Nicole is still venturing into the world of publishing although she has written two NaNoWriMo novels. Her favorite things to write are drabbles which are short stories of exactly 100 words. She lives, writes, and works as a nurse in Massachusetts. Her post will appear on her blog Soul Conversations. Please do check it out! |
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