Busy stuff
Jul. 17th, 2007 07:25 pmHarry Potter year 7 arrived at the library today, in a box that was marked "Do not open until July 21" but of course, you can't have the books ready to circulate at midnight unless you open the box somewhat sooner. So I got to catalog, stamp, and label them. Then they were locked up until Saturday morning. I did not cheat and look at the story. I can tell you that it is 759 pages long, though, and the book weighs 2 pounds, 11 ounces because we put it on the postal scale to see. The retail price is obnoxiously high, even for a book of that length: $34.99 US. I think they're trying to kill the goose that laid the golden egg. Or maybe the large price increase was needed to pay all the lawyers who wrote the tangled agreements we had to sign in order to even get copies in time. Audiobook versions and large print yet to come.
I hear that Rowling says the outcome of the story is hinted at by the dustjacket art, but I don't see how. The picture of that is all over the web (check Amazon, for instance) if you haven't seen it yet.
We thought we were now free from the negative influence of the BMUC, but this week we discovered that our billings for OCLC services are thoroughly messed up and it seems that BMUC had something to do with this situation. The bad news is that the powers that be (no one owns up to be actually responsible for the change or able to explain it, and the bills are worse than any phone bill ever was) have now decided to double our annual charges, for no evident reason. The good news is that we found that as much as a $1600 credit may exist in our account that was never applied. (OCLC pays libraries back a scheduled rate when they perform certain mutually beneficial cataloging tasks.)
When I got home, a parcel was waiting for me. It contained two books. One is Ben Goodridge's novel, White Crusade, which was released for Anthrocon. The other is ROAR volume 1, which contains my zebra-lion story. I was delighted to find that Ben (who is the editor) put my story first in the book. I don't take this to mean that it is better, but rather that it's like an opening act at a concert, the "warm up" performer who gets the audience ready for the main act. I'm just really pleased to see my writing in the company of some of the other well known by-lines that appear on the other stories. Oh, and it's nicely printed with a sturdy binding, and somewhat larger in size and type face than its big brother publication, FANG volume 1 was.
Oh, and the weaving proceedeth apace. I'm now past the first pattern repeat, so about nine inches of fabric are woven. It looks almost exactly as I intended, which is good, and it's moving quickly, in spite of the complex pattern that requires me to work more slowly than usual and with more rest breaks.
I hear that Rowling says the outcome of the story is hinted at by the dustjacket art, but I don't see how. The picture of that is all over the web (check Amazon, for instance) if you haven't seen it yet.
We thought we were now free from the negative influence of the BMUC, but this week we discovered that our billings for OCLC services are thoroughly messed up and it seems that BMUC had something to do with this situation. The bad news is that the powers that be (no one owns up to be actually responsible for the change or able to explain it, and the bills are worse than any phone bill ever was) have now decided to double our annual charges, for no evident reason. The good news is that we found that as much as a $1600 credit may exist in our account that was never applied. (OCLC pays libraries back a scheduled rate when they perform certain mutually beneficial cataloging tasks.)
When I got home, a parcel was waiting for me. It contained two books. One is Ben Goodridge's novel, White Crusade, which was released for Anthrocon. The other is ROAR volume 1, which contains my zebra-lion story. I was delighted to find that Ben (who is the editor) put my story first in the book. I don't take this to mean that it is better, but rather that it's like an opening act at a concert, the "warm up" performer who gets the audience ready for the main act. I'm just really pleased to see my writing in the company of some of the other well known by-lines that appear on the other stories. Oh, and it's nicely printed with a sturdy binding, and somewhat larger in size and type face than its big brother publication, FANG volume 1 was.
Oh, and the weaving proceedeth apace. I'm now past the first pattern repeat, so about nine inches of fabric are woven. It looks almost exactly as I intended, which is good, and it's moving quickly, in spite of the complex pattern that requires me to work more slowly than usual and with more rest breaks.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-18 12:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-18 01:10 am (UTC)The large print will probably not be much worse. They have ways of compensating: smaller margins, thinner paper. It will be more pages, but probably will not weigh any more. The paper and bindings of most large print editions are lighter and cheaper because the publisher assumes less readership per volume and thus less wear and tear.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-18 03:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-18 03:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-18 09:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-18 10:17 pm (UTC)Read lots too. That's how you get an idea of what different publishers or publications will consider. As in I don't submit anything to Sofawolf because my writing is nowhere near as explicitly erotic as most of their published titles.
National Novel Writing Month is November. That can be a good way to kick yourself into gear. You pledge to write a 50,000 word book in one month, and sign up, posting your daily progress. You get support from other writers, and if you get to the end, you have a manuscript to revise and edit. XD
Actually useful advice! O_o
Date: 2007-07-18 11:14 pm (UTC)I'm still finding my style, but I doubt I'm much for erotica- oh, I can if I'm motivated(just ask alexis whitepaws!), but it doesn't hold my interests...
This novel thing sounds intriguing... how can I find out more?
Re: Actually useful advice! O_o
Date: 2007-07-19 12:17 am (UTC)Re: Actually useful advice! O_o
Date: 2007-07-19 01:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-19 11:26 pm (UTC)What are OCLC services?
no subject
Date: 2007-07-19 11:28 pm (UTC)Congrats on the publishing :)
no subject
Date: 2007-07-20 11:12 am (UTC)