Lisa Renee Jones's Blog, page 164
July 11, 2011
Street Team and Beta Readers
Hi all — I'm still putting together my street as I get ready for the release of THE STORM THAT IS STERLING. I have a little yahoo group called Lisa's Underground Angels. My Angels are truly angels who help me spread the word for new releases both on line and in their cities. I also have readers who test read and proof for me. You don't have to do both to be a part of the group. Monthly, I have some fun goodies for everyone who helps.
So if you are interested then shoot me an email at lisarenjones@aol.com.
July 8, 2011
DH's book on buying and selling Storage Auctions
BUY IT HERE
A GUIDE TO BUYING AND SELLING STORAGE UNITS — the truth, not the fantasy fiction in the television shows.
Long before television brought you shows that make the purchase and reselling of storage auctions look glamorous and fun, there were those of us who were living in that world, and those of us who knew the truth. And what is that truth?
The truth is that 'yes' you can make money buying and selling storage auctions, and 'yes' you CAN make lots of good money. However, making that money is very much like gambling in Las Vegas. It IS a gamble, every single time you buy a storage unit, and one you must approach with education. If you fall prey to the glamorous way the television shows paint the storage auction business, you will most certainly regret buying a storage unit as much as you do betting everything on black in a game of Vegas Roulette when the ball falls on red. I laugh watching the shows about storage units but amazingly every unit has a treasure. ANYTHING THAT SEEMS TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE — IS! It's important to know that every unit DOES NOT contain a treasure. In the past, you could buy cheap units, and most certainly at least make a little profit – by way of a garage sale. That would ease the pain of finding no real treasure. But now, with these television shows, bidding has been driven up, and those units with zero treasures sell for far more money than they use to.
So — here is everything I've learned over the years about buying and selling storage auctions. Let me keep you from getting burned.
Day two RWA ramblings. What I learned at RWA
This was such an interesting year to be at RWA because the publishing industry is changing in vast ways and doing so at lightening speed. Everyone feels uncertain — authors and industry people alike. Everyone is trying to figure out where they fit in the industry in the future. Self Publishing is appealing to a lot of authors. I asked many why that was the case for them. Before I tell you their answers, let me just say that my main motivation for asking a lot of questions, is that I'm on the fence with this whole self publishing frenzy. As I said in my last post, I just think the market is going to get so crammed with poor quality books. And I admit, I love the bookstore experience. I met Diego at Barnes and Noble, and seven years later, we still love to sit at a bookstore, drink coffee, and savor the books we select together. So, talking to people, and hearing their perspectives on the subject, was informative to me. Certainly, many of the replies made me think about my own career, and my own opinion on what I should, or should not, be doing.
Anyway — here are the response I got from authors on why self publishing appeals to them:
–Creative control. Often authors feel that their books are so heavily edited they don't know the book as their own anymore. My thoughts on this are mixed. Sometimes I think the editorial direction really improves a book. Sometimes it goes to extremes. I also think its a big mistake for authors to skip a detailed copy edit. Think about how many times the publishers go through the books and still crap slips through.
–We as authors have no say in covers. So its nice to actually have some control. I would agree with this. It's hard to be given a cover you don't feel sells your books well. The same goes for blurbs and back cover copy.
–Fast payment. Often with traditional publishing our money is attached to when an editor reads our work, which might be months after we turn it in. Then, we might have revisions that push it back even further. Editors are vastly overworked, so this isn't their fault, but its still hard on the authors. So the chance to get paid monthly without delay is obviously appealing.
– Not having to depend on an agent. Agents can be intimidating to authors and they get 15% to scare the pants off of many of their clients. A good agent is worth every dime of the 15% though, in my opinion. However, many authors struggle to find that magical agent and author relationship.
So where do these answers lead me as an author? Still on the fence and watchful. I think there will be a year to eighteen months where self publishing and traditional publishing grapple for control of the industry. I think the publishers have good editing and guaranteed quality on their sides. But self publishing has price advantage and appeal to authors and readers on many levels. What happens if the minute the big houses make an author they just go self publish and take the readers with them? that couldn't happen before but it can now. There will be some contract issues come up — some power struggles.
It's going to be interesting. And so I stay, as I said, sitting on the fence and watchful.
Lisa
July 6, 2011
Day one of my RWA ramblings
I'm going to start my rambling with the AFTER RWA event I attended because it summed up what RWA was all about this year. The industry is changing in a big way. So Sunday — I had the good fortune of joining a great group of readers from Long Island and two fabulous authors for a book signing. Ironically this was at the Barnes and Noble I used to go to often when I lived there. The minute I walked in it was clear MUCH had changed. The entire middle section no longer looked like a bookstore but rather a MAC store. There were no book displays at all.
