Steph, did you actually place the order before you got the message?
Last year, yes. Although when I placed the order, there was already a US release date scheduled. As of now, there is a UK/Australia date scheduled, but no US date actually scheduled -- just confirmation that it will be released at some point.
I tried to put it in my shopping cart at .co.uk and it was okay, because .com usually tells me when I add something if it can't be shipped to Canada. But if it let you order it last year, maybe that won't work.
One of my friends buys stuff from amazonUK fairly often, but it is stuff that isn't published here. ( She is English) Of course, her CC stops her card all the time because the charge goes thru Lithuania.
I do know I bought the British edition of Monbiot's "Heat" from Amazon Canada before the U.S. edition was out. Don't know if that would work for fiction.
I'm now having a crisis of conscience. I dislike the way Amazon has behaved. I want Connie Willis' new book in my hands right this minute. Amazon is significantly cheaper than anyone except *shudder* Walmart, if the local store has it in stock.
Ginger, Barnes and Noble is currently offering Blackout at the member price ($15.21) which is the same as Amazon's price, to everyone.
Thanks, Barb! I had not only forgotten about B&N, but until you mentioned it, I had also forgotten about a Christmas gift card. Willis is on the very short list of authors whose books I buy new in hardback.
Seattle-istas and NoCal-isatas, a friend of mine, Carrie Jones, is book-touring in the areas next week and she writes YA that I think might appeal to many of you guys.
Her two most recent releases Need and Captivate just hit the NY Times Bestseller list. Her earlier books, Tips on Having a Gay Ex-Boyfriend and Love (and other uses for Duct Tape) were critically lauded, but it's really the Need series that's taken off.
She's a total sweetheart and I'd love to get her some support-- she's also touring with another author, Alyxandra Harvey-Firtzhenry. I don't know much about her, but she's written a vampire YA that seems to be getting some buzz as being different from the rest of the pack: Hearts at Stake.
Anyhow, details of the tour are at Carrie's LJ [link]
But here are the dates and times as well:
February 8th
Third Place Books
17171 Bothell Way
Lake Forest Park, WA
Time TBD
www.thirdplacebooks.com
February 9th
Barnes and Noble
19402 Alderwood Mall Parkway
Lynwood, WA
Time: 7 p.m.
February 10th
University of Washington Event
Time: TBD
February 11th
Copperfield's Books
140 Kentucky Street
Petaluma, CA
Time TBD
www.copperfieldsbooks.com
Not Your Mother's Book Club Valentine's Bash @ Books Inc
601 Van Ness
San Francisco, CA
7 pm
www.notyourmothersbookclub.com
February 12th
Keplers
1010 El Camino Real
Menlo Park, CA
Time: 5:30
So Emmett and I have been listening to the audiobooks for Harry Potter and are almost done with HBP.
I was poking around and was charmed by the story of Alice Newton, as it relates to the series finally finding a publisher with Bloomsbury:
It's not every exec who turns to his 8-year-old daughter for advice. But that's what publisher Nigel Newton did when he received a manuscript from an unknown children's author in 1997. The founder of Bloomsbury Publishing PLC handed Alice a sheaf of papers and asked her to read them. "She came down from her room an hour later, glowing," recalls Newton, "saying 'Dad, this is so much better than anything else.' She nagged and nagged me in the following months, wanting to see what came next."
Here's a picture of her at age 19 reading Deathly Hallows.