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DebL
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May 17, 2018 03:35PM

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I absolutely loved it. It engaged my emotions beautifully.

Comment: loved loved loved but now there are more people and situations I want further updates on!

Love it so, though. Truly.

Nods to Mountains of Mourning were palpable.

Very much liked this! Enrique is getting some sense rubbed off on him, looks like, too.

Very much liked this! Enrique is getting some sense rubbed off on him, looks like, too."
"loth" is a variant spelling, rarer but allowable. (I had this out with a test reader.) I prefer it to "loath" because the latter is too easily confused with "loathe", quite another meaning.
Glad you liked the tale!
Ta, L.

Loved the story!



I liked it. I'm glad you published.

Alas, one cannot seem to post there without being a member. Any GR librarian who is reading this, ping me! Here in the comments section, or by the messages, whatever.
Ta, L.

Not as much a typo than a stylistic choice that gave me pause? Miles keep calling his grandfather Piotr instead of Granda Piotr or something similar. And the book is in Ekaterin's POV and yet she kept thinking of Miles as Lord Vorkosigan?

->
Grimacing in mixed amusement and exasperation(comma) Ekaterin stepped away...
Apologies for the edits. I should have copied it straight from the book. :)

I loved the references to Baba Yaga and the bird-footed castle motif. If I hadn't been alarmed along with Ekaterin, I think I would have been howling with laughter.
(I don't know if this goes all the way back to the Russian versions of the story or not, but in Hungarian they've evolved/devolved into a general idea of the "palace turning on duck legs" as a way to describe the epitome of a fancy residence.)


Near? Nearest?
I especially like Enrique's positive approach to so many things.


Just barely started it but "the rangy ranger". You go where Don Westlake feared to tread. He once said he regretted naming his thief anti-hero Parker (writing as Richard Stark) because he could not write "Parker parked his car" I do not know why he would have said such a thing but he did.

Just barely started it but "the rangy ranger". You go where Don Westlake feared to tread. He once said he regretted naming his thief anti-hero Parker (writing as Richard Stark) because he cou..."
He was sensitive to word echoes, perhaps? I know I have to comb out a lot of them on my revision passes.
Though "rangy ranger" was deliberate word-play, on my part.
Ta, L.

Of course, we've since had more Pen and Des to fix that problem - here's hoping for a similar fix to this one.
Once again pleading for putting your works in stores where I don't have to do vaguely illegal things to them in order to read them.

Of course, we've since had more Pen and Des to fix that problem ..."
Print publishers, not I, put my books in stores, but anyway, I'm not sure what even vaguely illegal thing anyone would have to do to read my e-editions. Download free app of choice, download story, read. Done.
Ta, L.

I'm a little confused on the timeline - after CVA, but at the end of CVA, Elizabeth has been decanted and I think not in this story. Shortly before the epilogue of CVA then?

Any idea why your publishers don't put your books into the Google or Kobo ebookstores?

I loved the references ..." I read it that he is her actual brother and was made to take her to the zone when she was born with mutations

People with albinism do not necessarily have pink/red eyes. They more often have the same iris pigmentation as other humans, just a whole lot less of it. This means that they're very likely to show up with "red-eye" in photographs, and can look red-eyed in some lighting situations, but their eyes are actually blue, green, or even brown.
(Like most things in human biology, albinism is not a simple yes/no question. There are degrees of it or variations, depending on the exact genetics.)

I loved th..."
Correct. Then their parents died/departed, leaving big bro Vadim holding the bag, as it were.
Ta, L.

Any idea why your publishers don't put your books into the Google or Kobo ebookstores?"
I am my own publisher for these indie e-books, with valuable technical help from and through my long-time literary agency. (Blackstone Audio, Audible, HarperCollins, and for a few titles Baen, are their own things, and do what they want.) My agent doesn't want to deal with Google as she is still peeved over an ill-advised rights grab they did a while back, nor with Kobo due to their unfortunate habits of doing things like changing the prices without permission of the authors. (Plus they are small, making the game less worth the candle.) So, business reasons not normally visible to the end-user.
Ta, L.

