Hugh Howey's Blog, page 66
April 14, 2013
It had to be you…
Of course. Of all the people I could have done this to, it would have to be Charla.
April 13, 2013
Melbourne SupaNova
I had the pleasure of signing beside two incredible authors today. One was Tad Williams, who was the model of grace with his avid readers. On my other side was Kylie Chan, a native Australian who has a brilliant series of kung fu novels. Her readers were amazing. They came with stacks of well-worn books, and she spent loads of time with each one. In addition to a florid signature, each book received a chop from a custom soapstone stamp. It gave my Sharpie scrawl a pathetic air.
I read some of her stuff and can’t recommend it highly enough. She has some manga and quite a few novels. They should be available in the States and digitally. Check out her site.
It was also cool seeing Aussie readers I’ve had contact with online and finally met in person. And I finally got to meet Colin Taber, another excellent local author. His stuff looks brilliant. Can’t wait to see where his career goes.
Finally getting acclimated to the time change. One more day in Melbourne, which I’ve fallen in love with. I could easily live here for a few years. Reminds me of Portland.
April 12, 2013
To those whom I’ve offended
I’m sorry. Truly. Not a PR move or an excuse; I feel awful.
I took the blog post down because I hated the idea of offending anyone else.
April 8, 2013
¡ǝlnpǝɥɔS ɐılɐɹʇsn∀
Friday the 12th: I’ll be in Melbourne visiting a few bookstores and then at opening night of SupaNova.
Saturday and Sunday: SupaNova Melbourne!
Tuesday the 16th, I’ll be visiting Sydney bookstores. On Wednesday at 6:30 PM I’ll be at Kinokuniya Bookstore. Not positive, but I think this is open to the public.
Thursday the 18th, I’ll be signing books at Dymocks Brisbane City from 1:00 to 2:00
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday will be SupaNova Gold Coast!
Monday the 22nd, I’ll head to Auckland, New Zealand for two days of signing and touring.
There’s a bunch of stuff in-between, mostly bookstore signings and media interviews.
Closed for Remodeling
You may notice the signed books are no longer available on the lefthand side of the website. I had to take that feature down before I head off to Australia for two weeks. I hope to have it up soon in an improved fashion, complete with a shopping cart and easier payment options for shipping. However, the price for shipping will be quite a bit more than it has in the past. Let me explain.
I’ve been using the USPS for shipping signed books for several years now. Both in Boone, NC and here in Jupiter, FL, it gave me a chance to get out of the house and socialize. It was also the best chance to get Bella out for a walk at the greenway in Boone or on the beach here in Jupiter. Otherwise, the two of us were cooped up all the time.
Six months or so ago, one of the ladies behind the counter here in Jupiter finally leaned over the counter to see my dog. Bella is unbelievable in public. She just lays down by my feet and waits patiently while dozens and dozens of packages are sent out. This postal worker leans over all smiles and then recoils in horror at seeing a pit mix. This wasn’t the worker helping me, just another down the counter. She said I shouldn’t have that dog in there and asks if it’s a work dog. I reply that she’s canine good citizenship certified and a licensed therapy dog (both true).
The next time I come to the post office, there are signs everywhere. I’m told the dog can’t come in, that there have been complaints. It was a sad day, because it’s too hot here to leave Bella in the car. She had to start staying home for the post office runs.
At the first of the year, the next major bummer. The cost of shipping overseas — even to Canada — nearly doubled. I’ve had a difficult time passing along that cost to customers; usually I don’t. I just pay the difference. I’ve had a few people email me after getting their package and seeing $60 on the shipping label when they paid $25 and ask what happened. I tell them not to worry about it. What’s weird is how Canada more than doubled in price. It’s cheaper to ship to Hawaii than right across the border.
The biggest issue, however, has been the damaged books. I’ve had a handful lost completely and many that arrive dinged up. I watch them behind the counter throw packages into the sorting bins, and I cringe every time. I get emails from customers with damaged books, and I simply send out another. I only make a few dollars on these signed books to begin with (it costs to have them shipped to me from the printer, and I only charge retail plus shipping. The cost of materials, my time, gas, etc. isn’t accounted for). But I’ve been happy to do it. Even with the damaged/lost books and the higher overseas rates and the time that I needed some extra tape and was told that I needed to buy an entire roll from the back wall when I could see the tape gun at the ladies’ elbow.
Until today. So, I’m extremely hobbled right now with some kind of pinched nerve or bulging disc. It’s a chronic problem I’ve been dealing with for a decade. When it comes on, it’s so bad that I sometimes have to get Amber to help me in and out of bed. I normally have a high tolerance for pain, so it’s crazy that my body can suddenly make it difficult to move or perform the most basic of tasks. It’s extremely frustrating, as I hate allowing anyone to help me. It’s one of my many character flaws. I’d rather suffer than ask for a hand. (I get this from my father, and it drives me crazy when he does this, and yet I do the same damn thing).
