Tag Archives: Kindle

The Apprentice Fairy Godmother now available for Kindle

The Apprentice Fairy Godmother is now available for Kindle!

Georgia and Harrison Ford’s story is now available.  I’ve had the first chapter available as an excerpt here, but am now offering it as an e-book.

Student fairy godmother Georgia Rhodes, youngest of four, is used to causing trouble to get attention.  When she’s handed her last assignment before graduation and full-fledged apprentice status, she expects a simple task with a newborn baby – not the complications of a full grown man.  She’ll fail if she doesn’t complete the assignment and find a wife for him.  But how can she, when she might want the job for herself?

Harrison Ford (no, not that one,)is a nerdish actuary with a dislike of the notoriety his name brings.  He doesn’t have time for an opinionated, accident-prone godmother whose magic seems to be on the fritz.  Why should he fall in with her matchmaking schemes when the women she presents are dull in comparison?

This is one of my favorite stories.  Harrison has no idea how his world will change when Georgia poofs into his office then follows him home.  His bland, vanilla life is turned upside down as she invades his life. She’s not from Disney casting, and her hot body forces him to think of polar bears, ice cubes and IRS audits to cool down.

Georgia just wants to pass her final exam, but she’s left wandless, and her spells only work when she’s not consciously thinking of them.  While she tries to do her duty, she’s plagued by a supervisor who talks in Twitterese, Harrison’s jealous teen daughter, and his mother, who has a definite opinion of what’s best.

Tuesday of purpleinkdesigns did a marvelous job on the cover.  Can’t you see the mischief in Georgia’s eyes and Harrison’s exasperation?

Go to Amazon today and purchase The Apprentice Fairy Godmother!

News soon on my next book (or should I say new news about an old book?)

p.s. I’ll be adding it to Barnes & Noble’s bookshelf soon.

The publishing decision you need to make

I attended our monthly writers’ group meeting today.  As always, I returned home in total awe of our members.  They are a fantastic group and never take no as an answer.

It’s easy to forget between meetings, when you’re sitting in the basement staring at a blank screen, that there are others just like you.  As Emily, our newest member said, “Writing a book is hard.”  Yes, it is, but we keep plugging away, writing, critiquing, editing, submitting and hoping for publication.

But boys and girls, the road to publication is no longer a small trail with a select group of tollgate keepers deciding who gets to progress forward.  The publishing industry is in the midst of turmoil.  Those cart tracks have expanded to four-lane super highways.  Anyone who wants to be published nowadays can be.

Is that a problem?  Will junk and dreck clog the choices we have?  Probably.  But think about that for a moment.  How many people actually write a book?  As Emily noted, it’s hard.  Damn hard.  Your competition will remain the same.  If xxxx people finished a manuscript in 2006 b.k. (before Kindle), a similar amount will write a book in 2011.  The only difference is that more of them will become available to readers.

How many of your fellow authors are really, really good, on the cusp of being accepted for publication but have never quite got the nod from New York?  I can tell you, their chances lessen more and more.  Publishers can’t scramble fast enough to keep up with the minute-to-minute changes in the industry.  They hang on to their best selling authors, squeeze the mid-list and don’t take chances on newcomers.

How are you going to get a break if you don’t make your own?

Yes, there’s something to be said for traditional publishing.  I’ll always love the feel of a book in my hand.  I miss being able to thumb through the pages to the part I want to re-read (2/3 through the book on the left hand side.)  But, I can carry dozens of books in my purse on an e-reader.  (which will be super handy during my upcoming eight hour flight).  I can have what I want to read available within seconds instead of ordering it through the mail or hunting through library lists.

Ebooks have their drawbacks, but, at Amazon, they’ve already surpassed sales of paperbacks.  The Kindle (I’m using it as the standard of all ereaders) is not even four years old. Wait until the price drops below $99. Do you not think everyone will be using ereaders?

Traditional publishing might not go away, but do you want to miss out on the greatest opportunity that has ever happened to the industry?  The industry you’re so desperate to break into?

Think about alternative ways to offer your book to your readers.  That’s all I ask.  Think about it.

I know I am.

The publishing decision you need to make

I attended our monthly writers’ group meeting today.  As always, I returned home in total awe of our members.  They are a fantastic group and never take no as an answer.

It’s easy to forget between meetings, when you’re sitting in the basement staring at a blank screen, that there are others just like you.  As Emily, our newest member said, “Writing a book is hard.”  Yes, it is, but we keep plugging away, writing, critiquing, editing, submitting and hoping for publication.

But boys and girls, the road to publication is no longer a small trail with a select group of tollgate keepers deciding who gets to progress forward.  The publishing industry is in the midst of turmoil.  Those cart tracks have expanded to four-lane super highways.  Anyone who wants to be published nowadays can be.

Is that a problem?  Will junk and dreck clog the choices we have?  Probably.  But think about that for a moment.  How many people actually write a book?  As Emily noted, it’s hard.  Damn hard.  Your competition will remain the same.  If xxxx people finished a manuscript in 2006 b.k. (before Kindle), a similar amount will write a book in 2011.  The only difference is that more of them will become available to readers.

How many of your fellow authors are really, really good, on the cusp of being accepted for publication but have never quite got the nod from New York?  I can tell you, their chances lessen more and more.  Publishers can’t scramble fast enough to keep up with the minute-to-minute changes in the industry.  They hang on to their best selling authors, squeeze the mid-list and don’t take chances on newcomers.

How are you going to get a break if you don’t make your own?

Yes, there’s something to be said for traditional publishing.  I’ll always love the feel of a book in my hand.  I miss being able to thumb through the pages to the part I want to re-read (2/3 through the book on the left hand side.)  But, I can carry dozens of books in my purse on an e-reader.  (which will be super handy during my upcoming eight hour flight).  I can have what I want to read available within seconds instead of ordering it through the mail or hunting through library lists.

Ebooks have their drawbacks, but, at Amazon, they’ve already surpassed sales of paperbacks.  The Kindle (I’m using it as the standard of all ereaders) is not even four years old. Wait until the price drops below $99.

Traditional publishing might not go away, but do you want to miss out on the greatest opportunity that has ever happened to the industry?  The industry you’re so desperate to break into?

Think about alternative ways to offer your book to your readers.  That’s all I ask.  Think about it.

I know I am.

Like a kid in a toy box

Kindle loving Steve smiles at his purchase

Kindle loving Steve smiles at his purchase

I have a Kindle.  It is smooth and sweet and I’m thinking of naming it Steve.  As in Guttenberg (2 “s”).  As in Gutenberg (1 “s”) Press and Gutenberg Project.  I love www.gutenberg.org, where all books are free and I can find first hand accounts of whatever I’m researching.  Like Victorian Egypt, where my characters decided to go.  Why, I don’t know.  They’re unpredictable like that.

My book budget (ha, ha, as if) hasn’t taken too great a hit.  I’ve downloaded two books and a magazine subscription.  I’ll let you know about “The Help” when I’m done reading it.

Meanwhile, head over to www.writerslikeme.com for my handy writing hints and publishing news.