ANNOUNCEMENT!

skylightscover02Skylights might– MIGHT!!– be available in print (paperback, specifically) within the next couple of weeks.

Reason for the weasel words: I am expecting the cover to be rejected at some point in the next 24 hours.  I will then resubmit it in a version that I think they’re more likely to take.  So that’s Friday right there.  I’m not certain at this time whether they require a print copy to be approved before distribution, and that will probably take a touch longer.  The interior of the book looks great.  Just need the cover to match that.  I have used my day off to pound on this and I think it’s good to go.

Until then, it’s available digitally for just $4.95!


EDIT: I have reviewed the digital proofs– they fiddled with the spine a little bit on their own, which is fine, but otherwise the book looks great.  They’re sending me five proof copies, which should arrive next Wednesday.  Right now there’s a little timer icon on the “Review Proof” menu, so I can’t approve it yet– but it looks like we’re not more than a week and a half or so away from Skylights being available in print.

Awesome.

On libraries and ebooks

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I own– understand that this is not an exaggeration– thousands of books.  There are bookshelves in most of the rooms in the house; something like thirteen or fourteen full-size six-footers, and a couple of what are actually supposed to be high-capacity DVD racks that I discovered were the perfect size to shelve paperbacks. I love books, which is a distinct thing from loving reading.  I do love to read, mind you, but I derive a distinct amount of pleasure from the book as a physical object.  I’ve converted over to digital music easily; I never cared about the CD or the cassette tape as a thing.   Books, on the other hand, are things, and their thingness– their physicality, if I want to use a word that a literate person might actually choose rather than a dumb-sounding word that I made up– is inseparable from the pleasure they give me by reading them.

I’m never, ever going to want to switch my library over to digital.  Never.  Never ever ever ever ever.  I think ebooks are, by and large, stupid and horrible and I think the effect they’ve had on the publishing industry is terrible.  I also don’t like– and this extends to MP3s as well– the notion that you don’t really own an ebook; you’re just getting to use it until your device craps out or somebody decides you don’t get to own it anymore, at which point they can just delete it from your device remotely and, well, didn’t you read the EULA?

Good luck deleting my books.  Yes, yes, they can be lost if my house burns down, and there was the Great Dog Pissening of 2010 that lost me a couple of shelves’ worth of books, but I can literally count the number of books that I’ve lost or had destroyed in my entire life and still not get to fifty.  Digital files disappear for any number of reasons all the goddamned time, and good luck getting insurance to replace files lost on your beep boops if your computer dies.

(Blah blah cloud computing yeah good point.  BUT STILL.)

Enter Oyster.

Oyster is, effectively, Netflix for books.  Or, the way I’m thinking about it, a digital library.  $10 a month gets you access to their entire library, and they keep (I believe; my request for an invite hasn’t been honored yet) the last ten titles or so local on your phone/iPad so that you can be offline and still read.

I don’t use regular libraries very often– by which I mean “I haven’t set foot in a library in years”– because I like owning my shit.  But I can easily imagine a universe in which putting $10 a month into Oyster helps me out in the long run, and not by decreasing the amount of money I spend on books– just by decreasing the amount I spend stupidly on books.  This is not going to decrease my desire to own my books, but it *will* keep me from buying stuff as an experiment– or at least decrease how often I’m doing that– and ending up not liking it.  I can be more flexible about new authors and new genres now in a way I wasn’t willing to before.  And if I end up liking what I see, well, off to the bookstore (or, sadly, more likely, to Amazon) I go to get a physical copy.

This is waaaaaay better than spending $10 for a book that isn’t actually a book.  Massively, hugely better.  I have some questions about how royalties get to authors– I know services like Pandora generally claim to pay in terms of “exposure,” and that’s not worth a whole lot– but if previewing someone’s work on Oyster means I buy their hard copy books, I can’t imagine those authors complaining about it that often.  Some people (most?) won’t be doing that, obviously, but will.  Which is gonna have to be good enough.


