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I’m a Writer, not a Critic

Some people give out book ratings like they’re candy. I’m not one of them. A hundred or so books sit on my virtual shelves on Goodreads. I’ve written a handful of one-sentence reviews, but so far I’ve only given a single rating — for an audio book. Stephen Fry reading the Harry Potter books. Phenomenal. Five stars. Easy-peasy to give it a rating. Same with movies — I’ve rated dozens and dozens of movies on Netflix, four stars, two stars, five stars, not interested, whatever. No problem.

Books not so much. It’s worked for me so far.

But the other morning I awoke to this on my Goodreads author dashboard:

It’s the new recommendations feature. In the large gray square it points out that I’ve rated only one book (the Stephen Fry reading Harry Potter audio set; Goodreads treats books and audio books the same), and to the right it tells me that I need to rate at least 19 more (twenty being apparently the minimum threshold) to get personalized recommendations from the site.

Maybe it would be different if I’d grown up with the everyone’s-opinion-counts-equally-and-should-be-heard system, but I didn’t. The hundred books on my virtual shelf are only a sample, a sliver of my reading life, the books I happened to catch sight of on my (real-life) bookcases in the past few months and thought, that’s a good book, I should it to my Goodreads shelf. If I added all my P.G. Wodehouses, that be, like, another hundred books right there.

Besides, how do you rate a book you read years ago and remember fondly but suspect that rereading it now that you’re an (ahem) older, wiser adult might change your view of it?

How do you rate books by fellow authors?

For that matter, how do you rate a book in the first place? I think I’m too close to them. I rate movies easily because I’m not in the movie industry. Does anyone expect George Lucas to rate films? (Actually, I have no idea. For all I know, he might.)

By the way, I like all the books on my Goodreads shelf. Why go to the effort of adding them otherwise?

Goodreads recommendations are a welcome feature, but I don’t think that in itself will nudge me into assigning ratings. One thing might, however. It’s not that “1” that sits in the large gray square above. It’s the unintended grammar gaffe in it: “You’ve rated 1 books so far.” That will drive me nuts in about a week, and I’ll have to rate at least one book to change the “1” into a “2”. Once I’ve done that, well… 

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A Kid and a Kindle


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One day last winter, I was in the hallway of my son’s elementary school, waiting. I do this every day during the school year – arrive five or ten minutes early to avoid fighting for a parking spot and then wait, sometimes talking with other parents, but mostly just watching the kids shuffle off to school buses or to cars with engines running. The first graders, one of whom I was going to take home, are usually among the last to emerge from the classrooms. (I think this is because it takes them a while to don their gear — jackets, gloves, hats, boots.) As I waited, I noticed an older kid (elementary school age, so fifth grader at the most). He was leaning against the wall, reading.
This was interesting.
First of all, it’s not like the school hallway is a quiet, tranquil place conducive to reading, especially at pick-up time (having tried it myself, I can testify to this). In the fall and spring, non-school-bus kids wait outside, in the school courtyard, but in the winter they are just inside the front doors. Frankly, it can be a bit of a zoo. The kids congregate on the benches in front of the principal’s office and there is much merriment, bickering, jostling, and whatever other kind of socializing kids that age do. This happened to be the week just before winter break and there was much excitement in the air, making the book-reading kid stand out even more amongst his brethren.
Secondly, he was reading a Kindle.
The kid, as is right, was blithely unaware that others might hold strong opinions on tree books, e-books, mega-bookstores putting independent bookstores out of business, online retailers threatening to put mega-bookstores out of business, e-readers, traditional publishers, new publishers, the Nook Color, on-demand-printing, self-publishing, e-book rights, audio rights, et cetera.
(Disclaimer: in our house we own a Kindle and also buy a lot of paper books.)
Like the protagonist of Regarding Ducks and Universes, Felix Sayers, who grew up with e-readers and only met paper books in Universe B, I’m becoming aware that many of our preferences are based simply on what we’re used to. I am not the Kindle-reader in our house, my husband John is. I say that I like to read paper books because it’s easier on my eyes and gives me a welcome break from electronic screens… but even I’m not sure if this is true.
I read a lot as a child — I walked around at home with an open book in my hands. I don’t remember doing it at school, though.
Now, I’m always interested in what people are reading: at the YMCA, I see parents with kids in swim lessons reading novels on the uncomfortable and moist pool-side benches; at the coffee house, textbook and work-related materials seem to be popular; on planes, I see a lot of bestsellers hastily grabbed at the airport bookstore.
  
