Being a lover of reptiles, in general, and snakes, in particular, I just had to share this post of Sue’s. These adders are so seldom spotted, it’s amazing that she not only saw it, but got clear enough pictures to identify the snake by pattern and coloring. Excellent, Sue!!
Barnes & Noble, Dead Nooks, and Brave New Branding
Very interesting, timely, and thought-provoking post from #KristenLamb. Check it out! 🙂
The big news in publishing this week is Barnes & Noble’s plan to ax the Nook. After losing over a billion dollars trying to make the Nook a contender, it seems B&N’s new CEO is ready to just cut bait. According to Michael Kozlowski over at Good E Reader:
The NOOK segment (including digital content, devices and accessories) had revenues of $52 million for the 4th quarter and $264 million for the full year, decreasing 39.8% for the quarter and 47.8% for the year. Device and accessories sales were $13 million for the quarter and $86 million for the full year, declining 48.2% and 66.7%, respectively, due to lower unit selling volume. Digital content sales were $40 million for the quarter and $177 million for the full year, declining 36.5% and 27.8%, respectively, due primarily to lower device unit sales.
All I have to say is…OUCH.
I’d like to…
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Sometimes
Another of Caitlin’s lovely poems. Most of us here can identify with this one, I’m sure.
This is a bit prettier than my mental image. From WikiMedia by PJ NcNally.
Sometimes
Some days my mind is an empty cup
fine cracks through the glaze
a chip on the bottom
sound but worn
waiting to pour out on the page
but bone dry
so the page languishes
*
Sometimes my mind is a running engine
humming and churning
hot and full of sharp edges
waiting to be harnessed into a story
but uncontrolled
so the story churns, unwritten
*
Some days my mind is well behaved
full to the brim with thoughts
tires spooling neatly over asphalt
pages filling
story running
and it seems like it could never be
anything else
*
Sometimes is only
sometimes
Daunted by Self-Publishing Platforms?
Here is a great post from C. S. Lakin’s remarkable blog, Live, Write, Thrive. If you are as daunted as I by all the venues out there for self-publishing, guest blogger Jessica Bell has some great information to share with you. Check it out. It’s a keeper, but then I think almost everything on this blog is. I’ve learned so much there, from grammar, to novel construction, to proper usage of similar words. Just everything. I highly recommend following!
The Only Self-Publishing Platforms You’ll Ever Need
I’m Still Here!

This picture has nothing whatsoever to do with my post. I just wanted to look at some place COOL.
I’d like to be rolling around in the snow right this minute!
So sorry to have been absent for almost two weeks! My granddaughter was here for a week, and we were out taking eco-boat tours, and visiting drive-through wildlife sanctuaries, and doing lots of crafts. Just having fun. And then…dum, dum, duuuuuuum…I returned to my house after driving her back to Gainesville, only to discover my a/c wasn’t cooling well. By the next day, “not cooling well” would have been a happy phrase, because it had then stopped, altogether. It was 100 degrees here that day, and my husband, who knows a/c repair pretty darn well, since he’s Chief Engineer for a property management company in Orlando, was in OHIO. I’ve already complained ad nauseum about my misery, being a person who hasn’t been cool since 1972, in every sense of the word, so I’ll spare you some of the details. I suffered GREATLY waiting on him to come home, believe me.
We were without air for six days, during a point where the outdoor temps ranged between 94 and 98 every day, with the occasional 100 degree scorcher thrown in, just to remind us that Mother Nature can play dirty pool when she wants to. Thankfully, when Mark got home Wednesday night, he pulled our emergency window a/c (used for camping and/or lengthy power outages in hurricane season, along with our portable generator) out of the shed, and installed it in the bedroom. It was heaven to sleep comfortably again, and to know I had a little hidey-hole to run to when I started feeling heat stroke levels of discomfort coming on. Bless his heart, he did all this in the dead of night, after a long trip, too. (I’m sure he figured anything was better than listening to me moan and groan). He ordered a new fan motor the next day, installed it after work Friday, and voila! COLD AIR in my house once more. All is right in the world. And even better, the part was $175, the labor was free. So an $800 to $900 repair for a fraction of the cost.
