Sunday, July 28, 2019
Perilous Promotions
Authors and aspiring authors are not necessarily marketing or legal experts. There's a lot to learn. For instance, swap a good review of a friendly colleague's book with a good review from your colleague for your own book and you might see reviews deleted by Amazon. Even the suspicion that you might have gamed the unsolicited review system might result in backlash.
Trusting a beginner to Tweet for you might also backfire if they damn your work or product or service with exceptionally faint praise.
Experienced legal blogger Jeff Greenbaum, writing for the law firm Frankfurt Kurnit Klein and Selz PC analyses the disastrous (well, not really dis-aster because misaligned stars had nothing to do with the self-inflicted damage provoked by some ill-advised Tweets) social media honesty about flying with KLM India.
Lexology link:
https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=c1cd68eb-7ac8-45ec-9b94-f96ecf19fa06
Original article link:
https://advertisinglaw.fkks.com/post/102fo6e/klm-and-its-terrible-horrible-no-good-very-bad-day-on-social-media
Jeff Greenbaum's social media advice should be well-taken. Authors could learn from his top 5 tips.
What else *not* to do.
There's the matter of bribery, and illegal sweepstakes and "contests" to persuade people to provide something of value to the person running the contest. An illegal sweepstakes might be designed to induce "Likes" on a friendship-related social network, or reviews on a book-selling site, or a surge of book purchases during a specific timeframe.
There's a lot to know, and an exponential amount of legal paperwork if the prize value is in excess of $600.
The more a would-be contest organizer knows, the better the chances of staying out of trouble.
Legal blogger Philip K. Rebentisch ACP, blogging for Manhattan Advertising & Media Law Inc. offers some tried and true advice about the difference between a sweepstakes and a contest..
Lexology link:
https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=b65aa2cc-2485-4de4-be25-501ca0d75fd3
Original link:
https://admedialaw.com/sweepstakes-and-contests-not-knowing-the-difference-may-cost-you/
On the same topic, but geared towards healthcare organizations (but one can easily extrapolate), bloggers Randi Seigel and Po Yi for Manatt Phelps & Phillips LLP define raffles, games of chance and games of skill and share a very good checklist (or to do list) for organizations that wish to increase outreach, brand awareness and/or raise funds.
Lexology link:
https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=9e2030a9-9ed3-45ab-b0b4-e9e9cf887bd4
Original link:
https://www.manatt.com/Insights/Newsletters/Health-Update/Sweepstakes-and-Contests-What-Healthcare
There's also a webinar mentioned in the latter blogs, for those who have the time.
All the best,
Rowena Cherry
Thursday, July 25, 2019
Dystopias
There's a podcast series called Extra Sci-Fi, produced by people who also create podcasts on Extra History and Extra Mythology. All these short (usually around 10 minutes) presentations are entertaining as well as packed with information. Extra Sci-Fi, which has been exploring the history of science fiction, recently completed a sequence about dystopias and apocalypses. This is the first, from which you can follow the subsequent installments:
Extra Sci-FiIt's interesting to view their survey of dystopian fiction over the decades and witness the changes in what kinds of dystopias and apocalypses resonate with readers as cultural conditions evolve. 1984 and BRAVE NEW WORLD are very different types of cautionary tales from A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, for instance. However, it's worth noting how different 1984 and BRAVE NEW WORLD are from each other, too. Orwell's novel portrays a society that's horribly oppressive for almost everyone, with the possible exception of Inner Party members (and they're constantly watched, too). The proles seem to lead their lives in an attitude of indifference to the all-pervasive surveillance, but still those lives can't be very satisfying in a society of perpetual economic shortages. In Aldous Huxley's world, on the other hand, life is comfortable and full of pleasure. Transient problems can be easily solved by another dose of soma (a happiness drug with no negative side effects) or a fresh love affair. Everybody enjoys his or her work because they're all conditioned from conception to fit into their destined social and economic slot. The only discontented people seem to be a few of the Alphas with enough intelligence and self-awareness to realize what they're missing in this shallow lifestyle. Since "even Alphas are conditioned," though, most of them accept that it's their duty to behave "childishly" for the greater good. Only from the external viewpoint of the reader, and John the Savage as the reader's representative, does the society of BRAVE NEW WORLD appear dystopian.
Ira Levin, author of ROSEMARY'S BABY, wrote a superficially utopian novel called THIS PERFECT DAY. While not very original, it does have some points of interest. For example, the F-word in its sexual sense is commonplace, but terms referring to violence (such as "kill") are taboo. All citizens enjoy security and happiness as long as they obey the rules. Under the surface, though, this conformist society turns out to be cruelly oppressive. In this kind of world, naturally the hero is the character discontented and curious enough to probe beneath the surface and rebel against the ruling authorities' violations of human rights and dignity.
