Ebook News You Can Use

Those of you who purchase ebooks from Amazon need to be aware of the following:

a.  The Kindle edition of omnibus The Crystal Variation, by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, including the novels Crystal Soldier, Crystal Dragon, and Balance of Trade — has been taken off-sale by Amazon pending correction of “serious quality issues.” These issues are “misspellings.”  Amazon forwarded the list of 144 instances of misspelled words to Baen, which forwarded it to us.  More than a dozen of those “misspelled” words are “cermacrete.”  We also have “ISBN” identified as a “misspelled” word. Also, cantra, kais, qwint, Iloheen, aetherium, autoshout — you get the idea.  Steve and I have each made a pass down the list and have so far identified three Actual Misspelled Words, and one that I need to research, but believe to be a spacing problem.  The process from here goes like this:  We tell Baen which words are Actually Misspelled.  A Baen editor will fix those errors.  The Baen Ebook Team will then recompile the omnibus and shuffle it into its various formats, including forwarding a “clean copy” to Amazon.  Amazon will then, at some point, put the book back on sale.

If you would like to purchase an electronic copy of The Crystal Variation in the immediate future, your best choice of vendor would be Baen Ebooks, which offers the book for sale in All Formats Known to Man or Clutch.  Here’s the link.

b.  Amazon has also stopped selling Courier Run, an echapbook containing two Liaden stories by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, for Serious Quality Issues.  In a Surprising Plot Twist, this title shows as being Live and On Sale from my publisher’s dashboard.  KDP support is Researching the Issue and promises an answer by August 18 — next Thursday.

If you would like to purchase this echapbook before next Thursday, please seek it elsewhere — BN, Kobo, iBooks still offer it for sale.

c. Sleeping with the Enemy was also briefly off-sale at Amazon, but its honor has been redeemed and it is now on-sale in the Kindle store, as well as at the rest of the Usual Suspects.

d. Spell Bound, an echapbook collecting “Will-o’-the-wisp” and “The Wolf’s Bride,” two Archers Beach stories previously published on Splinter Universe, is now for sale at the Amazon Kindle store (after a brief tussle in which Amazon insisted that the content was available “freely on the web” and therefore I had no right to publish the compilation), and! at Kobo, and iBooks.  BN will presumably get around to publishing sometime soon.

A related note: Since these stories have been collected, they have been removed from Splinter Universe.

Today, it is rainy and cool at the Cat Farm and Confusion Factory.  I plan a quiet, working day.  I realize that we are very fortunate in our weather.  All of you who labor under Dangerous Heat Advisories — please be alert and take good care of yourselves.

 

In which it has been a day of parts

. . .too many parts, in fact, running in all directions at once.

Those who do not partake of the joys of Facebook may have missed the announcement that Sleeping with the Enemy, Adventures in the Liaden Universe® Number 22, is now on sale (as an ebook only) at Amazon, Kobo, ibooks, Page Foundry, and Tolino.  We are told that it will be published RealSoonNow at BN/Noon, Scribd, and 24Symbols.

As I write this, Alliance of Equals has garnered 86! reader reviews on Amazon.  Only 114 short of 200!  You guys are going gang-busters!

. . .as we used to say.

Steve and I have declared tomorrow an electron-free day, so we will be scarce-to-invisible.  If you have an urgent matter to resolve, you can try emailing the cats, but, well — good luck with that.

# # #

Progress on Book the Next
40,459/100,000 OR 40.46% complete

“Ah, but any system is subject to manipulation. For instance, one who stands in a position of strength may decide that one whose position is. . .less strong has not paid fully enough, and demand additional consideration.” She paused, head to one side. “It is rarely said, I think, that one has paid too fully, but we must be alert to the possibility.”

Childrens Book Cellar Steve and Sharon photo by Ellen Richmond

In which busy writers are busy

Woke up early because the power went out (and came back on before the generator could engage).  Guess everybody was running their A/C and fans against yesterday’s heat wave.

Steve made omelettes for breakfast, after which we moved on to working on the chapbook until it was time to head out to Children’s Book Cellar and our signing.

Driving in, we realized that the event could very easily go until 4:00 and we had neglected to eat lunch, which was — as nearly everything can be made to be — an excuse to stop at Dairy Queen on the way in to Waterville, in order to purchase milkshakes to sustain us in our Time of Fame.

