Jan 3, 2011 by

Motivation Monday

Happy New Year, all! Hope you had a good holiday. I spent mine at my parents’s place, being intensely lazy 🙂 Anyway, new year, new writing goals, including Turning Off The Internet. Well, sometimes.

Publishing: Why Social media fails to sell books. Jane Friedman absolutely nails it. What’s in it for the reader? Why should they follow you? Why are you following me? Wait, don’t think too hard about that last one!

eBook lending has been launched for the Kindle, though as usual it’s only available in the US right now.

InsPiring: Why Netgalley is the best kept secret on the web. Netgalley is a tool for publishers to share ARCs with reviewers, journalists and educators. If you’re serious about reviewing it’s definitely a service worth signing up for.

Interest-Piquing: A map of relationships between British citizens, measured in phone calls. It’s really interesting how national borders still show up (and regional), which tells you a lot about how even these days people haven’t moved as far from their families as you might assume.

Procrastination: Damn You Autocorrect.

Dec 25, 2010 by

A Christmas Carol

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Mine’s the Muppet’s Christmas Carol, by a long stretch. I think it was probably my first introduction to the story, and it remains my definitive version. I’m not sure why people keep bothering to make more adapatations now…

Happy Christmas if you celebrate it, and happy ‘ugh it’s cold and the days are short, let’s overeat and get drunk until spring comes’ if you don’t.  Unless you’re in the Southern hemisphere, in which case happy summer!

Dec 17, 2010 by

Where do you shop?

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This is partially inspired by a thread on Absolute Write, and partly by the news that Amazon is censoring itself again.

I don’t have an ereader (we have rather fewer options in this country than the US) so I’m not tied to any one store. I mostly read on my phone or my netbook. I purchase almost entirely from publishers. I’ve signed up to various other etailers at one time or another, mostly for freebies, but despite the incessant emails I’m rarely tempted back.

It’s better for authors, generally, to buy direct from the publisher, but I have to admit it’s not so much that as the fact individual publishers are usually more accomodating in terms of region and payment method and less inclined to incessantly spam me. I rarely read mainstream fiction in e-form, so I have to admit the agency pricing hasn’t really affected me, but I still dislike the idea of it.

Anyway, where do you shop from? Is it a matter of convenience? Cost? Personal preferences? Gadget of choice?

Dec 13, 2010 by

Motivation Monday

Day off work sick today. I’d have liked to spend it in bed, but the neighbours are doing building work (and have been for months) which started at 8:30 this morning, so I’ve been curled up under blankets watching Carnivale instead.

Publishing: Amazon’s pulling books again. This time it’s incest themed stories (well, it appears to be). They’re well within their rights, of course, but I do feel sorry for authors who’ve invested time and money in marketing books, knowing most purchasers will default to Amazon to buy them (expecially anyone who self-pubbed through Amazone – they might refund customers, but would they refund authors?).

Interest-Piquing: In a suitably appropriate follow up: a Day in the life of the Amazon romance boards. Though this could be any internet forum ever, really! Also, Cory Doctrow asks “What do we want copyright to do?”

InsPiring: Dr Seuss does Star Wars. Adorable selection of sketches in Seussian style from Adam Watson.

Procrastination: Write Christmas Competition. Got an unsung Christmas Classic inside you? Review your imaginary movie, upload it, and be in the runnings for a £100 prize.

Dec 11, 2010 by

Filing the Serial Numbers Off

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Omnific began life in the Twilight fandom, with the explicit intention of publishing ‘filed’ fanfiction – stories with names, settings and other pertinent details changed to avoid plagiarism. They still actively solicit filed fanfiction in their FAQ, unlike most publishers.

Q: I have a fanfiction story about Ross and Rachel in Friends. Can I publish it through Omnific?

A: No.  We do not publish fanfiction. What you can do is take anything that is your original idea (plot, characterization, etc.) and develop it into a manuscript using original characters that are your own creation.

Rumours have started circulating recently that SMeyer is unhappy about it all, but isn’t currently taking action. I’d take that with a huge pinch of salt, but it’s not surprising there’s a rumour, at least.

Now, as long as the fanfiction is sufficiently well filed, they’re not doing anything illegal. But what would happen if something wasn’t well filed? Say, in a fandom the editors aren’t sufficiently familiar with to realise the novel still contained large elements of the original source (for example, an original story about Barry, Ron and Persephone attending wizard school). By inviting filed fanfiction, they’re also inviting close scrutiny from rights holders.

On top of that, it’s extremely hard to do well. If your characterisation is good, then the characters are behaving in ways consistent with their backgrounds and surroundings. Change their back stories and setting and you need to change the characterisation, which will change the plot. At which point, well, why are you bothering? It’s more work editing than it would be to write something brand new. Trying to find an excuse for the ex-X-men to have powers vital to the plot that aren’t due to genetic mutation and don’t give away who they originally were is a good mental exercise but not something that makes me inclined to plow through 100k looking for every mention of ice or super speed. Honestly, I’m not against the process, I’m just against it being done badly, and frankly I’m too lazy to do it well!

The other issue is one Omnific are obviously fine with, but most publishers wouldn’t be. If the filed story is still sufficiently similar to the original that fans recognise it, has it used up first rights? That’s the issue that makes me very wary about finding this on a the website of a professional organisation. If you’ve got something on the hard drive you never uploaded, great, but something well read and recommended in the fandom? Hell, how do you know the editor your subbing to won’t recognise it? Well, I guess you sub to Omnific.

If you’re wondering how common the practice is, authors who’ve admitted to it (according to fanlore) include Sharon Bowers, BL Miller, Melissa Good and Alexis Rogers. And, of course, JJ Massa, who was caught filing the serial numbers off someone else’s fanfic.

Anyway, what’re your thoughts? Is it possible to produce a good original story this way? Is it ethical? Is it inevitably recognisable?