Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The Author’s Guild on State of Publishing and My comment

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

http://blog.authorsguild.org/2012/01/31/publishings-ecosystem-on-the-brink-the-backstory/

To which I commented  Monopolies are generally evil, and I hold no brief for Amazon.com– although why Amazon’s evil makes Barnes & Noble and Big Publishing into good guys is beyond me.  B&N with their end-of-the-aisle bribe stacks and books with a shorter shelf life than yoghurt.  Puh-leeze.

I personally have published with big publishers, small ones, university presses, and an independent co-operative press.  While I am, at least for the moment, still a member of the Authors Guild, I do not find them representing my interests.  AG works for  Scott Turow and  others who make a lot of money selling books.  I’m glad Mr. Turow and his ilk have a guild to represent them, but don’t let the Authors Guild fool you into thinking it does anything for people who don’t sell a lot of books.

So we’re living in interesting times.  Lean back and enjoy the ride.

Genre and Literary

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

Second go-through of a much-beloved genre novel is interestingly disappointing to me.  My first reading, I could not slow down, I yearned to get back to it, woke in the morning thinking of it.  This time, since I know how so much of the story comes out, the devices are more obvious, and sometimes creaky.  Is it just that I know which characters will die?  I notice interesting threads that seem to have been dropped.

This may be what it means to be a really tremendous writer of story and narrative: everything in the end is in service of momentum, so there is less available for the second reading.  This, then, a tentative definition for literary: that there is still plenty there when you read it a second time.

Authors’ Guild Opposes Amazon Prime Lending Program

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Here’s the reaction of the Authors’ Guild to Amazon’s new lending program on Amazon Prime:  : http://tiny.cc/ekuoa .  Essentially, the Authors’ Guild claims that Amazon is going over the heads of the big commercial publishers in lending their books, and that it going to hurt big publisher and big author profits.  Amazon is a War Lord, but the Authors’ Guild, to which I have belonged for many years, is so fixated on its big money earning authors that it turns away writers who don’t get sizable advances or who publish with very small presses.  And as for the Big Six Publishers?  Let’s just  call them Triceratops, Stegosaurus, Eoraptor, Archaeopteryx, Brontosaurus,  and Tyrannosaurus Rex.

My first library book on Kindle!

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011

I’ve been telling people that the big problem with Kindle–aside from how hard it is to take notes compared to an old dead tree book– is that you can’t share or borrow the overpriced newer (read in -copyright) books.  It seems to me that e-books absolutely ought to be the cheapest form of books– minimal materials, you can’t lend it to a friend or resell it, etc.  Amazon runs an in-house sharing site where I early on got one good book, the novel about Thomas Cromwell, but it has essentially turned into advertisements for new books for Kindle.

BUT NOW- it has finally happened.  It is finally possible to borrow from the library.  I had to go in person first to get my card renewed  (and I ended up promising to present a program for the library in the spring!) and they were very helpful showing me the website for the regional pool of library e-books, many with waiting lists, but I made the experiment by using “advanced search” and skimming over available books, and found Sarah Waters’ newest.  I now have it on my Kindle, for two weeks, anyhow, and I’m thrilled.  I don’t know how this works region to region, but here you get up to 5 books, and there is no extension– you go back on the waiting list if you didn’t finish.  Fine, who cares.  To borrow a Kindle book, you get sent to Amazon, and I had a little to-do about which email was my sign in, and actually ended up calling and speaking to a human being, but the next phase is beginning to happen….

Big Pub Panics over Changing Business Model

Monday, October 17th, 2011

Today’s New York Times has an article about the panic among conventional publishers over Amazon.com beginning to publish:

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/17/technology/amazon-rewrites-the-rules-of-book-publishing.html?ref=technology

In the Amazon business model, there’s no advance, and often no agent, although some agents are beginning to participate as publishers.  I have to say that my sympathy for the big commercial publishers  (not that Amazon isn’t or won’t be one soon) is very limited.  They dropped me unceremoniously 25 years ago– well, not entirely true, that was Scribner’s.  My last big publisher was HarperCollins for the Marco kid books, and that was only fifteen years ago– anyhow, the bottom line is, Conventional publishers dropped me and a lot of my friends– mid-list and literary writers of high repute and great accomplishment– and we’ve been scrambling ever since.  I’ve used small presses, nonprofit presses, university presses, cooperative presses:  I’ve published with all of these, as well as with Scribner’s and HarperCollins, and had Sc & HC been more nurturing of me when I was not a best seller for them, I might be less ready to embrace the Great Change going on now with ebooks and self publishing.  There are myriad problems including, at the very least, who are the gatekeepers, but also vast opportunities.  And for me, a lot of fun too.  The opportunities include simply being able to make books available to people who who might want to read them– miniscule numbers beside what bestseller oriented publishers except, but human beings, readers, communication.  I have been having a great time with my various ventures.