This involved some unanticipated delay, since there appeared to be a hazing going on at the College Avenue Dairy Queen, which left one newbie on duty at a very busy counter, while four of his colleagues lounged in the back room.

Still, milkshakes were achieved, and we arrived Exactly on Time at Children’s Book Cellar, to find a Mighty Crowd awaiting us, including Carolyn Smith and her husband, from Stoneham, Massachusetts, and our own James Hetley, down from Bangor, as well as some local folk.  We had a blast, and hoping our audience had the same.  Thanks to everyone who came to see us, and for Ellen Richmond and the Children’s Book Cellar for hosting us!

After our event, we hit the grocery store, returned home, and got with the ebook one! more! time!

On that front, I am pleased to report that Sleeping with the Enemy is now “publishing” at Amazon, and BN.  Expect to see the title on sale somewhere in the next 24 to 48 hours.

EDITED TO ADD:  The book is on sale NOW at Amazon.  Here’s your link.

Draft2Digital will be uploading the book to its vendors (Kobo, iBooks, Inktera, Scribd, 24Symbols, and Tolino) on its usual schedule.  Remember!  You will not be able to purchase this title through Smashwords.

Tomorrow, it’s back to the manuscript.  Monday may possibly be an Ocean Day.  We shall see.

In the meanwhile, it’s still hot, though not so much as yesterday.  We hold out some hope of rain tomorrow, which will be, so they (They) say, cooler than today.  Monday, however, we’re right back into the frying pan, and looking to stay there awhile.

As of this writing, there are 77 reader reviews of Alliance of Equals on Amazon!  Go, you guys!  Only 123 ’til we hit 200!

Speaking of Alliance — if you’ve read the book and want to talk about it, there is a spoiler thread here.  Please do feel free to make use of it.

And now?  I believe I see the cabana boy in the distance, bearing a bottle and a corkscrew.

Everybody stay happy.

Sleeping cover

Today, at the Cat Farm. . .

. . .it was hot.  All four cats were in my office, because Ceiling Fan, but — it was still hot.  More hot coming tomorrow.  Yay, summer.

We have a title for the upcoming chapbook.  Here it is:

Sleeping with the Enemy
Adventures in the Liaden Universe® Number 22
© 2016 by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller

For those coming in late, this chapbook will contain two stories:  “Chimera,” which was published at Baen.com in May 2015 (I may have said April last night; we turned it in in April; it was published in May in support of Dragon in Exile, which was a June book.  Ta-da!), and “Friend of a Friend,” a brand-new story, also set on Surebleak.  The book will include an author’s foreword.

Distant early warning!  We will be increasing the price of this chapbook, and all/any future chapbooks, from $2.99 to $3.99.  Thank you for your understanding.

I had hoped to get Sleeping. . . uploaded at least to Amazon tonight, but — it ain’t gonna happen.  Possibly tomorrow night (more likely Sunday afternoon, though, because Book Signing tomorrow).  In any case — soon.

As of right now, Alliance of Equals has 61 reader reviews on Amazon.  Only 139 more until we hit the goal of 200!

As alluded to above, tomorrow, Steve and I will be signing book and talking trash at our local indie bookstore — Children’s Book Cellar, 52 Main Street, Waterville — at 2 pm.  Drop by and see us if you can!

And I think that’s all the news.

Everybody stay cool.

Scrabble holds the high ground July 14 2016

She let fly with an iron toe, and kicked him back to Buffalo

Let’s do the bragging first, and get that out of the way.

Last week, Alliance of Equals by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller hit Number 3 in the list of bestselling science fiction hardcovers, and! it was also Number 8 on the All Science Fiction list.

Thank you all very much.  This would not have happened without you!

Steve and I have been working on putting together a new Echapbook.  It is currently title-less, but will contain two novelettes, one old and one new.  The “old” story is “Chimera,” which was published to Baen.com in March 2015.  The “new” story is “Friend of a Friend.”  Both stories take place on Surebleak.  An author’s introduction will also be included.

Speaking of Echapbooks!  Over the next couple weeks, in my Abundant Spare Time(tm), I will be removing our Pinbeam Books chapbooks from the Smashwords store.  There may be a Small Period of Readjustment as I set up distribution through Draft2Digital, but eventually the books will be back in the iStore, Kobo, and everywhere else.  Amazon and BN listings will not be impacted.

