Filed under: Feedback
Ok, you’ve probably noticed the design changes here. I was wanting to have the “Categories” and other nav stuff off to the side, and my good lady wife figured out a way to make it so. If you have an opinion on the result, let us know – right now this is a ‘beta’ version, still somewhat subject to change.
Also, got another bit of feedback from “elicivilunrest” on the About page (which seems to be a popular place for a lot of folks).  See how easy it is to get a link back to your site?
Jim Downey
Filed under: Art, Feedback, General Musings, movies, Promotion, Science Fiction, Writing stuff
I heard back from the person mentioned in this post. What they said:
I’m sorry to report that the person I was hoping would pass along the novel to “hollywood” is too much of an editor and less of a reader. They have been held back by the “roughness” as Kilgore Trout put it. Although they are still hoping/planning to try and read through it I told them that if their heart wasn’t really in it enough to actually finish reading the novel not to pass it along. Networking is only helpful when done with integrity – at least to my mind. I have a couple more “connected” people to try though and will look into them. If you would like I can pass along the editorial comments.
My response:
Oh, that’s fine – as you wish. I concur that networking should only be handled with integrity – the quickest way to ‘burn your cred’ (ruin your credibility) for someone like that is to push something you don’t honestly believe in. I’m certainly willing to hear criticism – my skin is plenty thick, and I will use it as I see fit – but I’m not planning on a major rewrite of the thing anytime soon. If there are small glitches (and certainly if there are typos, et cetera), I’m perfectly happy to fix those.
I honestly think that most of the problem that some people have with the book is that they don’t give it a chance – what may seem at first exposure to be a ‘problem’ is usually an intentional technique on my part to engage the reader to be thinking or reacting to something in a specific way, setting up for either an evolution in thought later or just some kind of outright surprise. Now, since this is “just” science fiction, and I am “just” a first-time novelist, some people do not expect any kind of literary sophistication in the book. So they get partway in, see some things which confuse their expectations, and give up. Whereas if they read it all the way through (perhaps more than once), some of the more subtle things going on may become evident.
*sigh* I’m not claiming to be some kind of literary genius. Everything I did with the novel is fairly standard stuff, applied from my education and decades of reading. It’s just that too often people are not expecting anything more than a surface layer from popular fiction. And when you don’t meet their expectations, if they don’t have some faith in you as an ‘established’ or ‘recognized’ author, they give up. If I’ve failed in anything, it is not in catering to these expectations on the part of some readers to help them get past their initial confusion. I just dislike pandering to people. Certainly, that segment of my audience who have completed the book and found themselves pleased with the whole thing is more rewarding to me than those who do not make it more than a couple of chapters in.
Oh, and thanks for providing me material for the blog. 😉
Yeah, I know – makes me sound like I have a pretty inflated opinion of myself and my book. There is an element of that, I will admit. But mostly, it is just a manifestation of my self confidence – a necessary component in dealing with life, and in particular in dealing with being an artist/author. A personal essay I wrote several years ago that touches on this:
Expectations
One birthday, when I was nine or ten, I woke with anticipation of the presents I would receive. Still in my pajamas I rushed into the kitchen where my parents were having coffee, expecting to get the loot which was rightfully mine. My father happily handed over a small, wrapped box. I opened it eagerly, to find a little American flag on a wooden stick. My father said that since my birthday was July 4th, he thought I would appreciate the gift. Horrorstruck first at not getting anything better, then at my own greed, I guiltily told my parents that I thought it was a fine gift. After a moment, of course, my folks brought out my real presents. I can no longer tell you what those presents were, but the lesson in expectations my dad taught me that day always remained with me. My dad had been a Marine, fought in Korea, and was a deeply patriotic cop who was killed while on duty a couple of years after that birthday. I’ve never looked at the American flag without remembering what a fine gift it really is, and have never forgotten not to take some things for granted.
When I was in High School some years later, I learned another lesson in expectations. I had always been a good student (straight A’s, involved in Student Government, various clubs, et cetera), but I was never announced as a member of the National Honor Society. With that earlier lesson about expectations firmly in mind, I watched as my friends were inducted during my Sophomore and Junior years, figuring that there was a reason that I had been passed over, that there was some flaw in my academic record that disqualified me. But I couldn’t figure out what it might be. When, during my Senior year, the NHS list came out and it didn’t have my name on it again, I decided to ask someone about it.
