Penultimate Draft and Postcard Distribution

The penultimate draft of Alliance of Equals is printing out as I type this.  After some very minor tweakage this morning, the draft now stands at 102,268 words/424 double-spaced pages.  My project for the next couple of days will be to do a rolling edit, while Steve takes on the taming of the Cast of Characters.  We are, yes, still in line to turn the script in before we leave on the book tour, though it may go into email next Monday, instead of Sunday.

So, that.

Next subject is postcards, of which we have received many, from Simon and Schuster, for “our own use.”  Asyouknowbob, with the exception of the upcoming book tour, Steve and I are not traveling this year, which limits the ability of the postcards to go out into the world and do as ghod intended them to do.

Which is where you come in.

If you are willing to take a small pack of postcards to your local bookstore, your book discussion group, library, science fiction club, or local convention, please drop me a note at rolanniATkorvalDOTcom, with your name and address, and we will mail said postcards to you.

It goes without saying that local custom must be observed in the matter of placing the cards.  Do ask the bookstore manager or the person who takes care of the SF section, or the librarian if you may leave the cards, and if they demur, please be gracious.  Some folks don’t like post cards cluttering up their counters; others adore post cards and can’t get enough.

Oh!  And lest I forget — now that Dragon in Exile is hitting mailboxes everywhere, in multiple formats, and some folks really, really want to talk about it, but of course don’t want to spoil the story for those who haven’t yet gotten (or read) their book — wow.  Run-on sentence much?  Anyway!  If you want to talk about Dragon in Exile, a spoiler thread has been opened.  Here’s your link.

Manuscript awaiting an author
Manuscript awaiting an author

Even more Liaden eBooks!

Those who have been following along at home will recall that, for a very long time, the only way to get the first 9 (excluding Agent of Change, which has been, and is, available as a free ebook from Baen Free Library and from the Kindle Store) Liaden novels in ebook form was by buying the Baen omnibus editions. Which was great, because, hey, you had All The Stories — but it did mean that you had to remember which book was in which omnibus, if you wanted to read one particular novel, or, if you, as many do, have a Preferred Reading Order, that you had to jump around from omnibus to omnibus.

Well!

Baen has now released the first 10 Liaden Universe® novels — Agent of Change to Crystal Dragonas single ebooks, (previously only available from Baen ebooks) to Amazon, to BN, to iBooks — oh, heck — to your favorite online bookstore!

In other news, it’s a gorgeous, breezy and ultra-green day outside my window, which I have open, so that I can hear the rustle of leaves, and benefit from the occasional waft of lilac-scent, while I finish up here on Langlastport.

Everybody have a great day!

Scrabble, having a great weekend.
Scrabble, having a great weekend.

Well, I wrecked the El Camino; it woulda been DWI, so I just walked off and left it, laying on its side

EDITED TO ADD:  “Chimera” is now up on Baen.com, starting on the first page and jumping inside, and!  the book has been claimed.  Thank you all for keeping the Story Watch!

Busy few days, and a busy few more ahead.  I shall sum up.

On Wednesday, I did in fact have a doctor’s appointment.  It was both irritating and puzzling, but the important thing is that we managed to forge a plan of action that meets the needs of both of us.  So, that.

Also on Wednesday, we looked at a house.  The house was. . .not as advertised.  We were disappointed; our realtor was. . .annoyed.

Also! on Wednesday, someone was scheduled to look at our house at 4:30, so we dutifully left the premises at 4:00, only to receive an email at 4:27 from our realtor, letting us know that the buyers had cancelled.  We were in Augusta by that point, so we stayed at the Barnes and Noble for a while, looking at books and wondering when in ghod’s name the Fashion for Dystopia will have run the course.

We had a cup of soup and split a sandwich at the BN Cafe, then headed back to Waterville, because!  On Wednesday, we had tickets to the second sold-out showing of The Last Unicorn (which I had never seen), at Railroad Square Cinema, with Peter Beagle himself on-hand to answer questions.

We had fun, the movie was good, and we got home late and over-caffeinated.

Moving on. . .

Thursday was a working day, until the arrival of the mason early in the evening.  He slung his ladder up over the eaves, walked across the roof and confirmed, by picking up bricks, and throwing down nuggets of mortar that, yes, indeedy, we do need to replace — that’s replace, not repair — the chimney.  As we had summoned him because we’d found bricks in the lawn, this wasn’t exactly a surprise.

