Hooray! The Amazon approval process is over and Baker’s Dozen is now up at the Kindle Store. That’s two places to find my premier short story collection (Amazon and Smashwords), both for $2.99. Take your pick.
The author, his writings, and his warped little mind.
Hooray! The Amazon approval process is over and Baker’s Dozen is now up at the Kindle Store. That’s two places to find my premier short story collection (Amazon and Smashwords), both for $2.99. Take your pick.
On the advice of…well, at least 13 people, I have compiled 13 of my stories into a self-published ebook and have formatted it for the Kindle.
Why 13? Well, that makes a Baker’s Dozen. It was a title suggested by my friend Greg and I couldn’t resist the pun. Guilty as charged.
Why self-pub? I can’t see shopping this thing around for forever just to wind up self-pubbing it anyway. I am a long way away from giving up on traditional publishing (novels and magazines), but I’m convinced this is the way to go for a single-author collection.
Why just Kindle? Okay, it’s not just Kindle. By the time I release the thing, it may well be ready for Smashwords and Nook, too. But I’m new at this and there’s a learning curve.
What’s in it? Oh, I’m so glad you asked! There’s quite a variety, but stories mostly fit into one of four categories:
Includes 9 of my greatest hits as well as 4 never before published stories; well over 40,000 words of fiction. Tiny little flash stories to the top end of the short story scale; dark and gritty to farcically hilarious; hard science to impractical frivolity. There is something in this collection for absolutely every reader of short speculative fiction, all for the low price of…
Okay, I confess, I’m still waffling on the price point. When I see individual short stories from writers at similar places in their career selling on Kindle for 99 cents, a fairly high number isn’t hard to envision. But then I consider the role that low price point plays in getting a reader to try a new writer and something bargain basement makes more sense. I’m considering splitting the difference (high basement?) and also maybe releasing some of the longer stories for $.99 as single stories plus a teaser for another story in the book. That’s my best impression of a marketing strategy, folks.
Anyway, I don’t quite have the release date set. I’ll post it as soon as I do. I’ll also Tweet it, Facebook it, and do whatever else I can think of to get the word out.
I’m pretty excited about this, excited enough to pull four very solid and promising stories out of my submission cycle to make sure my readers get value for their money. It sure isn’t everything I’ve ever written or even sold, but this is a sample of my best. If you’ve ever wondered how good I actually am at this writing stuff, here comes your chance to find out.
Check back soon for the latest.
Mere days before I flit off to LA to live a week like I’m something special, I realize I am special. I’m in a book on Kindle! Yeah, yeah, lots of people are, even people who aren’t in a real book…stop trying to burst my bubble. I’m on the biggest electronic reader in the world.
For the bargain price of five bucks ($5.00), you can read “Leech Run” and all the other stories in Zero Gravity. Big savings over the paperback price of $15.29. There’s something spacial about having a story in tangible print on paper that I can keep on a shelf and point to. There’s also something special about having my story distributed through cutting edge technology.
I suspect I may end up on the Kindle again when Writers of the Future XXV! comes out. Ooh, I just checked and found something cooler!!
How pretty is that? It’s available for pre-order through Amazon. People are pre-ordering me! *giggles like maniacal school child* They aren’t advertising it for Kindle yet, but I bet it will happen after the first surge of paperbacks sell…but wait. Previous years’ anthologies aren’t available on Kindle. Huh. I’ll ask about it next week to see why. But a print book is still great. They did an audio book of volume 24 that was excellent; I’d love to see that happen this year.
I guess I should go to sleep now. I have that real job thing in the morning.
For those interested, I’ll try to throw up a note here every day or so while I’m in LA. Nothing long winded until I get back. Now go buy me on Amazon!
Often I hear of urban dwellers using commute time to do their reading: on a train, bus, or subway. I drive. There aren’t a lot of options here. But I still like to spend that time catching up on good books. Thank heavens for audio books. Let’s face it, listening to a book is not the same as reading it. It’s a close second, though, particularly an unabridged version. It can, however, reveal some of your favorite authors’ faults the same way that reading your own work out loud can reveal flaws in your stories.
I have listened to the first five Harry Potter books on tape or disc, though it’s been years. I wanted to reread them but couldn’t justify the time away from my perpetually growing reading list that I already neglect far too much. A coworker had the HP audios and I borrowed one. The performance by Jim Dale is awesome. His voices are great and his delivery is spot on for the wizarding world. I consider his performance the industry standard. If you haven’t heard him, get one of those books and listen. If I find other books he reads, I may get them just for his voice. Of course I haven’t gone looking…yet.
More recently I listened to K-PAX by Gene Brewer. If you’ve seen the movie, you got the gist of the story. There were differences, but the movie was well done, as was the book. The novel’s style lends itself well to audio performance. It was no Jim Dale, but it was good.
At the same time I purchased K-PAX, I bought Michael Crichton’s Next. Both were in a discount bin at the local bookstore. I guess I’m about halfway through it. I’ve never really read Crichton. I hope his other books are better. Considering that every version of Next (hardcover, paperback, and audio) were marked way down, I assume it is a sub-par example of his work. It’s extra tough as an audiobook; I keep wanting to flip around to make sure I know which character he’s talking about. It took five of the thirteen or so discs to get to the main plot. I’ll keep this example in mind as I write my own novels.
I also bought a book off iTunes, intending to listen on my iPod but it found its home on my school computer. The book is Dune. Yes, I am a SF heretic that has never read Frank Herbert’s classic of classics. I have good reason. I had a college roommate who watched three different movies EVERY night as he fell asleep: Dune, Waterworld, or The Muppet Movie. Muppet nights always led to better dreams. What was more, I married a woman addicted to the David Lynch film. Just looking at the title sent images of Brad Dourif and Sting. It was a borderline phobia.

Anyway, the audiobook was a safer approach for me. The book is (obviously) much better than the film, though the movie does color many of my mental images. I’m glad I’m “reading” it this way. Numerous voices lend their talent to the presentation. I just absorb a chapter or two while I grade tests or homework during my planning period. It’s nice, relaxing, efficient.
I love audio performances. The new Amazon Kindle 2 reportedly has an automated “read aloud” option. Not the same. I don’t know that I could take more than a page of robo-speak. Reviews I have seen call the Kindle’s vocal technique “serviceable”. I’m looking for a voice that adds to the telling, not detracts. Still, as a writer (even one far from audio contracts), I am concerned what the auto-read will do to audiobook rights. Will licensing a book to Kindle reduce the value of the audio rights? Infringe upon previous rights? There is a fair amount of discussion out there already about this, most writers groups preferring Amazon include an option to block the audio feature. Sounds like n inexpensive solution to me, especially if it causes problems with the Kindle acquiring key authors. Maybe Oprah could get behind the writers’ initiative. Anyway, I love audiobooks and would hate to see anything inhibit their continued production.
-Oso