I went to my advisor and asked if he could explain it to me. He had only been my advisor my Senior year, but knew me fairly well, knew my GPA and my involvement level. He looked at me with some surprise and said he thought I was already a member. When I said no, he said he’d look into it. A couple of hours later I was summoned to the Principal’s office. It turned out that my file had been mis-filed years earlier. A purely clerical error. I should have been a member of the Society all along. Everyone was most apologetic, and they retroactively inducted me into the NHS.
My High School days are far behind me, and it has long since ceased to matter to me whether I received any particular recognition or award back then. As I’ve matured, gained life experience, I’ve learned many other lessons about tempering expectations, living with occasional disappointment, accepting that things don’t always work out the way you plan no matter how hard you work or how deserving you are. But those two early lessons in expectations still are the boundaries that I live by: don’t take things for granted, but don’t be afraid to ask why things aren’t the way they’re supposed to be. This gives me an appreciation for life, and the strength to really live it, which I think would make both my parents proud.
So yeah, I have some ego. But it comes from realizing that you get nowhere from being afraid to create and assert yourself.
Jim Downey
Subsequent to this post, just thought I would share note I got from the Head of Acquisitions at the Seminary this morning, following the presentation of the books I worked on last week to their Board of Regents:
Thanks for your work on the pieces. The regents were awestruck.
Yeah, baby!
Jim Downey
I’ve written a lot about the toll that comes with being a full-time care provider for someone with Alzheimer’s, and how the lack of sleep completely compromises my ability to think and function. I’ve also mentioned that I worry about whether or not I’ll really be able to pick up the various threads of my life again, once my care-giving time is over.
Well, I know now that I can bounce back. At least to a fair degree. This past week, between having the new overnight aide and my wife generously being “on call”, I was able to get a more-or-less normal amount of sleep for five nights in a row. And this week I was also able to get a lot of time in doing conservation work, with very good results.
See, I had to deliver the first batch of books back to the Seminary, so they would have things to show off to their Board and donors the first of next week. It was important that I get enough work finished, and that it looked impressive. And I was able to do just that, billing 30 hours (11 of which were on Thursday alone) without killing myself.
And the feedback I got when I delivered the books yesterday was quite satisfying. After going through the books with the Head Librarian and their Head of Acquisitions, explaining what work had been done and being complimented on how everything looked, I handed over the invoice. The Head Librarian looked at the bill, looked at the books spread out on the big library table, and then looked at me and said: “That’s a great price for all this work.”
That’s *exactly* what you want to hear from a client when you hand him a substantial bill. You want them to always feel like they got a deal. He will now take that enthusiasm for the project to the Board and their donors, and we’ll be off and running on making sure that this whole collection is properly treated.
Yay!
Jim Downey
Filed under: Alzheimer's, Book Conservation, Feedback, Habanero, Health, Hospice, Science Fiction, Sleep, Writing stuff
I’ve been busy this week trying to finish up the first batch of books for the new client, and have to deliver them tomorrow. So I apologize if postings here have been a bit light. But I thought I would post some updates on recent events . . .
My MIL is still doing pretty well, in spite of my concerns in Fever. Her fever did abate for a while, but yesterday it was back up, and higher than previously. We still cannot identify the source for it, but the Hospice nurse will be here today to do a check-up, and we’ll see if she has any ideas.
I’ve slept every night this week! Amazing what a difference it is making already, even if I haven’t fully settled back into sleeping deeply on the nights when the respite person is here. Normally, my wife and I will split the other four nights a week, but she helped me out by taking the Tuesday night shift so I could be well rested for doing my conservation work (see above). I will probably still need months of regular rest to be fully restored, but at least now I no longer feel like I am constantly dragging. Remarkable.
Hits here to the blog crossed the 6,000 level yesterday. As it turns out, downloads of the novel may well have crossed that threshold yesterday as well – I’ll know later today. It’s close, anyway.
Oh, one last item . . . I wrote about the First Habanero some weeks back. Well, now I’m happy to say I’ve harvested and dried and given away dozens of the Red Savina habs, and have even gotten a few of the Devil’s Tongue. The garden season is wrapping up, but I hope that I’ll still get a bunch more ripe habs, and will undoubtably have a whole bunch of green ones (which have a nice flavor but don’t develop their full heat).
Well, I need to get back to work. May not post again until tomorrow night, or this weekend.
Jim Downey
A brief note from yesterday’s news:
NEW YORK — It is high season for literary contests.
