I'm a writer. There, I've admitted it. I wonder if there's a 12-Step program for folks like me...

Most of this blog will be about writing for a living. Or maybe about trying to earn a living as a writer. Or maybe about trying to have a life while you write.

And maybe I'll be able to avoid the driving temptation to write about politics. But I'm not very good around temptation, so all I can promise is that I'll try to avoid writing about politics.

But I will write about the software I use, and the software I try out, and what I think about it. I actually spent lots of years in software testing - as a tester and as a manager of testing departments. I actually started work in software development in 1971, so I have a bit of experience with computers to back up what I have to say on this subject.

Friday, December 31, 2010

I know it’s not Monday, but…

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How do you write your books?

Believe it or not, folks really do ask that question. Writing is not an easy job, and producing one of my novels requires around two years of steady (all right, mostly on-off, but kinda-sorta steady) thinking, researching, writing and re-writing. Lots of re-writing.

In all truth, my contribution to these stories is a very small part of the project. Important – at least I’m told it’s important, but for all that a very small part of the process of writing.

Because I don’t write by myself. I don’t mean that I have a staff of hack writers. I wouldn’t know what to do with them, if I did. I do the creative thinking, at least at the beginning. And all of the typing. And deleting, and formatting and re-formatting of the text.

But the characters write their parts. They decide on what has to be done. Sometimes they argue among themselves, but that’s usually quickly resolved.

The environment plays a big part in the story, too. The roads, the shopping centers, the design of Terry’s office, the layout of his hotel room, what kind of vehicle he’s driving, that sort of thing. The layout of the city he’s working in plays a big part in these stories. I don’t make these things up, folks. Or, I don’t make most of these things up. It’s just too much trouble keeping track of them when I’ve got an entire world filled with stuff I can make use of.

The environment shapes the story. It provides the backdrop and the scope for the lives and actions of my characters.

The climate plays a big part in any story, or it should. Is it January in Tampa, and pouring rain, or summer in the Everglades? Are the roads slippery from the grease and rubber caked into the surface? Climate should play a big part in the decisions the characters make and how they react to their changing situation.

And, of course, there’s the ever-present plot. Or not. Frankly, I don’t care all that much about plotting in my stories. I do care a great deal about how my characters react to the situations I put them in, and the decisions they make and the prices they inevitably have to pay for having made those decisions.

I don’t bother with a plot outline. I find it very restricting. I do care about my characters. My characters drive the stories I write. Not some damn plot outline.

Have a Happy and Safe New Year!

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Writing is an art, similar to pulling ones own teeth without anesthetics

 

I managed to put in a full week on “Twisted Key” and now have forty-one pages of new material. I fully plan to do the same thing this week, unless Life gets in my way again.

It did, this morning. I had to drive my sister up to the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville. She’s got a nasty case of bronchitis, and at her age that can lead to other issues she’d much rather avoid.

So, it’s 4:30 in the afternoon and I’m just now sitting down to the computer. We’ll see how far I can get today without another interruption. Don’t get me wrong – I was happy to be here to help her today, but like I said – Life can get in the way of progress. Can, and usually does. Working past the problems Life throws at us, getting the job done and maintaining ones sense of humor is a very useful life skill. I haven’t quite gotten the hang of that one, yet.

But I’m still working on it. Persistence is another very useful life skill. I’ve got that one down pat.

Six pages a day is not bad, considering all the rewriting involved in coming up with six useable pages every day. I mean, there is less than no sense in turning garbage over to your editors, is there? You’d wind up looking for new editors real quick if you tried that more than once, I promise.

My brother-in-law came back from the store yesterday and handed me a web cam. It’s a MiniCam Pro, a GE product, and has a focus ring, snap shot button and mic, and comes with some very basic software for editing photographs and video clips. It’s a fun little critter to play with.

We use ComCast for our television and internet connectivity. I wish we had a choice. The last apartment we lived in we received both a Netgear router and a wireless adapter for the second computer. In this new apartment, we signed a new contract with ComCast and requested a new router and adapter so we could trunk in the old gear. They said, “Okey-dokey” (okay, they didn’t really say that, exactly), and promptly sent us a new Netgear router. When I called about the adapter, I was told they don’t supply those, that we would have to purchase that ourselves.

It’s no use arguing with them over any of this, really, it’s not. I have done that, several times. It really is not worth the wasted time.

Yesterday morning, I got busy and swapped out the old router for the new one. No joy, no internet. I called ComCast and after a brief meaningful discussion with their tech support, who told me they only deal with the modem and I would have to speak with NetGear about any problems I was having with their products, was transferred to the Netgear help desk, where I hung on hold for twenty minutes before I hung up. I had replaced the old router with the new one, remember. Identical in every way, except for the dust on the case. So I swapped them back. The old router picked up the connection with no problem. So I put the new router in the old box.

Then I hooked up the new wireless adapter (a Cisco product) and it picked up the connection with the old router with no problem after I provided the key code to authorize the connection. The old adapter was put back into its box. The whole thing took about two hours, which is about one hour forty-five minutes longer than it should have.

That’s tech support for you.

But I got to curse a lot – not over the phone, of course, but I did get to use some words you’ll never see in anything I write.

The new router and the old wireless adapter went back to ComCast this afternoon, and the money ComCast had held back has been credited to our bill.

Have a Happy and Safe New Year.

Writing is an art, similar to pulling ones own teeth without anesthetics

 

I managed to put in a full week on “Twisted Key” and now have forty-one pages of new material. I fully plan to do the same thing this week, unless Life gets in my way again.

It did, this morning. I had to drive my sister up to the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville. She’s got a nasty case of bronchitis, and at her age that can lead to other issues she’d much rather avoid.