Yay for people who can fix things. Not me. I’m afraid I’m not mechanical at all. If it has more moving parts than a spoon, I’m in trouble. 😦
At any rate, I’m playing catch-up now. Didn’t lift a finger for nearly a week, since it was simply too hot to move. But I promise to read the new posts and get some interesting tidbits up here this week. And I’m putting together a little challenge for you guys, just for fun. Because…spare time on your hands, right? 😀 Will get back to you on that, soon. Strictly voluntary stuff, naturally.
Hope you’ve all had a wonderful weekend, celebrating Independence Day, or just enjoying your time off.
Must get back to laundry. Haven’t made a very big dent in the pile, yet. Carry on, folks. As you were! *going away now, repeating my favorite line from the movie Dogma: “No pleasure, no rapture, no exquisite SIN greater than…central air.”
Aint it the truth?
4th of July Sale! PLEASE SHARE!
HOPE YOU’LL HELP ME SPREAD THE WORD!
To celebrate Independence Day, all three of my novels will be on sale for the next week, from July 3 through July 10, for $2.99 each. (Regularly $4.99). Now’s your chance to see why I’m running my legs off around central Florida, talking about Book 1 of my Riverbend Series, Swamp Ghosts. (Book 2, Finding Hunter is due out in September, btw.) And if you’ve already ready Swamp Ghosts, or you prefer the Blue Ridge Mountains over sultry, Florida waterways, check out my Wake-Robin Ridge books: Book 1, Wake-Robin Ridge, or Book 2, A Boy Named Rabbit. Don’t miss out! This is the first, and possibly the only, time I’ve ever lowered my price on my books, but I’d like to have everyone caught up and eagerly awaiting Finding Hunter, so Happy 4th of July to you all!
Have your #reading habits changed since the advent of #ebooks?
I posted this on my own blog a couple of days ago, and thought as it has relevance to indie authors, I would share it here as well.
Like so many, when ebooks first arrived on the scene I was a bit sniffy about them – “I like a real book,” I said.
I know quite a few who still haven’t succumbed to the electronic reader, though they are a dwindling group.
When I finally embraced the indie revolution and decided to self-publish, it went without saying that I purchased an ebook reader (Kindle Fire, in my case), and downloaded a kindle app to all my devices, so I could:
- check out my own books
- check out the competition
- read lots and lots of books that didn’t cost much and didn’t take over every shelf/cupboard/window ledge (and under beds) in my entire house.
Next, becoming an indie author and maintaining a blog involved producing content, and after a bit of experimentation, I settled on a mix of news, reviews, articles on writing – and hosting other authors on blog tours.
As a result, I find myself signing up for a number of review tours, and reading books I didn’t originally go shopping for, but which sound interesting. And here is where I’ve noticed how far my reading habits have changed.
Sadly, I find I’m becoming less tolerant. Back in the day, when books cost £8 – £10 a copy, I would read from cover to cover whether I was enthralled or not. I’d paid for the book and damned if I wasn’t going to get my money’s worth!
Those books were, of course, traditionally published; but that doesn’t mean to say they were all good – I’ve read many a turkey and wondered how the hell it got published. But no matter how crappy it was, my habit was to always finish.
Nowadays? My habit has been well and truly broken.
My kindle is stuffed to bursting with far more books than I will ever read, and I add more daily. The majority are indie books, and many are very good.
Unfortunately, many are not.
I really hate adding to my DNF list, as I know intimately how much time has gone into writing each and every book; the passion, the agonising over whether it’s good enough, the money spent (patently not on all of them, but most). But with that plethora of reading material available, I just don’t have time to invest in a book I’m not enthralled by.