Two leading booksellers announced competitions Monday, continuing the industry’s unending search for new talent and the increasing willingness to let others do the searching.
Amazon.com, Penguin Group (USA) and Hewlett-Packard Co. have launched the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award, which offers a contract with Penguin and a small advance, $25,000. Meanwhile, Borders Group Inc., Court TV and Gather.com announced The Next Great Crime Novel competition, with the winner receiving $5,000 and a publishing deal through Borders, the superstore chain.
I’d argue that when an industry is so disfunctional as to need to pull these kinds of stunts to select content, the system is broken. Completely. How is it possible that the publishing industry is in an “unending search for new talent” but is so swamped by submissions that they can’t deal with it all? They’re not looking for talent – they’re looking for name recognition, whether by existing celebrities or by ones created by this kind of gimmick. It is an aspect of our celebrity/sensationalist culture. And a $25,000 advance is considered “small”?
Oh, and we’ve now passed 5,700 downloads of Communion of Dreams. That’s some 1,200 in September alone. Thanks to all who have helped pass along word of the novel to friends and message boards!
Jim Downey
Filed under: Feedback
This is quick – I have a touch of a flu bug or something, and have been out of it all day, so have stuff to catch up on this evening.
But I wanted to pass on note of a nice review that has been posted about Communion of Dreams by Kilgore Trout over at Quintessential Rambling. It doesn’t pull any punches about what he does and doesn’t like (which is fine) but it is a very enthusiastic and positive review over all. I posted a comment which also touches on something I’ve been thinking about for this blog for the last few days, so you might get a preview of things to come.
Jim Downey
Filed under: Alzheimer's, Book Conservation, Feedback, Flu Wiki, Promotion, Publishing, Writing stuff
Brief note – thanks, I think, in large part to folks from the Flu Wiki, I’ve had over 600 downloads of the novel in the last 36 hours or so. That puts the total downloads over 5,100.
I guess I really should get off my butt and contact some agents again. Too bad I’m exhausted – my MIL had a rough night of it (I was on call), and I have a backlog of conservation work to catch up on.
But I thought I’d share the good news. Maybe more later today – right now I need a nap.
Jim Downey
I got this note from “Tom” at Daily Kos (I’ll let him ID himself further if he wants):
I clicked to your site from your sig at Daily Kos. I plan on reading Communion of Dreams. Thanks for putting it up for download.
I am not one to give advice, but I will offer this: Can you slap up a summary of the story, from 150 to 250 words, on the home page? I’d expect it to raise the number of readers, and help agents or publishers describe it quickly at their meetings.
Duh! Like most bits of really good advice, this is completely obvious – once it has been suggested.
Thanks, Tom. Of course I have summaries and complete plot outlines, et cetera. I’ll sort out what works best and post it off of a link on the homepage for Communion so that it is easily accessible but the spoilers are not there on the front page.
Excellent.
**Afternoon edit:**
OK, so in thinking about it, I decided that I do need something brief on the actual homepage, rather than as a link to elsewhere. This is what I came up with for a brief blurb, as you might find on the back of a paperback book:
Communion of Dreams is an “alternative future history” set in 2052 where the human race is still struggling to recover from a massive pandemic flu some 40 years previously. Much of the population is infertile. National borders and alliances have shifted. Regional nuclear wars have prompted some countries to turn to establishing settlements in space, and there’s a major effort to detect Earth-like planets in nearby star systems for future colonization. Fringe eco-religious groups threaten to thwart the further advancement of science and technology, and resist any effort to spread humanity to the stars.
When an independent prospector on Titan discovers an alien artifact, assumptions based on the lack of evidence of extra-terrestrial intelligence are called into question. Knowing that news of such a discovery could prompt chaos on Earth, a small team is sent to investigate and hopefully manage the situation. What they find is that there’s more to human history, and human abilities, than any of them ever imagined. And that they will need all those insights, and all those abilities, to face the greatest threat yet to human survival.
What do you think?
Jim Downey
Just a quick note . . .
I noticed in my stats (now over 4,500 downloads of the novel) that evidently there had been a link to Communion of Dreams from a SF discussion site called The Website at the End of the Universe. Someone there had some high praise for the book, said it was in the same league as some of the recent biggies in Science Fiction – quite a compliment! I thought if anyone who read this blog wanted to comment on Communion, they could do so in this thread.
Jim Downey
