Felicity Price's Blog, page 3
July 18, 2017
Downsizing not as easy as it sounds
      Dropping a couple of dress sizes is about as easy as dropping a couple of house sizes and takes just as much effort. You’d think it would be simple, popping the house on the market and waiting for the offers to pour in. But if your house is as tired looking as your favourite old [...] 
  
    
    
    
        Published on July 18, 2017 00:15
    
July 12, 2017
The best of both worlds?
      One week, I’m racing round work, one meeting after another, 55 emails to answer before lunchtime – not that there’s much time to stop for a lunchbreak – and people bombarding me with endless questions. The next week – nothing. No meetings, no frantic emails, no demands at all. The long and scary silence of [...] 
  
    
    
    
        Published on July 12, 2017 15:31
    
When the fine print finally fails
      Fine print? No problem. I can read that 6-point type, I’d boast, as much younger colleagues fumbled around for their reading glasses. Reading glasses were for old people. Not me. Not in my fifties. Not even when I turned 60. My eyesight had actually improved. The optometrist said it was something to do with long [...] 
  
    
    
    
        Published on July 12, 2017 15:13
    
What not to wear over 60? Flout the rules
      Have you noticed how magazines are increasingly telling older women what not to wear? And the “older” women they’re being so condescending about are in their 50s and sometimes even, shock horror, in their 60s. “Sixties plus” we’re called, parcelled up into a convenient category where the only possible next step is the departure lounge. [...] 
  
    
    
    
        Published on July 12, 2017 14:54
    
May 23, 2017
Get thee to a retirement village!
      The retirement announced last week of Simon Challies from Ryman Healthcare due to advancing Parkinsons is a poignant reminder that, no matter how fit and active we might be, people over a certain age can be immobilised out of the blue, stricken with a debilitating disease that eventually no amount of medication and fitness can [...] 
  
    
    
    
        Published on May 23, 2017 14:58
    
May 21, 2017
How many shades of grey?
      Almost overnight, it seems, every woman I know has gone blonde. The blondes are even blonder; mousey-heads, redheads, raven-haired, brunettes, all of them are now a uniform blonde. Well, almost all of them. There are a few brave eco-friendlies refusing to get out the dye-bottle, but even some of those au-naturels have given in after [...] 
  
    
    
    
        Published on May 21, 2017 01:13
    
January 10, 2014
Crossroads: self-publish or traditional publish my new novel?
      Over the last six months I have been very lucky to have had the time to write whenever I want. Part of the time, I was based in that famous Katherine Mansfield city of Menton, on the French Riviera, where the ions in the air I am sure helped me write a substantial chunk of my next book.  When I returned home, I had intended to go back to work, but finding a job took longer than expected and it is only now, six months after my last job, I am about to resume the 9 to 5 workday. In the interim, I have finished writing the book and have completed a substantial edit after finding a wonderful editor/adviser in Bronwen Jones (bronwen-jones.com) to provide the independent and wise advice a writer needs at this critical stage in a book's life. I thoroughly recommend her services.
The new novel is tentatively titled "Aftershock: a story of new beginnings". I'm not sure I'll stick with the title, but it will do for now. It's about how love endures, how two former lovers learn to trust each other again to find a new beginning and it's set against the backdrop of the Christchurch earthquakes of 2011. Bronwen helped me work through that plotline too!
So I am now at crossroads decision: do I self-publish, like I did with my last novel? Or do I go back to Random House, who published my three earlier novels, (randomhouse.co.nz/authors/felicity-price.aspx) and see if they would like to take it on?
I'm thinking I'll try the traditional publisher first, mainly because it's so much easier to let them do a lot of the work for you. You don't earn so much per book, but you do tend to sell more books.
However, I'm not so naive as to expect Random to do all the work. Times have changed and even traditionally published authors have to go someway towards promoting and finding outlets for their books. My next move, therefore is to update my website and build a database from it. A new learning curve.
If Random turns me down, I've been down the indie author route three times now (with my last book and two from my back catalogue) so, with a database and interactive website up and running, it should be a comparative breeze.
Meanwhile, it's off to work we go.
    