So, it’s 4:30 in the afternoon and I’m just now sitting down to the computer. We’ll see how far I can get today without another interruption. Don’t get me wrong – I was happy to be here to help her today, but like I said – Life can get in the way of progress. Can, and usually does. Working past the problems Life throws at us, getting the job done and maintaining ones sense of humor is a very useful life skill. I haven’t quite gotten the hang of that one, yet.

But I’m still working on it. Persistence is another very useful life skill. I’ve got that one down pat.

Six pages a day is not bad, considering all the rewriting involved in coming up with six useable pages every day. I mean, there is less than no sense in turning garbage over to your editors, is there? You’d wind up looking for new editors real quick if you tried that more than once, I promise.

My brother-in-law came back from the store yesterday and handed me a web cam. It’s a MiniCam Pro, a GE product, and has a focus ring, snap shot button and mic, and comes with some very basic software for editing photographs and video clips. It’s a fun little critter to play with.

We use ComCast for our television and internet connectivity. I wish we had a choice. The last apartment we lived in we received both a Netgear router and a wireless adapter for the second computer. In this new apartment, we signed a new contract with ComCast and requested a new router and adapter so we could trunk in the old gear. They said, “Okey-dokey” (okay, they didn’t really say that, exactly), and promptly sent us a new Netgear router. When I called about the adapter, I was told they don’t supply those, that we would have to purchase that ourselves.

It’s no use arguing with them over any of this, really, it’s not. I have done that, several times. It really is not worth the wasted time.

Yesterday morning, I got busy and swapped out the old router for the new one. No joy, no internet. I called ComCast and after a brief meaningful discussion with their tech support, who told me they only deal with the modem and I would have to speak with NetGear about any problems I was having with their products, was transferred to the Netgear help desk, where I hung on hold for twenty minutes before I hung up. I had replaced the old router with the new one, remember. Identical in every way, except for the dust on the case. So I swapped them back. The old router picked up the connection with no problem. So I put the new router in the old box.

The I hooked up the new wireless adapter (a Cisco product) and it picked up the connection with the old router with no problem after I provided the key code to authorize the connection. The old adapter was put back into its box. The whole thing took about two hours, which is about one hour forty-five minutes longer than it should have.

That’s tech support for you.

But I got to curse a lot – not over the phone, of course, but I did get to use some words you’ll never see in anything I write.

The new router and the old wireless adapter went back to ComCast this afternoon, and the money ComCast had held back has been credited to our bill.

Have a Happy and Safe New Year.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

I know it’s not Monday - again

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I’ve been getting up at 4:30 in the morning for years, now. Usually I get a cup of coffee started in the drip coffee maker, pour some orange juice and get a handful of pills down and then watch the news for an hour or so. Unless I’ve got a manuscript in the works, in which case the TV never gets turned on.

So that’s why I haven’t posted anything to my blog this week. I am now under a deadline on “Twisted Key”. I need to have the manuscript ready for an editor by June of next year, and the sooner the better. I’ve got a non-fiction project I’m working on as well, and I need to have that one ready for an editor by September.

It’s nice to be busy. Unless Life is really ticked off with you, in which case being busy is the least of your worries. Right now, however, Life is ignoring me, and I am doing all I can to ignore it in return. I’ve got just enough on my plate as it is.

The CD-ROM drive died on my Dell last week. It’s been moving in that direction for the better (worse, actually) part of a year, and it finally gave up the ghost. So I contacted CompUSA, spoke with one of their tech people and got a recommendation for a new drive. It went in without any fuss and when I turned on the computer, it showed up in Device Manager just like it had been there all along.

But I’m not so happy with Dell. Admittedly, the Dimension 2350 model is about seven years old, but there is essentially NO upgrade path on this machine. You can add (as I just did) a new CD or DVD drive, but don’t even think about removing an old drive that’s died. You cannot do that. The entire frame is pop-riveted together AFTER the CD-ROM is installed, so you cannot remove it without destroying the frame. Never mind being limited to a whacking great (sic) 1 gigabyte of RAM, having to keep a dead drive in the case is frustrating as all get-out. Well, it was a gift, so maybe I shouldn’t complain too much.

In a vain attempt to get more use out of my 1 gig of RAM, I recently purchased a PCI video card with 512 MB of RAM onboard. It worked fine in DOS during the boot-up, but when Windows loaded the screen went black. I got onto a geek forum and asked about that and was told I needed a new 400 watt power supply to power the card. So I got back in touch with my buds at CompUSA and they gave me a recommendation on a replacement PSU. Now, the video card ran me $64.00, and the new PSU will run $50.00.

And the DVD/CD drive cost me around $45.00 (with a new data cable and shipping, that is). New computers run around $300.00 and up. Maybe I should just save my money. But I’ve got all this stuff on my computer, and it’s set up just like I want it. I’d dearly love a new machine, but believe it or not, I can’t afford to put out all that cash at once. Besides, I kind of like this one. I’m used to it, and I can blame it for a lot of stuff I’d have to take responsibility for if I had a new one.

Merry Christmas, and  a Happy new Year!

Friday, December 17, 2010

An apology, and some Warm Fuzzies

 

Please accept my apologies for not posting at the beginning of this week (along with most other weeks). I try to get these posts out on Monday or Tuesday, but Life, working on my book projects and small interruptions tend to get in my way. Bedsides, I just love the sound of deadlines as they go wooshing by.

I’m scheduled to be at a charity benefit at the Middleburg Elementary School scheduled for tomorrow, December 18, and because this is one of Jacksonville’s damper seasons I have been keeping a close eye on the weather. Naturally, there is a 60% chance of showers and the odd thunder storm. But I’ll be there, smiling, rain or no rain. In my tent. With the sides down, sipping hot coffee. Cold, and probably somewhat damp.