Briefly, because I feel like it– Benjamin Percy’s Red Moon is a well-written, gripping, engaging story that will absolutely enrage you if you know anything about the various struggles that people of color across the world have gone through in the last forever or so.  As it turns out, every minority everywhere– racial, ethnic, religious, political, etcetera– were actually werewolves.  Well, not so much; more like their lives are erased entirely in favor of “that actually happened to werewolves.”  There is one black person in the book, mentioned briefly, and at the end a bunch of Mexicans inexplicably show up to menace the white main characters for a bit, but otherwise– the civil rights movement?  Werewolves.  The March on Washington?  Werewolves.  The Days of Rage, in Chicago in 1969?  About werewolves.  The Weathermen?  A group of werewolves.  Tahrir Square?  Werewolves.  Occupy fucking Wall Street?  Werewolves.  9/11?  Perpetrated by werewolves.  Israel?  In between Finland and Russia now; populated by werewolves.  Geronimo?  Was a werewolf, and not so much concerned about Native Americans.

And again, because I want to make sure this is clear:  we’re not talking Buffy the Vampire Slayer-style “all these people were actually werewolves, but no one knows about it” werewolves.  No; the human race has been perfectly aware of werewolves since something like the ninth century and the book simply erases every other minority group ever.  The Days of Rage weren’t about Vietnam.  They were about werewolves.  The protests in Egypt were about how the government treated werewolves.  The actual liberation struggles that happened in the real world that weren’t about werewolves, because werewolves don’t exist, are simply erased.  The man has literally cleanly removed all minorities from history, except for that odd pack of radiation-loving Mexicans at the end of the book, and that makes as little sense as it sounds like it might make.  People are going to focus on the terrorism and conclude that he’s using werewolves as a stand-in for Muslims; no, it’s far more systematic than that.  Werewolves are all minorities everywhere, and those minorities basically no longer exist in his book.

Your enjoyment of this book will be predicated entirely on how capable you are of not noticing that that is happening.  My gripes with the book are entirely political.  Other than that, it’s a great read.  But that’s kind of on the order of “Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how did you enjoy the play?” for me.  Maybe not for you; I dunno.

In which I stab my eyes

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So– hah– this post was gonna start with the words “just a quick note, since I want to be at school by 8:30” when I sat down twenty minutes ago to start writing it, before I 1) decided to look and see how much a song I heard on the radio would cost to download and 2) make sure to download a new album onto my non-3G iPad so that I could listen to it at work today.   I was going to spend a couple of minutes talking about this New York testing fiasco, where they switched to a Common Core-based standardized test and, in accordance with prophecy, “proficiency” scores fell through the fucking floor.

Neither of those two things worked, though, and now I’m all “fuck everything digital” and no it has not escaped me that I’m using a computer to write that on the internet, and if you’re so clever how come you haven’t figured out a way to go fuck yourself yet?

One, the goddamn MP3 album was three bucks more expensive than the CD.  And that’s bullshit, always.  You cannot charge me more to Not Send Me a Thing than you do to Send Me a Thing.  The digital version of a thing should always be less expensive than the Actual Thing.  And most of the time shouldn’t exist.  I’ve been converted to MP3s because MP3s are genuinely more useful than CDs are– yes, I really do want my entire twelve-some-odd-thousand song music collection with me all the goddamn time, because I never know what I’m going to be in the mood for, and my tastes are catholic enough that it’s difficult to even come up with a proper representative sample.

I pay $25 a year for iTunes Match, which is supposed to ensure that everything on my computer also lives in the cloud and can be accessed by both my phone and my iPad.  Granted, in the case of the iPad, if I want to be able to listen to something when not in reach of a wireless network I need to specifically download it, but I knew that when I bought the thing.

So why is the fuckin’ album I want to download the only album that doesn’t seem to have shown up on the iPad, almost a week after I initially downloaded it?  Hell if I know, and attempting to convince my iPad to find the damn album has unleashed hell in a manner that I don’t have time to describe.  Needless to say: technology clusterfuck, and nothing has the right album covers anymore, among other more massive but less obvious problems, and THIS DOESN’T FUCKING HAPPEN WITH CDS, GODDAMMIT, AND MAYBE SOCIETY SHOULD THINK ABOUT THIS SHIT A BIT?  Earlier this week just about my entire (small, as I hate them) collection of books disappeared out of both devices.  I had to redownload everygoddamnthing twice.  Have I ever had to redownload a physical book?  Nope, not once, and the total number of books I’ve lost or accidentally destroyed over the course of my life is probably twenty, most of which were lost in The Great Dog Piss Incident of 2009.  It happens to digital files all the fucking time.

I fucking hate the future.  Also, standardized tests, but I’ll bitch about that later, apparently.