Amazon reader reviews for Alliance of Equals as of this writing number 48!  Only 152 more needed to reach our goal of 200 reader reviews!  Go, Team Liad!

Also!  For those who pre-order ‘waaaaaaaaaay out from Amazon — The Gathering Edge, to be published in May 2017, is now available for pre-order.  We hope, but do not yet know (because, c’mon — eleven months out?) that the Uncle will once again conspire with us to offer signed and/or signed and personalized copies for pre-order sometime much closer to the publication date.

And, remember!  Steve and I will be talking books and signing them, too, at the Children’s Book Cellar, 52 Main Street, Waterville, this Saturday, July 16, at 2 pm. Hope to see you all there!

I was editing today, and I want to assure you that I had Expert assistance.

Cat editors hard at work July 14 2016###

An’ if he wasn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer, he’d do ’til something lethal came along.

Today’s blog title brought to you by Pete Seeger by way of Bruce Springsteen, “Erie Canal.”  Here’s your link.

 

Even more eye candy!

A couple days ago, we were pleased to show you David Mattingly’s painting that would become the cover for The Gathering Edge.

Today, we are pleased to share the comp cover, still smokin’ hot from the Baen Art Department.

Layout 1

Also!  If viewing the art above has made you a little peckish, Cedar Sanderson has featured Daav yos’Phelium’s Extra Special Grilled Cheese Sandwiches in today’s Eat This While You Read That column.  Here’s your link.

Also, also!  Alliance of Equals has 40 reader reviews on Amazon!  Only 160 to go!  You guys are doing great.

And! (given “also” a rest, you see)  Steve and I will be signing Alliance of Equals at Children’s Book Cellar, 52 Main Street, Waterville, Maine (our local indie bookstore) on Saturday, July 16 (that’s this Saturday!) at 2 p.m.  If you’re in the area, come on by and say, “hi!”

The weatherbeans are calling for A Warm One, as Maine counts these things.  I, of course, will be at the nice, air conditioned, hospital doing the volunteer gig.  Steve and the cats will likely need to put the portable A/C unit in to play.  Ah, summer. . .And, as Mainers say earnestly to each other, under just these sorts of conditions: “At least it ain’t snowin’.”

Hope you have a good day, wherever you are.

 

Carousels and Calendars

Today is Tuesday, which means!

Yesterday was Monday, and!

Tomorrow is Wednesday.  I need to do the hospital thingy tomorrow.  Best not to lose track of that.  Trooper — remind me tomorrow that it’s Wednesday, and I need to be away from the house for five or six hours.

Yeah, that’s gonna work.

So, let’s see. . .

As of this typing, there are 36! reader reviews on Amazon for Alliance of Equals, which is pretty impressive.  Only 164 more until we crack 200!

Though the micro-mini book tour was in support of Alliance of Equals, we/I were asked several times about the possibility of another (or, as one interlocutor had it, “the next”) Carousel book.

At this point, the Carousel books are a trilogy.  Really.  There are a number of reasons for this, including lack of Author Time, and Failure to Become a Bestseller.

I wrote Carousel Tides (against Best Advice) while we were between contracts, ‘way the heck back in 2006.  It was rejected By Nearly Everyone (foretold by Best Advice) through 2006 and 2007, purchased by Baen in 2008, saw print in 2010, and! began earning royalties in 2014.

Not only can I not go to Vegas on that, but — more importantly — I can’t put cat food in the bowls.

Now, I’m fortunate (and grateful) that Baen kept Carousel Tides in print long enough for it to start earning.  Too many of my colleagues see the hard copy editions of their work yanked after two or three accounting periods for “lack of numbers,” and never have the opportunity to earn out.

But, the fact remains that the Liaden books earn many, many times more than the Carousel books.  Make no mistake — Clan Korval keeps the cats fed and the electricity on.

(This is yet another low, unworthy, venal fact that ought to have no place in the House of Art, and I apologize, but — professional publishing is doomed to disappoint everyone who believes in the Purity of Art.)

Mind you, this has nothing to do with whether I’m “tired of” the Carousel premise/characters, or have run out of ideas.  Just between you and me, I’ll probably be writing some more stories in the Carousel/Archers Beach/Six Worlds universe, because that’s how I roll.  But the likelihood of another novel anytime soon — or, really, at all — isn’t high.