But I’ll be there.

I had a phone call from one of my customers who purchased “The Big Bend” for his wife about a month ago. He wanted to know how he could purchase “Hog Valley” for her because she enjoyed “The Big Bend” so much.

This is a charity event to raise money for a young man with Hodgkins Lymphoma, and I’ve committed to providing a few signed copies for the fund raiser auction.

On the 17th of January I’ll be at “All Booked Up” on Bichara Blvd in The Villages between Leesburg and Ocala for a signing.

If you’re in the area of either event, please stop by and say hello.

On another note entirely, my CD drive gave up the ghost. It’s been reluctant to accept some of the CD’s I’ve tried to access, and finally the cup holder wouldn’t even slide out when I pushed the Eject button. So I ordered a new one, along with a PCI graphics card with 512 MB RAM on board. I might have mentioned an earlier attempt to order a PCI graphics card; that time I would up with a PCIE card. Needless to say, it didn’t fit any of the three PCI slots on the motherboard…

Wish me better luck this time.

I purchased Serif’s DrawPlus X4. That’s one of the CD’s my CD drive refused to recognize, so I couldn’t install the software and test it out. Or report on it. But I will, as soon as the new CD drive arrives. And I get it installed. And install the new graphics card. Which, if all goes well, shouldn’t take more than twenty minutes.

I’ll be sure to tell you all about that, too.

Have a great weekend. Mine will be somewhat damp and a bit on the chilly side, but if you’re anywhere near Middleburg, Florida on Saturday, be sure to stop by the event at the elementary school on Blanding Blvd. Spend some money, help that young man, and stop by my tent and visit for a bit.

Bring hot coffee. I take mine with cream and sugar.

Monday, December 6, 2010

A busy week ahead

 

Being sick – with whatever it was – is a bummer. Getting better isn’t much of an improvement, because you have to run twice as fast just to catch up to where you should have been. And there you are, all tired and worn down from being sick, putting yourself into deadly danger by all that running and worrying, knowing your bills are coming up fast behind and waiting in ambush up ahead.

Life just ain’t fair, I tell yah.

So I don’t do that. I admit that I used to, but not any more. I prefer to maintain a slow and stately progress through life. I get bit on the butt by an especially aggressive bill or two, and I may blunder into an ambush set by an especially devious bill lurking somewhere up ahead, but for the most part I get to where I’m supposed to be, more or less intact, and not all sweaty and wiped out from all that running twice as fast business.

Actually, if I just absolutely, positively, had to be sick, last week was an particularly good time for it. I didn’t have any events scheduled, you see.

But I do this week. In fact, I have three events scheduled in the next ten days. I’ll be speaking at Rasmussen College in Ocala on Wednesday, December 8, and signing books at the Fleming Island Winter Festival on Saturday, December 11 and at the Middleburg Winter Festival at the Middleburg Elementary School on December 18. That last is a benefit for a young man afflicted with a serious disease. I will be donating a few signed copies to the event promoters for their auction.

The Post Office just delivered a book order this morning. I usually get such deliveries well within a week of placing the order. Now, with the holidays closing in on us, this particular order took well over two weeks to arrive. Not good.

I’m working hard on “Twisted Key”, the third novel in the Terry Rankin series, and I just started a new, non-fiction project that is still very much in the research and organization phase of its young life. But it is looking good.

 

I hope you all have a very good week.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

You know that toe just beside your big toe…

 

I started to feel a bit peckish around mid-week last week – dry cough, bones hurting in places I didn’t know I had bones, like that. Thursday night I was pretty sure I was gonna die. My sister said she thought I had the flu, while I was pretty sure I had a nasty cold. I woke up Friday morning – actually I woke up several times during the night with the bedclothes all wet and soggy and chilly, and I was sweating, and hacking, and coughing, and groggy from lack of sleep. My nose was all stopped up and I couldn’t draw a decent breath.

At that point I didn’t much care if I had a cold or the flu. I made it through the day – in fact I even put my bedclothes through the washer and dryer and got them back onto the bed before I crawled back into it for the night. But it turned into another night just like the last one, with one major exception. I broke that damn toe.

At one point during that night I got up with a bad case of dry mouth. Freezing and shivering and dripping with sweat I climbed out of bed, and stumbled into the kitchen for a bit of orange juice. Unfortunately, I didn’t lift my feet quite as high as I should have. My sister has a thick rubber mat in front of the sink. That toe on my right foot caught on the edge of that damn mat and I heard the little ‘snick’ sound as the bone broke.

I was cold, and sweating, and groggy, and thirsty and I really, really had to stop in the bathroom on my way back to my now soggy and cold bed. So I ignored the additional insult to my much abused body, got my orange juice and took my badly shivering, sweating and now injured body into the bathroom and then climbed back into my damp and cold bed. Baby-ing my poor toe all the way, of course.

In the morning my toe was very much black and blue. My bedclothes went through the washer and dryer and again. And that’s how I spent the rest of my weekend.

My health started to return on Sunday, and, desperate to have something to show for all the time spent flat on my back, I ordered a graphics card for my computer. I work on an older Dell Pentium. It’s got serious limitations compared to modern machines. The greatest impediment I have to deal with isn’t the speed of the machine – it’s the 1 Gig RAM limit that’s got me boxed in. What I hoped for was a PCI graphics card with at least 512 MB RAM on board that would take the processing load out of the motherboard RAM. I do a lot of my own graphics work, and layouts for book covers and such like eat RAM like candy.

So I found a Diamond ATI Radeon card that fit the bill, and after checking the specs for the Dell Dimension 2350 it seemed to be a good match, so I ordered it.