When we went upstairs the romance section had changed dramatically. What use to be a back wall that spammed four rows of romance novels had turned into ONE SHORT row front and back. No back row, no other rows. Do you know how few books that means they had? Had few authors? Wow. Just Wow.
Then we get to the signing area to discover they'd ordered ten copies of each books — even for Lara Adrian — who is a top selling author. Wow again. They said they wouldn't risk not selling them. There were 70 people there who would have all bought one of each book. It was just nuts.
The signing started and normally the bookstore would introduce the authors and transition them from talking to signing. We never saw the store staff.
I've read a lot of speculation that Barnes and Noble will close or downsize stores as leases expire. My prediction is that this mini store in the store from the photo is the future Barnes and Noble. Sad. So sad.
Book signings and print books — gone.
I think its happening too fast. The huge upload of new authors and books that are not properly edited is going to crowed the on-line market and cause challenges. Readers will be overwhelmed. More authors than not, will be overlooked.
One thing I think could happen is that authors go direct to the publishers they once loved because they realize this is a way to get by the crowed search engines on Amazon that are manipulated by their best sellers. I tend to think they will manipulate it more as their publishing program ramps up more.
Walmart will have more power until print goes away. Walmart can make or break a career more than ever now because they are one of the ways print authors can get to readers in that format. Walmart will still allow that visual purchase that allows discovery for new authors by readers. There is a tiny window for authors to use that opportunity that will be lost sooner than later, or at least, that is my prediction. Barnes and Noble isn't stocking. Borders is being liquidated. So Walmart. It's all Walmart. Some Target and KMART but not much. A few grocery chain.
I can only imagine how the world of publishing will look next RWA. It will be interesting to see. I'm sad because I love my print books. I'm happy for new opportunities that the new world creates for many authors though as well. I just fear its happening too fast and that it is going to be a bumpy road for many.
Lisa
July 5, 2011
Lots of pictures from Sunday's Long Island Book signing
You can see the pictures on my facebook!
July 4, 2011
Chance to winner LEGEND OF MICHAEL and RWA updates
Hi all! I am back from RWA and starting tomorrow I will blog about something I learned or experienced at RWA. I hope you will join me. I'll be giving away fun stuff too:)
The contest is HERE with the lovely Carla from Book Monster reviews who I got to meet in Long Island Sunday.
June 23, 2011
My new UNDERGROUND ANGELS Beta Reader and street team
I've put together a new yahoo group of my special Beta Readers and Street team. We have lots of fun stuff planned and if you are interested please email me at lisarenjones@aol.com.
June 21, 2011
New release — Secrets Exposed for only $2.99!
Lindsey Paxton was once the number one defense attorney in New York. She fought for those who were innocent, but charged. Her instincts were her lifeline, never failing her, as they guided her in her choices of who to defend. Or so she thought. Until she won a case she would forever wish to have lost. Her client, an accused rapist, kills and rapes a woman only a day after being set free. Destroyed by her role in the woman's death, Lindsey blames her father's controlling ways for what she has become, and runs from her career and life. Years later – the past becomes the present . . . Her father has cancer, and Lindsey is forced to leave her career with the Washington branch of the FBI. She finds herself facing the responsibility of running her father's law firm with the reluctant help of hotshot attorney Mark Reeves, a man who sparks her temper while also managing to tempt her heart. With his help she finds herself fighting the emotional battles of the past, tempted to trust both him and her instincts. Now, faced with a case inherited from her father so similar to her career-ending one, she now must decide if her instincts will lead her down the path to saving an innocent man or setting free another killer. But while she fights her own battles, someone watches, wanting from the past what he had failed to get the first time . . . Lindsey.
NOTE: Previously released as Hidden Instincts. Title change to indicate prelude to the new TALL, DARK, AND DEADLY trilogy coming in July of 2011.
Buy it at Kindle HERE
Buy it at NOOK books HERE
June 13, 2011
A tiny little look at the Storm that is Sterling…
This is a very unedited glimpse at the Prologue for my November Zodius book 2 THE STORM THAT IS STERLING. I had some formatting issues so I had to manually move around the lines so forgive me if a few are off. I struggled with it.
The Prologue lets you meet the hero and heroine who themselves meet for the first time when they are young. This reminds me of a story I heard Kevin Bacon tell the other day in an interview about his wife seeing him in a NY play when she was 12. She came up to him and told him how great he was. Many years later they met again and he said she blew him off and he had to chase her but he just KNEW she was the one. That was such an awesome story. He said he knew she was 'the one'. Sigh….and clearly they are soul mates to come together and then find each other later when she was old enough for it to count. They've been together forever.