I do know that Kate and Company have some very devoted fans — thank you.  But — we have as of this writing four* Liaden novels still under contract, and contracted work — which is to say, the work that pays the bills — must come first.

For those who never heard of the Carousel Trilogy by Sharon Lee (as there were at least as many people in the audience who hadn’t as had), follows some news you can use:

Carousel Trilogy ebooks at Baen.com:
Carousel Tides
Carousel Sun
Carousel Seas

In addition, you may find the Carousel Trilogy in paper and ebook at all of the Usual Suspects.

Stories set in Archers Beach, free to read:
The Gift of Music
The night don’t seem so lonely
Will-o’-the-wisp
The Wolf’s Bride

_________
*Stares at delivery schedule on the wall.  Right.  Four novels; not five.

Toadstool Books Milford July 9 2016

Buy my book

This post is brought to you by the phrase, “…but don’t start here. . .” 

A discussion began on Facebook re: reader reviews, honesty, why books do — or don’t — get published, and how writers earn money.  I reacted emotionally to the continued beat of, “It’s a good book, but you can’t start here,” and I said I would try to explain why that was.  Follows the explanation.

For those who may be alarmed by some of the comments made below:  you are in no immediate danger of losing Liad.  We have five Liaden books under contract as I write this.

The discussion has run a little long, but I hope you’ll stick with me.

Let’s do this thing.

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As most people reading here know, Steve Miller and Sharon Lee (that’s me) have been mostly writing in a big, sprawling space opera universe that they built all by their onesies back in the mid-1980s (in the last century; when what portable phones there were weighed more than a beagle, and the overwhelming majority of civilians had landlines (we won’t go into party lines, your head would explode); impact printers walked the earth, dispensing text from 9 to 24 pins; 300-baud was considered Quite the Thing, modem-wise; and you could smoke cigarettes anydamnwhere you pleased and be thought So Cool).

Lee and Miller’s first book, establishing that sprawling space opera geography, which later became known as the Liaden Universe® — was written in 1984 and published in 1988.  It was titled Agent of Change.  Yesterday, July 5, the 19th novel in the Liaden Universe® was released.  It is titled Alliance of Equals.

We repeatedly make the case that the Liaden Universe® novels are not a series, which is to say, they are not necessarily sequential, though some are, and form mini-series within the whole tapestry.  The books tend to follow the doings of a particular set of Liadens called Clan Korval, with a penchant for trouble.  Just to keep you on your toes — sometimes we write about characters and situations that are not about Clan Korval.  For a complete explanation of our books and universe and how the books fit together, see this page.

In the 28 years since the first book was published, the Universe has gained many readers, and fans. This is Good and Wonderful.  We are grateful to the readers and fans of the Liaden Universe® who twice brought our career back from the dead, and allowed us to continue writing in our universe.

Now, back in the day, after we had died the first time, there were only three books in the Universe:  Agent of Change, Conflict of Honors, Carpe Diem.  Readers and fans encouraged other readers by telling them to start with Agent of Change and continue.  This was reasonable; the Whole Liaden Universe® at that time was contained in three +/- 100,000 word novels.  Any reader worth their salt could polish them off over a weekend.

Came our first resurrection, which saw the reprinting of the first three novels, and the publication of ten new novels.  Long-time readers, whose mass market paperbacks of the first three Liaden novels had long since been read to pieces, snatched  up the reprints and pushed them to their friends, who may have missed them the first time around.  The subsequent novels continued the pattern.

Then we died again, not for very long this time, and we continued to write in our big sprawly space opera universe.  As I said, the 19th novel just came out; there are three novels’ worth of short stories published in three collections, and there may eventually be a fourth, since we can’t seem to break ourselves of the habit of writing short stories.

Now — leaping back in time to 1988, 1989. . .the reason that there was no fourth Liaden book in 1990, was that the first three books did not have numbers.  This means, nobody bought our books.  Which was — according to those very numbers, which the publisher shared with us — true by the standards of the mass market standards of the time.

Imagine our surprise, then, when we learned, after the internet finally arrived in Maine and those readers and fans of the first three books found us — a lot more people — a whole lot more people — had read our books than had bought them.

How was this possible?  Well, the folks who had bought the books lent them to their friends, of course, just like anybody does, when they find a book they like a lot.

As one person told me, when we were still in our first, decade-long death:  “Everybody knew there would be more Liaden books, because they were so much fun!  We were really sad when there weren’t any more.”

