All the poor soldiers are weary

In which several points are addressed, in no particular order, and with no particular connection.

1.  Have you pre-ordered your signed/personalized copy of Dragon in Exile from Uncle Hugo’s Science Fiction Bookstore yet?  Time’s a-wastin’.  Here’s a link to background and instructions.

2.  Sharon Lee and Steve Miller are writers.  We are published by Baen Books. We are not horses, and we are not in “Baen’s Stable.”  You may think it means “all of the writers who are published by Baen” — and you would be wrong.  A human stable is understood to mean a group of people who have been trained, or who work for, a particular team or organization. Writers are trained by many, and they are self-employed.

3.  Pursuant to 2, above, we have nothing to say (and have therefore said nothing) on the topics of sick and unhappy canines, as they have Nothing to do With Us.  Sadly, some. . .outraged persons who are unable to make fine distinctions, have decided to make Grand Gestures, such as refusing to review all Baen Books, because they feel that Baen Books is the architect of the present silly shenanigans of a few. . . very loud authors.  If you see fewer reviews of our work, this may be the reason why.

4.  There is apparently more than enough Stupid to go around.  This does not mean you have to take a handful of Stupid out of the box when it comes to you.

5.  Eric Flint has written a cogent and sane piece about awards, and, coincidentally, the history of the SF/F genre, and the SF community.  It is the long view from someone who has been in the field for longer than five years, and who has taken the time to understand the field, and the community.  Well worth a read.  It is a lengthy essay, but take it in shifts, if you need to.  Here’s your link.

6.  Yes, Korval’s Game has been out of print for about a year.  How clever of you to notice!  The good news is that it’s being reprinted by Baen this month, and should be available soon.  Now!  It used to be that the distributors would let indie bookstores know when a backordered book was reprinted, but apparently they don’t do that, anymore.  So — if you would share this happy news with your favorite indie bookstore, the next time you’re in, you’d be doing everyone a good turn.

7.  Today’s blog title comes from “The Banks of Sicily.”  Here’s one link     AND!  Here’s another

Sooper Trooper rockin' the red basket
Sooper Trooper rockin’ the red basket

In which reviews are endlessly fascinating

Dragon is Exile has now entered the Review Arena, by which I mean that reviews are beginning to appear in various venues, in anticipation of the June 2 manifestation of the Hardcover Itself.

We have, first, a review from Publishers Weekly, which is a very good venue in which to see your book reviewed.  Publishers Weekly — aka PW — is the weekly industry news magazine for the publishing industry.  It also reviews books (though not, by any means, All The Books).  Booksellers use PW reviews to choose stock; some libraries also choose new books from the PW review lists (though I hear nowadays more librarians are depending on Library Journal and not referencing PW — is there an acquiring librarian in the house?  Can you tell me if this is correct?).

So, anyway, a PW review is a good thing, and a good PW review is doubleplusgood.

The whole review will appear in tomorrow’s (April 13) edition of PW; I’m just going to excerpt some shiny bits here.

In Lee and Miller’s sprawling and satisfying 18th Liaden Universe novel (after Trade Secret), the spacefaring Clan Korval settles into its new home on the crime-ridden planet of Surebleak after being exiled from Liad.

Space opera mixes with social engineering, influenced by Regency-era manners and delicate notions of honor. For established fans, it’s like spending time with old friends; however, many ongoing story lines are still unresolved by the end of the book. Newcomers are advised to choose an earlier entry point to the series.

*stands back and considers the above*

Not bad.  Not bad, at all.

Oh, and about that “Newcomers are advised to choose an earlier entry point”?  We hear that a lot.  Mostly established fans, who have been reading along with us, are of the opinion that newbies cannot possibly comprehend the action in any new book you’d like to name (including those volumes that Steve and I wrote deliberately to be portal books) unless they start with Agent of Change and go forth, systematically, until they arrive at the new book.