Can’t tell with an e-reader, though.
I didn’t ask the fifth-grader what he was reading on his Kindle. Why should other people know what you’re reading anyway?
I left that day thinking, I would have liked being that kid, knapsack at his feet, back against the wall, nose buried in his e-reader. I think I was that kid.


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numbers, Numbers, NUMBERS

Project Author asked me the other day what the hardest thing about writing Regarding Ducks and Universes was. This is what I replied: 

The writing is the fun part. I enjoy all aspects of it — filling up a blank page, research, editing… Well, except maybe for proofreading, because you’re supposed to be concentrating only on finding typos and such in the manuscript, but I always want to keep making edits. Not big ones, just little details here and there. I hope I didn’t drive my editor nuts doing that!

The business side of things is a different story. At some point you have to let go of the book and suddenly there are deadlines to worry about, reviews, sales numbers, marketing, promotion… It was all a bit overwhelming at first, but I am getting to the point where I feel more comfortable with that stuff.

Thinking about it some more, I’ve realized that part of it is that nowadays a newly published author is faced with a barrage of numbers, some of which I found myself obsessing over even before the official publication date of my debut novel. For aspiring authors out there, here they are, grouped into four categories:
(1) For starters, we have the numbers that serve as a measure of your writing efforts:
The daily word count. I shoot for a thousand words a day. I’ve found that that’s often unrealistic, especially on days when I need to do research. I try to reach it anyway.
  
The manuscript word count. It edges upward day to day, except when I trim the ending of a chapter or edit out a scene that turns out not to work within the story. The MS count gives you something to say when people ask, “When is your next book going to be done?”
(2) Then there are the numbers that serve as a measure of your sales:
Amazon rank. It’s updated hourly and it’s different for the print version and the Kindle version, should you have both available. The e-book rank is usually higher (that is, better) since there are fewer books to compete with in the Kindle store (currently just under a million listed.) Other places to find rankings to obsess over are Barnes & Noble (including the Nook, if your book is on it – mine isn’t yet) and, if your book is available internationally, on Amazon UK, Amazon Canada, Amazon Germany, and so on.
Bookscan data, the number of print books sold in the past week, broken down by geographic area. Available in Amazon’s Author Central.
And finally, the sales statement sent by your publisher, including, of course, any earned royalties. I receive statements monthly and pore over them with an obsessive parent’s eye.
(3) Then we have the numbers that serve as a measure of your promotional efforts:
The number of people who entered your latest giveaway. These can be quite high (on the order of a thousand if you list your giveaway through Goodreads or LibraryThing) or on the low end if you list the giveaway on your blog but don’t have many followers yet.
The number of to-reads (people who have shelved your book on their virtual bookshelf on Goodreads, LibraryThing, or Shelfari and think they might eventually get around to buying it.) There’s usually no direct relation between these and your actual sales numbers.
The number of friends/likes you have on Facebook, Goodreads, and other social sites. (I’m not big on friend counting, so I don’t worry too much about these. Then again, that might be why the “like” count on my Facebook author page is only up to sixty-eight.)
If you have a blog, there is also the number of daily hits to keep an eye on. 
(4) Finally, there are the numbers that reflect people’s opinions of your book:
The book’s average rating on Amazon, Goodreads, LibraryThing, Barnes & Noble, and other sites. I cannot emphasize this enough: People’s opinions of your book will vary. You’ll get five-star reviews and also one-star ones from people seriously lacking in reading taste. Move on.
Also of interest are the Top 100 lists on Amazon and in the Kindle store in the book’s category. There are ones based on sales, and others on the book’s average rating. Regarding Ducks and Universes tends to slip in and out of the Top 100 rated category in Science Fiction > Adventure as it and other books accrue ratings daily and get shuffled around.
Speaking of lists, it’s good to be on them. Goodreads has ones like Beautiful Book Covers of 2011, Books That Make You Laugh, and Hate the Book, But Can’t Stop Reading It! (My own book is on two out of those three, as it happens.)
One last thing — of all the numbers listed above, only the daily word count and the related MS count are fully under your control. Something to keep in mind!
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BEA pics