Tomato Crop– and New Book!!

Friday, September 16th, 2011


New Book of Short Stories by MSW From Hamilton Stone Editions

Re-visions: Stories from Stories is a collection of spin-offs from myth, fiction, and the Bible. From a new look at Adam and Eve and why they left the Garden to a grown-up Topsy from Uncle Tom’s Cabin to the confessions of Saint Augustine’s concubine- each story offers a gloss on the original as well as insights into how we can live today.

“The stories were so vivid and natural that after a while I forgot of them as based on actual classic myths and felt them alive in my modern world, real as any other stories. My favorite was the one about Lazarus (for the wonderful imagery about fire and moths and desire) –but so many engaged and moved me.”
– Leora Skolkin-Smith

Higher Ground is Now Available as a Kindle Book!

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

I just checked, and yes! Higher Ground is now available on Kindle! The other Hamilton Stone books are under review, and I have to finish putting up Trespassers, so this is a new day for real. Since I broke down and decided to stop waiting for Smashwords.com, who, terrific as they’ve been, haven’t completed their deal with Amazon. It is a tedious kind of work, preparing books for transfer to electronic reading, but I often do it late at night when my reading attention sags. Repetition is reassuring.
It is a wonderful feeling to know that at this moment one of my novels, as well as books by other Hamilton Stone Writers, is available via all the common electronic media.

Interesting blog discussion on e-books

Sunday, August 7th, 2011

Engine Books Press has an interestingly balanced discussion of the e-book phenomenon here.

One More Tale of Genji…

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

… by Murasaki Shikibu, tranlated by Royall Tyler, this time.  I have the full Waley translation and the Seidensticker.  I used to turn up my nose at abridged versions, but I got in the mood again– a damp gray summer early evening on the back screened porch, and  I just wanted to dip, and to taste Genji on the Kindle.  The translation is good, with the poems laid out in a very readable way.  So many sleeves made sopping wet– I mean dew covered, and during Genji’s exile, soaked by waves of salt water.  Such a different ethos, all the fathers and mothers trying to give their well-brought up accomplished daughters to the emperor or other high status men as concubines. Then with political machinations, raising the daughter’s status to possible Empress Mother and the power of the family as well. And then there’s how Genji essentially kidnaps and the little girl and eventually has sex with her and continues to keep her and make her his ideal woman, even while continuing his other affairs, although never failing in attention  to the many women he loves and does not abandon them.  As always, a fascinating excursion into an alternative reality. Dim, all those curtains and blinds, sex enhanced by handwriting.

And yes, it works on the Kindle, the grayness of the screen matches the weather, the spray of mountain waterfalls, the night time creeping in bedrooms, the dawn when you send you love note.  And as to the lower classes–the people who clean the latrines and actually dye the fabrics and cook the meals and empty the chamberpots– they apparently do not exist at all.

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

I’ve just been through an interesting experience.  I never paid a lot of attention to the reader reviews on Amazon.com till last week when an absolutely scathing review was posted about Marco’s Monster.  Now this is a book that has been in print for more than fifteen years, with two publishers, and I often make school visits and talk to kids about it and use it as a way to start them writing.  But this person said it was badly written, seemed unlike real children in the world, and she didn’t believe parents would let their children run the streets the way those kids do– anyhow, suddenly Marco has the lowest possible Amazon rating.  I was about to send out an email blast to everyone I know asking for help, but had the sense to talk it over first with a writer friend who recommended sending the blast, but only to those who had some reason to know the books, which made a lot of sense.  So I did, and I’ve been touched by the response– some family, like my sister and my niece and nephew, who were really good, plus a number of adult friends who wrote short complimentary statements, and above all raised the Amazon rating.  What’s scary is that a book with good reviews from Library Journal, Hornbook, etc. etc. could suddenly be sitting there with a bad rating.  The democratic possibilities of this digital world are considerable– but, as I guess we all know by now, so are the dangers.  To see what people say about Marco,click here.