Things have been happening here at the Confusion Factory. Also, things are about to happen. Here’s your handy guide to our Official Goin’s-ons.
- “Cutting Corners,” a Liaden Universe® short story including but not limited to: norbears, pirates, and piloting re-certs is now live and ready for you — yes, you! — to read it. Here’s the link.
- The first Patreon goody has been posted — Steve reading “A Night at the Opera,” by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. This may be accessed by Patreon folks only. After May 15, it will migrate to Splinter Universe for everyone’s listening pleasure. Here’s your link.
- The second Patreon goody will be posted on or about Saturday April 29, and it will be my turn. There’s a poll open right now, to help me figure out which story I ought to read. Here’s a link to the poll.
- On May 1 at 12 noon Eastern Daylight Time, Steve and I will be hosting a pre-release A(sk) M(e) A(nything) at Reddit. We hope you’ll be able to join us. You do need to register with Reddit in order to take part in the AMA. You can register here.
- On Tuesday, May 2, The Gathering Edge, by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, the twentieth novel-length adventure in the Liaden Universe®, will be published, in hardcover, ebook, and audiobook.
- On Saturday, May 13, from 1-3, Steve and I will be at the Barnes and Noble in the Augusta Marketplace in Augusta, Maine, hosting a meet and greet and a book signing, and we hope to see you there!
And now? You’re all caught up.
Sad news: the audio book for The Gathering Edge is not yet available to pre-order on Audible nor Amazon under title or author Sharon Lee nor author Steve Miller. Audible appears to list some of your books under author Sharon Lee and some of your books under author Steve Miller, but not all of your books under both. Perhaps there is a Baen person who could persuade the keepers of the Amazon database to update it.
Um. That would be because it’s still being recorded.
I would love to pre-order a Nook ebook version at B&N, but so far it isn’t there.
This is true. I don’t know why; since getting things into catalogs falls into the publisher’s honor.