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[personal profile] pegkerr
Upon thinking over what I wrote yesterday, I took back all my books to the library on wildfire management. It's a good idea for a story, but I think it's still missing one critical element, and I'm not ready to write it, and so my back brain is resisting. [livejournal.com profile] alexmalfoy said the crucial thing that made me finally make the decision I'd been hemming and hawing over for several weeks: it's not fun. Now I know that sometimes when I'm writing something that is working, I can get temporarily stuck and it's not fun, but I know I just need to barrel on through. This is not one of those times, I think. The key is I'm not excited about it at all; I don't want to write it, at least not now.



I'm leaving open the possibility of getting back to it some day. Sometimes I do that.

Before I forget: a couple of people have asked where I get the Jane Austen icons. I've answered in the comments, but I'll put it here too: I get them at a lovely site called The Republic of Pemberley, which is devoted to Jane. These icons, which they call "FUPs" for "Frequently Used Phrases" can be found here ("I sometimes amuse myself with suggesting and arranging such little elegant phrases as may be adapted to ordinary occasions." You recognize where that comes from, don't you? It's a remark of Mr. Collins, in Pride and Prejudice.) Anyway if you'll go to that link, you'll find links at the top to seven other pages of icons; they have hundreds to choose from.

Out of curiosity, I have decided to archeologically excavate my bedside table. Starting from the top and working my way down:

1. Diplomatic Immunity by Lois McMaster Bujold. Picked it up at the signing last night.
2. My daily journal. Twenty-eighth year in a series.
3. Growing Up Weightless by John M. Ford. I've finished this; just haven't gotten it back onto the bookshelf.
4. Welcome to my World, Where English is Sometimes Spoken by Shannon Olson. My boss lent it to me; haven't started it yet.
5. The Right to Write: An Invitation and Initiation into the Writing Life by Julie Cameron. A birthday gift from Rob. Dipping into it occasionally.
6. A pack of overlay screens for my palm assistant (haven't figured out where else they should go).
7. Making the Connection by Bob Greene and Oprah Winfrey. (Hey, I just passed my sixty workout mark since I've begun exercising again! Am starting Cathe Friedrich step videos. Without a step. Go me.)
8. A list I printed out from the Internet entitled "100 reasons to exercise," which I grab to read to convince me to get out of bed when my alarm goes off at 5:35 a.m. so I can get up to do my Cathe Friedrich step videos.
9. The parent comment cards for my two daughters' report cards. Oops. These were supposed to be returned to the school.
10. A print out of Lois McMaster Bujold's novelette (or is a novella? Not sure) "Winterfair Gifts," the story of Miles and Ekaterin's wedding. This one is going to be published in an anthology of sf/fantasy and romance cross over stories. I don't remember what the anthology is going to be called, but I think Catherine Asaro is editing. The story is Way Cool and is told from the p-o-v of Armsman Roic. Sergeant Taura figures prominently. And I mean prominently. All eight feet of her. Go her.
11. A lovely card from Kij.
12. Fiona's spring conference report. Good lord, from February?
13. A handwritten draft of a short story.
14. An early printout from [livejournal.com profile] cassieclaire's Very Secret Diaries.
15. The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring Movie Companion book.
16. A book that Lois lent me on Chinese Eunuchs when I was working on that story treatment idea for a prequel to Emerald House Risingthat never went anywhere. Damn, I forgot to take that with me to the reading to give back to her.
17. A spiral notebook which I was using for morning pages when I was doing Julie Cameron's The Artist's Way. I'm not doing them anymore.
18. Various barrettes, combs and hair twisties.

On the bed itself: [livejournal.com profile] cassieclaire's Draco Veritas.

What's on your bedside table?

Cheers,
Peg

Sample pages

Date: 2002-05-12 09:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pegkerr.livejournal.com
I've not had sample pages of my work posted on Amazon. I have had the first chapter of my second novel posted at Warner's website (quibble: it annoys me a little that they skipped the prologue, which is where Elias's story starts). I haven't had anyone specifically tell me that they've bought my book because they read that sample chapter, but perhaps someone has. I'll keep asking. I know that Lois has had a very good experience in having some of her sample chapters posted at the Baen website--she thinks it helped the sales of A Civil Campaign enormously. I wonder if that's more true for fiction than non-fiction.

I do think that I'm more likely to buy a book if I've been able to leaf through it first, whether an actual copy or a virtual version.

Cheers,
Peg

Re: Sample pages

Date: 2002-05-16 10:10 am (UTC)
lcohen: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lcohen
i think that reading a little of jo walton's book the king's peace on her website was part of why i decided to buy that book (the other part was liking her writing on rasfw and rasff). once i've read a book or two by an author, i don't think i'd bother with sample pages, but when it's someone whose work i'm unfamiliar with, it can be useful. of course the downside is, it might convince me not to buy the book!

pet peeve: when the first chapter of the next book is at the end of the book you're reading. two primary reasons: 1) as you're reading and you see how far you have to go, if you think there's a bunch left, you might not take another book for when you're finished and then you're stuck without reading matter if you don't read that chapter which i usually don't because 2) usually i have another book lined up so i'm not going to rush right out and read that next book right now anyway, even if it's available which often it isn't. i don't want to start something right this second when i'm not intending to finish it until weeks or months in the future. this won't make me not buy that next book if i like the author and want to read more by her, but it sure doesn't sell any books to me and it irks me.

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