Feb 14, 2011 by

Motivation Monday

Happy Valentine’s day, people! My most valentiney thing today is green tea with rose petals, but  who knows, maybe the pub quiz this evening will be themed 🙂 Oh, and I’m working on Space Romance, so that’s pretty relevant.

Publishing: Astatalk have dropped their fiction board (where someone had uploaded Tease, at one point!). Rumour has it the FBI had a ‘friendly’ word with them.

Interest-Piquing: The weird world of book packaging. Turns out one company, Alloy, is responsible for most the more famous packaged books (e.g. Sweet Valley High). Everyone in that article is very insistent they’re happy with the company and the decisions being made (and the amount they’re paid), aren’t they?

InsPiring: Search is on for the ninth planet. Sorry, Pluto, you still don’t cut it.

Procrastination: The five worst valentine geek gifts

Don’t forget, comment on this post by the end of the month to be in with a chance to win 21 Hammer Horror films.

Feb 11, 2011 by

Monster Awareness Month: What’s your favourite featured creature?

[poll id=”10″]

Humans don’t count! Though Mr Hyde would fall under ‘man made creature’. I’m pretty loyal to ghosts, myself, though if you know me you’ve probably figured that out already! I also have a soft spot for Giant Mutant Animals, in films like Deep Blue Sea.

Don’t forget, comment on this post to be in with a chance to win 21 Hammer Horror films.

Feb 8, 2011 by

Monster Awareness Month Giveaway!

My review for The Quatermass Xperiment goes up today (sign up for dropbox now and watch the film itself!) on the Monster Awareness Month Blog, as does my brief history of Hammer Horror.

In celebration of Monster Awareness Month I’m giving away a set of 21 Hammer Films to one lucky winner! Comment either here or over at the Monster Awareness Month blog and tell us why you think Hammer is one of the greats in Horror cinema history!

This competition is open to anyone in the world, though due to the ratings of some of the films in the boxset only adults over 18 can enter.

(the competition is for the films only, since for some reason the boxset I have is missing the postcards and other extras originally advertised. Sorry! Still, 21 films… That’ll keep you busy.)

Feb 7, 2011 by

Monday Motivation

Publishing: From March31st Apple are insisting all apps that offer content must make it available to purchase through the app (where they get a 30% cut). Amazon’s Kindle app, for example, allows you to read kindle books but doesn’t allow you to download them through the app. You can see where this is going, can’t you? Yet another square off.

Which is interesting, since if you skim through the spin in this press release (really, only three major self-published authors?) you’ll notice this:

Bright is one of a select group of authors whose books will be premiering in a new e-book format featured on Amazon that will be announced on Tuesday.

The e-books will be announced to promote Adobe’s new e-book format at Seybold Seminars in Boston.

Adobe’s epub is the big rival to the Kindle format, so, well. This looks interesting.

Interest-Piquing: Vida have been doing a little research into reviews and reviewers. Turns out that at most major sources of professional reviews, it’s considerably easier to be review and be reviewed if you’re male. Three times easier.

Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of International Law is taken to caught over a negative review. They were fairly certain they could get it thrown out of court (for libel tourism, since there was no real reason to take them to caught in France), but wanted to stand up for their right to publish a negative review and prove it wasn’t criminal defamation. The verdict is due March 3rd.

InsPiring: Nellie Bly travelled around the world in less than 80 days and got herself committed to an asylum so she could tell the world how bad the conditions were. Nellie Bly was the pseudonym of Elizabeth Jane Cochran. She travelled the world as an investigative journalist throughout the late 1800s, and after her death was described as “The Best Reporter in America”. I’ll lay good odds you’ve never heard of her, but, fortunately, there’s a website complete with downloads of her best known articles.

Procrastination: Rose: the 3D Zombie Puppet Musical is looking for backers. They’ve got 16 days left and a lot still to raise.  To encourage more people to give, Adam Blomquist is doing a giveaway on his blog. If they don’t raise enough to make the movie, they won’t take money from anyone.

Feb 4, 2011 by

How important are covers to you?

[poll id=”9″]

A very thorough poll for you there. Hopefully there’s something for everyone!

I wouldn’t buy a book solely on the basis of its cover, but about half my library rentals have been because I liked the look of it*. And there’s a bit of positive reinforcement there, because I haven’t had a bad rental, so I keep doing it. However, there have been a few times I’ve purchased a book in a situation where the cover has had a strong influence, along with blurb/extract/etc, and been very disappointed. As a result, when the wallet comes out so does the buyer’s discretion, and I want the minimum of an extract before I’ll part with my money.

On the flip side, a bad cover hasn’t put me off a book, though it has put me off a publisher (this tend to be a specifically e-issue, since publisher branding isn’t such a big thing in print). It’s certainly put me off a lot of self-published books; I know not everyone can afford to pay for a decent cover, but self-publishing if the only arena in publishing where spending money to make money really does hold true. At the very least invest in yourself and develop the skill to make an appealing cover.

Where do you stand? And has it ever backfired on you?

*Soulless by Gail Carringer, Bruce Campbell’s autobiography, a book about a vampire that I’ve been trying to remember the name of for six years now…