TV Tropes labels a dystopian society that looks pleasant, cheerful, and generally attractive on the surface a Crapsaccharine World:
Crapsaccharine WorldThe page includes BRAVE NEW WORLD and THIS PERFECT DAY as examples.
This topic came to mind for me while watching the third season of THE HANDMAID'S TALE. Like Margaret Atwood's novel, the TV series portrays the Republic of Gilead as a society that's oppressive and unpleasant for almost everyone except those who manage to reach accommodations with the roles they're forced into. Perhaps the children growing up in Gilead, if its regime lasts that long, will simply accept those roles as "normal." In the series, as opposed to the book (except in the epilogue set long after the fall of Gilead), we at least get some relief from horrors by way of the scenes set in Canada. The only people likely to be content in Gilead, the Commanders with their privileges, power, and material luxuries, still have to face competition from their peers, so they may not enjoy complete happiness either. Junior Commanders and the Guardians, one assumes, have to watch their backs all the time. The Wives, although pampered, lead very circumscribed lives, endure the monthly humiliation of the Ceremony (embracing a Handmaid while the Wife's husband ritually rapes her), and have no real power aside from their potential influence over their husbands. Presumably a Wife who becomes a mother (through the surrogate maternity of a Handmaid) may find fulfillment in her child. As for the common people, married couples have to face the lurking danger that an econo-wife who proves fertile may be forced to become a Handmaid. Then there's the threat of execution or a slow death in the Colonies as punishment for transgressions. The only women with any actual power seem to be the Aunts, who exercise control over the Handmaids and perform the vital function of midwifery.
Pioneering behaviorist B. F. Skinner wrote a book provocatively titled BEYOND FREEDOM AND DIGNITY. A society such as Huxley's in BRAVE NEW WORLD offers and generally provides happiness for all, except for the very few who still care about freedom and dignity. The world of THIS PERFECT DAY and Crapsaccharine Worlds in general seem to offer that promise of happiness, which works as long as nobody probes too deeply. Then we have the downright horrible dystopias such as 1984, THE HUNGER GAMES, and THE HANDMAID'S TALE, dooming all but the privileged few to a miserable existence. Maybe the underlying theme of all types of dystopian SF is that warped societies, including those that look pleasant on the surface, aren't good for anyone, even the apparently privileged elites.
Of course, as Cory Doctorow says in his blog on "fake news" (which I linked to recently), that kind of fiction doesn't give us predictions, but rather warnings: "If this goes on. . . . "
Margaret L. Carter
Carter's CryptTuesday, July 23, 2019
Theme-Plot Integration Part 18 Stating Your Theme
Previous entries in Theme-Plot Integration are indexed at:
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2013/05/index-to-theme-plot-integration.html
By the end of the first scene of your novel, preferably the end of the first page, the reader should have a grasp of your theme.
Oddly enough, though it's not discussed in books on writing, and most readers would deny it, THEME is the reason people read books all the way through, or toss them aside half-read.
THEME is what the novel, story, book (non-fiction, too) is about.
It's the topic and you need a topic-sentence on your opening page, something to frame the story so the reader can tell if they want to invest the time (and money) to read the entire thing.
What you're talking about has to be something the reader is interested in.
Writing craft instruction usually starts with "make it interesting" -- or write about something interesting -- and other phrases that seem to assume that some topics are inherently interesting and others not.
In other words, the FALLACY underlying writing craft instruction is simply that "interesting" is an objective property of topics.
We discussed various fallacies masking ultimate truths in our world in Parts 6 and 7 of this series of posts.
Fallacy is an aspect of our culture that can be exploited by fiction writers, especially Romance writers, to interest a reader in a topic, a THEME.
The theme itself doesn't have to be interesting. In fact, all themes are interesting to the writer who is stating their own angle on a topic.
"Interesting" is not a property of theme. All themes are equally interesting.
And in fact, a particular reader doesn't have the property "interested in" as an inherent trait of that person.
What interests a particular person at a specific moment will be whatever problem is currently between them and the satisfactions of life they crave most.
Children are always interested in how the next older age-group copes with whatever problems they are up to in life.
Adults are eternally interested in The Mating Game -- even after having solved the problem "Who Should I Marry" people are interested in where other sorts of choices might have led, and how they'd cope with those situations.
When you add science fiction to the mixture of fictional ingredients in theme, you can lead the reader from their own (boring) here and now, to a "there and then" which you can use to cast the spell of "this is interesting" over them.
What is interesting about science fiction? It isn't where the reader is living at that time.
Life, the treadmill of work, housekeeping, kids, carpooling, school meetings, and all the drudgery that goes with it gets boring with repetition. All that boring drudgery can become refreshingly NEW after reading a good book.
