Friday, October 28, 2005

The Times They Are A Changin'


Ooops. I never noticed this before, but The New York Times website replaces the "All the News That's Fit to Print" tagline with - well, the current ad is "Are you A Vetran Looking For A Job?" I guess that means that Judy Miller is now officially gone. You heard it here, well, not quite first.

Coolness


Okay, I think this is a great idea. It's PocketMod, a little pocket organizer that you print out from one8.5 x11 sheet of paper and then fold. I set up a sheet with a week-view calendar, a task-list, and six storyboard mods so that I can write down a week's worth of scenes and then just stuff the thing in my purse. However, you can set up your eight pieces the way you want.

Gotta love free stuff....

Thursday, October 27, 2005

Everything's Coming up Roses for Harlequin....

Harlequin released their third-quarter profit report. Newspapers were very sad, but the books business was a much happier place, with profits up $1.3 million (5.6%) from the same period last year, with profit coming in at 24.6 million for the quarter. My favorite line is this:

"North America Retail operating profits were up .6 million in the quarter with higher volumes and revenue gains offset partially by increased promotional spending and higher costs."

Kathleen's translation: "Advertising sells books."

And to even further prove my hypothesis:

"Year to date, the investment in promotional spending and higher costs have more than offset the revenue gains."

Just saying....

Monday, October 24, 2005

LA Time's more erudite version of the quills Coverage

When is a romance novel not a romance novel?

Answer: when it's written by Diana Gabaldon. Slate has an article on Gabaldon's best-selling success in the romance genre, and her unremitting protests that she doesn't write romance.

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Blogging the Quills


I'm passing the time watching the Quill awards, the book awards decided by a popular vote. I decided to share my thoughts on this debut broadcast event. Please note, absolutely no fact-checking was involved in the following report.

The pre-show interviews are all television types, except for Candace Bushnell. Jon Stewart is the opening act, with Brian Williams as the host. Not many crowd shots, there's a few, and I'm thinking, who's that? I realize the reasoning for the absence of crowd shots. We don't know who these people are. Eventually, I satisfy myself playing, "Guess the genre." The young teacher type, definitely kid's lit. Boas in the back? Romance, or possibly auto-biography. The old, dead-looking gent. Probably historical biography.

The first presenter is Kim Cattrell, presenting the award for debut award. The winner is Elizabeth K. for the Historian. Elizabeth is there to accept, and I'm thinking, "Oh, honey, you need to tone those arms, or else wear long sleeves; obviously typing a 10,000 page book is NOT ENOUGH." She tells a joke. Not funny. Don't quit the day job, hon. Okay, that was a cheap shot. Sorry, two million dollar advances (not mine) turn me into a very mean and nasty person.

Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson present the award for humor: huge applause for America the Book, and a respectable bit for George Carlin, who in the end, loses to Jon Stewart, who, as we all know is the JK Rowling of funny. Jon Stewart does not accept the award, instead one of the other co-authors accepts. I can only assume this is some sort of protest move on Stewart's part, giving the ceremony its first bit of controversy. I'll research this and see what I can find out before the end of the show.

Maria Bartiromo (I think I spelled that right) is the presenter for business awards. They keep flashing to some Karl Rove/Jack Welch type, who I assume is either one of the nominees, or else Ms. Bartiromo's secret lover. Oh, no, not Jack Welch, no idea who he is. The winner goes to the guys who wrote Frankonomics, whoops, typo, Freakonomics, but I think I like Frankonomics. Possibly for a sequel. The original is a cool book. Loved it. Stephen Dubner is a total geek-head, but who is represented by Suzanne Gluck, who is like one of the hugest agents in the biz, so he may be a total geekhead, but he's not stupid.

Next up is Jules Feiffer (who?), a distinguished gentleman with a Santa Claus beard and spectacles, who presents the award for children's chapter book, middle grade, which pits all the biggies against the Godzilla, Harry Potter & The Half-Blood Prince. Rowling wins (I hope you really didn't bet against that one), but is not able to attend, more of that controversy, possible the rumors of a terrorist threat in NYC have scared the big authors away?

