Mar. 7th, 2007

ksmith: (Default)
From Radar, by way of MediaBistro:

HarperCollins Book Deal for Jenna Bush (Radar)
It's hard out there for would-be first-time authors — unless your dad is the president, y'all! First daughter Jenna Bush has landed the book deal she was fishing for, with HarperCollins announcing plans to publish Ana's Story: A Journey of Hope this fall. The News Corp.-owned publishing house pursued the deal in spite of a $300,000 price tag that had given other suitors pause.


Rest of story via the above link.

I know it's my publisher. I know publishing is a business, and this book may well make money. But HarperCollins has lost money on these sorts of books before--non-fiction by the media darlings of the moment--and yet they keep going after them.

And the midlists keep shrinking...
ksmith: (Default)
From Radar, by way of MediaBistro:

HarperCollins Book Deal for Jenna Bush (Radar)
It's hard out there for would-be first-time authors — unless your dad is the president, y'all! First daughter Jenna Bush has landed the book deal she was fishing for, with HarperCollins announcing plans to publish Ana's Story: A Journey of Hope this fall. The News Corp.-owned publishing house pursued the deal in spite of a $300,000 price tag that had given other suitors pause.


Rest of story via the above link.

I know it's my publisher. I know publishing is a business, and this book may well make money. But HarperCollins has lost money on these sorts of books before--non-fiction by the media darlings of the moment--and yet they keep going after them.

And the midlists keep shrinking...

Yea!

Mar. 7th, 2007 05:03 pm
ksmith: (Default)
Someone on SFFNet advised me to clear the Firefox cache, and I did. And it worked. We're back to seeing the book covers.

Yea!

Mar. 7th, 2007 05:03 pm
ksmith: (Default)
Someone on SFFNet advised me to clear the Firefox cache, and I did. And it worked. We're back to seeing the book covers.

Picture Day

Mar. 7th, 2007 05:11 pm
ksmith: (cillian_coy)
Taking a half day off from work tomorrow to go get a new book photo taken. Have the jacket picked out, and the scarf. The hair will be the thing--we'll see how it behaves in the morning. The desired look is Messy Boy Cut, but we'll see how it goes. I'll take hair and makeup stuff with me, Just In Case. Printed off some internet shots to show the photographer what I'd like. I'm going back to the same place where I had the CI shot taken, but I don't know if it's the same photographer.

Once every 3-4 years is about all of this that I can take...

Picture Day

Mar. 7th, 2007 05:11 pm
ksmith: (cillian_coy)
Taking a half day off from work tomorrow to go get a new book photo taken. Have the jacket picked out, and the scarf. The hair will be the thing--we'll see how it behaves in the morning. The desired look is Messy Boy Cut, but we'll see how it goes. I'll take hair and makeup stuff with me, Just In Case. Printed off some internet shots to show the photographer what I'd like. I'm going back to the same place where I had the CI shot taken, but I don't know if it's the same photographer.

Once every 3-4 years is about all of this that I can take...
ksmith: (gimme a break)
One of the best pieces of writing advice I ever heard came from, iirc, Lois Bujold, during either some long-forgotten panel or in a post on her list. The gist of it is, don't box yourself in. Don't mention specific dates, days of the week, times of day. Avoid as much as possible any sort of timing straitjacket, because sure as hell it will come back to haunt you. Maybe not right away. Maybe it will wait until Book 3 or 4, at which point you will realize that you mistimed some important past event that your character would not have forgotten, that you did yourself good and hard. If you happen to forget, never fear, for if the books do well, some sharp-eyed reader with a loooong memory will remind you. Or maybe, if you're lucky, no one will figure it out but you, and it will gnaw at you like a little gnawing thing, falling out of your mouth every time someone compliments the detail in your books. "Yeah, but in Book 3 on page 247, I did the stupidest thing--"

I recall this advice now, because I have spent the last hour using a nifty little program called QuickPhaseLite to chart moon phases around the Winter Solstice from the year 1836 to the present. Why, you ask? Well, she said, because occurrences of Waxing Gibbousness and their frequency have suddenly become important. And I could handwave this, except that I have a starting date that can be checked. And I could fudge the starting date, except if I do that, then the story loses that cool sense of being related to something that actually happened. So even though this program is likely reliable, I will probably find some way to check...then check again. And maybe again. Damn it.

Don't mind me. I'll be over here. Gibbering.
ksmith: (gimme a break)
One of the best pieces of writing advice I ever heard came from, iirc, Lois Bujold, during either some long-forgotten panel or in a post on her list. The gist of it is, don't box yourself in. Don't mention specific dates, days of the week, times of day. Avoid as much as possible any sort of timing straitjacket, because sure as hell it will come back to haunt you. Maybe not right away. Maybe it will wait until Book 3 or 4, at which point you will realize that you mistimed some important past event that your character would not have forgotten, that you did yourself good and hard. If you happen to forget, never fear, for if the books do well, some sharp-eyed reader with a loooong memory will remind you. Or maybe, if you're lucky, no one will figure it out but you, and it will gnaw at you like a little gnawing thing, falling out of your mouth every time someone compliments the detail in your books. "Yeah, but in Book 3 on page 247, I did the stupidest thing--"

I recall this advice now, because I have spent the last hour using a nifty little program called QuickPhaseLite to chart moon phases around the Winter Solstice from the year 1836 to the present. Why, you ask? Well, she said, because occurrences of Waxing Gibbousness and their frequency have suddenly become important. And I could handwave this, except that I have a starting date that can be checked. And I could fudge the starting date, except if I do that, then the story loses that cool sense of being related to something that actually happened. So even though this program is likely reliable, I will probably find some way to check...then check again. And maybe again. Damn it.

Don't mind me. I'll be over here. Gibbering.

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