But what is a "good book?"
Is a "good" book the book you want to write? Or is it the book the reader wants to read? Or - is it really the UNEXPECTED?
The best writers best books are about themes that ask questions most people never think to ask, and present answers that challenge everyday assumptions about the common world of daily drudgery.
Two such series are currently being published that, while barely acknowledging Romance and only occasionally nodding to Relationship as a plot moving dynamic, nevertheless give the Science Fiction Romance writer many themes to pursue.
Pass of Fire (Destroyermen Book 14 ) by Taylor Anderson
https://www.amazon.com/Pass-Fire-Destroyermen-Book-14-ebook/dp/B07HDQXWYW/
Triumphant (Genesis Fleet, The Book 3) by Jack Campbell
https://www.amazon.com/Triumphant-Genesis-Fleet-Book-3-ebook/dp/B07GV29RDX/
These are good books, can't put it down reads, about a topic that will bore you to tears -- war.
Yet how many grand War Romances have you seen on film, usually World War II settings? How many marvelous novels have you read which are War Romances, and how many of your favorite kick-ass-heroines are from books set in a war zone?
War is a male occupation, a fascination and inherently interesting. Therefore, male writers, when using a war-plot, waste no words trying to convince their readers that war is interesting.
How many chapters of plot development do you build into a Romance to convince your readers that Romance is interesting?
When was the last time you asked yourself why you find Romance interesting?
What's interesting about it? Why would anyone WANT to meet that Perfect Stranger? What's wrong with the boy next door? Why would anyone WANT to fall in love with the boy next door when they could adventure with a Stranger?
What do we write about that needs no explanation?
That topic is what must be explained, (e.g. used in the THEME) to non-Romance readers in order to convince them that Romance is interesting, and then to intrigue them into being interested.
None of that process is evident in either Taylor Anderson's writing or Jack Campbell's series-of-series.
I love them both, gobble them up, but fight through the flat-boring and tedious wordage that doesn't acknowledged the Relationship energy necessary to drive a war-plot.
I've discussed both these writers and their series at length - there is so very much to say about what a Romance writer can learn by studying these two exemplary series, so I'm pointing you at the latest entries. Here are previous posts where I've discussed them:
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2010/05/orson-scott-card-mormon-jack-campbell.html
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2013/11/reviews-2-by-jacqueline-lichtenberg.html
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2015/02/depiction-part-6-depicting-money-and.html
Depicting Political Disruption From China To Today
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2016/07/depiction-part-16-reviews-26-depicting.html
Depicting Interstellar Commerce
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2016/08/depiction-part-18-interstellar-commerce.html
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2016/09/lost-fleet-beyond-frontier-leviathan-by.html
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2018/08/reviews-38-jack-campbell-genesis-fleet.html
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2019/01/reviews-45-military-science-fiction-and.html
Why would a writer of Science Fiction (or Paranormal) Romance need to read these books?
Surely, you've studied military tactics and weaponry issues. If you've ever played a video game, (and won), the principles of resource conservation and weapons superiority are ingrained in you. Tactics are second nature.
If you've ever captured a guy's attention, you've mastered the fine art of war, strategy, tactics, and that little black dress is your most potent weapon.
On your own battleground, you know what you're doing.
But what makes your battleground of interest to readers who hate Romance Genre?
Notice the phrasing of that question: "of interest to" -- that's the key. "Interesting" is not a property of a static element in the equation. It is something that the Artist Makes.
In graphic arts, we learn how to "lead the eye" of the viewer, and focus attention where we want it.
The same is true of writing stories -- grab the reader's attention, then lead that attention through an obstacle course to a goal which becomes more enticing with each passing page of the narrative.
The THEME hint on page 1-5 "grabs attention" and just before the final climax scene, the THEME STATED image-or-dialogue congratulates the Reader on having guessed correctly what is to be REVEALED by the nature of the ENDING.
The initial problem from page 1 (where the two forces that will conflict to generate the plot first meet) asks the question the writer thinks will intrigue the target reader for this novel.
The same story can be opened with a dozen different page-1 questions. The artist chooses an approach angle to the story's main problem the same way a photographer chooses an angle to snap a portrait image.
It's all about composition, and that is all about what is concealed and what is revealed.
When you write out in plain language what your theme is, you are presenting that them "on the nose" -- a blatant, can't-miss-it, insistent statement that will not allow the reader to use their imagination to "fill in the blanks."
What makes War and Relationship connected lies in that blank space the reader has to fill in.
But to entice the reader into a story framed in a genre they are convinced is un-interesting, the writer has to frame the blank space so that the reader wants to know what's in that dark hole.
The most boring material in our current world is considered to be philosophy, but it is in fact the most interesting material. And in fact, at this point in history, philosophy is the most explosive issue.