Rocco DiSpirito is there to present the award for yes, you guessed it, cookbooks. He's wearing pin-strips (he's really too pudgy for stripes).. The winner is Rachel Ray, 30 minute to something, it's a really long title, and I can't type that fast. Rachel Ray is not there, either. More of the terrorist threat? Perhaps there was a bomb threat earlier, a cab parked outside, cops evacuating the theater.

The next presenter is Robert Klein, who knows how to makes jokes about being an author, I respect that. You can tell the real authors, from those who have ghostwriters. They get the real pain and neurosis that comes from books. He's joking about promoting, Larry King talking about his joke. Very funny stuff, and oh, he's not a promoter. He's the warm up to the real promoter: Elmo. Whoa, who is presenting the award for children's illustrated book is Runny Babbit by Shel Silverstein, and yes, either Shel has become a woman, or else Shel is not there EITHER. What is the deal? What if they had a book awards program, but nobody came? More crowd shots. We have no idea who the woman is who is accepting this award. Possibly an agent, maybe their dry cleaner. We get a shot of Deepak Chopra, looking deeply into the camera, like he wants to seduce it. Very fascinating.

Matthew Modine is next presenter. Remember VisionQuest? And he's there presenting the book for religion and spirituality. Obviously I'm missing something from Matthew Modine, the Later Years. The winner is Peace is the Way, Deepak Chopra. He thanks Oprah first. Funny joke. I'm impressed. A slight political rant in his acceptance piece, but he does not accuse George Bush of not caring about religious people. Next up is an advertisement, no, whoops, that's a little human-interest piece on Deepak. According to Al Roker, this guy is on the road 80% of the time, writes every day, usually three books simultaneously. I am shamed.

Next up is a video presentation (cover shots, don't get too excited), about the awards that are not presented on camera. Debbie Macomber wins for romance. Obviously 54% of the fiction market is not respectable enough to rate a presenter. Sigh. Another Charlie Brown moment for romance.

Anthony Rapp is presenting the award for young-adult-slash-teen award (WHOA? Slash fiction for teens? We are getting advanced). I looked him up. He's a Broadway guy. The winner is Girls in Pants by Ann Brashears wins, and let's see, is this Ann? I think it is! And kudos to Ann for braving the bomb threat to show up in person. Nice speech to honor girls, she thanks, like, everybody in the world. A joke to her editors about being late. Editors do not look amused. There's a story there.

Erica Jong is the next presenter for general fiction. She's wearing a huge necklace, and lots of bling. The award goes to The Mermaid Chair by Sue Monk Kidd. And yes, another brave soul, Sue is there to accept the award. She looks like such a housewife, possibly the lady down the street from me. She's wearing some major rocks around her necks as well. Obviously the Secret Life of Bees bought her some serious honey. Argh, argh, argh.

Last up is the award for Book of the Year. The presenter is Brian Williams. Momentary shots of the crowd, lots of anxiety, the winner is JK Rowling. Harry Potter & The Half Blood Prince. JK is still not there, claiming the family excuse, but we get a video of her in her office. Brian Williams makes a joke about her furnishings, "the Office Depot chair," a pencil cup, just like the rest of us. Brian Williams tells us her to go out and splurge. Brian Williams is funny.

That's all for the awards. I have since discovered that Jon Stewart demanded special Kaballah water in the green room, imported directly from Kabal. The award committee explained that "This wasn't the Oscars." He told them to take the quill award and well, use your imagination. I bet there's more to this story. I'll keep you posted.

Thursday, October 20, 2005

Why is this Clown Smiling?


Today, the House of Reps has just gotten busy handing out those Get out of Jail Cards to everybody but Tom Delay! Gun manufacturer , not a problem! They love you. Fast food maker sweating a lawsuit ? No fear here.

Yup, fat, happy, and packing, that's our Congress!