Ah.

Which brings us to the title of this post.

Buy my books.

There is a reason why authors say, “Buy my books,” and not necessarily, “Read my books.”  It’s a low, unworthy, venal reason, that ought to have no place in the House of Art, but here it is —

Authors get paid when somebody buys their book.  It’s a simple transaction:  You buy a book, we get our percent, and we go away.  Afterward, you can read that book a million times and we don’t earn one cent more.  Unless, of course, you buy another copy of the book for some reason, or recommend it to a like-minded friend, who then buys their own copy.

But, wait!  There’s more.

Publishers are not satisfied if readers buy one book out of 19.  Publishers are very zen creatures, living in the moment.  It’s nice if the backlist sells, but that’s free money, in a sense.  What they need to keep an eye on is how this book sells. And if it doesn’t sell well, and is seen, perhaps, to be one of several in a row that have not sold well (where “well” is a moving target decided by the publisher), then. . . Understand, that the House guards the House’s profit, as is only meet.  If a series does less-well enough, and it’s no longer profitable for the House — the House kills the series.

No, really; it does happen.  Be honest — have you not, yourself, been enchanted by the first two books of a trilogy, and been seriously annoyed — at the author — when the third book is never published?  Sometimes, yes, this is the author’s fault, but not always.  I would go so far as to say, not usually.

So, real harm is done — not just to the authors, but to readers of particular series, or universes — if the chorus upon every new book hitting the shelves is. . .but don’t start here.

To bring this back to the personal — Steve and I are not idiots.  We have written portal books into the Liaden Universe®; we layer backstory into every book — both to remind existing readers of various details, and to clue new readers in.  It is possible for a new reader to read the 19th book (for instance), and follow the story.  Even, possibly, we hope, enjoy the story.  No, they will not know everything and everyone from all the rest of the previous stories, but I put it to you —

When you first read Agent of Change, or whichever Liaden book you did read first — did you know every single bit of backstory?  All of Val Con’s relatives?  The place of Korval in the trade culture of the universe?  Did that stop you from enjoying the story?  Or did you want to know more?

Now, I understand that people want to be truthful; they don’t want to mislead other readers.  That’s honorable, and I salute you.

Some readers will, indeed, be put off if they aren’t given all the backstory at once.  I’m certain people stopped reading Agent of Change, ‘way back last century because we didn’t explain enough up front.  Why am I certain?  Because people have said as much to me, or around me.  And that’s OK; we don’t all like to read the same thing; we all have different comfort levels and different things that we want from our pleasure reading.

But, I think you’re shortchanging the intelligence, resilience, and story-sense of a whole bunch of potential readers by actively discouraging them to try the Liaden Universe®, at whatever point they care to enter.  I think that they deserve the chance to try, and see what happens.

I will tell you that I — we get to see the royalty statements, after all.  We get the checks, and we can look back and see what the check for last year’s book was, and how many sold in the first period — I have seen a worrisome (to me; I worry; it’s my job). . .downturn in the first reported sales of Dragon in Exile, which is possibly the first Liaden novel to have a concerted. . .but don’t start here! campaign brought against it by readers and reviewers.

Now, there are many other reasons for a book to experience low(er) sales.  We may have written a lousy book.  The title might have turned readers off.  The cover art might not have spoken to folks who would potentially enjoy the story.  The economy sucked and book-buying budgets went down the drain.  There are lots of reasons why some books do less-well than others.

But, the reality is: if people don’t buy our books, if readers are discouraged from buying the new book — we’re dead again, as authors.

For those of you who remember landlines and party lines. . .The tradition we and the Liaden Universe® come from is that of Andre Norton, whose many novels took place in a full-realized universe.  Has anyone seen a review of an Andre Norton book that included. . .but don’t start here?

Robert Heinlein came to the realization that a “universe” was a desirable thing very late in his career, and his attempts to cobble up his work into a cohesive universe was not, imho, very successful, but!  Do people write reviews of Heinlein novels that include. . .but don’t start here?  (Leaving aside those folks who think you shouldn’t read Heinlein at all.)

. . .I’ve been mulling over the reviews garnered by some of our colleagues.  Lois Bujold is probably doing the closest to what we’re trying to do in the Liaden Universe®, in writing novels as they occur — which is to say “out of order.”  And I don’t think I’ve ever seen a review of one of her books that said. . .but don’t start here.  There are many, many, many authors writing multi-books series — and remember, the Liaden Universe® is not a trad series — and I don’t see. . .but don’t start here.