For example, a lot of people now think that Capitalism is Evil. But just a few decades ago, Capitalism was considered the greater Good.
Capitalism is a word that's been redefined, as has Socialism. That redefinition is possible because each of these words represents a system rooted in vast, but different, philosophical systems.
We all live in the same objective reality, but we all craft our own subjective reality from what we observe, then proceed with life assuming that what we don't see isn't there.
The writer's job as an Artist is to reveal what we are not seeing.
What we, today, are not-seeing is what we call Philosophy.
Both Jack Campbell and Taylor Anderson have created imaginary wars in which the sides are divided along the same philosophical line -- Totalitarian Vs Democracy
But each is analyzing Democracy differently, and in some instances peppering the argument with "Republic" -- or the USA hybrid a "Representative Democracy."
Taylor Anderson's alternate universe reality has peoples who are not "human" (anthropoid) but have governing philosophies based on their physiology. At the same time, his Global War has many human factions, torn from our Earth at different points in history. These human factions have evolved governing philosophies along different paths than our Earth has taken.
Taylor Anderson's Destroyermen series pits a wide variety of governing philosophies against each other, but follows a number of evolving Relationships among exceptional individuals whose decisions reshape the course of history on his well built world.
Jack Campbell's universe is huge, and contains several Series set in interstellar war-torn landscapes. The Genesis Fleet series focuses on an epoch of human expansion among the stars using "jump points" but ships that fight each other within Newton's laws.
Campbell's 3-D warfare tactics are Heinleinesque, and remind me also of Edward E. Smith's Lensman series.
Campbell develops the reasons why the newly settled planets far out there, barely able to conduct commerce with each other, using humanity's known history. On Earth, we spread out, settle new areas, then fight over resources, or just territory, and very often just over control of large populations.
And that's where Campbell uses philosophy so very well. He's drawn the newly settled planets' cultures based on the essential philosophic dichotomy currently splitting our own real world, "Totalitarianism vs. Democracy" in various versions.
Humanity's enemy of freedom is born within us. Given a few generations of freedom, we will breed a faction that is driven by the urge to CONTROL -- people who can't feel safe or at rest while other people make their own decisions.
Where those who need to control others gain command, war happens because they notice all these surrounding peoples who won't knuckle under.
So battle lines are drawn, alliances formed, and shooting wars held.
On Earth, now and historically, warriors battle without knowing what they are fighting for, but believing in their Cause, stated in some two-word motto.
Jack Campbell articulates what such mottos stand for, and what motivates large populations to espouse one or the other form of government. His THEME is that people who believe in the same values are natural allies, and even lovers -- with Romance in there, and true love as well.
Campbell's Characters have Relationships which they set aside in order to go into mortal combat to protect those they love. He has male and female warriors, equally good at personal combat, strategy and tactics, and computer hacking.
Interwoven with the action scenes, there are short dialogue scenes where the Characters articulate what they are fighting for, against, and why these ideas are important enough to die for.
For example, in The Genesis Fleet TRIUMPHANT, one of Campbell's Characters, Freya, says...
-------quote--------
"...I think there's an important point there. Those who have sought to impose their will on others have often done so in the name of peace and law and order, arguing that freedom must be given up to accomplish those aims. We know that's false. That's why we balk at giving up even a little of our freedom even when we see danger at our doors. But perhaps we should be thinking of it as if all of us were in a fight, and standing back to back to protect each other. We'd have given up some freedom of movement, but nothing that matters compared to knowing we can't be stabbed in the back."
------end quote---------
The quote is from a discussion about forming an interplanetary alliance of freedom-loving planets to fight off encroaching totalitarians who aim to take over an entire region.
That quote is from page 119 of 327 pages in book 3 of the Genesis Fleet sub-series all set in the same universe, but about the same War. Being an intermediate restatement of the theme, the reader doesn't get a feeling of finality but rather of progress.
The Characters are trying to figure out why they are doing what they are doing in order to figure out what the enemy is doing, in order to figure out what to do next to win this war.
But given other thematic utterances previously, the reader sees "this war" is a war against human nature, and war isn't the correct tool to win it.
Without war, though, humanity as a whole will definitely lose.
So War isn't the correct tool to solve the problem posed by War.
Later in his timeline, Campbell introduces Aliens who are playing a game of "Let's you and him fight" -- pitting these two factions of humanity against each other in order to conquer (perhaps wipe out) humanity.
The entirety of this Work of Art directly addresses the thematic issue of the role of government in species survival.
There is so much to be said on that theme that is better suited to Science Fiction Romance than to the Action Genre format Campbell is using. But he does have his most potent Hero Characters deeply involved in committed Relationships. Their primary motive in every act of war is protecting those Relationships.
It would be so easy to spin off a sub-series of pure Romance from this material.
