Linda Nagata: the blog at Hahví.net


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And the winner is…

Friday, June 8th, 2012

Book View Cafe Grand OpeningPaul Weimer who requested Judith Tarr’s Writing Horses. Congratulations, Paul! I’ll be in touch with the how-to’s of picking up your ebook.

And if you’re not familiar with Paul, check him out on twitter at @princejvstin

The Dread HammerThanks once again to everyone who participated in Book View Café’s grand opening celebration, and to those who took advantage of the sale on The Dread Hammer. And if you have a chance to read The Dread Hammer, please, please, please go give it a quick review over at Amazon. You don’t need to have bought it there, to review it there.

Grand Opening Celebration!
The New Store at Book View Café

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

Book View Cafe Grand Opening

Book View Café is celebrating the opening of our new, completely-redesigned bookstore by giving our readers a chance to win the book of their choice. Just take a look around the store anytime up until midnight, June 8, and choose the book you’d like — all the books that are eligible for the giveaway are marked with a gold star. Then come back here and leave a comment with the name and author of the book and why you want it (we may use that comment for publicity purposes). When the promotion ends, I’ll pick a random winner from those who’ve commented, and I’ll send you a coupon for the book you’ve chosen.

So please head on over to Book View Café and then come back here and make a comment!

What? You Haven’t Read
The Dread Hammer Yet?

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

The Dread HammerWell, there’s no time like the present, because for a limited time you can get $2 off The Dread Hammer‘s ebook edition, by using the promo code PUZZLELANDS1. Only at Book View Café!

A coupon system is one of the cool new features of our revamped ebook store, and The Dread Hammer gets to be our first test specimen. You can buy either the epub (Nook) or mobi (Kindle) version. The ebook won’t load automatically onto your e-reader, but being DRM-free, you can either drag and drop it from your computer, email it to your e-reader if you’re set up for that or, if you have one of those flashy new tablets, you can probably just save it directly.

So if you haven’t read The Dread Hammer yet, now’s the time. And feel free to share the coupon code. We’d love more people to come check out the new store.

The Dread Hammer at Book View Café

 

Book View Café’s New eBook Store

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

(Crossposted at BookViewCafe.com)

Most writers start scribbling stories at a very young age. Not me. I waited until I had graduated from college before I started writing fiction – and what was my motivation? Having read something dreadful, I was struck by the certain knowledge that “Even I could write a better story than that.”

Fast-forward to December 2011. The writers of Book View Café, being well aware of the limitations of our online bookstore, were eagerly anticipating the launch of a brand new website that had been months in the making – only to discover at the eleventh hour that the new website had serious flaws. Correcting the issues would require extensive programming which we could ill afford, and no one felt confident that at the end of it all, we would get the website we wanted.

So we decided to start over.

I’m a fairly new member of BVC, having joined last summer, and hadn’t been involved in the website process, but at that point my occasionally cocky nature reasserted itself. I could build a better website than that, I thought, so I stepped up and volunteered my services.

This wasn’t quite the level of chutzpah I’d shown when I suddenly decided to be a writer. After all, I’d worked for nine years in website development, PHP programming, and database-driven websites. But the website committee was adamant that the new bookstore should run on a WordPress platform, and I knew very little about WordPress.

WordPress is a brand of software widely used to run blogs, including BVC’s blog and my personal blog here at Hahvi.net. On my own blog I’ve modified WordPress to suit my needs. So I thought I knew some things about WordPress – but as it turns out, I’d barely dipped my toes in the ocean of WordPress knowledge and possibilities…

But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Four of us joined forces in the effort to come up with a new online bookstore: myself, Dave Trowbridge, Vonda N. McIntyre, and Pati Nagle. The first task was to find and test ecommerce software packages designed to work with WordPress. This went slowly, taking up scattered blocks of time through January. There are a lot of ecommerce packages out there, but not very many that can competently handle downloadable products like ebooks. We found a good one though: by early February we’d agreed to go ahead with a product called Cart66.

In most group situations, I’m the cautious one: hesitant, careful, expecting the worst. So it was amusing to be outdone in this regard by Dave, who insisted that we should develop the new site on a test server, so that there was no way we could blow up the live website.