Today, is a working morning, then a short trip out to — wait for it! — look at a house — then back for the second shift.  My intention is not to budge from this house over the weekend, and finish up the manuscript.  We all know what they say about intentions, right?

Also, today!  Is the beginning of the period when “Chimera,” a Liaden Universe® short story, may appear on the Baen.com front page.  As advertised on Twitter, the first person who alerts me to the presence of “Chimera” on the Baen front page will win! a rare Russian edition of Crystal Dragon, signed by the authors.

And that?  Catches us up.

Oh, except for Sprite.

Sprite was helping me edit yesterday’s chapter this morning:

Sprite helping with the editing
Sprite helping with the editing

Then, she got curious about the camera:

Hey!  Whatcha doin?
Hey! Whatcha doin?

Today’s blog title brought to you by James McMurtry, “Rachel’s Song.”  Here’s your link.

 

Cloudy Saturday

You may have heard the rumor that we’re writing a book here in East Winslow. Well!  The rumor’s true, and work continues.  Yesterday’s project was to frog about 5,000 words (thanks to Brenda Clough for this very useful word, “frog”), and to wander around the house wailing and rubbing ashes in my hair, finally to gather with Steve at the kitchen table for two hours of serious staring at each other, interspersed with sentence fragments, after which I repaired to my office to make several pages of dense notes.  I also identified the section that needs to be built up in order for this other section here to work, and the place where I forgot to put back in a scene that I took out because it was in the wrong place the first time.

Today’s project is to fix both of those problems and to get with the notes.

Yesterday, we also signed 180 books.  Today, we will sign the remaining 60, and commence in to personalizing 68, after which we will tape up the boxes, affix labels, and on Monday call UPS to make a pickup.

Today we will also view two, perhaps three, houses in the Greater Waterville Megaplex.  I’m in the mood to choose one of the three and Have Done, so it will be Steve’s job to Be Prudent.

Yesterday, we also had the Dead River guy, who repositioned the propane tank, which had been displaced by the Snows of Winter, leveled it, and replaced the cutoff valve which had been savaged by ice.  It’s interesting to note that, when a particularly intense CLANG! came forth from the work site, Sprite ran back to my office, to take shelter in the Safest Spot — which would be Grandpa Mozart’s place under my desk.

I may have forgotten to mention the other day that, when I had my height taken at my annual, I was found to no longer be six foot tall.  I’m now a paltry 70.75 inches tall.  I suppose no one will look up to me now.

Tomorrow On Monday I shall visit the vampires, which means that tomorrow tonight I shall fast, and then I will come home to write some more.

Tomorrow, then, being Sunday, will be a Day of All Writing.

What’re y’all doing that’s fun or interesting?

 

Yes, and back again

REMINDER!

If you want a signed and personalized copy of Dragon in Exile by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, you’re about out of time.  May 1, 2015that’s next Friday! — is the deadline for ordering your very own personalized copy of the first Baen hardcover printing.

Here’s your link to pre-order personalized and/or signed copies of Dragon in Exile from Uncle Hugo’s SF Bookstore

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Tomorrow, we’re heading south to inspect houses. There are six on the list, which seems like a very full day to me.  On the other hand, the Southern Prospect is two hours/115 miles from the Cat Farm and Confusion Factory, so it’s not like we can slide down there every time a house looks interesting.

At this point in the proceedings, most of the Imagination Work is falling to Steve.  I’m exhausted with Imagining, and the realities of knowing how impossible it is for a couple of indigent scifi writers to buy a house are weighing on me like rocks in my pockets, pinning me down on the road to Fairyland.

Now, you might think that Imagination has nothing at all to do with shifting houses.  It may seem to you to be a straightforward matter of budgets and cash flow and other practical things, and in general, I’m guessing, you would be right.  However, if we were ruled by budgets and cash flows and other practical matters, we would have chosen to be actuaries, or gone into sales, or stuck with writing ad copy for a living.  Everything we have ever done in our entire lives together have been Epic and Foolhardy Acts of Imagination, from marrying our libraries and our cats together, to moving to Maine, to making a career as writers, to, indeed, purchasing, and keeping, the house we now live in.

Well.

For today, what Imagination I have will be focused on Alliance of Equals, which Steve read yesterday (insofar as it exists, which is not quite, perhaps, the penultimate draft).  The backbrain has graciously forked over with four scenes and a possible wrap-up.  By such small steps do we proceed until one morning we wake up and there’s nothing left to do.

What’re y’all doing that’s fun this weekend?

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Oops. Forgot.