Don’t ever do that when you’re sick as a dog and can’t string two thoughts together without screwing up.

The card showed on on Tuesday. Five minutes later I had the computer laying on it’s side with the cover off. I removed the card from the packaging and tried to fit it into one of the two open PCI slots. It was too long. It was a PCIE card. All I saw when I read the tech specs on line was PCI. When I checked the web site for the specs again, it said, PCIE. The ‘E’ is for “Extended”. My Dell does not have any PCIE slots.

I’m feeling a bit better today.

I hope your weekend went a bit more smoothly.

Here’s what I have coming up in the next month or so:

Book signings and speaking engagements

December 8    Rasmussen College, Ocala

December 11    Fleming Island Festival, Village Square Gazebo, 2245 Plantation  Center Drive, 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

December 18    Middleburg Christmas Festival, Middleburg Elementary School
                          Blanding Blvd, Middleburg, 10 AM - 4 PM

January 17       All Booked Up bookstore, 1126 Bichara Blvd, The Villages,
                          11:00 am - 1:00 pm

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Nothing else seemed to work…

 

…so I took on another project. I’ve been stalling, actually thinking of things to do to avoid getting back to work on “Twisted Key”. It’s not unusual, actually. It’s not that I’m tired of Terry Rankin and Cathy Diamond, or even the story line. I just didn’t want to sink back into the “Zone” again.

Well, that particular problem is out of the way.

I was one of eighteen authors at a group book signing party give by the Historic Grounds Bookstore in Green Cove Springs last Saturday night. I got there earlier than most and was still setting up my table when a customer and her daughter entered the store to look around. She promptly bought copies of “The Big Bend” and “Hog Valley”, which I happily signed for her. Once the party got under way an hour later, I spent the rest of the evening selling and signing books.

It was a great evening. I hope all of the other authors did as well as I did. I met a lot of very nice people – new authors, old authors, journalists and even a publisher. And customers, of course. Lots of very nice customers.

One of whom wrote me a few days later to say she had already finished “The Big Bend” and loved it. She said she reads a lot of murder mysteries. So many, in fact, she can easily predict ‘who done it’, which must really ruin an otherwise good story for her. But in “The Big Bend” she was surprised by the ending, and loved that immensely. A few days later she got back in touch and said she thoroughly enjoyed “Hog Valley” and was waiting for “Twisted Key”. She also mentioned she was thinking of taking a long drive around Florida to see some of the locations in my books.

What a great compliment that would be for any author. And what a great encouragement to keep on writing. I feel like running into the street, yelling “More appreciation! Less cash!” I would never do that, of course, but the thought is there.

I had lunch around mid-week with that publisher I met at the book signing. He suggested a book project to me. We spent the next ninety minutes eating and talking. About editing, and books, and marketing and promotion. And that project. I sent him an email this afternoon, telling him I had an outline ready and would work on the first chapter, starting tomorrow. I should have it ready for him around mid-week.

“Twisted Key” will get equal time, I promise.

I’m looking forward to this next week. I hope you are, too.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

The Ups and Downs of Selling

 

You’d think that after two years (or more) of writing, editing, rewriting and polishing a manuscript and actually getting the thing published that you’d be on easy street. You’d think that folks would appear on your doorstep, cash in hand, all atwitter to purchase your new book. Signed, of course.

You’d think that. Of course you would.

You’d be wrong. Disappointingly, frustratingly, and very sadly wrong. Nobody, except for your very closest friends, knows you exist, or knows that you have actually written and published a book. Or cares, for that matter.

Shortly after the glow of publication wears off (about fifteen minutes, on average), you begin to understand that writing and publishing are the easy bits of writing for a living. No matter the incredible number of hours you sweated blood to get your manuscript ready for the publisher, no matter the nights you lost sleep to doubt and insecurity, no matter the days you wandered and pondered, lost in plots and plans.

Harsh reality gets up in your face after those first fifteen minutes of utter joy and yells that no one gives a single, itty-bitty damn about you or your book.

They don’t know you, and have no idea your book even exists. What’s worse, they don’t care.

That is when you begin to understand that your job as a writer has now been placed way down on your List of Things To Do With Your Life.

Way, way down.

Remember the old saw about selling ice to Eskimos?  That’s you. That’s what you’ve got to do. You have to sell yourself and your book. Actively. There is no such thing as a passive salesman. You can’t sit in a bookstore with your book attractively displayed on a table, with your head buried in a magazine as people walk past and go home at the end of the day wondering why nobody bought your book. Well, you can, and some folks actually do that.

Time after time. Until they get really, really bored. Or depressed and very poor. At which time they go back to their real job, their precious book locked away where they won’t have to look at it ever again.

You have to get out, meet people, get them to like you and then help them to convince themselves they really want to read your book. You can’t sell a product to anyone, you know. You have to show them there is value in that book for them and then they convince themselves to buy it.

It’s what some folks call work. ‘Cause you have to do it for a living. Full time, overtime, weekends and holidays. You can write more stuff when you’re not selling. Or keeping your accounts, or researching new markets, or writing puff pieces for newspapers, or ordering more copies of your book(s) and hoping they arrive before your next sales event. Or setting up and maintaining your web site. Or writing a new post for your blog.

New writers are almost always reluctant to put themselves out there. Writers are usually shy and prefer to write in peace and quiet. They live through the the stories they tell. That’s a big part of why they write. But that does not sell books. Salesmen – or saleswomen – sell books, and develop markets.

Let’s get past the nasty bits of identifying the market for your work. Let’s assume you did that before you wrote the first word in your manuscript (as you should have done). Let’s also assume you’ve identified the price point for your book, and it’s set in stone. You know how much each copy costs you, including shipping, so you know what your gross profit will be from each sale. All that’s left is to identify where you’re going to go with your bags and boxes of books and your brand new marquee tent. And your smile, and your attentive look and pleasant demeanor.