I went to the post office this morning with a huge load of books. Poor Amber had to load them into the car for me. It took a lot to even ask her to do this. But my plan, since I’m leaving for Australia tomorrow, was to get there and ask one of the postal workers to help me bring the books inside to the counter. There’s a guy there (I think the branch manager) who is quite large and just roams around helping wherever needed (when the line gets long, he asks if anyone is there to pick up a package. He also goes behind the counter to help sort and arrange packages that have been checked in). I know all of the workers at this branch by name, and they smile and wave when I come in. Me and this guy are quite friendly.
And so I wait in line with a small box; I get up to the counter and ask if I could get some help bringing some packages in; and I’m told by the manager that he can’t help me. “We aren’t covered out there,” he says.
I’m stuck. Even with my new back brace on, it hurts to walk and open doors. It takes me a dozen trips, back and forth, carrying a single box at a time, but some of these boxes have twenty books in them. Even though the physical exertion isn’t much, I’m sweating from the pain. It feels like my spinal column is grinding down on itself. My back is spasming at the counter. It takes forever, little shuffling steps, and there’s nothing they can do to help.
Of course, this is what I normally do anyway. I normally can’t bear to ask for help in the first place. If I wasn’t flying out of town tomorrow with all the pressure to heal up and be able to get around on this book tour, I wouldn’t have asked. I would just suffer the consequences and be laid up for the next week.
Maybe it was the pain thinking for me, but I decided at the counter there that I needed to make a change. The UPS store, when I’ve needed to use them, has customer service like you wouldn’t believe. It’s practically around the corner from my house. They have dog treats and love on Bella when she comes in with me. They do copying and have a desk I can use for signing contracts. They go out of their way to help people, and I know what they would have done if I walked in there today. They would have seen how I was moving, maybe spotted the back brace under my t-shirt, and demanded that they unload my car.
I haven’t used them because the shipping is more expensive, and I do everything I can to keep prices down for you all, the customers. I wish I could get signed books to you for nothing but the price of the book. Instead, I’m driving ten minutes further each way, not getting Bella out of the house, and dealing with long lines and customer service that makes zero sense. I’m not going back to the USPS. And I apologize to you all for that.
I’ll make an announcement when we get the new store up and running. It should calculate the shipping for you. Books will arrive in better condition. But instead of $3.50 in shipping, it will probably cost $10+, depending on where you live. Also, I hope to unveil a little surprise along with the new signed books store. I think you’re going to like it. Thanks for your understanding.
April 7, 2013
Ruth Francisco’s Kindle Primer
Alas, where was Ruth Francisco and her fantastic Kindle Primer back in 2009 when I needed her? Well, it’s still helpful to me four years later, and it’s an unbelievable resource for any author starting out with self-publishing on KDP.
I get emails all the time asking how best to get started. My new response is going to be a link to this thread over at KBoards. Be sure to leave a comment thanking Ruth (it’ll bump the thread up and keep it visible, which it deserves to be). And check out her author page on Amazon. If you ask me, she deserves some kind of medal.
April 6, 2013
And the Bear Played On
Well, at my Chuck E. Cheese it was a bear, because I think they inherited their band from a Showbiz. Anyway, the highlight of my childhood were the days spent with pockets full of quarters and a belly stuffed with pizza.
I’ll never forget being ten or twelve years old and wetting my pants in a Chuck E. Cheese because I couldn’t pause the damn arcade game and no way in hell was I handing the joystick over to someone else. I danced and danced and crossed my legs and finally went in my pants. I believe the game was Ten Yard Fight. I could milk the hell out of a quarter with that game.
When I wasn’t begging my mom to drop me off at the arcade, I was at home blowing lint out of my game cartridges. The Atari 2600 started it all. (Well, we had Pong first, but I never got hooked on that game. It was just a novelty. My Atari was my altar).
Chuck E. Cheese and Atari were both founded by the godfather of video games, Nolan Bushnell. Nolan is the reason I peed in my pants as a young adult and had to spend fifteen minutes in the bathroom with paper towels and toilet water (too embarrassed to use the sink). Over two decades later, Nolan is the reason I just wet myself again. A little.
April 5, 2013
Night Shade Books in Trouble
This is amazing to me. Night Shade has been one of the models of small publisher success. I saw a few panels at WorldCon that featured their authors or owners. They’ve been the toast of the town. Now, they’re in deep trouble and in need of bailing out.
iO9 did an amazing write-up of the situation. The only thing I don’t get is the deal made about their royalty structure. The 8/10/12 of retail is fairly standard, unless the escalators were set quite low. That is, where a major publisher might have the 12% rate kick in at hundreds of thousands of books, maybe they set it to thousands, but I seriously doubt that.
The e-book royalties sound slightly more generous, but not extravagant. So why are they going under? Are all publishers this tenuous? It might explain why the terms for authors haven’t improved much; there might not be any room to improve them! Which means very-not-good-news for trad. authors and publishers going forward, because they’ll have to compete with the 70% of retail rates that self-pubbed authors enjoy.
My heart goes out to the authors and staff of Night Shade. Good people. Let’s hope this is resolved in the best manner possible.
Exciting new tool for filmmakers
I don’t shoot a lot of video, but I’m excited about this for those who do. An incredible piece of technology. It’s going to enable indie filmmakers to be creative and come up with stunning shots that would’ve required them mortgaging a house before.
MōVI BTS from Vincent Laforet on Vimeo.