Today’s blog title brought to you by:

How many miles to Babylon?
Three score and ten.
Can I get there by candle-light?
Yes, and back again.
If your heels are nimble and light,
You may get there by candle-light.

#

Scrabble
Scrabble

In which it’s Tuesday and there is no mail

. . .I hate it when the mailman gives us a miss. Even when the mail is just catalogs, at least we’ve gotten something.  Not finding any mail in the box leaves me wrong-footed on the day, somehow.

So, a rambling kind of post while the backbrain gets on the case.  I need, let’s see. . .six? seven? scenes, a climax, a denouement, and a wrap up.  Is that so hard?  Oh, and a cast of characters.  If the backbrain isn’t forking over, yet, on the Actual Writing Front, I can edit the working lexicon down to a reasonable list.  Thirty-five hundred words is probably a little long in the dramatis personae business.  Do you guys like your Players List in the front of the book or the back?

I’d like to thank everyone who has helped in the various fundraising efforts we’re presently undertaking, whether by subscribing to our Patreon account, supporting Splinter Universe, or directly supporting us, through PayPal, and by check.  You guys are amazingly kind and we are humbled by your generosity.  . . .Please note that I speak here for myself and for Steve.  The cats aren’t really on top of the whole Where Crunchies Come From thing; they leave that sort of thing to Staff.

Weather-wise, we’re into our second day of rain, here in Central Maine, and the snow is, for all useful purposes, gone.  As far as my eye can see, there is mud, and last year’s brown grasses, and bare, grey trees.  We look to have lost three buffer evergreens over the winter.  Some of the maples are pushing out buds; can’t really tell about the birches, or the ash.  Well.  A few weeks will tell.  Meanwhile, the daffodils are making a valiant effort to rise tall and get the trumpets out.  I fear me this will be one of those seasons when they give their all, but fall short of a win.  Hopefully, they’ll prove me wrong.

Given that the snow is now gone, we can see, among the dead grass, the Trash of Winter, which means that, if it ever stops raining, we’ll be able to go outside and stamp around the property, picking up soda/beer cans, shreds of blue tarp, old paper bags, the occasional whiskey bottle, and who knows what else.  The process by which trash gets under ten feet of snow is a mystery to me. A friend suggests that it’s put there by snowmen, who are pissed off by humans sticking carrots  in the middle of their faces.

Makes as much sense as anything else.

One of the results of having been stupidly ill for ‘way too long back around the winter holidays, was that I lost 10 pounds.  Now that it’s been a number of months since I regained my health, and I haven’t regained the weight, I’ve gotten ambitious.  I like being. . .less close to 200 pounds, and would like to widen the distance by another 10 pounds, if possible.  I can’t say I much care for the method by which I shed the first 10, though, and, as someone who was very thin for most of her adult life (insert Ironic Theme here), I don’t actually know how to go about dieting.  I would go to the gym and exercise and walk in order to keep flexible and strong, but as far as I’ve ever been told exercise isn’t really an effective way to lose weight.  For now, I’m just making a conscious effort to Eat Less Food (which is tough, because, having also been, ah. . .cash challenged. . .for most of my adult life, “wasting” food is a big no-no).  Now that Winter is Out and Mud is In, I’ll be able to get walking again, which will be a relief all around, and I guess if all I do is not backslide those 10 pounds, then I’m that much to the good.

And now?  Time to get back to the backbrain.

See you on the flipside.

Sprite, on Author Assist
Sprite, on Author Assist

In which Lee and Miller still do not allow fanfic of their work

We have said this many, many times in the past; and I’m kind of sick of the whole topic, but apparently we have to renew our stance on Liaden (and other Lee-and-Miller and Lee and Miller) fanfic every so often because the wiki entry where we’re supposed to listed among those authors who do not sanction fanfic of their work, I dunno, disappears from the web?  Or people think we’ll change our minds and stop being so mean?  Ot they just don’t care what stupid authors say? or. . .something.

So!  No — that’s NO, the opposite of yes — we do not sanction fanfic of our work.  Don’t do it.

Thank you.

The fine print:  Yes, I do realize that I can’t stop you from doing whatever the hell you want to do, that the pie is large, the author got it wrong and, and, and…As I’ve said, we’ve been ’round this barn more than once, I’ve heard the reasons and the justifications.  I do think, however, that, if you really, really really love an author’s work so much that you can’t stop thinking about their characters and their world, you could respect the author’s wishes with regard to that work.

And if you can’t do that, then I really think less of you.

Comments are closed.

 

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”