But not yet

This is probably the best shot I’m going to get tonight since it’s getting dark.

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I promise I’ll stop soon

Here’s a good shot of both pairs of wings.

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In which I’m just taking pictures of bugs all night

Last night I got up at 3 o’clock in the morning to stand in my front yard and watch the Perseids. I saw about six meteors in 20 minutes. This is way more interesting. This guy is now completely out of his exoskeleton.

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Hi there!

There are like five of them in various stages of molt right now. This is amazing.

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Don’t mind me

…just climbing this tree here, getting ready to molt, all in broad daylight and stuff.

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On book sales: Mostly bad news division

I’ve gotten a couple of questions about this on Twitter recently so I may as well talk about it here:  the 99 cent price point failed utterly to drive any additional sales.  In fact, I haven’t sold a book since July 25th.  For the last few days, The Benevolence Archives, Vol. 1 has returned to its original $2.99 price point.  I had always planned to perma-free the book sooner or later, so the lack of sales lately may be accelerating that decision.  We’ll see.

Smashwords claims that I have literally no sales at all from Barnes and Noble, the iBookstore, or Smashwords itself.  I don’t know how seriously to take this as I know that bought a copy of the damn book through the iBookstore, so I’ve had at least one sale that way.  It does tell me that there have been eighteen downloads of the sample chapter, which I feel should have generated at least one sale by now, but who the hell knows.

I mentioned this a day or two ago, but my next book, Skylights, has got a page up on Goodreads.  If you’re a Goodreads user, feel free to drop the book into your “to read” shelf if you like, and send me a friend request while you’re at it.  I’m eagerly anticipating the day when I have more friends on Goodreads than I do on Facebook.  The way things are going, it’s not going to be long.

Follow-up on “Question for Readers”

The following is a non-exhaustive and in no particular order list of authors whose new books are always purchased immediately and in hardcover.  I’m going to forget some.

  • John Scalzi
  • Warren Ellis
  • Salman Rushdie
  • China Mieville
  • Seanan McGuire/Mira Grant (note: her books are not always reliably released in HC)
  • Django Wexler
  • Scott Lynch (with his next book)
  • John Irving
  • Helene Wecker
  • Brandon Sanderson
  • GRRM (but I do it out of spite)
  • Stephen King
  • Kevin Hearne
  • Patrick Rothfuss

The following are authors whose books, so far, I’m always buying, but buy in paperback:

  • Alastair Reynolds
  • Charlie Stross
  • Tana French

As soon as these folk start seeing hardback releases, they’re upgraded on the spot:

  • N.K. Jemisin
  • Saladin Ahmed
  • Michael J. Sullivan
  • Cherie Priest

 

An unfortunate observation

alive-exhausted-teacherSpent all day surrounded by teachers.  I’m not sure whether I can use the word “other” in that sentence anymore.  It hit me today that I could, if I wanted, use the word sabbatical to describe this year, since at least in theory I plan on returning to the classroom next year, so I think my ten-second “So what do you do?” job description is going to be to continue to describe myself as a middle school math teacher and then admit that I’m on sabbatical if pressed for further detail.

But that’s not the point.  The observation is this: it was rather amazing to me just how exhausted everyone already looks.  Now, granted, for a lot of folks this was their first day back, and we did start awfully early in the morning, but I know the difference between exhausted and tired and I’ve chosen that word on purpose.  It’s not a thing I’ve noticed at pre-school events in previous years.  Just about every adult in that room looked fucking exhausted already and we haven’t even started.

Not a good sign.  And I’ll tell you what else: not for a single second did I regret my decision to not teach this year.  That will come, I think– we’ll see what happens when the kids get back– but it sure as hell ain’t here yet.