I highly recommend you pay close attention to both these writers, and both these series.
Jacqueline Lichtenberg
http://jacquelinelichtenberg.com
Saturday, July 20, 2019
Unlawful Surveillance
In December 2018, my holiday travel was disrupted by the Gatwick airport (London, England) drone scare, but long prior to that, when my offspring participated in rowing competitions, I was alarmed by what I perceived to be the danger of hobbyist drones out over the water which could easily have caused a crew to founder, and perhaps worse.
Of course, there is also the problem of permission. One is not supposed, under the law, to be permitted to photograph and disseminate photographs of under-age children. When under age girls are rowing, they are usually scantily clad and often wet.
I do not sunbathe nude on my secluded, enclosed flat roof... perish the thought... but it is bad enough that Google routinely photographs my private flat spaces. I do not want my neighbors in my airspace. I don't want Amazon there, either.
Here's a fascinating faculty publication by Hillary B Farber of the University of Massachusetts School of Law about the efficacy of trespass, nuisance and privacy torts as applied to drones.
https://scholarship.law.umassd.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1190&context=fac_pubs
Huge thunderstorm incoming. Must end.
All the best,
Rowena Cherry
Thursday, July 18, 2019
Learning from Fake News
Cory Doctorow's latest LOCUS column explores what "fake news," conspiracy theories, and hoaxes can reveal about our culture:
Fake News Is an OracleHe begins by discussing the mistaken idea that science fiction predicts the future. Instead, SF "can serve as a warning or an inspiration, influencing the actions that people take and thus the future that they choose." A second function of SF, where the analogy with fake news comes in, is to expose "our societal fears and aspirations for the future" somewhat the way a Ouija board planchette reveals the fears and desires of the users by responding to unconscious movements of their hands. As Doctorow points out, even the most innovative spec-fic creators must choose their material from an existing array of tropes that resonate with their audience. Authors write "stories about the futures they fear and relish." The fiction that gets published, achieves bestseller status, and captures the imaginations of readers reflects hopes and fears dominant in the current popular culture: "The warning in the tale is a warning that resonates with our current anxieties; the tale’s inspiration thrums with our own aspirations for the future."
Similarly, a hoax, conspiracy theory, or false or deceptive news item that gets believed by enough people to make it socially significant "tells you an awful lot about the world we live in and how our fellow humans perceive that world." As an example, Doctorow analyzes the anti-vaccine movement and why its position on the alleged dangers of vaccination seems plausible to so many people. Asking what makes people vulnerable to conspiracy theories and false beliefs, he speculates, "I think it’s the trauma of living in a world where there is ample evidence that our truth-seeking exercises can’t be trusted." While the first step in fighting fake news is "replacing untrue statements with true ones," a deeper solution that addresses the roots of the problem is also needed.
Speaking of true and false beliefs, and harking back to the topic of my post of the week before last, I was boggled by a widely quoted comment from a certain junior congresscritter: "I think that there's a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct than about being morally right." Say WHAT? As one article about this remark is quick to point out, using precise language and accurate facts isn't mutually exclusive with being morally right. Ideally, we should aspire to do both:
CNNThe article summarizes the attitude behind the Congresswoman's remark this way, noting that it's not exclusive to her: "My specific fact may be wrong, but the broader point I was making still holds. The problem with that thinking is that it says that the underlying facts don't matter as long as the bigger-picture argument still coheres." This attitude is said (correctly, in my opinion) to lead to a moral "slippery slope."
I would go further, though. I'd call having the correct facts one of the essential preconditions to being morally right. How can we make moral judgments if we aren't certain of the objective materials we're working with? If a speaker's statements about concrete, verifiable facts can't be trusted, should we trust that speaker's version of truth on more complex, abstract matters?
As writers, we in particular should place a high value on accuracy of language. Referring again to C. S. Lewis (as I frequently tend to do), his book THE ABOLITION OF MAN, first published way back in 1947, begins with an analysis of a couple of secondary-school English textbooks sent to him for review. From certain passages in those texts implying that all value is subjective, Lewis expands the discussion to wider philosophical issues and constructs a detailed argument in defense of the real existence of objective values, "the belief that certain attitudes are really true, and others really false, to the kind of thing the universe is and the kind of things we are. . . . And because our approvals and disapprovals are thus recognitions of objective value or responses to an objective order, therefore emotional states can be in harmony with reason. . . or out of harmony with reason." And how can we recognize which values are "true" or "false" in this higher sense without verifiable knowledge of "the kind of thing the universe is"?
Margaret L. Carter
Carter's CryptTuesday, July 16, 2019
Business Model of Writers In A Changing World Part 4 - Patreon and Teaching
Previous Parts in this series
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2013/01/business-model-of-writers-in-changing.html
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2013/03/business-model-of-writers-in-changing.html which is about Google + which is gone, now, in 2019.
