Nobody can tell Marmaduke what to do. That's my kind of dog.

Trick ,'First Date'


The Great Write Way, Act Three: Where's the gun?

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


-t - Sep 16, 2010 5:46:25 am PDT #3589 of 6693
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Congrats, Gud! That's some nice validation.

Eta: I like the story, too. That's an interesting world you've built.


Barb - Sep 16, 2010 7:19:16 am PDT #3590 of 6693
“Not dead yet!”

Woot! Some early reviews are starting to roll in for STARS and they're so sweet, especially since they're from librarians! (We loves our librarians, we do...)

This one just got it, top to bottom.

[link]

And this was another great one.

[link]

Please, all the gods and little fishes, let this be a SIGN.


Gudanov - Sep 16, 2010 9:36:55 am PDT #3591 of 6693
Coding and Sleeping

Congrats Barb! I hope the sweetness keeps rolling.

Thanks -t, the world from that story will likely be my next novel, along with the main character.


Wolfram - Sep 16, 2010 10:03:24 am PDT #3592 of 6693
Visilurking

Congrats to both of you, Gud and Barb!


Burrell - Sep 16, 2010 12:11:00 pm PDT #3593 of 6693
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

Congrats to both of you! Barb, those are great reviews.


Amy - Sep 16, 2010 12:15:15 pm PDT #3594 of 6693
Because books.

Lots of good news! Excellent! Congratulations, Barb and Gud!


Gudanov - Sep 23, 2010 6:05:50 am PDT #3595 of 6693
Coding and Sleeping

I'm getting my novel momentum back, I kind of took a break after the last revision and lengthened that break it by writing a short story. But now I'm getting ready for chapter 5 in my comment sifting and tweak-making revision. I need to get moving to finish this off by year's end.

I've made some adjustments to my short story 'Sarah' that hopefully also makes the decision at the end a bit more balanced.

Though I sent my parents a link to my short stories, I didn't really expect them to read them (not Sci-Fi readers). To my surprise, my mom said she read and liked 'Discipline', especially the ending.


Typo Boy - Sep 29, 2010 5:45:47 pm PDT #3596 of 6693
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

OK - Three editors like my proposal. The problem is getting it past the committees, and the Senior editor thinks we need a better title. Conveying what the book is about trumps Euphony or cleverness. The current title:subtitle is "Cooling a Fevered Planet: Beyond Market Tinkering - An American Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis".

The book's argument is essentially that the climate crisis stems from inequality - not only contributes to it but actually is caused by it. That is the same economics factors that cause unequal distribution of wealth and income also cause the particular kinds of waste that lead to climate change.Thus for various good reasons, putting a price on carbon is NOT the primary solution to global weirding, in spite of the conventional wisdom. Instead the primary solutions are reducing inequality, and compensating for past effects via public investment and rule based (non-price) regulations (such as efficiency regulations, and Renewable Energy requirements for utilities). Now obviously I can't say all this in the title, but my editor thinks I need to convey some of it. Also, she doesn't want to me rely on the subtitle. She wants as much of it as possible in the main title.

Senior Editor seems to think the right title is important in getting through the committee. So any thoughts would be welcome.

(I'm not sure the reasoning is right in terms of what title is for. But I'm also sure the Senior editor knows what she needs to sell the committee and I would rather it get published with a bad title than not published with a good one. So again suggestions that fit the requirement of conveying a lot about what the books is about are welcome.)

In thread if you think a game of "title the book" would be fun, or my profile addy is good otherwise.


dcp - Sep 29, 2010 6:00:55 pm PDT #3597 of 6693
The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know.

Is there a target audience or tone? Academic or popular?


Typo Boy - Sep 29, 2010 6:33:45 pm PDT #3598 of 6693
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Sort of in between. Library and institutional sales. Big publisher, but inprint targets libraries and institutions and specifically not bookstores because this type of title does not reach a big enough audience to make a profit with the deep discount, high return rate and slow pay. Yeah, libraries are really a growing market with all the budget cuts.

My thoughts so far:

Windmills, not weapons. Why spending money on clean American energy will buy more national security than money wasted on stupid wars.

Clean Energy, not Stupid Wars. Why diverting most of the military budget into clean energy will keep us safer and make us richer and protect the environment besides.