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

If Only Elvis could write a book too...


Newsday has an article on the plenitude of celebrity-authored tomes, a subject which I must always make fun of. Now, there are some celebs who I feel like understand what it takes to tell a story, or alternatively, there's a handful celeb that I would actually take advice from. However, I must question the wisdom of some of these:

The Martha Rules: 10 Essential Rules for Achieving Success as You Start, Build or Manage a Business -- Martha could learn something from Trump's mistake. A#1, overexposure is NEVER a good thing, and when you don't have that magnetic, likeable personality, of say, Kermit the Frog, then overexposure can be the kiss of death. Even more so than prison.

Speedbumps: Flooring It Through Hollywood" by Teri Garr. Okay, I like Teri Garr, she was great in Tootsie, but when the last role was a voice-over in Aloha, Scooby-Doo, well, I'm not sure we're "flooring it through Hollywood." What's next, a book from the 60s singer, Donovan???

Well, funny you should bring that up. Yes, lest we forget the man who gave us such treats as "Mellow Yellow", will provide The Autobiography of Donovan: The Hurdy Gurdy Man" by Donovan Leitch. Apparently the Brits are/were really fond of Donovan, however, the man will also be right up there with bell-bottoms, platform shoes, and Peter Maxx in my book.

Friday, October 14, 2005

THE END

Just turned in my short story for HELL WITH THE LADIES, and was very happy for two reasons a) getting a deadline crossed off is always a nice feeling and b) I love happy endings. I was scouring the news sources for funny things to write about, but there is nothing funny in the world. Iraq is about to vote, problems with the Chechens AGAIN, Yanks are NOT in the playoffs, consumer prices rose in September, there is a BLOND James Bond, there's been 6 inches of rain in the last 48 hours up here, and Apple has release a new video iPod. Okay, now that one I wonder about. A 2.5 inch screen. And people are talking about watching TV on their cell phones as well. I have one question. Why? I'm dating myself, but one of the lines I remember is from the TV show Rhoda, and she's talking about her tiny TV screen. She's watching Tora, Tora, Tora, but it comes out Tora, Tora, Tor. Let's think about all the things that won't fit on 2.5 inches. Mick Jagger's mouth. Angelie Jolie's chest. Jay Leno's chin. Any basketball game. Torso's only. William Shatner's head. The Olson twins? They would fit.

But I have to say that technology is getting sexy again. I'm such a gadget geek, but it seems like the past ten years have been dull. But now, HDTV is cool, the iPod nano is cool, TIVO is cool. Anyway, just a few idle musings, because the world is damp, dreary, place today (except that I finished my story, which makes the sun shine in my mind).

If you know of anything funny, please comment, the world could use the laugh.

Happy Friday to all....

Monday, October 10, 2005

The State of Used Books

There's an article in the Houston Chronicle on the used book market. According to the Book Industry Study Group, sales of used books topped $2.2 billion in 2004, an 11% increase over the previous year. This is a controversial area for both authors and publishers. For publishers, who live and die by backlist sales and reprints, this isn't good, and the bad news for authors (including moi) is that when a used book is sold, the authors receives no royalties on that purchase. I'm also a consumer of used books as well. I've always been able to read more than I could afford, and a used book store provided an outlet for more economical purchases. As I became more saavy about the royalty situation, I started switching to only buying out of print books used, and mostly for research. I still like shopping online and finding what I want. It doesn't have the same tactile thrill as browsing Barnes and Noble, and picking up the book, perusing the back cover copy, flipping pages, the smell of dead trees happily filling my nostrils, but I think there is a market for used books, and I think that market will continue to grow. However, speaking from my own buying habits, I only buy books used that I wouldn't have bought new, so the publishers aren't losing a sale from this purchase. It's a sale they never would have had. Question for everyone:
Do you buy books online
If there was a new book out on the shelves that you wanted, would you opt to buy it used instead? If so, is cost the primary factor?

Thursday, October 06, 2005

I'm Up Today...