And your fears of failure and rejection and your general nervousness.

I do a lot of personal appearances and book signings at independent bookstores and community fairs. I am open to speaking engagements, too. Not everybody can sell, and not everybody feels comfortable with public speaking. Not everybody writes books, either. But you did, and now you have to sell. First you have to sell yourself. then you have to give the person you’re speaking with a few good reasons to take a big chance on you and buy your book.

When a person approaches your booth, they are already curious. They want to know what you have out on your table. Stand up, smile, hold out your hand and introduce yourself. Look them in the eyes, and smile. Not everyone will give you their name, but most will. Be sure to remember it. Most people with take you hand, and return your greeting. People want to be friends with other people. People want to liked, and they want to talk about themselves. Find something about that person to compliment. Perhaps they’re wearing an NFL jersey, or carrying a very nice purse or wearing a lovely scarf. Get them talking. Find a connection for them with your book. Add value to your book by mentioning that connection.

Let them sell your book for you.

Let’s say you have two books. Make them an offer on the second book: “Look, I sell these books at $12.00 plus tax. Let’s say you buy both. I’ll knock $5.00 off the second book for you.” Almost always your new customer will go for the deal. He – or she – already likes you and likes the value they see in your product.

And then you sign the books, with a special note to your new friend.

You haven’t just made a sale. You’ve made a friend.

And you’ve just sold two books.

It’s easy. It’s fun. And you’re no longer alone. You’ve got a new friend. And money in your pocket. From your books.

Have a good week.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Web site changes, book signing events and more

 

I’ve added a number of new sections to the Photo Gallery ( http://garyshowalter.com/PhotoGallery.aspx ) – the major change is the addition of a section highlighting some of the pieces I built while in the workshop of Catriel Sugarman, in Jerusalem, Israel. I wish I had more pictures from those days. We did build some absolutely stunning pieces together.

Casey had the great good fortune to of acquiring a Holtzapffel lathe from a friend of his in South Africa. I had the great good fortune of restoring the lathe and using it for a few years. I loved that wonderful machine. Any real engineer would. I took lots and lots of pictures, and many of them are now in the Holtzapffel Lathe section of the Photo Gallery.

I had a great time at the Middleburg Winter Festival this weekend. Lots of nice people walking around, lots to see and do. It’s a small affair, and very well organized. Good music, good food and good weather, too. I met some very nice folks, many of whom purchased copies of my books. That’s always so encouraging.

Thursday evening will see me in Gainesville, Florida, at Books Inc, from 5:30 to 7:30. Stop by if you’re in the neighborhood. Saturday evening I’ll be at the Historic Grounds Bookstore on Walnut St. in Green Cove Springs. There will be six or eight authors present, along with some good wine and good cheese, so dress nice (I have to, so you should, too), stop by and visit for a while.

Have a good week.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Web Site changes

I’ve had the privilege (or misfortune, to be more precise), to spend much of my working life in crafts. Woodworking, silver and gold smithing, wood turning and carving, furniture building and restoration, and so on. I call it a privilege because it is sheer joy to build something well. But for me it was a misfortune, because I never made enough money to turn a profit for all of the hours I put into each job. I’m just that good a craftsman, and that bad a businessman, I guess.

So now I’m a writer, and a businessman. The only difference I can see between being a good craftsman and a lousy businessman and and being a good writer and a lousy businessman is that I don’t sweat as much, or drive my hammer onto my thumb quite as often. Actually, that’s a real improvement in my quality of life.

I miss all of my lovely tools, and my workshop, and my dreams. I do, really. But at my age I have to at least appear to be starting to grow up. Maturity sucks, if you ask me.

So I’ve taken many of the photographs of my work over the years and put together a Photo Gallery on my web site. I’ve added a bit of commentary on the pieces I’ve made, or restored, and I’ll probably expand that once most of the photographs are in place. It’s about half done, now.

So, log on to www.garyshowalter.com and click on the Photo Gallery. There are three or four sections there, now. Let me know what you think.

We’ll get back to more serious stuff later in the week. I’ve got a book to finish.

Have a good week

Friday, October 29, 2010

I did absolutely nothing worth writing about this week…

 

But I still got some things done, and found a dream I'd misplaced several years ago.

The first part of the week had me researching small business accounting applications. Right now I’m using Quickbooks Simple Start, the free Quickbooks starter app. It works very nicely, and is just about as easy to use as an accounting tool can be. It’s also very limited in what it does, but it’s enough to get started with. But to gain any real control over your business you have to upgrade to QuickBooks Pro.

I’m at that point now. But before I shell out $200.00 for the Pro version I spent a few days looking over other packages to see what they had to offer.

My bookkeeping and accounting skills can be summed up in one short sentence. I cannot balance a checkbook. No kidding. I have no business running a business, though I have run several over the years. My only saving grace is that I know how completely unsuited I am to be allowed that close to money and business ledgers. I know when and what to delegate, and to whom, which is how I’ve survived this long.

So those few days spent researching accounting software leads me to believe that I will indeed be shelling out $200.00 to buy Quickbooks Pro. It does what I need, and it’s reasonably easy to understand. Besides, they have really good support and a large community to fall back on if you’re stumped by anything the software throws back at you.

Now I need to get out and sell some books.

My next round of events starts next weekend in Middleburg, Florida, at their Historic Fall Festival. Stop by, purchase one or two books and help me get my financial affairs in order.