They are, let me hasten to say, perfectly reasonable and within their rights to hold and express this opinion.

However.  Because this is How They’ve Done It, they don’t have the perspective of a Brand New Reader coming to the universe for the first time with New Title Of Your Choice.  (I also lack this perspective — but my perspective isn’t that of a reader, either.)  Among other things, this insistence on starting from the beginning reveals a touching tenderness for the sensibilities and story-sense of new readers.

Steve and I, however, like to think that most people who seek out SFF as their reading drug of choice are tough, savvy readers, with an excellent sense of story and character, who can therefore come up to speed with frightening quickness, no matter how strange the terrain.

Occasionally, we’re vindicated in our belief, as in the following review, from Otherwhere Gazette:

The 18th book in the Liaden Universe®Dragon in Exile, is as gripping as the rest most likely are.  Readers of the series will buy the book as a matter of course.  However, there are people (such as this reviewer) who have never read anything in this series.  The good news is that this book can stand alone quite well.  The bad news is that people (such as this reviewer) who pick this book up will now be on the hook for seventeen more books.

The new reader will be introduced to a complex cast of characters who will interact based in part on seventeen books worth of prior history.  However, the authors do paint their characters quite well.  It is quite easy to believe in and root for the characters without knowing the back story.

For folks who like their plots spare and their characters few, perhaps this is not the book.  But for those who like high adventure and fascinating cultures and plots and characters so intertwined that the book should be written on a mobius strip; here’s your book, the first of eighteen that you will buy.

You can read the whole review here

*smiles fondly at the above shiny bits*

I particularly like the moebius strip comment, because that’s exactly what writing these five (well, OK, two, so far) books feels like, from here.

So! Today around the Cat Farm is Terrorizing the Cats (also known as vacuuming), washing dishes (gave that a miss, yesterday, in order to work with Padi), and packing what I hope will be the last box of papers to go to the archives.  Also, writing.

It’s a clear and sunny day here at the Confusion Factory.  If it’s not too windy, I may even go for a walk.

I hope everyone’s enjoying a pleasant Sunday.

 

 

 

In which I left a little girl in Kingston town

So, it was a busy weekend, here at the Cat Farm and Confusion Factory.  For those who were away, and/or  celebrating the holiday of their people, if any, I shall sum up:

1.  Madame the Editor has purchased two additional Liaden novels, to be completed after the Five Book Dash, of which Alliance of Equals (to be turned in at the end of May) is the second.  Steve and I are calling these the Mask Books, to differentiate.  No, we don’t know what, or who, they’ll be about, yet.  Make sure y’all thank Madame for her care of your reading habit.

2.  We have posted, on Splinter Universe, an introduction to, and two outtake chapters from, Shan and Priscilla Ride Again, a Liaden novel which was never finished, though it was written out to 15 chapters (about 22,000 words).  Here are your links:   Introduction       Outtake Chapters

2a.  For the next 16 weeks (aka through August 3, with one week off (the week of June 8) because, Book Tour), we will be posting a chapter from Shan and Priscilla Ride Again on Splinter Universe.  The reason it’s 16 weeks for 15 chapters is because there is a prologue, which we will post next Monday, April 13.

3.  At the urging of many, Lee and Miller set up a Patreon account, with an experimental goal, in order to measure interest.  The experimental goal was subscriptions totaling $500 per month.  As I write this, 123 patrons have subscribed, for a total of $958.99.  Which is. . .awesome.  Thank you all.

Today in East Winslow, I am working on the short story commissioned for Baen.com, in support of Dragon in Exile.  It doesn’t have a title yet, but I’m about 2,000 in and feeling good about the character.  With luck and a lack of persons needing to view the house, I’ll have the rough draft done today.  Hopefully, a title will also suggest itself.

