All the Kool Kidz Are Doing It

I’m preserving, and commenting on, my FB top 10 most influential books.

Also, that Mother Jones article ticked me off, for its inability to read and interpret data, and because of it’s another foray into the analysis-free attack on “adults who read YA.” Have any of these armchair social critics considered that people read YA because that’s where a lot of the best stories are right now?
OK, rant off, here are my top ten:

Johnny Tremain1. Johnny Tremain
In the 5th grade, I discovered bildungsroman. Someday, I will do a deep analysis on this book, bow down before the greatness of its author, and endeavor to learn even more from her as a writer.
Disney movie version: C
(The Kindle price is appropriate  for grade-school kid content.)

HaveSpacesuit2. Have Spacesuit Will Travel
In the 7th grade, our union school district combined 5 tiny grade schools, and put all 6-8 grades in the same building.
And created a library bigger than the 2 shelves each classroom had.
I found Robert Heinlein, and from there, YA science fiction.
So anything you like about him as a person, but these books opened the world to me in the 7th grade.
Movie Version: How is this not long ago a movie, but instead still languishing “in development”?
(The Kindle price is marginal [$6.99] and the used books are all collectors editions, so the pricing of this is a crime against junior-high aged kids, all around.) Continue reading

ch-ch-ch-changes – dubstep version

My July post for Steyer Associates plays on the David Bowie song — so if I’m going to risk an DMCA takedown, I might as well double-up and use the same headlines.

“every time i thought i’d got it made”

My Managing Up tips for TechComms professionals this month tackles the challenges of organizational and technology changes:

For those of us who’ve been around for a while, we turn over every rock labeled “new,” wondering: “Have I seen one like this before?”

Check the post for my best ideas on how to cope when management shakes the dice at your workplace.

“you’ve left us up to our necks in it”

Nine Volt Heart - A Rain City Comedy of MannersTwo “Rain City Comedy of Manners” books:

Artemis in the Desert

Nine Volt Heart

The Grrrl of Limberlost .

 

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Opera en Espanol: New Jugum Press Adventures

As managing editor at Jugum Press, I’m working to publish translations by Enrique Prado of major opera librettos in Spanish.

Barbiere_1913_CROPPEDMy editorial and production tasks closely resemble my twenty years’ work on technical tomes for Windows driver developers. This content, however, is farm more emotionally charged. And proofreading Windows pseudo code never prompted as many laughs as proofreading Don Pasquale.

However, it may be that some of those old Windows programmer publication projects prompted as many tears as Tosca, though less blood on the floor.

Project background: Continue reading

None Dare Call It Vanity

As the owner, managing editor, art director, and acquisition editor of Jugum Press: I’m a grown woman and I can do what I want.

And thanks to POD technology, I can finally answer to the siren call of freedom I first heard from the bearded, bushy-browed former CPUSA activist in the Southern Oregon College copy shop:

“Freedom of the press belongs to those who own the press.”*
Jugum Press

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Obsessive Reading List – 2013

I don’t know what “best” means, so I can’t compose such lists. I typically obsess about books and movies that are critical failures or, gasp, in bad taste.

My list contains the authors and series that I read in an obsessive manner: retreat to bed or sofa, and read until I reach the last page—and then start over or download the next one by that author.

Jo Nesbo: Police and The Bat
Only last year my friend Chip turned me on to Jo Nesbo. So this year I had only the new release (Police) and, at last, the translation of his first novel, The Bat. As a writer, I’d love to achieve everything that Nesbo does. Police, however, didn’t have everything that I wanted from this series, mostly because I didn’t like the sociological choice of bad guys. I don’t want to apply my PC choices to my favorite authors. This is a great series, the most recent of which I read obsessively but without total satisfaction.

