Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
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What are U reading these days? (PART SEVEN) (2011) (ONGOING THREAD for 2011)
message 351:
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Werner
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Apr 03, 2011 09:30PM

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Hi Linda!"
Hi Jackie! Hopefully I'll be able to write that I've finished reading a book....soon.

Water for Elephants (2011) MovieWater for Elephants in US theaters April 22, 2011 starring Reese Witherspoon, Robert Pattinson, Christoph Waltz, Hal Holbrook. A 90-year-old man reminisces ...
www.movieinsider.com/m4283/water-for-...

Jim: This Librivox reader was excellent:
http://www.archive.org/details/magnif...
But I really haven't tried many others yet.

Jim, that's just fine. Barb is lucky to have her private reader do audio for her.

Thanks, Linda. I can't wait to see the film. I loved the book (Water for Elephants). I have the film on my Netflix "Saved" queue. I'll see the movie soon, I hope.

In my GR review I wrote: "This book is a well told combination of mystery, history, and romance. It's a true cozy mystery, an absorbing story and an easy read, one of those books you like to curl up with."
I gave the book 5 stars out of 5. I've said much more at my GR review at:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...




Good to see everyone keeping up with their reading. I've got several books/audios going at once. I'm starting to feel the pressure. :)
The books are:
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Women of the Silk
Dog on It
The Memory of Running
In my review of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo , I have written the following:
==================================================
I am currently listening to an audio version of this book and at the same time I'm following along in the book. I find that it helps me to digest the details.
The first two chapters are very dry, dealing with financial fraud details. Hard to get through. (I've read through them twice now.) Things are picking up now, but the only reason I'm staying with it is because I want to find out why the book is so very popular. It does create suspense but so far I don't feel a strong attachment to any of the characters. This type of writing has never been my favorite thing. Too many unnecessary details, too many names.
BTW, even though I know the ending (from viewing the film), there is still an element of suspense. So knowing the ending hasn't hurt the reading for me. In fact, in some ways, it enhances it because I can see where the characters' suspicions are mistaken and also because... (view spoiler) .
=====================================================
BTW, Simon Vance is a terrific reader! He dramatizes each part so well, often in a different tone of voice and/or accent.


That's OK, Werner. It's natural to use abbreviations we're familiar with. Now I've learned something. Thanks for that. :)
BTW, how did that offer come about?
(You had written: "They offered me, and a number of other Goodreaders, an ARC if I'd agree to review it.")




Though when I review it, it is hard to review with repeating the same things thousands of other Gr readers have said!


Both men's contributions to the discussion draw very heavily on their own personal experience, an approach which has both its strengths and weaknesses. One of the latter is that their experience, at the summit of the writing profession, may have little or nothing in common with the experience of many other authors -- especially with part-time, relatively unknown authors (like myself) whose experience with traditional publishing has been strictly with small presses. The world of the latter is sharply different, with very different practical considerations and economic realities. They also assume (incorrectly) that self- published authors publish their work only in e-book format, and that traditional publishers only offer print books. I've had experience with two traditional small presses now (though Trestle Press' owners would object to calling it "traditional" --but I'm using that term in the strict sense, and in a good way!) and with one printing service for self-publishing authors. All three offer books in both formats, as a matter of course; and I think that's a standard practice throughout much of the industry. So that's a consideration that somewhat weakens Eisler and Konrath's analysis.
A central thesis of their argument is that if you self-publish, you can offer your books for sale to the public much more cheaply than traditional presses will (especially if you only offer e-books, which don't cost as much overhead to produce and distribute), and that this price difference will surely lead to many more sales --enough to more than make up in profits for the lower unit price. IMO, this assumption that price is the only factor driving sales is too simplistic, and will not hold water. They also expend much energy insisting that the gate-keeping function --the filtering of good literature from the flood of amateurish chaff unleashed in the self-publishing explosion-- doesn't HAVE to be performed by publishers; the market, they say, will develop alternative gate-keeping mechanisms. But this is a speculation about what could eventually develop, not a description of anything that exists in the present. Also, none of the difficulties Konrath had with his publishers were difficulties I ever had with either of mine --and I somehow suspect that, in the world of fiction writers, there are a lot more authors whose careers and experience are more similar to mine than whose experience remotely resembles anything like Konrath's. For instance, "earning out my advance" was never a consideration, since I didn't have one. :-) (I could imagine a vast number of part- time writers scratching their heads and saying "An advance? What's an advance?" :-) )
For big-name authors who are interested in maximizing profits, and who already have a huge built-in readership out there waiting for their next book, the Eisler-Konrath model probably makes sense. And some of their criticisms of Big Six publishing practices, and the gap between theory and reality, are valid. But they haven't convinced me that self-publishing is the optimum route to go for most writers. It's an okay option if you have a book that's hard to shop to publishers for some reason, or as a stop-gap when you're between publishers; but I don't recommend it as a universal handy-dandy substitute for the traditional route!