Fans of Scrabble, Sprite, and Trooper will be glad to know that they haven’t let the events of the weekend throw them off stride.  I provide photographic proof:

Sprite up in the high branches
Sprite up in the high branches
Trooper continuing his study of the properties of the shower
Trooper continuing his study of the properties of the shower
Scrabble inspecting my work
Scrabble inspecting my work

 

Today’s blog title is courtesy of Harry Belafonte, “Jamaica Farewell”

In which there is astonishment, and good news for Liaden readers

As I write this, the Patreon account has long passed its Exploratory Goal of $500, rocketing to $705.50 in 17 short hours.  That’s. . .pretty amazing.  Steve and I thank everyone who has subscribed.  We’ve had a couple people apologizing because their donation is so small.  Please, there’s nothing at all to apologize for.  Your generosity and goodwill  is very, very much appreciated.

Speaking of good news, we have some for you.

Madame the Editor has, with the agreement of ourselves, and the cooperation of Madame the Agent, written a contract for. . .

. . .two as yet titleless Liaden novels, to be consummated after we turn in the final novel in the Five Book Dash.  We’re calling these the Mask Books.

So, what that means is that we have work through 2019, and you have Liaden books coming through, oh, 2020? 2021?

We hope that makes y’all as happy as it makes us, and!  If you happen to see Toni Weisskopf, yanno, at a con, or around the intertubes, or someplace, you might want to thank her.

And, now?

Steve is making us soup to go with our salad, because, for a change, it’s snowing.  After lunch, it’s back to work on Alliance of Equals.

Thank you all.

In which Lee and Miller try Patreon

Per our discussion the other day, and the subsequent input from y’all, we have put up a Patreon page.  Here’s your link.

As noted several times at Patreon, this is a Complete Experiment, for us, and for you.  We’re going to be riding the wave for a little while and we’ll see where it takes us.  All of us.

So!  Housekeeping details:  Patreon apparently charges patron credit cards at the end of each month. They take out their piece of the action and pass the rest on to the artist.  There’s a tiny fee for getting the money out of Patreon’s account and down to our bank.

Since this is an experiment, and we haven’t committed to any Creation or Rewards, yet, you will for the first three months — April, May, June — be supporting the authors’ peace of mind as they finish writing Alliance of Equals, and embark on the Dragon in Exile book tour in early June.  At the end of June, we’ll reassess.

Someone had asked for the option to make quarterly donations.  I’m very sorry, but Patreon’s control panel allows for only two sorts of payments:  Per project, or per month. Since we’re not at the moment doing a project, we set the switch to “per month.”

Thank you all very much for your support, and for your input.

Oh.  I should probably mention that your patronage may also go to support Trooper’s long-held wish to travel to Angkor Vat.  I caught him reading a guide book this morning:

Trooper with the Angkor Wat guidebook
Trooper with the Angkor Vat guidebook

Pre-order SIGNED Dragon in Exile NOW!

Why, yes, this is a repeat post.  We’re trying to catch all the folks who want a signed copy, but who know they still have plenty of time to order — and then miss the deadline.  So!  Tell your friends!  Tell your neighbors!  Tell your mom!  Time, it marches; pre-order TODAY!

Here’s how:

As promised, Uncle Hugo’s Science Fiction Bookstore in Minneapolis, will be — is! — taking pre-orders for signed and personalized copies of Dragon in Exile, the 18th novel entry in the Liaden Universe®, the history of same having been faithfully recounted by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, Chroniclers of Korval since Nineteen-Aught-Eighty-Eight.

Be aware that there is a deadline in play!  Personalized copies (in which “personalized” means that you ask the authors to write something in addition to their names in your book) must be pre-ordered by May 1.  NOTE1:  If you want your book personalized, you must write the personalization you desire in the Special Instructions box on the order form.  Be careful and check your spelling; the authors will transcribe your words exactly.  NOTE2:  The authors reserve the right to refuse to personalize your book in the manner you stipulate if, in their sole judgment, the personalization is too long or if it for any reason offendeth them.