I was concerned. My expecting-the-worst nature reasserted itself and I worried that when we moved the website back to the live server, all the file paths would break. Nevertheless, working on a test server was proper procedure, so by February 21 we had our test site set up and we were ready to go!

Except that the hosting company hadn’t got it quite right. The file permissions didn’t allow us to make necessary changes, so there was very little we could do.

By the next day though, that was fixed, and we were really ready to go!

Progress through February was slow. Book View Café operates on a consensus system. We don’t really have a “boss,” and there was no supreme project manager. This can be a bit frustrating: issues are discussed, people have really good ideas or they bring up valid concerns, but many times no decision gets made—and besides, all of us had our own lives going on and our own work to do. So it wasn’t until early March that I started seriously looking at out-of-the-box themes designed to work with Cart66. I tried out one or two—and I quickly reached the conclusion that none of them were going to work for us.

WordPress themes are designed to make life easy for people who don’t know PHP or HTML. But when you do know PHP and HTML, themes can feel very restricting. It’s hard to design a theme flexible enough to satisfy any user. As an example, many WordPress themes have a massive header image. The one on my blog is a good example. This works on my blog, but in my opinion, it doesn’t work for an online store because the real estate on the page should be showing off the products, not the pretty magazine-style design of the header image.

So I eventually junked the Cart66 themes. Instead, I took a very basic theme, modified it to what I thought it needed to be, and asked my cohorts, “What do you think about this?” I got a thumbs-up on it, and in the process I learned all about “child themes”—something I hadn’t known about before. Child themes are a means of modifying a theme without changing the parent theme. This is important, because it means you can continuously update the parent theme without overwriting your customizations.

This became the pattern for me. Some new feature would be needed so, being used to working on custom programs, I would charge in and start creating it. But because the code is complex and modular, I would have a very hard time with it until, after much Googling, I would stumble over a function or a plugin that would do very easily exactly what I needed. So for me, WordPress was consistently hard to work with until I found the right way of doing something, and then it became incredibly easy. It was like mastering magic spells, one after the other, and I slowly began to grasp the logic and to learn where to look for solutions.

So the basic theme was settled, and Vonda and Pati were working on the details of the CSS. Meanwhile, I was having a crisis of confidence. I had a new book out, but hardly anyone seemed to have noticed. I’d stopped exercising, and my mood was growing bleaker with each passing day. I stopped writing—but at least I had the BVC bookstore to work on. What a great excuse to avoid writing! I enjoy complex website work. It’s challenging, like writing a novel, but the outcome is far more certain, and I can do it no matter how bleak my mood, so I put in a lot of time on the new store—it’s fair to say I was obsessed with it—and knowing myself, I figured it was best to just finish it, so I wouldn’t have to think about it anymore, and then I could get back to writing.

So before long I was satisfied. The store wasn’t a technical marvel, but it was a lot better than what we’d had before.

We showed it to our members. I was a bit nonplussed that the majority of comments we received involved the categories we would use to sort out our books—categories are very flexible and easily adjusted and not very interesting. What about all the cool and challenging stuff we’d done? Like controlling what posts showed up on any particular page? And creating pages for each author, showing their bio and all their books? We had to figure all that stuff out, you know! It’s not like there was a manual; each step forward was a sweet little victory.

But the thing about programming is that when you do it right, the difficulty becomes invisible.

Well, whatever, I thought. I just want to get this project out of my brain-space. So let’s load up our books and get this store launched!

That’s when Dave started making trouble.

In projects other than writing, I tend to be a minimalist. If it works, it’s fine. Right?

Dave, on the other hand, has vision. He’d been looking into what WordPress could do, he was thinking in the long term, and he had ideas. Me? I didn’t want to hear them. The store did what it needed to do. Couldn’t we leave it at that? I’d put in my volunteer hours and I wanted to get back to writing. But while I’m occasionally cocky, I’m not so cocky as to think that my way is always the best way, and eventually I settled down and paid attention.

And it was good.