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2018/03/business-model-of-writers-in-changing.html
Here is a perfect website presenting and giving access to Cat Rambo, one of the most famous best selling writers in our sprawling and ever-morphing field of fiction. Study it. You want to be able to present yourself and your work like this.
http://www.kittywumpus.net/blog/the-fashion-of-worldbuilding-clothes-technology-and-taboos/
You know how we've discussed how to build the world up around your Characters, Plot, Story, and most of all THEME. Details such as discussed in this course are not chosen at random or because they seem exciting ideas. They are chosen to convey information without expository lumps.
She has her own novels, plus some books on writing craft on Amazon:
https://smile.amazon.com/Cat-Rambo/e/B002LFMXGG
Cat Rambo has a Patreon link on her website: http://www.patreon.com/catrambo
I've seen more and more very famous, widely published, very versatile, long established writers joining the Patreon business model.
Patreon is an online way of allowing everyday people to become Patrons of the Arts, just like old time Aristocracy.
By subscribing to an author's work, you not only get something from them every month, but you also get to influence the direction of the artistic field's development.
Patreon is the professional manifestation of the oldest fanzine based fan activity.
Study Patreon's business model and use it to leverage your zone of influence.
I don't do a Patreon group, but if I had more time I probably would. In fact, if I were starting my career today, I'd start with Patreon.
Jacqueline Lichtenberg
http://jacquelinelichtenberg.com
Monday, July 15, 2019
Amazon Kindle Book Sale July 2019
Saturday, July 13, 2019
A Facebook Event Might Not Be The Best Venue To Organize Illegal Activities
Good device hygiene means clearing your devices' cookies, cache, and history often. You might notice CLOUDFLARE cookies.
Film maker and copyright blogger Ellen Seidler of Vox Indie has something to say about Cloudflare and the piracy it hosts and from which it profits, thanks to the inadequacies of the DMCA.
http://www.voxindie.org/piracys-scofflaws-all-roads-lead-through-cloudflare/
Ellen's interesting piece illustrates a copyright owner's judicious use of Search (of Whois + an alleged pirate sitename) to discover information.
In the same vein, but way more extensively, thetrichordist illustrates astounding investigative tactics to track down villains, conspiracies, downright illegal and wicked (alleged) organization of illegal activities for apparently furthering political and profitable agendas, and corruption in metaphorically high places.
Ajitation Event
It's very long, contains plentiful peregrinations (love that word!), but exposes some freakishly flexible definitions of acceptable behavior...and also the naivete of some Facebook users.
By the way, this week Wozniak warned the world to wean themselves rapidly off that site.
https://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/techwatch/alexander-dolhun/2019/07/11/wozniak-warns-public-get-facebook
Nothing to do with Facebook, piracy, conspiracy theories etc, but some light relief for science fiction story plotters, the wellness.com editor reports on a theory that a love of music is what separates humankind from simiankind.
https://www.wellness.com/blog/13294901/did-this-change-the-human-brain/wellness-editor?utm_source=1000-6030&utm_placement=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter&utm_content=WDCnewsletter
As this blogger read that article, one remembered philosophy, literature studies, and "the music of the spheres" ...
Meanwhile, SFWA adds its voice to that of copyrightalliance and authorsguild in urging individuals to contact their Representatives and Senators to express support for the CASE act.
SFWA members are invited to a fly in on July 18th to speak with Congress members and staff in person about the shortcomings of the DMCA and the need for a small claims process for small fry copyright owners who have had their copyrights infringed and have no remedy.
Email LegalAffairs@sfwa.org for more info.
Authors Guild shares this link to co-sponsors in the House (possibly to be thanked and encouraged)
https://authorsguild.us10.list-manage.com/track/click?u=727ad03949c981c140a2bf125&id=3f3d28917c&e=4daaa77539
And this link for Senators:
https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/senate-bill/1273/cosponsors?q=%7B%22search%22%3A%5B%22CASE+Act%22%5D%7D&r=3&s=1
Alas, this blogger's Representatives and Senators are not on the lists. One must write again. Now, dear Reader, please remember to delete cookies.
All the best,
Rowena Cherry
Thursday, July 11, 2019
When Publishers Fold
Recently, author Delilah Devlin hosted me on her blog, where I wrote about what to do with books and stories "orphaned" by the closing of a publisher:
Rescuing Orphaned WorksIn re-releasing the fiction mentioned in this post, I had the advantage that those novels, novellas, and short stories had been thoroughly edited before their original publication. Therefore, I could have confidence that professional editors had already deemed them to be publishable. Still, I welcomed the opportunity to comb through them again. It's a rare piece of writing that gets into print with no typos, not to mention examples of minor stylistic awkwardness that need a bit of polishing. Also, one of the publishers that closed, Ellora's Cave, seemed to have an irrational aversion to commas. I'm delighted to be able to put the punctuation in those stories back where it belongs. As an English degree holder and former professional proofreader, I cringed to imagine that some readers would think I didn't know the right way to punctuate a sentence.