Pre-orders for signed copies (in which “signed” means that the authors wrote their names in your book, period), will be taken until all the books are gone.

Here’s your link to pre-order personalized and/or signed copies of Dragon in Exile.

Lee & Miller history lesson re “crowd funding”

Most of y’all know this story.  Generally, I’m putting it here for those who have heard a garbled version, or who are justifying something they want to do by convincing themselves that we did that thing, and so it’s OK for them to do it.

In general, I’m not comfortable with being a justification for the actions and decisions of anybody else.  I mean, jeez, if you wanna do something, do it, and see what happens.  Though, I don’t — I really don’t — think it’s a good idea to quit your day-job and ask your friends to support you while you “try this writing thing,” if you don’t already have publishing experience, and a reader base.

Anyway.

Once upon a time, ‘way back in the last half of the 20th century, Sharon Lee and Steve Miller were working day-jobs and writing on the side, as one does.  We had collaborated on, and sold to a magazine called Fantasy Book, two short stories about a not-very-bright, if well-meaning, accidental wizard by the name of Kinzel.  The editor was very encouraging about the stories, asking for more of this, please, so we wrote a third in the series, and sent it off, feeling like we had a sure sale.

Lesson the First:  There are no sure sales.

The story came back by return mail, with a form letter attached, that said (paraphrased): Fantasy Book has gone on hiatus, due to lack of funds.  Just as soon as we have funding, we’ll let all our writers know.

That was in 1985.  Fantasy Book is still on hiatus.

Well, that was a disappointment, to say the least.

Now, for those who were born since those Halcyon Days of Yore, I will just mention here that home computers, cell phones, tablets, and the like did not always exist.  In fact, desktop computers were just starting to become available to regular people, and, courtesy of our advance money for Agent of Change, purchased in 1985 by Del Rey Books (an imprint of Random House), we had a Kaypro so-called portable computer and a 9-pin printer.  The Kaypro computer had an internal 300-baud modem, and we were members of several Baltimore (we were living in Baltimore, Maryland at the time.  In fact, we were both born in Baltimore, Maryland, in the 1950s.  No, I never rode a dinosaur to school.) area computer bulletin boards (computer bulletin boards were pre-internet chat and (sometimes) group game systems).  We were on Midnight, KC’s Place, and. . .(memory fails:  Fallen Angel ran the place, that’s all I remember.  Lovely woman.  ‘Til Dawn, maybe it was called.). . .all of which were heavily messaged-based.  There was quite a tight-knit community of BBS users, and one night, Steve was “talking” about the Fantasy Book situation, and the fact that we had an orphaned third story in a “trilogy” and no other magazine was likely to take it, when one of his correspondents said, “Why not publish it yourself?”

“Takes money,” said Steve.

. . .and two days later, when we went to the post office to collect our mail, among the advertisers and the bills was an envelope containing two $20 bills, and a note that said, “Toward publishing your fantasy stories.”

Steve had the skills to do layout, having worked for several newspapers in several capacities.  He did the figuring — how many pages to publish not just the third, but all three Kinzel stories, got the quote from the printer, added in probable postage, asked Colleen Doran how much she would need to draw us a cover, and put the whole package before the BBS community:  This is how much it would cost to get this done, and everyone who donates — I forget.  $5? — to the project will get a copy of the finished chapbook.

Donations — I kid you not — poured in, we produced the book, friends from the community came over to our house to help us collate and saddlestitch it (we saved money by doing that part ourselves, rather than having the printer put the book together), we mailed them to subscribers, and!

That was our very first crowd-funded project.

Historic touchstone:  Agent of Change was published as a paperback original by Del Rey Books in February 1988; Conflict of Honors, was published as a Del Rey paperback original in July 1988; Carpe Diem was published as a paperback original in October 1989, as a Del Rey paperback original.  In 1991, I guess, Del Rey rejected the option book, and our editor there told us we were has-been writers.