Hence the change in habit. I now give a book 2 chapters to win me over (provided I haven’t ditched it before that, due to formatting and writing errors, or construction and/or word choice I just can’t bear), and if I’m not thoroughly hooked by then, I stop and delete.
This post, like my earlier rant about cliff hanger endings here, has been prompted by a book I really wanted to like, but just couldn’t. I took it on as part of a review tour, and had to pull out (which I feel slightly guilty about), but the first chapter left me cold, and while the second was markedly better, I realised that it was the main character I did not care for, so not a good basis on which to continue.
The concept is terrific. I scanned the book to see where it was going, and the plot looks as good as it promised to be from the blurb. But that MC? I understand the issues with writing a somewhat unsympathetic character, and this was an exiled fae, with major issues in his life that led him to be rather cold and unpredictable emotionally and in his dealings with other people. I get that. But I couldn’t warm to him, so sadly that was that.
I find that I’m also much quicker to dismiss a book on its blurb – if I’m not hooked in the first two sentences, I don’t look any further.
I find this change a bit sad, but I’m guessing there are many other readers out there becoming more discriminating too, and I take it as a wake up call – indies, polish that blurb until it can’t fail but grab the right reader (of course it must be tailored to the genre), and for goodness sake, start your book with a dynamite scene!
How long do you give a book before you put it aside? Or do you still doggedly finish everything you start?
An excerpt (better late than never, right?)
I missed posting during excerpt week because I was simply too embedded in my current work in progress to polish up even a little bit for your enjoyment. So I hope you don’t mind me posting the first scene here now that the book is at the copy editor!
***
Ixchel always dreaded May 3, but not because she worried about growing old. No, the twenty-seven year old was more afraid of never getting the chance to see her next birthday than of sprouting gray hairs.
Which meant she usually ended up running into doors on her birthday due to excessive over-the-shoulder looking in search of brothers who had every reason to wish her harm.
And, yet, nothing bad has happened for the last nine years, Ixchel reminded herself at dawn as she and Mr. Fuzzy set off for his morning constitutional. The coddled spaniel had been in her charge for five days now while his owner was on vacation, and the veterinarian had quickly grown attached to the borrowed bundle of fur. She’d even gotten to the point where she’d deemed the dog attentive enough to run off-leash…assuming they set out the back way and stayed far from any roads, that is.
Now the dog bounded ahead just out of sight, and Ixchel hurried her steps to catch up as she heard him begin to bark. It would be just her luck if Mr. Fuzzy got skunked or otherwise ended up in trouble that would make the vet look bad when his owner returned that afternoon. Nothing like failing to take care of the mayor’s dog to turn a newcomer to the community into the county pariah.
Ixchel wasn’t terribly concerned, though. After all, Mr. Fuzzy liked to bark at squirrels, birds, and even run-of-the-mill trees that the dog thought were looking at him funny. So, most of the vet’s attention remained focused on self-chastisement. Today is just another day, she told herself. It’s high time I got over my jitters.
Ahead, Mr. Fuzzy came into view, his front paws resting on the trunk of a spreading elm tree as he yapped up into the canopy. Treed another butterfly, have you? Ixchel thought with a grin. But she still did her best to bring the dog to heel. “Here, boy!” the vet called, before craning her neck to see what the spaniel had discovered.
Oh no.
This couldn’t be happening. Not in the safest place Ixchel could think of in which to sink her roots. Her practice was rural enough that the vet couldn’t see any neighbors out either the front or the back doors, but the building wasn’t located deep in the back country. So there really shouldn’t have been a tremendous black feline crouched on that branch. Maybe if Ixchel blinked, she’d realize that Mr. Fuzzy had simply treed a raccoon.
Nope, still there. Still a mountain-lion-sized cat whose fur seemed to suck light out of the morning air due to the intensity of its blackness.
“Mr. Fuzzy, let’s go,” the vet called, trying to keep her voice calm but instead hearing the words emerge as a shriek. She wasn’t sure what kind of creature the huge black cat would turn out to be, yet she was pretty sure the feline could eat her charge for dinner.