As you may know, the Marion Zimmer Bradley Literary Works Trust is publishing its final installments of the Darkover and "Sword and Sorceress" anthologies this year. I'm sure lots of other readers and writers will miss those books as much as I will. The Trust has also decided to let many earlier volumes go out of print. That was disappointing news, because I'd expected my stories in the older anthologies to remain available in perpetuity. Thanks to the Internet, e-books, and self-publishing, I was able to collect my "Sword and Sorceress" contributions in a Kindle collection. (The MZB estate gave Darkover contributors permission to reprint those out-of-print stories, too, but unfortunately I didn't realize until too late that the files were no longer on my hard drive. Luckily, Amazon has many used copies of the Darkover volumes for sale, so the books and their contents haven't faded into nonexistence.)
In addition to minor edits and corrections, another decision to face in re-issuing older works is whether to update the settings into the contemporary era. With my first vampire novel, DARK CHANGELING, I had a definite in-universe reason for the year of its action, because of when it made sense for the protagonist to have been born. Therefore, I didn't change the time period, with the result that the date of the direct sequel, CHILD OF TWILIGHT, explicitly set thirteen to fourteen years later, couldn't change either. That's one difficulty I could avoid with several of my fantasy stories; the culture of "fairy-tale realm" or "vaguely Dark Ages England" remains unaffected by advances in computer or cell-phone technology.
In a way, it's a pleasure to have control over the presentation of some of my older fiction. On the down side, a self-published author also bears the full burden of marketing and promotion. How does one stimulate fresh interest in books and stories that readers have already been exposed to in earlier releases?
Margaret L. Carter
Carter's CryptTuesday, July 09, 2019
Theme-Plot-Character-Worldbuilding Integration Part 13 - Historical Verisimilude
Previous parts in this advanced series are indexed at:
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2015/12/index-to-theme-plot-character.html
When writing science fiction romance, you are telling a story that develops differently from the stories the reader has seen unfolding among their real life acquaintances.
The difference is caused by one element. The mistake many beginning writers make is the same mistake many beginning scientists make: varying more than one variable at a time.
Art is a selective recreation of reality, not reality itself. In reality itself, many things vary at once, and nothing stays the same for long.
Science is an art form, and as such is SELECTIVE in focus.
Humans do this selective narrowing of focus in art and in architecture, mechanics, agriculture, everything we do, because our minds can't handle too many variables at once. Even multitasking is done by cycling the selective focus rapidly between processes.
So we do this kind of narrowing in both story-reading and story-writing.
The writer "establishes" or nails down each variable at a time, usually on page 1, or at least in chapter 1, until only one thing is left to change under the impact of conflict-resolution processes.
For example, in writing a Historical -- the "setting" is nailed down as one of the first variables. -- it is THE PAST. How far past, what year, what era, are indicated by the details mentioned as the conflict is established.
In films, the automobiles (or carriages) by year-model or style will tell the viewer where and when this story is happening.
The writer decides WHEN and WHERE to set the story according to the THEME, and what the writer has to say about that theme.
We've discussed theme from many angles. Here is one of the series featuring theme:
https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2014/04/index-to-theme-worldbuilding.html
The theme is very often the solution or resolution of the conflict which generates the plot.
Once you have the theme, you can find the point in history where your theme is the resolution of a social or cultural conflict larger than the Characters you are writing about.
From that point, you have a clear path into the Plot, which is the series of events triggered by the actions or decisions of the Main Character.
If you're using real history, you already have your world built for you, but if you're doing science fiction or fantasy, or Paranormal Romance, you have to take the real world that was, and vary ONE ELEMENT to generate your alternate history.
For a very long series, you can pinpoint a different variable for each volume, so you can point out a long list of ways your pre-history varies from your reader's -- and thus how your alternate universe would lead to a different present the your reader lives in.
The trick to getting readers to suspend disbelief and go with you into your alternate-past is verisimilitude.
Even those who live in a mono-cultural world are aware of cultural norms, and the older readers are aware of how norms change, while younger readers see changed norms as "reality" and the world their elders live in as "fantasy."
One of the inescapable realities these days is the increasing speed with which our culture is changing.
One change ignored by many Historical Romance writers has to do with the implications of the embedded sexism of just 50 or 60 years ago. Such a few decades seems like ancient history to the modern Romance reader, but to some of the older people the reader works with, 50 years ago is the present.