We continued to write, though nobody bought our stuff, and we worked day-jobs to keep cats and house together.  I was a copy editor on night-side news at the local daily.  Steve was childrens librarian at the Oakland Public Library.  I was office manager for a wastewater service company; Steve did sales in a computer store.  I was executive director of SFWA.  Steve was internet librarian for a dot.com that went bust. You know the drill.

Around 1995,  SRM Publisher, Ltd. came into being, and?  Most of our 25 chapbooks, three trade paperbacks, and two hardcovers, were pre-funded by subscription — crowd-funded, if you will.

Then — we’re still in the 20th Century, now — Del Rey Books having dropped us, though, as I said, we continued to write — we got a call from Stephen Pagel, who was starting a publishing company called Meisha Merlin.  The idea behind the company was to reprint “underpublished” books — by which Stephe (that’s what he called himself, “Stephe,” and that’s how he spelled it; not a typo, OK?  A man can decide what he wants to be called and how it’s spelled) meant mostly 1970s and 1980s paperback originals that had been read to literal pieces and were now out of print, so people couldn’t replace their worn-out, much-loved books.

NOTE for those who were born into another time:  Ebooks existed at this time, but, since ereaders with nice resolution did not, nobody wanted to buy them.

So, Stephe at Meisha Merlin had heard good things about our three novels, and wanted to reprint them, if the rights were available.

Well, not only were the rights available, we had five more books (we’d continued to write, remember?) in series ready to go, and Stephe — for good or ill — purchased them on the spot.

Plan B, the fourth novel in the Liaden Universe® was published by Meisha Merlin in February 1999; our last book with Meisha Merlin — Crystal Dragon — was published in February 2006.  By that time, we were full-time writers, and earning more than the day-jobs had ever paid us.

Right around the time of Crystal Dragon’s publication, Meisha Merlin stopped paying us, and by the winter of 2006, we here at the Cat Farm and Confusion Factory were. . .in serious financial straits, barely afloat, despite the income that SRM was still bringing in.

Obviously, we needed to do Something, and in the end, we did three things.

1.  I went — as my colleagues there charmingly put it — “back to work” as a secretary in the History Department at Colby College.

2.  Steve and I put together the first five chapters of a Liaden book we called Fledgling, about a never-before-seen character, Theo Waitley, and announced to the interwebs that we would be posting the first chapter, free for anyone to read, on January 7?, 2007.  The next chapter would be posted when we had collected $300 in donations.  We further promised that anyone who donated $25 or more would receive a hard copy of the novel, if one were ever published.  (At that point, like the Kinzel stories, we figured we would publish the book ourselves.)

NOTE:  Kickstarter did not exist at this point.  In a sense, we pioneered the Kickstarter model in science fiction publishing.

3.  We asked our agent to send two active proposals for fantasy novels, to Baen Books, who had picked up the erights (which we owned) to the (then) 10 existing Liaden novels.

Number 1 above covered our health insurance, and brought in a modest amount of money, bi-weekly.

Fledgling did very well for us; and the following year we wrote the second Theo book, Saltation, in the same manner.

Baen purchased the two fantasy novels — Duainfey and Longeye.

In due time, Baen picked up the rights to publish both Theo books — and, the rights having finally been recovered from the smoking wreckage of Meisha Merlin — new Liaden titles, as well.

We are now full-time writers; I quit my day-job in the summer of 2011, because the loss of opportunities it caused outweighed the benefits it produced.  We will in May turn in our. . .twelfth novel to Baen books.  Our entire backlist is currently in print, as books, ebooks, and audiobooks.

. . .I think that’s it.  Who has questions?

 

REMINDER REPOST: Pre-order your signed copy of Dragon in Exile NOW

As promised, Uncle Hugo’s Science Fiction Bookstore in Minneapolis, will be — is! — taking pre-orders for signed and personalized copies of Dragon in Exile, the 18th novel entry in the Liaden Universe®, the history of same having been faithfully recounted by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, Chroniclers of Korval since Nineteen-Aught-Eighty-Eight.