    
    The new novel is tentatively titled "Aftershock: a story of new beginnings". I'm not sure I'll stick with the title, but it will do for now. It's about how love endures, how two former lovers learn to trust each other again to find a new beginning and it's set against the backdrop of the Christchurch earthquakes of 2011. Bronwen helped me work through that plotline too!
So I am now at crossroads decision: do I self-publish, like I did with my last novel? Or do I go back to Random House, who published my three earlier novels, (randomhouse.co.nz/authors/felicity-price.aspx) and see if they would like to take it on?
I'm thinking I'll try the traditional publisher first, mainly because it's so much easier to let them do a lot of the work for you. You don't earn so much per book, but you do tend to sell more books.
However, I'm not so naive as to expect Random to do all the work. Times have changed and even traditionally published authors have to go someway towards promoting and finding outlets for their books. My next move, therefore is to update my website and build a database from it. A new learning curve.
If Random turns me down, I've been down the indie author route three times now (with my last book and two from my back catalogue) so, with a database and interactive website up and running, it should be a comparative breeze.
Meanwhile, it's off to work we go.
        Published on January 10, 2014 00:02
    
December 10, 2013
Give and Ye Shall Receive
 Joining the New Zealand Romance Writers online community has opened a new window of opportunity for me - there are some wonderfully helpful people there like Shirley Wine, who writes Rural Romances as breathtaking and unique as the land that inspires them. Shirley has been generous with her advice and has hosted my first guest blog on her website-linked blog:  http://www.shirleywine.com
Joining the New Zealand Romance Writers online community has opened a new window of opportunity for me - there are some wonderfully helpful people there like Shirley Wine, who writes Rural Romances as breathtaking and unique as the land that inspires them. Shirley has been generous with her advice and has hosted my first guest blog on her website-linked blog:  http://www.shirleywine.comI hope one day I can help others in the group as much as Shirley has helped me. I've often been told that being generous with your help to other writers can reap its own rewards later on. If this is the case, Shirley deserves payback big-time.
This is what I wrote on her blog, which can be found at: http://www.shirleywine.com/2013/12/fe...
Why I simply had to write “In Her Mothers’ Shoes”
Like many Baby Boomers, I was born to an unmarried mother in the 1950s and adopted at birth. My mother never even got to hold me or say goodbye. I was simply taken from her while her stitches were being sewn up and she never saw me again. My adoptive parents told me from an early age that I’d been adopted. It never seemed a big deal until I was a teenager, a time when many of us question our parents and wish we’d been born to someone more glamorous and lenient! From then on, I keenly wanted to know who my “real” mother was (I wasn’t so fussed about my birth father) but it wasn’t until the New Zealand adoption laws changed in 1986-7 that I was able to do anything about it.I finally got to meet her in the late 1980s but it wasn’t for another twenty-two years that I met up with my new brothers and sister.The more people I spoke to about finding me new family, the more I realised just how common my story is. It seemed almost everyone had a half brother or sister, or cousin, or some close relative who’d suddenly popped up out of the blue. It was a story waiting to be told, and for some time I thought about writing it.Until then, my books had been a bit like Marian Keyes’ books – a mix of light-hearted humour with some serious issues, but essentially entertaining. The title of one of them – “A Sandwich Short of a Picnic” – says it all.This new novel (yes, it is fictional, but obviously based on my story) about finding my birth family, had to be different to allow for the heart-wrenching time my birth mother had and the heart-warming feeling of finally meeting someone who looks like you. Not to mention, realising that at last you can have a sense of belonging, of fitting in.So I started working part-time and spent a year attending the “Bill Manhire” Victoria University Creative Writing course. It was the most wonderful experience. I learned how to stop over-writing, over-explaining, how to internalise better; I learned so many things that helped me write a better book.When it was finished, my usual publisher, Random House, told me it wasn’t commercial enough – which it wasn’t. Especially compared with my earlier books. So I published it myself – in print and online – and documented some of the fun and games on my blog. I’m still learning how to do it, how to sell more books online, and how to write even better next time. Because, of course, I’m writing another book this year. It’s quite different. Who knows if it will be commercial?!
        Published on December 10, 2013 15:23
    
