Creative Reviews discussion
?'s for the Members of CR
>
How to build community on Goodreads?
date
newest »


Splitter- Small, medium and large are not fancy enough to say... LOL. though, i admit at first I was like you and wonder why they can't just say small. BUT if you go there and ask for a small they will give you a tall.. they get it there. LOL
And I can forgive you for drinking your coffee regular. :) I drink it at home regular (well i add milk and sweetner) but it never tastes as good as SB... i have my eye on this fancy coffee machine that makes lattes at home... it doesn't fit my budget. 2,000 is just too much. lol.
But i have my eye out for a cheaper one....

Splitter"
A friend brought us some Cheesy Vegemite. We loved it so much we went out and bought some cheesy Marmite - not quite the same, but almost.

Pimp my Website...
What do readers expect to find on an author's website? I now see the merit in doing updates, but wonder if there is a need for a blog/news page on the website?
Would be interested in reader feedback.
Thanks
www.just4kix.jimdo.com

As a reader, I love the news and blog section of an authors site. I like to hear their updates on works in progress or just what's going on in their world.

Thanks. Perhaps I should add a news page. I was also considering offering a free PDF of one of my books on the website. I would change the book every couple of weeks. Do you think this would interest readers? Do many people like reading PDF's?


However, it's not hard to convert PDF's to other formats like MOBI and ePub that cover the vast majority of eReaders.
I am sending out my second book to the beta readers in multiple formats so they can use whichever one suits them.
Splitter

Thanks. Perhaps I'll start tomorrow with

will have to remember to send the cover as well.

Thanks. Perhaps I should add a news page. I was also considering offering a free PDF of one of my books on the website. I would change the book every couple of weeks. Do you think this wou..."
I loathe PDF files cause I do most all my reading and correspondence by my phone so PDF files are hard to read as the print is small.
Sure I can enlarge it then I'll be scrolling all over the place.
But that's just me and I'm "special"

Splitter"
As an Aussie, Splitter, I think you'll find, (1) Vegemite is an acquired taste (as in acquired very young, before taste buds have properly matured); and (2) it tastes nothing like either beer, peanut butter, or any combination of the two.
If you can think over-salted axle-grease, that's probably closer.
There was a tale we used to tell overseas visitors, that it's made from kangaroos' ear-wax, but I'm not sure that's right.

There is a coffe shop in Rehobeth (not even going to try to spell it) that made a ..."
good tip splitter. And cinnamon makes everything taste better.

There's two things you need to know about Vegemite.
1) We shipped all our convicts to Australia.
2) Vegemite was invented there as a punishment.
Though personally I feel making all the convicts stay here and us going over to Australia was the way it should have happened. London or OZ? You're winning on that one, Phil!!
Zero degrees C outside yesterday morning. Though admittedly it was at 5am and looked a lot like night. Bet that's not the case in Oz...
JAC

JAC

There's two things you need to know about Vegemite.
1) We shipped all our convicts to Australia.
2) Vegemite was invented there as a punishment.
Though personally I f..."
Correction, JA -- we didn't get all your convicts. Some of them stayed and became Parliamentarians.
You're right though, about the climate. It's warming into late spring here, though current anticipation is for another damp summer like last year. La Nina seems to be building up again in mid-Pacific. After 6 pm and the sun has just set.

In fact maybe it's all spin and the good guys ~~DID escape over there, leaving the bad'uns here to tell whatever story they thought best!
How's the new book going on? Is it behaving?
J.

In fact maybe it's all spin and the good guys ~~DID escape over there, leaving the bad'uns here to tell whatever story they thought best!
..."
Don't think anyone can win on the question of which country has the worst/most crims. There are lots of candidates.
Books 2 and 3 are finished, subject to any further suggestions by JournalStone. Now picking up where I left off on the next series, a fantasy about the earliest kings of Iran. Hope the current political climate doesn't ruin things, because I find the stories fascinating. Remember the epic of Sohrab and Rustum?

We did a school play about Sohrab and Rustum when I was about 13 which the 6th form had written. We had a superb warscene with two opposing armies and chants and broomstick spears and painted our own cardboard shields and big masks and everything! I had a little solo bit where I challenged (and got killed horribly by) Sohrab. Who was unexpectedly ginger but I quite fancied so was well up for a warscene with him.(What larks!)
Haven't remembered that in years...
Sounds like your stuff will be really interesting, Phil, will look fwd to that.
JAC

We did a school play about Sohrab and Rustum when I was about 13 which the 6th form had written. We had a superb warscene with two opposing armies and chants and broomstick spears and pain..."
Thanks, JA, I'll dedicate it to you.
I've been fascinated with Persian/Iranian tales since I read a Leslie Charteris story (one of The Saint novels) years ago, where the hero quoted from the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. I bought a translation, and still find inspiration in it from time to time. That and Khalil Ghibran.

LOVE Khalil Gibran though - my sister is an excellent soprano and when she was younger used to sing at weddings a lot. My mum did a setting of a bit of Gibran to a most wonderful jazz tune and people still remember that fondly (it's the "To be together you were born" bit.
Though obv, in that case she was not 'singing in the wilderness'...
JAC

JAC

There's two things you need to know about Vegemite.
1) We shipped all our convicts to Australia.
2) Vegemite was invented there as a punishment.
Though personally I f..."
Bah ah ha ha ha ha ha h ah ahahahaaha
And yes, cinnamon makes everything better!!!


She was Tahmineh, daughter of the King of Samengan.

Thanks, Cambria. Sadly, our Western education systems seem to ignore Persia's rich and varied history and literature almost completely.

Mind for years I had no idea Persia was actually Iran/Iraq, it was just this magical fairy-tale place you read about. I was quite confused about sherbet though.
JAC

Mind for years I had no idea Persia was actually Iran/Iraq, it was just this ma..."
Did you know Project Gutenberg has published Arabian Nights?

I'm partial to a bit of Aladdin, I may wander over and investigate!
(See, Cambria, you knew more Iraqi / Iranian folklore than you realised...!)
JAC


Some people can be mean.
I'm sorry you had a bad experience but glad it wasn't from us.
We wish you the best of luck!!!

Thanks Jenn. And nah you guys are awesome, I enjoy this group!

http://dalesplace-dale.blogspot.com/2...

Sorry to hear you're without power/water and other "necessities" of life but at least these days there's 3G for the phone right? LOL!!

we are thinking of you Dale!!!!

There is a coffe shop in Rehobeth (not even going to try to spell it) that made a Vietnamese espresso with cinnamon. I remember it to this day.
Btw, when making coffee at home, the finer the grind the stronger the coffee.
Splitter