Be aware that there is a deadline in play!  Personalized copies (in which “personalized” means that you ask the authors to write something in addition to their names in your book) must be pre-ordered by May 1.  NOTE1:  If you want your book personalized, you must write the personalization you desire in the Special Instructions box on the order form.  Be careful and check your spelling; the authors will transcribe your words exactly.  NOTE2:  The authors reserve the right to refuse to personalize your book in the manner you stipulate if, in their sole judgment, the personalization is too long or if it for any reason offendeth them.

Pre-orders for signed copies (in which “signed” means that the authors wrote their names in your book, period), will be taken until all the books are gone.

Here’s your link to pre-order personalized and/or signed copies of Dragon in Exile.

Pre-Order Dragon in Exile from the Uncle — MORE INFO

After reading yesterday’s post, reproduced below, lots of people rushed off to pre-order their signed and/or personalized copy of Dragon in Exile from Uncle Hugo’s.

This is very gratifying.  Thank you.

But!

It came to the attention of Mr. Blyly, who may, in this instance, be understood to stand in for Uncle himself, that, in the happy rush of ordering, some folks who usually ask for personalizations (yes, Mr. Blyly notices this, because he’s that good) — didn’t.

So!  What I’m going to do is ask you to read the instructions carefully and don’t let excitement carry you away.

We’re going to do a practice run, now.  Please read the information below, and act according to your needs and estate.

1.  If you want your book signed and personalized, you must write your requested personalization in the box provided on the order form.  You must write the requested message EXACTLY as you want the authors to write it, so be sure to check for spelling errors.  Also, the authors reserve the right to not personalize a book, if the personalization requested is, in the authors’ sole judgment, too long, or offensive.

1a.  If you want your book personalized, but you don’t put the personalization in the box on the order form?  You’re gonna get a book that the authors have written their names in.  Period.

2.  If you have already pre-ordered a book, and you wanted it personalized, but you forgot to fill in the box?  You may direct an email to Mr. Blyly at unclehugoATaolDOTcom with Dragon Personalization in the subject line, and your requested personalization in the body of the email.

I want to thank everybody for your interest in, and support of, our work.  We’re very pleased to be able to provide signed books to those who want them; it adds an air of festival and sharing to the process of seeing our book published.

* * *

Original blog post follows, with link

As promised, Uncle Hugo’s Science Fiction Bookstore in Minneapolis, will be — is! — taking pre-orders for signed and personalized copies of Dragon in Exile, the 18th novel entry in the Liaden Universe®, the history of same having been faithfully recounted by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, Chroniclers of Korval since Nineteen-Aught-Eighty-Eight.

Be aware that there is a deadline in play!  Personalized copies (in which “personalized” means that you ask the authors to write something in addition to their names in your book) must be pre-ordered by May 1.

Pre-orders for signed copies (in which “signed” means that the authors wrote their names in your book, period), will be taken until all the books are gone.

Here’s your link to pre-order personalized and/or signed copies of Dragon in Exile.

Pre-order signed copies of Dragon in Exile!

As promised, Uncle Hugo’s Science Fiction Bookstore in Minneapolis, will be — is! — taking pre-orders for signed and personalized copies of Dragon in Exile, the 18th novel entry in the Liaden Universe®, the history of same having been faithfully recounted by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, Chroniclers of Korval since Nineteen-Aught-Eighty-Eight.

Be aware that there is a deadline in play!  Personalized copies (in which “personalized” means that you ask the authors to write something in addition to their names in your book) must be pre-ordered by May 1.

Pre-orders for signed copies (in which “signed” means that the authors wrote their names in your book, period), will be taken until all the books are gone.

Here’s your link to pre-order personalized and/or signed copies of Dragon in Exile.