Hey, way to go.

Will definitely grab a copy.

On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 1:24 AM, Handsome John <[email protected]> wrote:

> Congrats, Richard. I'll check them out when I get paid this week.
>
> And thanks for that link. There's a few little interesting things in
> there. Most daunting, though, is his warning against jumping straight into
> a novel/series. I'm 130,000 words into my first novel in a series, haha, so
> I think it's too late to back out.
>
> But I'm looking forward to grabbing your shorter stuff. Short version SF
> is like a trip down memory lane. Can't wait!
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On 9 Feb 2015, at 10:39 am, Richard Williamson <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> Rhys, Yeah.  Just a bit :) I won't wait up, that's gonna take a while.
>
> Lani, Um.  Let's wait until you read it, before we use "decent books to
> read" on the same line were you mention me?  Jury's still out on that.  I
> mean, my mom, partner and son have all said they liked it, but... I would
> expect that to be sort of required.  Probably right there in the job
> description, innit.
>
> Thank you all!
>
> Mark, these are the descriptions from the iBooks blurb:
>
> *Stowaway*:  *Nan Renard is the senior machinist on a cargo ship, and is
> the Ship Aentity’s best friend — and a stowaway.  What happens when the
> ship is taken by pirates?*
>
> *What You Don’t Know…:** A survey ship 300 years into deep space, barely
> FTL.  The Surveyor, the sole human occupant on the ship, spends the
> majority of her time in stasis.  Occasionally she’ll be brought out of
> stasis to verify interesting things discovered by the ship’s autonomous
> systems — the ship’s autonomous systems that are slowly going crazy.*
>
> *Inflection Point:  **Three new cadets are inbound to the academy, but
> their pod is sabotaged by terrorists and they end up in unexplored space.
> The scion is unconscious, the ‘mat brat is immobilized, and the waiver
> boy’s implants fail, leaving him blind.  The blind, the maimed and the
> dying… and the local fauna is troublesome.*
>  The word count distribution is about 50k words, Stowaway and Inflection
> Point are just over 20k each, the rest are in from What You Don't Know...
>
> commentary:
>
> These are the first three things that I've put out for public critique.
> Horrors, but, you gotta start somewhere.
>
> The impetus for this was recent comments by Charles Stross about genre
> publishing and *self-*publishing.
>
>
> http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2014/12/cmap-short-stories-what-are-th.html#more
>
> My takeaway from that piece is that iBooks, Nook and Kindle were going to
> bring back the golden age of the shorter fiction piece (Novellas,
> primarily).
>
> These will be used by people like me, for advertising-of-capability, and
> further to build up a clique of readers who will pay $3 for a 50k-word
> "taster" (or series of tasters), before they would consider dropping $8-10
> or so on a 100k word ePub novel (or more, for an actual print version) by
> some unknown.
>
> rip
>
> On Sun, Feb 8, 2015 at 10:56 PM, Mark Chaloner <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> So you got something published at last hey? What's the synopsis?
>>
>> Mark
>>
>>

Reply via email to