Steve and I are, I think, doing something unique in the field, and we’ve been doing it for 28 years.  It’s hard to be unique in publishing, because unique is difficult to explain, and because unique doesn’t fit into the cozy little sub-genres the bookstores invented to make business easy on themselves.  And, if you do something for 28 years, you tend to be trivialized by. . .people who Form Opinions based on Their Opinions.  Oh, that’s Lee and Miller doing That Thing that they do. Bodice rippers in space.  Too bad they don’t have any original ideas. . .

So. . .you who are readers of — who are friends of — Liad. . .by all means write reviews, and share your honest opinion of our work with other readers.  Especially share your opinion of the newest Liaden adventure, along with, perhaps, one of two of your personal favorites.  If you liked the book, say so.  If you didn’t like the book, say so.

But, please, don’t tell people not to read our newest book.

Thanks for listening.

 

 

Important Info for Uncle Hugo Pre-orderers

How to say this?

I’m very sorry, but the odds are good that, if you pre-ordered a copy of Alliance of Equals from Uncle Hugo’s, you will not have them in hand before-or-on the official publication date of July 5.

This is not Uncle Hugo’s fault

Simon and Schuster, which is Baen’s distributor, has, for the entire month of June been assuring Baen, us, and Uncle Hugo that the books are on the truck, and should be arriving here at the Confusion Factory at any moment.

In fact. . .the books went onto the truck today, and (according to the tracking information from UPS) will arrive here in Maine tomorrow, Wednesday, June 29.  Even if Steve and I sign books like Mad, Signing Things (which I promise we will do), we’re talking in excess of 200 books, many of them requiring personalization — so, best case, we can get them on a truck to Minneapolis on Friday, July 1.  July 4 is, of course, Monday, so — you see where I’m going with this.

To forestall — No, I don’t know why S&S behaved in this really frustrating manner, since I don’t work at the S&S warehouse.

Again, apologies for the delay.  I promise it’ll still be a good book, even it’s mailed a couple days late.

 

 

The root of all your problems is that you don’t look like me

Well, let’s see. . .

Several questions from the depths of the Roll Call, so! Answers.

*Book tours happen at the whim and/or planning of the publisher.  If we have helpers on the ground, Steve and I will occasionally do a book tour, or visit a bookstore local to the vicinity of an SF convention or WorldCon.  We were in Colorado some years back — 2006, I think — as GoHs at CoSine; and in Denver Itself for the WorldCon in 2008.  We did not do a bookstore tour at either of those cons; the local bookstores being largely uninterested in having second-string scifi writers come to their stores.  We are Further Constrained by the fact that we don’t fly, which limits the venues to which the publisher can economically send us.  Which is to say:  Unless we’re in Denver for Another Reason, and one or two or three of the local stores are willing to host a signing, our book tours, at least, will probably not reach Denver.

*I’m not certain I understand either the need or the desirability for a Collected Liaden Works for Kindle.  That being said…to the best of my knowledge, Baen is selling two bundles of novels — Korval’s Legacy and Phase Change, but I think that only gets you ten or twelve.  Surely, if one has a Kindle, there’s a way to make a category, say, LIADEN, and stick all your Liaden books under that category?  Just a thought.

*The reason we have not Mentioned the Rest of the Geography, Fauna, and Population (if any) of Planet Surebleak is because!  all the stories thus far have happened in the Port and the City, and neither Steve nor I feel like writing a Forbes Guide to the Surebleak Outback.

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As reported elsewhere, you may now pre-order the Audible version of Alliance of EqualsHere’s the link.

Yes, we are aware that Audible has the book listed as AN Alliance of Equals; we have written to them on the topic.

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It’s a warm and pleasant day  here at the Confusion Factory.  I have vacuumed, and done a blankie run, the latter no doubt being the reason why I have three Large Cats asleep on my desk, all within the reach of my hand.  The coffeepot is hissing through its cleaning cycle; and I need to sort laundry.  After lunch, I will make a Sincere Effort to actually add words to the working manuscript.

I hope everyone is having a fine and relaxing day.

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Today’s blog title is brought to you by Julie Brown, “Brand New Girl.”  Here’s your link.

Sprite and Steve June 14 2016