Ah. The root of the problem is that you are still reading on a proprietary reader. I own a Paperwhite, and I haven't had it open in a year, since I got my tablet. (An Android, but most any tablet works the same.) After downloading the free Kindle app onto it, everything I ever bought on Kindle is available to it, and to all my other devices including my laptop and cell phone. I've switched to recommending general-purpose tablets for anyone looking for a reader.
Does Kobo not have a similar system? (If not, they are being seriously out-competed.)
In any case, you are allowed to have reading apps in parallel on a tablet or other computer. (Most people I know seem to collect a bewildering array.) You are not stuck with Kobo. Really, it's no different from having more than one bookshelf to hold one's books. If you even want just one book on a given app system, you can have it.
And I know how much fanfic some people read off their regular computers, so that's done, as well.
Ta, L.

Kobo uses Adobe ePub, the most common type of DRM outside the Kindle/Nook/iTunes closed systems. It's the DRM everyone else uses.
I am in the market for an Android eink tablet once they produce one that can run Hoopla - but until then I'll continue to rail against walled gardens and do vaguely illegal things.
(Also, if you want to hold grudges, Amazon should come in for several. They're the king of antics. Oy!)


Kobo uses Adobe ePub, the most common type of DRM outside the Kindle/Nook/iTunes closed..."
When you upload to Amazon, the person uploading the file can choose whether or not DRM is applied. DRM does nothing to stop actual pirates. They can strip it as easily as they breathe. But it does make normal readers feel like criminals, when they must strip the DRM in order to read the ebook on their preferred device.
Lois, I urge you to instruct the person who does your uploading to uncheck the box for applying DRM.
One other thing...yes, Google does change the prices at their own discretion and without notifying anyone. I agree with the choice to stay away from the platform for that reason (and a few others). But Kobo does not do this. Yes, Kobo is a smaller marketplace, but it is growing and worth considering as a platform.


It is solidly SF. If it weren't for butterbugs and the testing of science, we wouldn't have the story. But it's not the kind of SF where the "what if?" is the entire story (which often reads like infodump to non-SF fans). It's the intersection of science and humanity.
I mean, we've been picking up pretty rocks and flowers and bugs ever since we became human (and maybe slightly before). That's such a human thing. What if those bugs could kill you, even though they are beautiful?
Lots of other scientific advances these days are beautiful and gorgeous, but are they going to help people in the long run? Twinkies. Instagram.

All taken care of. Librarians read your posts too.

It occurs to me to wonder how Vashnoi compares with the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Is some brilliant Dr Borgos devising a biological solution there? Add to my list of Wikipedia rabbit-holes.

People with albinism do not necessarily have pink/red eyes...."
Thanks! Always like to learn. My experience with albinism is pretty much with zoo animals. I've seen several with the typical lack of pigment and pink eyes, and the white alligators have signs explaining that, no, they're not albino but leucistic and why. They have blue eyes, but not pale, not missing pigment apparently.
Carry on.

I recommend to your attention the PBS Nature episode on the ongoing consequences of Chernobyl, with the irresistible title of "Radioactive Wolves". It's available on DVD, so your library might have it; also intermittently available on PBS.org
Ta, L.


I think I enjoyed Flowers for reasons similar to yours. It felt really satisfying to see Ekaterin thoroughly engaged in the work of her life as a leader in the Vorkosigan district.


Yes, another reader had mentioned the Amazon note -- which explains the uptick in my sales ranking today, hah. Good autobot, have a biscuit.
Ta, L.


I could easily be wrong.
Also, this was the first re-read and I enjoyed it even more. Now I want to see Enrique as a father. He’s going to be terrific!

Sometimes what might be technically correct is still the wrong choice. "...an, oh God, stumpy bare foot..." flows for me as a reader, just because the word immediately following the article starts with a vowel. My opinion.