Police: A Harry Hole Novel

Andrea Camilleri: Inspector Montalbano Mysteries (Stephen Sartarelli, trans.)
This is my favorite all-time detective series and one of my top “comfort reads.”
When genetic modification becomes possible under my health care plan, I want Andrea Camilleri author genes grafted into my DNA. This is the only mystery writer (that I read) who uses the same damn formula every time and yet amazes and astonishes me anew in each story. The great advance this year for me was to have “Montalbano’s First Case” in hand—to see how Inspector Montalbano begins as a character.
 Treasure Hunt     Montalbano’s First Case

Ginn Hale – The Rifter Series
This is the most satisfying series I found this year—and the first one that I found via another writer’s Twitter feed (hi Leta Blake! Congrats on your new top-seller!)
The Rifter series has everything I want out of fantasy-adventure: sterling character-driven excitement, pacing, inventive alternate universe, love drives and conquers all. The only thing I wish Ginn Hale would do is revise the covers or title tags, so it’s easy for a compulsive reader to identify which one to download next in the middle of the night.

The Shattered Gates (The Rifter)

Attica Locke: Black Water Rising  
I found Attica Locke because a friend made me listen to her Chautauqua.
Great character-driven mystery, although for the mystery genre, the lead character spends too much time studying his own misery.

Black Water Rising

G. Willow Wilson: Alif the Unseen.
Had to call in sick the day I started this book, because once I started, I couldn’t stop. And I’m self-employed. The alternative universe, the characters, the inventive conflict, the tension in the pacing: this is what I want from fantasy-adventure!

Alif the Unseen

Denise Mina: Gods and Beasts  
Whenever there’s a new Denise Mina novel available, I download immediately. Then I have to wait days, weeks, months until I feel brave enough to enter her dark, Glaswegian universe. Mina creates complex, intriguing characters and then forces them to deal with shit deeper than anything you’d ever want in your own life. Once again, in Mina’s Gods and Beasts, she leads you into a significant understanding of how people think and function—then hits you upside the head with surprising plotting.
If you are asthmatic, keep your rescue inhaler nearby.

Gods and Beasts

Kate Atkinson: Life After Life  
I was a Kate Atkinson fan before her Jackson Brodie series, so I’m familiar with her themes that have cross-generational stories braiding over time. So Life After Life wasn’t a surprise—except that her writing (always exquisite) jumped up a coupe of levels beyond what she’d done earlier. Human Croquet was the other title I read this year (having obsessed over all the others). If your 15% preview of Life After Life feels too literary for you, then try the Jackson Brodie series, which starts with Case Histories.

Life After Life

Don McQuinn: The Moondark Saga
Don’s a pal of mine, and I read this series when it first came out in paper. It’s a delight to find this again, since my first read was long enough ago that re-reading allowed me to discover elements I’d forgotten. This is an obsessive read—and the second time through, it’s easier to slow down and focus on the magnificent character development and the intricacies of the alternate dystopian universe.

The Moondark Saga

Kristine Kathryn Rusch: Retrieval Artist series
I spent the year studying the indie publishing world, and anyone involved in that will quickly find Kris Rusch on www.kriswrites.com. After reading the first great business title from Kris, I started in on her Retrieval Artist series, saying aloud to myself (I swear it!), “Science fiction left me behind long ago.”
Then, I got wrapped into the series and found everything again that science-fiction did for me in junior high and high school. Super-inventive universe, intriguing characters, each story with a satisfactory conclusion, and yet begging you to download and read the next as soon as possible. Kris says she’s got a set of titles she’s working on in this series, so there’s no immediate gratification in 2014 for Retrieval Artist fans. However, if you haven’t read her yet—you have the exciting opportunity to start at the beginning and immerse yourself in all of them.

The Disappeared   Blowback

Jason Vail:  Stephen Attebrook mysteries
In February I published Bone-mend and Salt, Book 1 in the Accidental Heretics series. Immediately, the Amazon alsobot recommended Jason Vail’s medieval mystery series. I read all three books, and read compulsively. Vail’s series ranks as the best of medieval fiction I found this year: great detective character, faithful historic details, compelling conflict and resolution in each story. And I just found #4: The Girl in the Ice – in time for staying up all night to read it.
I shall start 2014 by reading his Lone Star Rising alternative history series.