December 1, 2013
It's been raining men - but where's the benefit?
      When everyone raves about ultra-fast fibre broadband, it's a no-brainer to sign up for it right? 
Now that we've done so, I'm not so sure.
The fibre cable arrived at our gate, along with all the other gates in our street, about two months ago, followed by a flyer from Snap! Did we want to sign up for some incredibly cheap rate, including landlines, that was significantly less per month than our existing supplier? Of course. So, after decades with Telecom, we switched everything - phones and internet provider - to Snap!
Men came to make diagrams where the cable would go up our long drive. Men came to have another look at where it would go into the house. More men came back a month or so later to burrow up the garden border at the side of the drive, like big hairy rabbits burrowing holes every few meters and magically drilling horizontally in between to stretch the cable. Another bunch of men came to drill through the wall and connect up the phones and the Fritz-box that holds the key to the ultra-fast broadband. But they couldn't find where the copper cable comes in so they couldn't disconnect it. Several phone calls later, another bunch of men came to disconnect it. Meanwhile, my laptop wouldn't get emails and neither would my non-Telecom phone. More phone calls to reconnect. Apparently there was a new code that had to be entered into the laptop and phone, but nobody had bothered to tell us.
It became something of a trial, really, waiting for endless people at call centres to fix each problem and get everything going again. But three weeks later, we're all connected and looking forward to enjoying the benefits of ultra-fast fibre broadband. I say "looking forward" because neither the cable provider nor the ISP has bothered to explain to us what the benefits actually are and how to access them. Such as movies. My laptop, being an older one, doesn't like playing movies unless they're on DVD - which don't need fibre broadband to be delivered to my lap.
Next step: upgrading the laptop software to play movies and finding out what else the fibre wizardry can do.
It would be a pain to think that all those men laboured in vain.
  
    
    
    Now that we've done so, I'm not so sure.
The fibre cable arrived at our gate, along with all the other gates in our street, about two months ago, followed by a flyer from Snap! Did we want to sign up for some incredibly cheap rate, including landlines, that was significantly less per month than our existing supplier? Of course. So, after decades with Telecom, we switched everything - phones and internet provider - to Snap!
Men came to make diagrams where the cable would go up our long drive. Men came to have another look at where it would go into the house. More men came back a month or so later to burrow up the garden border at the side of the drive, like big hairy rabbits burrowing holes every few meters and magically drilling horizontally in between to stretch the cable. Another bunch of men came to drill through the wall and connect up the phones and the Fritz-box that holds the key to the ultra-fast broadband. But they couldn't find where the copper cable comes in so they couldn't disconnect it. Several phone calls later, another bunch of men came to disconnect it. Meanwhile, my laptop wouldn't get emails and neither would my non-Telecom phone. More phone calls to reconnect. Apparently there was a new code that had to be entered into the laptop and phone, but nobody had bothered to tell us.
It became something of a trial, really, waiting for endless people at call centres to fix each problem and get everything going again. But three weeks later, we're all connected and looking forward to enjoying the benefits of ultra-fast fibre broadband. I say "looking forward" because neither the cable provider nor the ISP has bothered to explain to us what the benefits actually are and how to access them. Such as movies. My laptop, being an older one, doesn't like playing movies unless they're on DVD - which don't need fibre broadband to be delivered to my lap.
Next step: upgrading the laptop software to play movies and finding out what else the fibre wizardry can do.
It would be a pain to think that all those men laboured in vain.
        Published on December 01, 2013 01:13
    