Anyway — I hope you will enjoy this tiny little peek!
This is from — THE STORM THAT IS STERLING …..this is from the UNEDITED version!
Prologue
Rebecca Burns was sitting behind a scuffed wooden table in the Killeen, Texas, Llibrary when he sauntered by, and every nerve ending in her body went on alert. "He" being Sterling Jeter, the hot blond hunk of a guy who'd graduated a year ahead of her. And try as she might to keep her attention on Bobby Johnson, the second-year, high school quarterback who she was tutoring for his SAT test, she failed pitifully. As if drawn by a magnet, her gaze lifted and followed Sterling's sexy, loose-legged swagger as he crossed to the computer terminals he'd been frequenting the past three weeks.
Sterling yanked a chair out from behind a desk, and she quickly cut her gaze back to Bobby, who was still struggling through the work sheet she'd given him. Unable to resist, she slid her attention back to Sterling only to find him looking right at her. He grinned and winked, before holding up a Snickers bar. She blushed at the realization that he'd brought it for her, after she'd confessed an undying love for their peanuty goodness the afternoon before.
"I just don't get why I need to know algebra on the football field," Bobby grumbled.
Reluctantly, Becca tore her gaze from Sterling's and refocused on Bobby. who, aAt six-foot-two with brown hair and eyes, and stud status at the school, he was no grand dictionary of knowledge.
"Either you meet the required SAT score for the University of Texas," she reminded him, "or you'll be passing your ball to whoever is open somewhere else."
He shoved the paper away from him and scrubbed his hand through his hair. "This is bull. I don't want some fancy NASA-sponsored scholarship like you got, so I don't see why I have to be some geekie bookworm like you either."
She stiffened at the familiar jab, wondering why she let it bother her, why every once in the while she wished she was a cheerleader or blonde bombshell of a prom queen. Her mother was never a cheerleader or a prom queen. Her mother was teacher, both beautiful and smart. Darn it, Becca liked having her mother's dark brown hair and brains, and she was darn proud of the NASA scholarship. Her parents were proud of her, and that's what counted.
Resolved to ignore his remark, she pushed the paper back toward him. "Let's try again."
"I'm done," he said. "I'm going to talk to Coach. He has to get me out of the SAT."
"Get you out of the SAT?" she asked. "You can't be serious?"
He pushed to his feet. "As a touchdown." And with that smart remark, he headed toward the door.
Becca tossed down her pencil and sighed. Please let the summer end. She couldn't get to Houston and her new school soon enough.
The chair in front of her moved, and the Snickers bar slid in front of her.
"You look like you need this fairly urgently." He sat down across from her, his teal -green eyes a bright contrast to his spiky blond hair. She decided right then that her summer-long goal was to run her fingers through that hair just one time before she left for Houston. And kiss him. She really wanted to kiss him.
"It's a wiser and safer man, who brings a Burns woman chocolate when she's upset. The men in the family swear it's a better survival technique than anything they learned in basic training." Both her father and brother were career military, same as her grandfather had been. She reached for the candy bar. "Thank you, Sterling."
He grabbed the work sheet Bobby had abandoned and started working an algebra problem with such ease, she assumed he was just doodling. They chatted while she waited for her next tutoring session, and she decided he was the best part of her summer wait for college. He took care of his grandmother doing some kind of computer programming work. She thought that made him amazingly sweet.
When it was nearly time for her next student, he abandoned the work sheet and studied her. "I should go."
"Okay." Dang it, she really didn't want him to go.
He didn't go. He sat there, staring at her, the air thick with something—she didn't know what—but it made her stomach flutter.
"You want to catch a movie or something Friday night?"
She smiled instantly, knowing she should play coy—after all, Sterling was older, and more experienced—but not sure she would know how if she tried. Dating wasn't exactly something she'd excelled at.
"Yeah," she said. "I'd like to go to a movie."
His lips lifted. "With me, right?"
She laughed. "Yeah, with you."
Once they'd arranged to meet at the library at seven the next evening, Sterling headed back to the computers. She glanced down at the math work he'd done and smiled all over again. He'd gotten all the questions right. Good looking and smart. She might just fall in love with her hot cowboy.
***
With a smile on his lips, Sterling whipped his battered, black Ford F150 into the driveway of the equally damaged trailer he called home and killed the engine.
He leaned back in the seat and pulled the wad of cash from his pocket. Ten thousand dollars and a date with Becca tomorrow night. He was going to kiss her, see what honey and sunshine tasted like, because that's what she reminded him of. Ah yeah. Life was good.