Otherwise, I agree with your take on this entirely. For them, sure. For a new author - maybe. The idea of all that marketing is enough to scare me off.
It was 54 pages? Wow. Wish I could have claimed it for a book because I also read a lot of the linked articles. Probably did read a book's worth!

Yes, it printed out to 54 pages. :-) That kind of thing is hard to judge when you're reading something onscreen!

I forget exactly how I came across it, but I wound up on Konrath's site & read his first Jack Daniel's novel for free. I downloaded it & read it on my ereader. Then I bought the next few because I liked them - in paperback. I'm keeping them. As MMP's they were affordable. I probably wouldn't buy his self-published books as they're 50% more & in trade format.
He has a lot of other free stuff on his website, too. Some of it is fairly silly or bad, but most is good. Some is written with new authors & introduces them. That's another way of marketing & gatekeeping a new author. I see a fair amount of it now - more than I used to, I think. Not sure, though. I like it, in any case. It's a good introduction & helps fight off the biggest problem any artist faces - obscurity.

James Patterson, I know, now "co-writes" a lot of his books with unknown new authors. In that case, I'm skeptical of the practice, and some other Goodreaders are also; it comes across as a way of using his name to cash in on another person's work, perhaps without doing much or any work of his own --though, to be sure, it gives the newbie author more sales and exposure than he/she could have gotten otherwise. But if Konrath does this with free materials, it removes the obvious mercenary connotations from the practice, so I'd agree with you in liking it in that case.


http://www.pulitzer.org/node/8501
I see that the following book won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction:
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan.
At the following link a GR reviewer tells about the book:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
"The "goon" in the title of this book is time."


BTW, below is a link to a radio interview of the book's author:
http://www.npr.org/player/v2/mediaPla...

http://anvilpub.net/southern_review_o...
It's the first one,
1. Kindle gives e-writer Hocking multi-million dollar platform for success
so just scroll down a bit to it.
Basically, his young lady couldn't get published traditionally, so she self-published through Kindle & others. She's now a millionaire, but she's now getting published through traditional means. Why?
While her success was remarkable, it was exhausting.... "I want to be a writer. I do not want to spend 40 hours a week handling e-mails, formatting covers, finding editors, etc. Right now, being me is a full-time corporation," she writes on the blog.

http://anvilpub.net/southern_review_o...
It's the first one,
1. Kindle gives e-writer Hocking multi-million dollar platform for ..."
Jim, that's amazing. As to "why" she now wants to publish the traditional way, she says (as you pointed out) that self-publishing is exhausting and "she also cites book availability, increased quality of editing and career stability as factors in her decision."
I don't blame her. Even when authors publish the traditional way, they have to spend time and energy on interviews and book-signings. Their life is no longer their own.
PS-Here is a link to the author whom Jim referred to: Amanda Hocking

It was interesting to learn that Cheever spent quite a bit of time at Yaddo, the writers' retreat in Saratoga, NY, just a few miles south of us. I learned that Yaddo also had subsidiary colony called Triuna Island on Lake George. Cheever stayed there as well and he cavorted in Bolton Landing too. Triuna Island is now known as Three Brothers' Island.
Here's a website with info and photos related to Three Brothers' Island:
http://www.coveredbridgesite.com/ny/t...
Here's an article about Yaddo:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/art...

Yes but... how many make it that big?