November 26, 2013
An Indie learns to publish on Kobo and Smashwords
      Having made the most of the "Kindle Select" promotional offers with my latest book (In Her Mothers' Shoes) - the ones you can only have if your book is exclusive to Kindle - I decided the time was right to move onto other pastures, hopefully just as green. Kindle was my first learning experience in Indie Publishing, as they call it. I sweated for hours over my keyboard formatting the book for html; I nearly went mad getting the cover the right size; and I almost lost it trying to get the worldwide distribution settings right. But after a while, I got the hang of it so well I published two of my earlier novels on Kindle as well - and each time, it got a little easier.
   You would think, then, that publishing my adoption-triangle novel In Her Mothers' Shoes on Kobo and Smashwords would be a doddle.Not quite.While Kindle requires you to save the book as "Web Page, Filtered" (html), Kobo needs it in epub, odt, mobi (whatever that is) and, thankfully, word documents. Smashwords, on the other hand, only takes older word documents but the formatting is much the same.The only major difference between Kindle and Smashwords is that you can't have your paragraphs indented AND a 12pt (or any-sized) gap after the paragraph. It has to be one or the other. But it was only a moment's work to reformat the whole book without the extra space. How times have changed!
You would think, then, that publishing my adoption-triangle novel In Her Mothers' Shoes on Kobo and Smashwords would be a doddle.Not quite.While Kindle requires you to save the book as "Web Page, Filtered" (html), Kobo needs it in epub, odt, mobi (whatever that is) and, thankfully, word documents. Smashwords, on the other hand, only takes older word documents but the formatting is much the same.The only major difference between Kindle and Smashwords is that you can't have your paragraphs indented AND a 12pt (or any-sized) gap after the paragraph. It has to be one or the other. But it was only a moment's work to reformat the whole book without the extra space. How times have changed!
There is also a specific requirement for how you word your copyright on Smashwords, which I hadn't struck before (Published by Felicity Price & Associates at Smashwords, © Copyright 2013 Felicity Price).
For Smashwords and Kobo, you need to have a new ISBN Number (which you get when you apply first time round - one for print, one for Kindle and one for epub).
With those four things sorted, I clicked the "Publish" button and my book was up there in the Smashwords and Kobo stores.
Just how this will translate to sales, I have yet to learn. I suspect there is a secret formula somewhere but, unlike Kindle, there doesn't appear to be a special "Select" marketing programme that helps boost your sales up the rankings.
That's my next task. I'll keep you posted!
    
    
     You would think, then, that publishing my adoption-triangle novel In Her Mothers' Shoes on Kobo and Smashwords would be a doddle.Not quite.While Kindle requires you to save the book as "Web Page, Filtered" (html), Kobo needs it in epub, odt, mobi (whatever that is) and, thankfully, word documents. Smashwords, on the other hand, only takes older word documents but the formatting is much the same.The only major difference between Kindle and Smashwords is that you can't have your paragraphs indented AND a 12pt (or any-sized) gap after the paragraph. It has to be one or the other. But it was only a moment's work to reformat the whole book without the extra space. How times have changed!
You would think, then, that publishing my adoption-triangle novel In Her Mothers' Shoes on Kobo and Smashwords would be a doddle.Not quite.While Kindle requires you to save the book as "Web Page, Filtered" (html), Kobo needs it in epub, odt, mobi (whatever that is) and, thankfully, word documents. Smashwords, on the other hand, only takes older word documents but the formatting is much the same.The only major difference between Kindle and Smashwords is that you can't have your paragraphs indented AND a 12pt (or any-sized) gap after the paragraph. It has to be one or the other. But it was only a moment's work to reformat the whole book without the extra space. How times have changed!There is also a specific requirement for how you word your copyright on Smashwords, which I hadn't struck before (Published by Felicity Price & Associates at Smashwords, © Copyright 2013 Felicity Price).
For Smashwords and Kobo, you need to have a new ISBN Number (which you get when you apply first time round - one for print, one for Kindle and one for epub).
With those four things sorted, I clicked the "Publish" button and my book was up there in the Smashwords and Kobo stores.
Just how this will translate to sales, I have yet to learn. I suspect there is a secret formula somewhere but, unlike Kindle, there doesn't appear to be a special "Select" marketing programme that helps boost your sales up the rankings.
That's my next task. I'll keep you posted!
        Published on November 26, 2013 13:14
    