"Yeehaw," he whispered, staring at the cash again. How many nineteen-year-olds had that kind of dough? He was liking this new job. Hack a computer, get cash. He snorted. "And they say that government databases can't be hacked. This lowlife trailer trash proved them wrong." That's what the kids at school had called him after his grandmom had gotten arrested for public intoxication. Trailer trash. Misfit.
"Screw you," he mumbled to the voices of the past. "Screw you all."
Once Sterling had counted the money, down to the ten thousandth dollar, he grabbed a hundred-dollar bill for his date with Becca, and stuffed the wad of cash back in his pocket. Then he snatched the bundle of flowers on the seat. He left the Snickers bar for himself, and then decided better. Candy had worked with Becca, after all. And he'd need all the sweetness he could muster to convince Grandmom to head to that fancy alcohol-rehab center he'd arranged for her to enter up in Temple, Texas. It was even close by, only twenty miles away, which he hoped would help convince her to go. She'd curse and probably hit him. She was good at that, but it didn't hurt anymore. Hadn't for years.
He knew she couldn't help herself. He'd read enough about alcoholism to know she was sick. Yet she'd raised him despite that. Heck, he was to blame, he supposed. He was why his mother had died—the trigger that had set Grandmom off.
He climbed out of the truck and whistled down the path to the front door. The whistle faded the instant he entered the trailer. Grandmom sat on the couch, wrapped in the same crinkly blue dress that she'd gone to bed wearing, a big bottle of Vodka in her hand. Two men dressed in suits sat next to her.
"Look what these men brought me," she said, grinning, holding up her prize.
"We know how you like to take care of your grandmother," one of the men said, his buzz cut flat against his skull.
"Kind of like your father took care of his family," the other man stated, a clone of the first one.
Fuck me! They had to be army or government.
"The resemblance between the two of you is amazing," the first man said, picking up a picture of Sterling's father.
He was standing in front of a helicopter, his blond hair longer than it should have been because he wasn't normal army. He'd been Special Forces, working undercover all over the map. And it had gotten him killed when Sterling was barely out of diapers. The man set the picture back down on the coffee table.
Grandmom grabbed the picture, mumbling to herself. "They're the spitting image of each other." Her gaze lifted, her voice with it. "But Sterling ain't got no clue who his daddy was. Man was never here. Neither was his mama." She took a drink. "They died. Didn't they, Ster… ling?"
The captain focused on Sterling. "We think you're a lot like him. For instance, you both showed an interest in official government business."
Sterling's gut twisted in a knot. He was busted. Big-time freaking busted and going to jail. "I don't know what you're talking about." He wasn't admitting shit. He wouldn't go down without a fight. He had Grandmom to take care of.
"You know," the second man said, "there's a lot that can be forgiven if you serve your country. Enlistment is favorable in certain circumstances."
The first man took the picture from Grandmom. "I'm Captain Sherman, son." He gave a sideways nod to the second man. "This is First Lieutenant Jenson. We served with your father."
Thank the Lord above. They weren't Feds. "What do you want from me?"
The captain answered, "Your father was part of a Special Forces unit where certain 'skills,' like say— computer expertise, can be useful." He wrapped his arm around Grandmom's shoulders. "In exchange for service in this unit, your family will be well taken care of. It's time you enlisted, son. Be all you can be, like your father."
Grandmom gulped from the bottle, and suddenly Sterling realized he was still holding the flowers—those damn flowers that weren't going to erase his problems any more than the wad of cash sitting in his pocket.
"And if I say no?" he asked.
"I don't remember asking," the first man said.
"I'm not a soldier," Sterling said. He was just a kid in a trailer park who knew how to hack a computer.
"You are your father's son," the man said. "Mark my words, boy. You will be a soldier when I'm through with you."
Sterling looked at his grandmother, watched as she gulped from the bottle, her teal green eyes that matched his own the only familiar thing left in her. He saw the hint of contempt that lurked in their depths—the blame for his mother's death. The booze could never quite kill that. Sterling realized right then and there, that the best thing he could do for her was to leave and give her a chance to heal. To get as far away from her as he could, and stay there.
His gaze shifted to the man to his grandmother's right, and Sterling fixed him in an accessing stare. "She'll be taken care of?"
"You have my word."
"Mister," he said. "I don't know you from anywhere. I'll expect that in writing."
A hint of respect flickered in the man's expression. "As well you should."
"Don't suppose you'd wait until after tomorrow night to sign me up and ship me off?" They gave him deadpan looks in reply. "No. I didn't think so." His date with Becca was officially cancelled.
June 10, 2011
Us female writer's knew how to whip up on men very early in our history!
Find the fun proof here!