I’m back from BookExpo with lots of impressions and having met and talked to some lovely people from Amazon Publishing, including my editor Alex Carr and fellow authors Karen McQuestion, Sarah Collins Honenberger, Richard Hine, Eric KraftElisa LorelloSarah Girrell, and others! I finished off the week by visiting my sister Anna and her family for a couple of whirlwind days in downtown Manhattan before heading back to (at least ten degrees cooler) Minnesota and Memorial Day weekend, which we celebrated by finally buying a charcoal BBQ grill.  
Here is a brief recap of the BEA part of the trip in photos:   
The Press Lounge, rooftop of the Ink48 hotel (previously a printing house), just before the Amazon Publishing cocktail party on Monday night. Fog and a view in the general direction of Times Square. 
Same rooftop, a couple of hours later. The party is in full swing behind the picture-taker. Five AmazonEncore authors, left to right: Raymond BeanMaria MurnaneKaren McQuestionSarah Collins Honenberger, and yours truly. (Photo courtesy of Karen McQuestion; mine turned out too dark.)

Entrance to Javits Center as seen from the upper floor on Tuesday morning.

Karen McQuestion and I in front of the Amazon Publishing booth. Karen turned out to be as nice in person as she is in her emails and was quite willing to show a BEA newbie around.

The suitcases, lower level of Javits Center. Booksellers and librarians stash advance reader copies and other giveaways in the suitcases before heading back to the exhibition booths for more.
BEA, one of the exhibition floors.
And finally… the cookie. In addition to arranging for a few other things (like transportation to NY, lodging, the cocktail party, and admission to the BEA exhibition floor), the Amazon team had goodie bags for each of us when we checked into the Ink48 — bottled water, snacks, and a cookie decorated with our book’s name! The titles got abridged a bit for compactness purposes, but pretty nifty.
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Murder at the ABA

I’ve been invited to BookExpo America 2011 and will be traveling to New York next week. So naturally, instead of spending my time deciding what to wear for the publisher’s party on the first evening of the BEA and otherwise preparing for the trip, I am reading Isaac Asimov’s Murder at the ABA. I suspected, and this turns out to be the case, that the ABA (American Booksellers Association) convention was the precursor to BEA. According to the ABA website, “ABA sold the trade show in 1994 to Reed Exhibitions, which manages and operates BEA.” Today BEA is advertised as being the largest annual book trade fair in North America. 
I picked up a used hardcover copy of the book, first published in 1976, at Uncle Hugo’s. The entertaining and quite funny mystery novel follows the adventures of a midlist writer named Darius Just. While attending the 1975 ABA convention, Just discovers a dead body and things take off from there. (The height-challenged Just is modeled, rumor has it, on Asimov’s friend and fellow writer Harlan Ellison; the dedication in the front of the book seems to confirm this, as it reads: To Harlan Ellison, whose brightness of personality is exceeded only by his height* of talent). 
What has surprised me as I’ve been reading the book, which I’m enjoying very much, is not how much things have changed since the seventies–though they have, of course, with respect to the “filth of cigarette smoke (that) hung in the air” at the convention and also some other stuff, like the role of the women in the book. 
No, what really surprised me is how much things haven’t changed in the world of publishing between then and now–writers, editors, publishers, booksellers all vying for their piece of the pie and stepping on each other’s toes, as described by Asimov with a light hand through the voice of his narrator Darius Just. Asimov himself is a character in the book, an acquaintance of Just; some of the descriptions of Asimov as given by Just are hilarious. 
According to the book, the attendance that year (May 1975) was around twelve thousand, with six hundred exhibitor booths. If 2010 is any indication, this year there will be twenty thousand-some attendees; look for me somewhere in the vicinity of AmazonEncore‘s booth (#3129). It will be my first time at BEA and I plan to wander around and take lots of pictures and try not to be too intimidated by the sight of all those authors with long autographing lines. I am particularly looking forward to meeting in person and putting faces to some of the names that have made this past year, my first in the publishing business, so memorable: Alex, Jill, Sarah (two of them), Jacque, Karen, Richard, and others! 
*The emphasis is mine.
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Number One Novels Giveaway