The rest of this week was spent playing with a long-held dream. Back in the 70’s I experienced a work-related injury that put me out of work for nearly eighteen months. I’d been an avid model builder as a kid, so I purchased an R/C boat kit from Sterling.  It was the Emma C. Berry, a Noank fishing smack re-rigged as a schooner. I loved the idea of building a 48” R/C schooner. The boat went together in a few months (I only had one hand at the time – my right hand was in a brace, so it made a good clamp for holding pieces in place). And when she hit the water, she sailed beautifully.

Well, Sterling is out of business and no one is selling the Emma C. Berry Schooner anymore. but the sheet plans, bulkheads and builder’s notes are available from other model builders, and I am in touch with them. I don’t have a lot of room (in fact I have no room for a project like this), but I am going to scale up the drawings and build a 6’ model from scratch. She is a pretty boat (in my head), and I look forward to getting her into the water.

Dreams are nice, aren’t they?

Happy Halloween

Friday, October 22, 2010

It’s been that kind of week…

 

I meant to post an entry on Monday, as I do most weeks, but life got in the way. Sorry about that, but it happens. I write for a living, rather than live to write as many do, or at least aspire to do. So if I have to, or want to, I do other stuff without batting the proverbial eyelid.

But I really did mean to post an entry on Monday. Really.

I will be working on “Twisted Key” over the weekend, cutting some stuff out of the first third of the MS that seems to be slowing down the pace of the story. It’s mostly background stuff from the first two novels that’s getting in the way. I wasn’t all that sure I needed to fill in the back story for new readers, but it seemed to be necessary. On the other hand, I don’t really like it when I come across that sort of thing in other people’s writing, so I feel perfectly justified in cutting it out of the MS.

Besides, a few test readers told me it slows the story down to a crawl. So there you have it; my opinions don’t always count for as much as I’d like to think they do…

The bookmarks for “Hog Valley” look really nice. I’m glad they were done before the next event at the Middleburg Historic Festival on November 6.

I’ve got four events confirmed, and four others I am committed to but don’t have dates/times for, yet. Here are the four confirmed appearances:

Book Signing Events
Fall, 2010

November 6    Middleburg Historic Festival
            9:00 - 3:00 pm

November 11    Books Inc, Gainesville
            5:30 - 7:30 PM

November 13    Historic Grounds Bookstore, Green Cove Springs
            5PM - 9PM

November 20    Andrea's Bookstore, Palatka
            12 Noon – 3PM

It’s Friday already. I hope you have a great weekend.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

I’m late, I’m late…

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…For a very important date.

Actually, I’ve been extremely busy, preoccupied and cursed with a sour stomach. Which makes for a bad combination when you’re doing your darndest to make headway against an economy that seems to be going downhill in a hurry. With vigor.

Then again, what would life be without a challenge, eh? Quiet? Maybe even peaceful?

Well, here’s a challenge for you. Actually, it’s another challenge for me, but you can chime in, if you want. “Twisted Key” is the third in my Terry Rankin series of murder mysteries. The problem is, as one reader of the manuscript puts it, that it starts slow. He’s read both “The Big Bend” and “Hog Valley” and is not interested in re-reading what happened in those two novels before he gets into the meat of the new story. So I have to pare down on the background. I already did, but what remains is still slowing down the pace way too much. New readers who pick up “Twisted Key” first might find the information useful, but then again maybe it will just be a distraction, instead. So I’ll get out my pruning shears and go to work.

I spent my weekend at the Orange Park Fall Festival and quite happily sold a large number of books. Well, not Carl Hiaasen large (no, he wasn’t there), but for me it was a lot of books. I offered a 2-fer, meaning if a customer purchased both “The Big Bend” and Hog Valley” I’d knock $5.00 off the price.  It worked, really well. I sold a lot of books (it bears repeating).

On the 6th of November I will be at the Middleburg Historic Festival, selling and signing. That’s going to be a lot of fun – they have some re-enactments scheduled, some music, lots of food and other stuff going on. The festival starts at 9:00 am and goes on until 3:00 pm.

I hope you’re having a good week.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Weekly wrap-up and more on Dropbox

 

I’m a writer – okay – I’m a novelist. I feel so much better, finally getting that off my chest.  Writing involves weeks of field research (more, if I can get away from the computer and all that editing and rewriting my editors insist on),  a lot of hunting and pecking on line, and months of plotting and planning. And then I mix all of that together and tell a story. It’s what some folks like to call lying for fun and profit. Well, fun for you, anyway. I hope. Profit? Ahh, not so much.

Just like everyone else who works with computers for a living, I depend on the software I work with to do what it was designed to do, without errors. I need software that works, period. A nice, well laid out, easy to understand ergonomic user interface is good, too. There is a lot of good stuff out there, designed and written by people who know their jobs and love what they do.

I started work in computers in 1971, for Control Data Corp, in Atlanta, Georgia, as an entry-level database programmer. Without going into a lot of ancient history nobody really cares about, I’ll just say that I love the software industry and the people who make it what it is today. Good on yer!

Dropbox (www.dropbox.com) is a very good example of this. Drew Huston is a man who thinks outside the box. In 2006, he was waiting at a bus stop and thinking of the code he was planning to write on the bus when he realized he’d left his USB drive at home. With all of his data. So the code he began to write on that bus trip didn’t have anything to do with the project he started his day with. Instead he worked on what would become Dropbox on its release in 2008.

There are other such products on the market today, some  hit the market a few years before and some after the Dropbox release. I don’t care all that much about the history or the financials around this piece of software or that. I don’t write software reviews for investors. I write these reviews for people like me, who need dependable, easy to use applications that will fill a need for them. My reviews focus on the use-ability of the applications, not the money they might make for the investors.

I tell you what works for me, based on my current needs and my years of experience in software development.