WordPress comes with a basic blogging package that will get you up and running very quickly. Depending on your purposes you can then start adding “plugins”—additional pieces of software used to achieve some goal. Cart66, our ecommerce software, is a plugin. We’d already used several other plugins for different purposes. Now Dave wanted to introduce plugins to create custom post types, custom taxonomies, and custom fields. (Did you just zone out on all that terminology?) I won’t bore you with an explanation of what all those things are. Let’s just say that in the end, Dave came up with some backend stuff that is incredibly useful for keeping the store organized and making it easier to update—definitely worth the extra hours of work, even if we did have to re-engineer some things.

There were some false paths along the way. We tried some things that didn’t work out, or that might have worked out if we had a lot more time to invest in them. At one point we had a backup of the test site made prior to installing a new and possibly risky plugin. After a day or so we decided the plugin wasn’t what we needed, so we had the hosting company restore the site from the backup—but the backup they used was a backup made after the new plugin had been installed—so after fighting over file permissions again, we had to rebuild the site by hand. But by April 9 we had agreed on a final structure to the store, and on April 12 we had the hosting company move it to the live site.

Of course that didn’t work out quite as hoped. My initial fears were partly realized and there were some broken file paths, but there was also a WordPress magic spell that fixed most of them, and in the end the result was better than my pessimistic self had expected.

Suddenly we were aiming for a May 1 launch date.

Vonda worked like mad to load chapter samples and book covers into the new store.

Dave, Pati, and Vonda spent a lot of time writing up the instructions that would be passed out to BVC members. We’re a cooperative, which means everyone helps, so members were expected to load their own books into the store. The instructions took a surprisingly long time and turned out to be a bit too complicated, so Dave very quickly re-wrote them, and suddenly we were on our way. BVC members started logging in and adding their books to the new store. It wasn’t perfect, but it was working . . . and then, without telling us, the hosting company decided to migrate our website to a new server, but the migration failed, and BookViewCafe.com vanished from the Internet.

This happened on Saturday evening the weekend before we were scheduled to launch the new store. BVC members who’d set aside a block of time to load their books were unable to do so … and time ticked past. Sunday afternoon rolled around, and the website reappeared, but it was much too late for a Monday launch, and besides, our email wasn’t working. With the new store, our customers receive an email receipt that includes instructions on downloading their purchased ebooks. There was no point in launching the store if we could not send our customers this email. So we waited for word from our hosting company on when things would be fixed.

And we waited.

And by Friday we decided we needed a new hosting company. This took a few days, but by May 11, the entire website had been moved. Debugging followed, while Vonda and Pati worked hard to get the rest of the ebooks into the store and clean everything up.

Then on the evening of Monday, May 14, the new store went quietly live. We haven’t made a hoopla over it yet. We wanted to go with a quiet opening, that would let us address any issues that might crop up. So far, things seem to be going very smoothly.

We hope you’ll visit our new store, look around, buy a book or two if you’re so inclined, and let us know what you think.

The celebrated “grand opening” is still to come.

New At Book View Café

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

The ebook version of Hepen the Watcher is now available at Book View Café, so if you’ve been waiting to get a copy, now’s your chance! It’s available in both epub and mobi formats.

Special note for those of you outside the “Amazon countries”: there is no download fee if you buy from BVC. You pay a straight $4.99 USD like everyone else.

And to everyone, if you want to wade in cautiously, BVC also offers free sample chapters in epub and mobi formats.

Today though is not just about my book. It’s mostly dedicated to BVC’s newest member, Lois Gresh, the New York Times Best-Selling Author of 27 books and 45 short stories. Her books have been published in approximately 20 languages. Lois has received the Bram Stoker Award, Nebula Award, Theodore Sturgeon Award, and International Horror Guild Award nominations for her work. She debuts at BVC with her collection Eldritch Evolutions, her first short story collection.

And that’s not all! Also debuting today at BVC is a fantasy novel, Swords Over Fireshore by Pati Nagle. Pati’s stories have appeared in Asimov’s Science Fiction, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Cricket, and others. She was a Writers of the Future and Theodore Sturgeon Award finalist. Her novels include the Blood of the Kindred series (The Betrayal, Heart of the Exiled), and urban fantasy Immortal.

Please stop by and visit us at Book View Café.