Number One Novels, which posts weekly interviews with debut novelists, kindly let me take a crack at their interview questions today. They are also running a Regarding Ducks and Universes giveaway for the week – you can enter it by leaving a comment after the interview, tweeting about it, following the Number One Novels blog, liking the interview on Facebook, or purchasing something from their store.

My thanks to Rebecca Chastain for the interview opportunity and for running the giveaway! Her Number One Novels author interviews run all the way back to 2009 and are fun to browse. You can find her author blog here. She writes about “writing, getting published, reading, story creation, and the occasional insight into my life.” 

The Regarding Ducks and Universes giveaway ends Sunday, May 8th.

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Kindle Highlights

The Kindle has this nice feature where readers can highlight passages in a book as they are reading it; Amazon then keeps track of the most popular ones and displays them on the book’s product page. Regarding Ducks and Universes has been out for just over a month and I thought it’d be interesting to document the most popular highlights so far.

If you haven’t read the book, these probably won’t make much sense, but I’m finding it quite fascinating to see what people are marking. The third quote from the bottom is particularly interesting as I took it out in the editing process at one point (since it wasn’t strictly necessary for the scene) but ended up putting it back in simply because, well, I liked it.

Here they are, the most popular highlights so far:

“I was stuck somewhere in between, with neither the blind confidence of youth that everything would turn out as imagined nor the experience that builds up as years pass that it wouldn’t matter if it didn’t.”
Highlighted by 9 Kindle users
“My husband used to say, ‘Danger makes life worth living.’”
“Did he?”
“Of course that was before the hang-glider malfunction, the poor dear.”
Highlighted by 7 Kindle users
“…it makes little sense to pack a bunch of heavy books and lug them along when you travel.”
Highlighted by 5 Kindle users
“…we all know that we have the power to change our lives. But in the back of our mind is a tally of all the times that things didn’t turn out as expected because of random chance, other people’s behavior, false assumptions we’d made, or the disconnect between how we see ourselves and who we really are. We therefore know that most likely things will not turn out as we expect them to, so we try to take that into account but end up going in circles and doing nothing.”
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
“I spent a few minutes fully engrossed in the textbook, having forgotten where I was and why I was there, the highest compliment one can pay a book, I suppose.”
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
“After all, when Socrates faced the brand-new technology of the written word, he DID NOT LIKE IT at all. It takes time to get used to things.”
Highlighted by 3 Kindle users
“Everything felt slightly off, like being served chocolate mousse on a paper plate or wine in a mug.”
Highlighted by 3 Kindle users

Of course I’m assuming these are all passages actually liked by readers and not marked for other reasons, such as “this sentence is lousy and should have been reworded”, or “this sentence has a typo in it,” or something of that sort.

Incidentally, I’m quite sure a few typos did manage to sneak in even after all the edits and proofreads Regarding Ducks and Universes went through. It’s just the nature of the beast. All things considered, though, I think I’d rather you send the publisher (or me) an email if you do happen to come across a typo, not use the highlights feature!