Dropbox fills my need for an easy to use tool for collaboration with my editors. Man, is it easy. No muss, no fuss, no unnecessary bells and whistles and lots of actually useful features. It doesn’t cost you a penny to register, and you get 2 GB of storage up front. It’s also free to invite others to access your Dropbox. Anyone who does join Dropbox from your invitation gets you another 250 MB of storage space. That's a deal you can’t afford to ignore.

So don’t ignore it.

“Twisted Key”, my third novel, is moving along. The first third of the story is rock solid and back at the editors for their final comments. I don’t anticipate any major changes in the story line at this point, so I am going to forge ahead on the next few chapters. With any luck the first complete draught should be done by January of 2011.

I’ve got a two-day event this weekend. I’ll be at the Orange Park Fall Festival, selling and signing. Somebody has to pay for all this software.

Have a good weekend. You’ve earned it.

Weekly wrap-up and more on Dropbox

 

I’m a writer – okay – I’m a novelist. I feel so much better, finally getting that off my chest.  Writing involves weeks of field research (more, if I can get away from the computer and all that editing and rewriting my editors insist on),  a lot of hunting and pecking on line, and months of plotting and planning. And then I mix all of that together and tell a story. It’s what some folks like to call lying for fun and profit. Well, fun for you, anyway. I hope. Profit? Ahh, not so much.

Just like everyone else who works with computers for a living, I depend on the software I work with to what it was designed to do, without errors. I need software that works, period. A nice, well laid out, easy to understand ergonomic user interface is good, too. There is a lot of good stuff out there, designed and written by people who know their jobs and love what they do.

I started work in computers in 1971, for Control Data Corp, in Atlanta, Georgia, as an entry-level database programmer. Without going into a lot of ancient history nobody really cares about, I’ll just say that I love the software industry and the people who make it what it is today. Good on yer!

Dropbox (www.dropbox.com) is a very good example of this. Drew Huston is a man who thinks outside the box. In 2006, he was waiting at a bus stop and thinking of the code he was planning to write on the bus when he realized he’d left his USB drive at home. With all of his data. So the code he began to write on that bus trip didn’t have anything to do with the project he started his day with. Instead he worked on what would become Dropbox on its release in 2008.

There are other such products on the market today, some  hit the market a few years before and some after the Dropbox release. I don’t care all that much about the history or the financials around this piece of software or that. I don’t write software reviews for investors. I write these reviews for people like me, who need dependable, easy to use applications that will fill a need for them. My reviews focus on the use-ability of the applications, not the money they might make for the investors.

I tell you what works for me, based on my current needs and my years of experience in software development.

Dropbox fills my need for an easy to use tool for collaboration with my editors. Man, is it easy. No muss, no fuss, no unnecessary bells and whistles and lots of actually useful features. It doesn’t cost you a penny to register, and you get 2 GB of storage up front. It’s also free to invite others to access your Dropbox. Anyone who does join Dropbox from your invitation gets you another 250 MB of storage space. That's a deal you can’t afford to ignore.

So don’t ignore it.

“Twisted Key”, my third novel, is moving along. The first third of the story is rock solid and back at the editors for their final comments. I don’t anticipate any major changes in the story line at this point, so I am going to forge ahead on the next few chapters. With any luck the first complete draught should be done by January of 2011.

I’ve got a two-day event this weekend. I’ll be at the Orange Park Fall Festival, selling and signing. Somebody has to pay for all this software.

Have a good weekend. You’ve earned it.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Dropbox

www.dropbox.com

Unless you’ve been living in a cave far from civilization as I have for the past two years, you’re probably aware of this nifty tool. But I have been living in a cave, so Dropbox hit me like a ton of bricks. Literally. I was setting up a collaboration between an audio book producer, a Voice talent and myself. We needed a quick and dirty way to move large audio files back and forth. By large, I mean over eighty megabytes.

Then I got an email invitation to join in a Dropbox collaboration from the audio book producer. Wow. You get up to 2 gigabytes of data, absolutely free, file sharing, encryption, automatic backups (I mean really automatic – you don’t have to do anything) and all sorts of other really neat stuff. I’m not exaggerating when I say it was like someone turned on a light in a dark room.

Dropbox works like a separate hard drive on your computer. The contents of the hard drive can be shared with others so they can see and interact with the files you place on it. From their computers, anywhere. You can invite others to share access to your dropbox and kick someone off if you don’t like what they’re doing.

Anything you place into your dropbox is available to you anywhere in the world, either by installing the Dropbox app on the computer you’re working on or via the web-based interface. Goodbye USB flash drives.

I’m a writer – okay, I’ll admit it, I’m a novelist – so I spend my days and often my nights hiding from the world while I plot and plan and write. And rewrite, and think of nasty things to do to my editors, my neighbors, the electric company, my landlord and anyone else who has the temerity to bother me when I’m writing.

If you’re collaborating with others on a file – as I do nearly every day – any changes by one person are immediately available to the other collaborators, and just in case, older versions of your files are backed up automatically and are available for restoration.

I live in Orange Park, just south of Jacksonville, Florida. One of my editors lives in Ocala, and the other in Silver Springs. We’ve been transferring files back and forth using email, for the most part.  In comparison to Dropbox, email attachments are ancient history. So now I don’t have to do anything but drag and drop my files into my dropbox and then I can go right back to work. My editors have access to my files immediately (or when they get around to it, anyway).

Here’s a  list of features I snagged off the Dropbox web site:

File Sync

Dropbox allows you to sync your files online and across your computers automatically.

  • 2GB of online storage for free, with up to 100GB available to paying customers.
  • Sync files of any size or type.
  • Sync Windows, Mac and Linux computers.
  • Automatically syncs when new files or changes are detected.
  • Work on files in your Dropbox even if you're offline. Your changes sync once your computer has an Internet connection again.
  • Dropbox transfers will correctly resume where they left off if the connection drops.
  • Efficient sync - only the pieces of a file that changed (not the whole file) are synced. This saves you time.
  • Doesn't hog your Internet connection. You can manually set bandwidth limits.

