Rachel Alexander's Blog, page 391

June 29, 2016

coloricioso:

It’s watercolor time for Asphodelus.
If you like...











coloricioso:



It’s watercolor time for Asphodelus.


If you like check the pomegranate watercolors.

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Published on June 29, 2016 14:00

June 28, 2016

Which will come first, "the thrice plowed field" or "the good counselor" ?

September 22nd on Kindle. 

Preorders start in August.

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Published on June 28, 2016 14:00

ever-presentbitchface:

So I won Receiver of Many and Destroyer of light in a give away...

ever-presentbitchface:



So I won Receiver of Many and Destroyer of light in a give away @kata-chthonia (the author) did. And this is actually my favorite book series so today I bought the e-books so I could have a “full collection”



:D

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Published on June 28, 2016 12:06

:o I ordered it ( the destroyer of light ) yesterday, it should come in tomorrow :D

Yay! :D

I hope you enjoy the paperback! I think I had more fun putting that together than I did the ebook. The cover art is by the fantastically talented ms.morgan graphic design. You should check out her all her other design work, too.

Also, by “fun to put together” I mean it was a delightful pain in the ass that totally engaged all my anal retentive and font loving tendencies, simultaneously deighting me and driving me completely insane.

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Published on June 28, 2016 12:02

coloricioso:

macroramblings:

Stained glass

Uhh this reminded...



coloricioso:



macroramblings:



Stained glass



Uhh this reminded me of your book! @kata-chthonia
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Published on June 28, 2016 11:42

June 27, 2016

nicholelynart:

Dead sketches. It was the retelling of Hades and...





nicholelynart:



Dead sketches. It was the retelling of Hades and Persephone in Egyptian style

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Published on June 27, 2016 23:21

This week’s ranking for Destroyer of Light :D





This week’s ranking for Destroyer of Light :D

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Published on June 27, 2016 20:29

hauntedgardenbook:

The asphodel is a native of Sicily, and its...



hauntedgardenbook:



The asphodel is a native of Sicily, and its roots were once enjoyed as food. But it was also strongly associated in ancient times with funerals, death, and the afterlife. It was planted around tombs to provide sustenance to beloved spirits. Inscriptions found on old Sicilian tombs included “I am nourished by the asphodel” and “Without, I am surrounded with mallows and asphodel, and within I am nought but a corpse.” Homer, in The Odyssey, described fields of asphodel that lay beyond the river Styx, bordering the paradise of Elysium.

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Published on June 27, 2016 14:01

June 26, 2016

Do you have any advice for a new/never been published author? I have a manuscript but I'm not sure what to do next. I know I need an editor though. Is self publishing a good thing? How did you get published? (I bought your books and I loved them by the way

Definitely get an editor. 

I’d work first with someone who has a good grasp of novels and language, someone you trust, who isn’t afraid t o give you constructive criticism and liberally use a red pen (or red markups in a word processor, you know what I mean).

I decided to skip the big publishers and go straight to self publishing after I read a 2013 report on self-publishing stats. I have greater control over the look and feel of my books, the content, the distribution, and honestly, higher royalties. It is pretty funny watching where the book pops up, though. Like how I just found out that Kinokuniya in Malaysia carries Receiver of Many, like yesterday (Thank you expanded distribution!) The downside to self publishing is that I’m my own agent, my own PR and marketing, and my own legal team.

As for YOU getting published, there’s lot of options out there. I personally chose to use Createspace to publish and distribute the paperback, and KDP and Smashwords to publish the ebook. All of them are free to use, variably difficult to navigate (smashwords = easiest, KDP = nightmarish). I would also get your books their own ISBN through Bowker. You will need one for the paperback and one for the ebook (some also say you need one if it’s a Kindle vs. an Epub file, but I didn’t find that necessary). I was able (through all three sites) to get a preorder for each book, and I assure you that getting the paperback preorder set up is a TREMENDOUS pain in the ass.

But first things first, get a reliable editor, one who’s also going to give you solid content feedback as well as fixing grammatical errors. The rest will fall into place. After all, you already did the hard part, finishing the manuscript! Everything after the initial outpouring of blood sweat and tears is kinda cake.

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Published on June 26, 2016 14:01

Do you have any advice for a new/never been published author? I have a manuscript but I'm not sure what to do next. I know I need an editor though. Is self publishing a good thing? How did you get published? (I bought your books and I loved them by the way

Definitely get an editor. 

I’d work first with someone who has a good grasp of novels and language, someone you trust, who isn’t afraid t o give you constructive criticism and liberally use a red pen (or red markups in a word processor, you know what I mean).

I decided to skip the big publishers and go straight to self publishing after I read a 2013 report on self-publishing stats. I have greater control over the look and feel of my books, the content, the distribution, and honestly, higher royalties. It is pretty funny watching where the book pops up, though. Like how I just found out that Kinokuniya in Malaysia carries Receiver of Many, like yesterday (Thank you expanded distribution!) The downside to self publishing is that I’m my own agent, my own PR and marketing, and my own legal team.

As for YOU getting published, there’s lot of options out there. I personally chose to use Createspace to publish and distribute the paperback, and KDP and Smashwords to publish the ebook. All of them are free to use, variably difficult to navigate (smashwords = easiest, KDP = nightmarish). I would also get your books their own ISBN through Bowker. You will need one for the paperback and one for the ebook (some also say you need one if it’s a Kindle vs. an Epub file, but I didn’t find that necessary). I was able (through all three sites) to get a preorder for each book, and I assure you that getting the paperback preorder set up is a TREMENDOUS pain in the ass.

But first things first, get a reliable editor, one who’s also going to give you solid content feedback as well as fixing grammatical errors. The rest will fall into place. After all, you already did the hard part, finishing the manuscript! Everything after the initial outpouring of blood sweat and tears is kinda cake.

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Published on June 26, 2016 14:01