The Wayward Apprentice   A Dreadful Penance

Charlie Newton: dark mystery
I found Charlie through Don McQuinn’s recommendations. He’s doing exciting, gritty work—perhaps too gritty for people who settle on mysteries from big-name writers. These are extraordinarily well-paced, character-driven thrillers…but I’m warning you, the point-of-view characters are not warm and cuddly.

Start Shooting     Calumet City: A Novel

Ian Rankin: Detective Inspector Rebus
My Ian Rankin obsession date sway back. So of course I pre-order, and wait for it to magically appear on my reader months later. Therefore, I’m going to use this opportunity to rant about NOT being able to order UK editions as soon as they are available, and having to wait some absurd amount of time to read a new UK / European title in the U.S. Especially since I’m no longer in the UK or EU on a regular basis, I’m personally annoyed. This applied for the release of Police. Then I have to listen to people rave on Twitter and Facebook about a book that I can’t easily obtain.
The foundation question: When will the publishing industry enter the 21st century?

Standing in Another Man’s Grave (Detective Inspector Rebus)

Kage Baker: the Company Series.
It’s so sad that we don’t have Kage Baker with us any longer.
Clearly, this was an impulse buy on my part—a futile attempt to bring her back. Of you haven’t obsessed about Kage Baker’s Company series, start with In the Garden of Iden. I hope I get amnesia so I can read this series again for the first time, with the same wonder.

In the Company of Thieves

Donna Tartt: The Goldfinch
Finishing off in December with this book that’s on the front table of most bookstores right now—which doesn’t usually cause me to pick up a book and read it. I read an inspiring review, however, and liked the preview. I’m only 10% in—so far, this book is allowing me to identify what a lazy slut I am as a writer.

The Goldfinch

 

Back to the 1992 Future

I wrote the Windows 3.1 Resource Kit using my own WYSIWYG Word template, being the first to deliver Msft Press a camera-ready manuscript using only Msft tools. Then I became one of the first adopters of the infamous Msft MAE templates. Until I began creating Web pages—and even after—I did most of my writing in ready-for-print Word files.

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Curious Incident of the Cuckoo in the…

Irresistibly curious, I’m reading The Cuckoo’s Calling–not so that you don’t have to, because it’s actually a good British detective mystery (of which I’m a fan).

The only criticism I’d make is that the first 25 pages would not have made it over the transom in a U.S. publishing company, but from there, the book is more than just a little bit good. The psychologizing of characters is quite good–not as good as Denise Mina, but there might be a potential for the writer to get that good over time.

I’m just about to hit the mid-point plot twist (can’t hardly wait!), but paused when a new clue appeared: the sister-in-law of an attorney revealed confidential information learned from his family-law practice. Galbraith/Rowling has his/her own personal series of unfortunate coincidences–this time, fiction foreshadowed life.

Also, the publisher did a good job on the ebook formatting, and is not charging hardbound prices. Too bad, however, that the U.S. cover art sucks. Wish it were possible for the reader to choose the British cover. At least when my Kindle is in hand, you can’t see the bad cover of the book I’m reading.
— Annie Pearson

Life as an Indie Publisher: Go-Live Task List

I pushed a new Jugum Press title live last week. Today I described the related tasks over lunch with my former Web-master, with whom I collaborated to publish several thousand major content pieces during our work life. She had a look of horror.

Here’s my hideous-tedious task list as Jugum Press managing editor to bring one title live in two formats.
QA for Indie Publishers

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Learning Not-So-New Technologies

I’m working on new tasks related to electronic publishing. If you follow any discussions on line, experienced users complain about the tools; new users blame themselves for their own confusion — just like the PC world.

The tools are new incarnations to support project and publication tasks that I’ve been doing for several decades. Here’s what I’ve learned about the new tools and processes I’m mastering:

Lots of important websites suck.
Lots of websites with wizard-like processes also blow.

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