We see that on the political stage as older people running for office casually, without thinking about it, put their hands on other people. We see it in offices where older people in decision making positions simply assume the privileges of those who preceded them.
Current young people assume (as the young always have) that their cultural values and behaviors are correct and morally superior to those of older (say, 70-somethings) people.
THEME: my culture is superior to yours, or to all cultures.
THEME: Modern = Better
THEME: Women who let men get away with it are contemptible
THEME: Women who refuse to let men get away with it are contemptible
Think about that. Which era in human history -- or future history -- would you choose to showcase each of those themes.
PLOT: A woman fights cultural norms and wins her freedom (Joan of Arc)
PLOT: A woman understands her place in a man's world, and prevails anyway, without confrontation
PLOT: A woman raises daughters to champion the cause of women (owning property, voting, holding a job with equal pay, not-having children).
PLOT: A woman refuses to obey men and dies a martyr
CHARACTER: A man learns his home is his woman's castle
CHARACTER: A man learns women make better bosses in the workplace
CHARACTER: A man proves women are not capable of a man's work
CHARACTER: A woman refuses to let a man get away with excluding her
All of these conflict lines raise the cultural questions related to THEME.
If you choose a setting of the 1960's going all the way back to Roman Empire Times, you have to deal with the realities of how woman raised in that culture reacted to being told "women can't do that." And contrary to modern Romance novels, women back then who made an overt issue of the "man's world exclusion principle," didn't succeed.
When women gained the right to vote in the USA, their husbands assumed the right to tell them how to vote. (honestly!)
How many actually did that might be calculated from the election results records. Most did, I suspect.
Why? Why would a woman not exercise independent judgement?
One answer would be that women are human, and had been raised in the same culture as the men.
Depicting that reality with your point of view Character's inner dialogue is as difficult today as depicting the inner dialogue of an Alien from outer space.
A respectable character with self-respect, a character the reader wants to identify with, will not knuckle under.
How could you explain the emotional reaction of a woman with all the requisite scientific credentials to apply for a particular job getting the following letter in response to her application?
This is a real letter sent to a real woman who was well qualified for the job she had applied for, and who was living far away at the time and couldn't go in for an interview. If she had, she would have been treated politely, as politely as this letter is phrased. At that time, this letter was POLITE, and proper, and not in any way discriminatory or offensive or illegal.
If that image is hard to see, here is a transcript of part of it.
------quote of old letter--------
While we very much appreciate your interest, I fear I see no way in which we can pursue with you very directly, at this stage, the possibility of your filling one of the positions advertised. Those positions actually are designed to prepare me for service in our regional editorial offices; we have found through experience that the nature of the duties and of the demands placed upon our regional editors is such that we cannot ask young ladies to undertake them.
We do have from time to time (and we have at this time) openings on the editorial staff of our research journals . The duties here are different from those on the staff of Chemical and Engineering News in that the work is almost entirely concerned with editing the contributions of other scientists, rather than gathering information and doing the writing oneself.
We should be glad to consider you for one of the latter positions, if you feel this kind of work would have strong interest for you, Even here, however, we could not consider placing you on our staff without having first explored the matter with you quite extensively through personal interviews here, Unfortunately, the distance between us--or more appropriately, the high cost of bridging that distance—makes it impractical to consider bringing interviewees. I fear that unless you find a way to travel and can then approach us from we shall not be in a very realistic position to discuss employment possibilities with you,
Your job as a Romance writer is to create a Character who would not be disturbed or offended by that letter, and would not see it as a symptom of something wrong with the world that she has to fix. Make the reader understand the inner world of that woman, walk a mile in her moccasins, and be comfortable in a world where gender is destiny. If you can do that, you are a science fiction writer. An Alien Romance would be no challenge to your skills.
Build your historical world, your theme, and your character's inner self-image so that, presented with this rejection letter, she believes that only men can do that work, and goes looking for other kinds of work.
Not, "I can do it but you won't let me," which is a child's response, but "I might be able to do it but I'd be miserable at it." And she takes herself off to do something she will be good at, and happy doing.
This would be a female character who has no chip on her shoulder and is fully mature. Her story is about how she triumphs by following a different path than she had expected to.
Or if you're playing with alternate universes, you can use two versions of this same woman, and show how, if she'd gotten the job, the whole world would be changed one way (say, she'd spark the invention of Artificial Intelligence), while if she didn't get the job, the world would be changed in another way (say, she raises a son who turns into the Bill Gates of that world).
THEME: the significance of a woman's life is measured only by the achievements of her son
Build a world where that truth is joyfully embraced by all women, who do not see that part of their world as in need of change. Those women are busy instigating some other change. What is that other change?
Jacqueline Lichtenberg
http://jacquelinelichtenberg.com