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On a Pale Star

Jessica from On a Pale Star, a book blog for speculative fiction, has written a lovely review of “Regarding Ducks and Universes”. Not only that, but I had the honor of being the very first author to be interviewed on her blog, which was fitting as it was my first interview for a book blog as well. Jessica asked some interesting questions and a few that made me stop and think (like What is your favorite Agatha Christie novel? So hard to choose among the 80-some written by the Grand Dame of Mystery!) Find out the answer and read the whole interview here.

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An Ode to the Loft

The Twin Cities. Yes, the winters are long and the summers hot and stormy. Minnesota, because of its location in the middle of the country, misses out on the moderating effects of the oceans. We sit on the 45th parallel north, halfway between the North Pole and the equator (the 45th parallel incidentally also passes through Belgrade, Serbia, where I was born.)

But I digress. Yes, the weather in the Twin Cities can be wild at times. But we have the Loft.

It’s a good place to take a writing class, listen to a reading, or just grab a cup of coffee and sit down with a book.

In their own words:

The mission of the Loft is to foster a writing community, the artistic development of individual writers, and an audience for literature.

Incorporated in 1975 in a space above a Minneapolis bookstore, the Loft Literary Center has grown to become the nation’s largest and most comprehensive literary center. From novels to children’s literature, from playwriting to poetry, from spoken word to memoir, there’s something for everyone at the Loft. Programs include readings by acclaimed local and national authors, classes, weekend genre conferences, competitions and grants, open groups, writers’ studios, and much more. The Loft is located in the award-winning Open Book literary arts building in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

As I was writing my first book, I took workshops at the Loft over the course of a few years and attended a novel-writing conference. Yesterday was the first time I had been “on the other side of the podium”, for my first book reading. This is what greeted me when we arrived:

I couldn’t believe it! They’d taken an unknown newbie writer and put my name on the outside of their building. (With a slight snafu with my first name, which was interesting because it’s usually my last name which gets mangled. The subject of a future post: the trials and tribulations of being an author with a hard-to-spell name.)

The reading itself was a cozy and intimate experience (we didn’t have a ton of people show up, it being St. Patrick’s Day — note to self, don’t schedule talks on holidays) but I enjoyed it very much. I talked a bit about how the book came to be published, read a bit, and then answered some good questions — people were curious about the process of switching from science to novel-writing and also where I got the idea for the story about a culinary writer who goes to an alternate universe.

Anyway, if you live in the area and haven’t checked the Loft out yet, I highly recommend it. It’s a great place for readers, aspiring writers, and authors.

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Launch Day!

Regarding Ducks and Universes is being released today both in print and on Kindle. I’m so excited, I can hardly sit still! I’ve learned a lot about the publishing business in the last ten months, and one of the most important things that I’ve learned is that publishing a book takes a team of people. So, without further ado, here is the Acknowledgment page (slightly amended) from the book:

Thanks go out to Alex Carr, my editor at AmazonEncore, for being intrigued by the title and pulling out a manuscript languishing on last year’s contest shelf and liking it;

to Jill Marsal, for graciously agreeing to represent me;

to Sarah Burningham, Sarah Tomashek, and everyone at author-team for helping get the word out;

to the art and editing team at CreateSpace for turning a manuscript into a book;

to Mary Alterman and Jo Cravens for many writers’ group meetings, even when the snow was knee-deep;

to the teachers at Woodpark Montessori for imparting many bits of preschool wisdom to my son Dennis as I wrote and edited and wrote and edited;

to my friends and family for all their encouragement, even when they didn’t quite understand why it was taking so long;

to the light of my life, Dennis, for keeping me grounded and for introducing me to many imagined worlds of his own;

and, most of all, to my husband, John, for coming along for the ride and for being steadfastly certain it would all work out in the end.

Thank you, everyone, for helping launch Regarding Ducks and Universes into the world!