Writing Expertise, aka Practical Meerkat’s 52 Bits of Useful Info for Young (and Old) Writers

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Like most writers, it took me a long time and a lot of rejections before my first novel sold. This was a good thing. I am so very, very glad that the first book an agent ever took to market for me never found a buyer. In these modern days I suppose I would have gone ahead and published it myself—and then I would be faced with the fact of its existence ever after. We hate to admit it, but often, a rejection is a good thing.

The second novel of mine that ever went to market was an early version of The Bohr Maker. It was turned down many times, and with the most painfully “almost but not quite” rejections I ever hope to see.

For some reason I was flipping through the file a few months ago and discovered this gem of a rejection, addressed to my agent and later forwarded to me:

“This is the worst situation I can think of: really liking a book, and having to pass on it…The author has a very complicated vision working here, and I’m not sure that it works. There are so many threads, and so many changing viewpoints, that it becomes difficult to see where it all comes together, or how – or why…”

This was written by Laura Anne Gilman, who was then an editor at Berkley—and Laura Anne knows of what she speaks! Because of notes like this one I finally pulled the manuscript from the market and rewrote it from beginning to end. When it went out into the world again, it sold to the first publisher that saw it, and went on to win the Locus award for best first novel.

But it never would have been rewritten if I didn’t have experts in the field like Laura Anne telling me in very clear terms that something was lacking and it needed to be rewritten.

Expert advice is a great thing to have, even if it’s painful in the moment.

Laura Anne and I recently crossed paths again at Book View Café, and shortly after that I discovered that she works as a freelance editor. This past fall I hired her to edit my soon-to-be-released novel Hepen the Watcher. She gave me a great critique, asking me to explain things, fill in holes, and take advantage of dramatic opportunities that I’d missed on my own, and the book is much stronger for it.

Over the past year, Laura Anne has been writing a weekly post at Book View Café’s blog on a wide range of practical aspects of writing and publishing. Those posts are now available in ebook form under the title Practical Meerkat’s 52 Bits of Useful Info for Young (and Old) Writers. If you’re at all interested in writing professionally, I urge you to take advantage of Laura Anne Gilman’s writing and publishing expertise by picking up a copy at Book View Café. I’ve got mine! At only $2.99, how can you go wrong?

Cross-Blogging At Book View Café

Monday, January 9th, 2012

Book View Café has a very active blog, with contributions from many members of the co-op. Back in November I agreed to take on a weekly slot, posting something every Wednesday. The idea was that I would get to recycle things from this blog, and at the same time get my name out there at least a little more prominently on a busy website. At that point I was blogging fairly often anyway, so I thought, Why not?

Things went smoothly at first. I had some posts that worked out well enough for BVC’s very diverse blog, but it wasn’t all that long before those ripe and ready posts were used up. I realized that a lot of what I have here is an exploration of indie publishing seen through my own direct experience, and most of it doesn’t feel general enough for BVC’s blog.

Now, around Friday every week, I start thinking, I need to come up with something for BVC. Then on Sunday, Google Calendar emails me a warning, Do BVC blog post.

By Monday morning I’m either desperately combing through past posts here or, more and more often, trying to come up with some topic of “general interest.”

I write down potential blog topics all the time, but when I really consider them, a lot don’t hold up. Either I don’t have any coherent thoughts on the subject, or it would entail research that I don’t have time to do, or it winds up being a little too personal, or to do the topic justice, I would have to include spoilers to books and movies that I like.

On the other hand, having to meet a weekly deadline for the first time in my life is leading me to exercise a level of creativity I never would have otherwise. So if you start seeing odd little posts like the preceding one “Born to Wander,” the reason for it is that I need something up in my slot at Book View Café, and if I’m going to the trouble of writing it, I might as well post it here too.

If you’ve got suggestions on blog topics you’d like to see me try, please do let me know.

Goddesses & Other Stories Now At Book View Café

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

The title of this post pretty much says it: my short fiction collection is now at Book View Café. There’s also a sample story up, “Spectral Expectations,” which is the first piece of fiction I ever sold.

Both EPUB and MOBI versions are available at a cost of $3.95.