But Mr. Fuzzy was too intent on the hunt to listen to his temporary mistress, and the feline appeared to be growing annoyed at the spaniel’s persistent barking. So Ixchel stood frozen in place and watched as the cat stalked down one of the spreading limbs. It was now nearly at the trunk and only ten feet above the smaller animal’s head.
This can’t be happening!
Ixchel told her feet that the smart thing to do would be to run away, with or without the cuddly-but-not-overly-bright spaniel. Mr. Fuzzy was only a dog, after all. And if the vet walked any closer, she would likely be mauled by the sharp claws that she knew to be embedded in the feline’s dinner-plate paws.
But Mr. Fuzzy was the closest thing Ixchel had to a friend at the moment. And how sad is that? Plus, she really didn’t want to imagine the bad PR resulting from a dog she was boarding being eaten by a cat. So, instead of following her own advice, the vet instead found herself striding directly toward the spaniel and lunging for his collar.
At the same moment, the cat jumped down and landed lightly on its feet mere inches from Ixchel and her borrowed pet. The beast’s eyes were a yellow more intense than Ixchel had ever seen on a living creature, and they seemed to bore through her skin and into her soul.
Focus. What did they say to do if you meet a mountain lion in the wild? Stand tall and raise your arms so you looked bigger than you really were, maybe. Or was that the recommended procedure for scaring off a bear?
Neither option seemed like a possibility when Mr. Fuzzy continued to think he was a rottweiler trapped inside a lap dog’s body. The canine lunged forward, the feline hissed, and Ixchel found her disobedient feet following directly after those of her charge.
Her heart was beating so fast the vet thought she might pass out, but she was somehow able to latch one hand into the spaniel’s collar before he could sink his teeth into the massive cat. Ixchel yanked Mr. Fuzzy up into her arms, ignoring his yelp of annoyance at being manhandled, then she forced herself to stand upright rather than turning and running away.
The vet fully expected to feel claws or teeth sinking into her skin at any moment. But, instead, the tremendous feline merely stood his ground and gazed directly into her face.
That makes no sense, the vet thought inanely. Feral cats never look you in the eye.
But the cat was looking. And he was so close that if Ixchel dropped the struggling Mr. Fuzzy, she could have reached out and stroked the feline’s fur.
Yep, I’m definitely going into shock now.
“I’m sorry we bothered you,” Ixchel said in her best soothe-the-terrifying-animal voice. “That was very rude of Mr. Fuzzy, and I’m going to take him right home and put him on bread and water. No doggie treats for him! You won’t have to worry about either of us bothering you ever again.”
As she spoke, the vet slowly backed away, her gaze still trained on the wild animal that could so easily bite off her hand. And why should he stop at a hand? The words ran through her mind like a hamster in a wheel. The cat’s jaws are so huge he could probably consume my entire arm in one gulp and have room for a hot-dog chaser.
Then, so quickly that Ixchel almost didn’t see him move, the cat turned and loped off into the shadows beneath the trees. Immediately, Mr. Fuzzy changed his tune from barking to face-licking, marring the vet’s view of the long black tail disappearing from view. And Ixchel remembered how to breathe at last.
Could it really be that simple? Could the feline actually be gone?
Lifting the hand that she’d been using to pat the brave little spaniel in an attempt to calm him, Ixchel fingered the cat charm strung around her neck. Yes, birthdays weren’t to be trusted. It was time to head back to her practice and hope that nothing else terrible happened on this third day of May.
***
Are you hooked? If so, Jaguar at the Portal is available for a limited time at 99 cents. Snag your copy now and it will be auto-delivered to your kindle when the book goes live. Thanks for all of your support!
5 Questions to Think About When Developing Characters
Guest Blog: It’s Never too Late by author Marcia Meara
Had a wonderful visit with Ali and her followers on A Woman’s Wisdom today. So nice to be invited to chat with them. Hope you’ll check it out! 🙂