Good point, Nina!

It's the first one,
1. Kindle gives e-writer Hocking multi-million dollar platform for ..."
Jim, I'm coming back to this post of yours. You gave us a link to the article about Amanda Hocking, the author who has gotten rich by self-publishing.
Below are links to similar articles about Amanda Hocking's success:
http://www.novelr.com/2011/02/27/rich...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tonya-p...
"Amanda Hocking is really something of a wunderkind. At only 26 years old, the Minnesota native has written a total of 17 novels. Since self-publishing eight of those books in April 2010, she's sold over 185,000 copies, making her indie publishing's latest star." (That was written 1/5/11.)
(The article Jim cited says: "That’s a total of 285,598 sales for the three platforms in February 2011 alone.")
The more I thought about it, the more amazed I became. I wonder how good her writing is.
PS-We can read a sample of Hocking's book, Switched, at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1453...
(Look inside the book.)

I'm currently reading (started last night) On the Soul of a Vampire, by my Goodreads friend Krisi Keley. As you'd guess from the title, it's vampire fiction. So far, I'm liking it very much!

Currently, I'm into the book, She's Come Undone (1992) by Wally Lamb. I'm on page 371 (out of 601 pages, large print). It has some very compelling sections to it. It's told in the first person by an obese girl. I realized today that, by coincidence, I'm currently listening to a book about an obese fellow: The Memory of Running (1999) by Ron McLarty.
Now I'm wondering if obesity is becoming a genre!
PS - As I think about it, IIRC, the state of Rhode Island plays an important part in the lives of BOTH obese characters in the different books mentioned above. Another coincidence.


It is quite good.



The Man Who Loved Books Too Much: The True Story of a Thief, a Detective, and a World of Literary Obsession (2009) by Allison Hoover Bartlett.
I loved the book, Water for Elephants (2006), and am looking forward to the movie.

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Now I'm listening to it & I'm certainly going to give it 3 stars. The reader Nancy Wu, is doing a great job. She's really making the humor, which fell rather flat when I was reading it, to life. Much more enjoyable. I would like to give the book a bit higher rating in this format. It's a candy book, fairly silly, but a lot of fun now.
I'm also reading The Black Stranger: And Other American Tales which I picked up new for $4 (a penny & $3.99 shipping) along with The Riot at Bucksnort and Other Western Tales for about the same price at the same time. The western tales were funny, while most of the 'Black Stranger' tales are horror in a sword & sorcery setting.
Robert E. Howard was amazingly prolific. He only wrote for a dozen years or so - he committed suicide when he was 30 - but in that time he wrote over 500 short stories & I'm not sure how many poems. I don't care much for the latter, but I've made a spreadsheet up of all his short stories & am trying to figure out which ones I have. That's tough because some stories can have 3 or 4 names, feature different characters & are slightly different. Some of the changes were done by Howard so he could sell the stories, but a lot were done by later editors.
I got my list from http://www.howardworks.com/howard.htm
Then I went through it & put the variations together, including unfinished fragments so each row of the spreadsheet was a unique story. I still have over 650 rows, although about 100 of those are unfinished pieces.
Now I'm going through my books & putting down which books have which stories in them. It's quite a job, but will really help me in the long run. I have a couple of dozen of his books, 160 computer files (e-stories/books) & there is a lot of duplication of stories.
Originally, I thought The Black Stranger: And Other American Tales had quite a few stories in it that I didn't have. Unfortunately not. For instance, the title story is one I know very well as a Conan story, "THE TREASURE OF TRANICOS". It was originally written this way, but didn't sell, so Howard rewrote it as "SWORDS OF THE RED BROTHERHOOD" with another character & it still didn't sell. Then L Sprague de Camp rewrote it & made it the lead story of Conan: Conan the Usurper - one of the very first Conan books I ever read. (It has a Frank Frazetta cover of a man chained with a huge snake & one of the reasons I just HAD to start reading my father's books.)
Anyway, all 3 versions are very similar & it's a great story, but I have most variations in several books now. That kind of duplication is tough on my already overcrowded book shelves, so I'd like to get a comprehensive list together & avoid that in the future.
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