Included stories:
Spectral Expectations (Analog 1987)
Career Decision (Analog 1988)
In the Tide (Analog 1989)
Small Victories (Analog 1993)
Liberator (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction 1993)
Old Mother (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction 1995)
The Bird Catcher’s Children (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction 1997)
Hooks, Nets, and Time (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction 1997)
The Flood (More Amazing Stories 1998)
Goddesses (Sci-Fi.com 2000)

Where Do You Buy Your Books?

Friday, December 9th, 2011

I buy almost all my books at Amazon. Odds are good that you do too, and our reasons are probably similar:

1. Been shopping there for years and years
2. Pricing is excellent
3. My account is there
4. Very convenient and easy to use
5. I have a Kindle—purchased books automagically appear on my device with no effort on my part.

I’ll also say that sales at Amazon account for the majority of sales on books I’ve published through my company, Mythic Island Press LLC, and while that doesn’t add up to nearly enough to make a living, without Amazon I would have little hope for future success. Most writers are in the same situation. I wish it weren’t so, because it’s always worrisome when one agency holds most of the power.

If you follow indie publishing, you’ve probably already heard that Amazon has made a new offer to independent publishers. Details are all over the web but in essence, Amazon is asking for the exclusive right to sell an author’s ebooks — meaning the books won’t be available at any other vendor — in exchange for a very uncertain amount of additional money. It’s possible some writers could benefit from this program, but I won’t be one of them. It took a lot of effort to get the rights back on my books and to re-publish them as ebooks, and as print books too. I like being in control of my distribution; I like being able to offer readers alternatives; and I really like the security of not having all my eggs in one basket.

My books are, and will continue to be, available at Amazon—but there are other places to shop for books. Some of the more obvious are Barnes & Noble, iTunes, Kobo, and Smashwords. I’m not currently selling at all those places, but lots of writers are. One of the less obvious places to look for books is an author’s own website. I’m not selling ebooks from my website, but more and more authors are, with the result that, less transaction fees, every penny paid goes directly and immediately to the writer, with no portion lost to a middleman, and no time spent waiting for the check to arrive. There is no better way to support a writer’s future work, then by buying direct.

And then there is Book View Café. If you’re a regular reader of my blog, you’ve heard me talk about BVC before. Book View Café is an author’s cooperative of over thirty professionals in several different genres working together to publish and promote DRM-free ebooks in both mobi (Kindle) and epub (Nook) formats. Buying a book from BVC is not quite as convenient as buying from Amazon. You have to download the file and then transfer it to your reader. But you’ll receive a reasonably priced and professionally produced book, along with the knowledge that 95% of the purchase price (less transaction fees) will go to the author. I hope you’ll consider that a worthy result!

Below is a list of names you can find at Book View Café. For more details, look here. And please, stop by and browse!

Bohnhoff
Brenchley
Caselberg
Casil
Clough
Dolley
Donnelly
Frost
Gilman
Harper
Kelso
Kerr
Kimbriel
Lange
Le Guin
McIntyre
Moore
Nagata
Nagle
Piziks
Radford
Rice
Robins
Ross
Shiels
Smith
Stevenson
Tarr
Trent
Wright
Zettel

Book View Café–New Release

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Lord of the Two LandsLord of the Two Lands (fantasy)
by Judith Tarr
December 6, 2011 $4.99
ISBN: 978 1 61138 134 4
LCCN: 93-24635
Copyright: 1993, 2011

Description: In 336 B.C., Egypt lies under the yoke of Persia. But from the north a spirit of fire moves across the world. His name is Alexander, and he is the destined conqueror of the Persian Empire–and the king foretold of Egypt. Meriamon, daughter of the last Pharaoh, journeys out of Egypt to find him and bring him home. From the battlefield of Issus to the siege of Tyre, from the founding of Alexandria to the divine revelations of Siwah, Meriamon both leads and follows her divine charge, who becomes her friend and her chosen king.

Find it at Book View Café.

Judith Tarr is the author of numerous novels and short stories, including ALAMUT and THE DAGGER AND THE CROSS from Book View Cafe. LORD OF THE TWO LANDS was nominated for the World Fantasy Award.