File Sharing

Sharing files is simple and can be done with only a few clicks.

  • Shared folders allow several people to collaborate on a set of files.
  • You can see other people's changes instantly.
  • A "Public" folder that lets you link directly to files in your Dropbox.
  • Control who is able to access shared folders (including ability to kick people out and remove the shared files from their computers).
  • Automatically create shareable online photo galleries from folders of photos in your Dropbox.

Online Backup

Dropbox backs up your files online without you having to think about it.

  • Automatic backup of your files.
  • Undelete files and folders.
  • Restore previous versions of your files.
  • 30 days of undo history, with unlimited undo available as a paid option.

Web Access

A copy of your files are stored on Dropbox's secure servers. This lets you access them from any computer or mobile device.

  • Manipulate files as you would on your desktop - add, edit, delete, rename etc.
  • Search your entire Dropbox for files.
  • A "Recent Events" feed that shows you a summary of activity in your Dropbox.
  • Create shared folders and invite people to them.
  • Recover previous versions of any file or undelete deleted files.
  • View photo galleries created automatically from photos in your Dropbox.

Security & Privacy

Dropbox takes the security and privacy of your files very seriously.

  • Shared folders are viewable only by people you invite.
  • All transmission of file data and metadata occurs over an encrypted channel (SSL).
  • All files stored on Dropbox servers are encrypted (AES-256) and are inaccessible without your account password.
  • Dropbox website and client software have been hardened against attacks from hackers.
  • Dropbox employees are not able to view any user's files.
  • Online access to your files requires your username and password.
  • Public files are only viewable by people who have a link to the file(s). Public folders are not browsable or searchable.

Mobile Device Access

The free Dropbox application for iPhone, iPad, and Android lets you:

  • Access your Dropbox on the go.
  • View files from within the application.
  • Download files for offline viewing.
  • Take photos and videos and sync them to your Dropbox.
  • Share links to files in your Dropbox.
  • Export your files to other applications.
  • Sync downloaded files so they're up-to-date.

A mobile-optimized version of the website is also available for owners of Blackberry phones and other Internet-capable mobile devices.

I’ve read several reviews of Dropbox over the last few days. Most of them are very positive, some cautious and a few critical (those reviewers probably don’t like sunshine, small bunnies or carrot cake with cream cheese icing, either). On the whole, though, I’m far more concerned with my opinion of the software I use, and I like Dropbox. A lot.

Way back in the bad old days when I was working for living, I spent several years beavering away in the high-tech industry. I ran software testing labs for a few software houses. It’s a great job, and I loved it. The term VPN crossed my desk one day and out of curiosity I looked it up on the Microsoft web site. Virtual Private Network. That sounded really neat. VPN’s work over the internet and are set up in such a way that if you’re not part of the vpn you can’t even see it, much less what it contains. Dropbox seems to be built along those lines. As you can see in the Features list, they don’t stint on security or encryption.

I’ll be posting a wrap-up on Dropbox near the end of this week or early next week. But to end this introduction I want to say that if you need to share files with anyone, for any reason, you can’t go wrong with Dropbox.

Have a good week.

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If Life is what happens when you’re busy doing other things, writing is what you do when you really can’t be bothered doing anything else.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

SnapIt 3.7 by Digeus

SnapIt 3.7 is a nice little screen capture utility.

Here’s the URL: http://digeus.com/downloads/snapit/files/3/snapit_3_7.exe

With this little app you can grab photos from anywhere to post into your blog just as quick as a bunny. SnapIt has two modes of operation – automatic or manual. You can choose which mode to work in through the Properties menu. Right-click on the camera icon in the Tray and select ‘Properties’. Choose a Hot Key to start the Snap. The default is the Print Screen button, but you can select any button on the keyboard. Then specify a folder to store your snaps and select a file format from the 5 available; JPG, TFF, BMP, GIF or PNG. You also select a file name prefix – say, “snap”, and a number generation system such as 01, 02 and so on. You have two choices here – it can be Incremental or Random. Finally, if you want to automate the photo collection process, click the “Auto Save Images to Folder” box just under the Hot Key option at the top of the Properties dialogue box.

When you work in ‘auto’ mode all of your choices in the Properties dialogue go to work. You left-click on a photo on a web page and a cross-hair cursor appears. Crop the photo as you need and release the mouse button. Your selection is stored to the folder you chose, in the format you chose and with the file name generation system you chose. Neat, huh?

You can capture anything you see on your display – windows, menus, full screen or cropped images and even images from a video clip. Like I said, this is a neat little tool to have on hand.

In manual mode, you click on a photo, get the cross-hair cursor and crop the photo as you wish. The photo is placed in the system clipboard. You then copy/paste direct into your blog or into MS Word, your photo editor or any other application that will take it.

SnapIt 3.7 really is a handy piece of software.

Download SnapIt 3.7 from the URL above and play with it for a while. You’ll find it as handy as I do, I’m sure. Here’s another nice little option – if you post a review in your blog or on your website and send a link to your review to: Julia.taylor@digeus.com, she’ll be tickled pink to send you a registration code for your copy of SnapIt.

So you get a very nice little tool, lots of people get to hear about it and it doesn’t cost you a penny. What a deal. That is a business model I can live with.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

WordPress migration redeux, SnapIt 3.7

 

Here we go again. I’ve got enough on my plate without having to deal with Microsoft induced headaches.  I’ve worked in and around computer hardware and software since 1971, so I’ve seen my share of migration screw-ups, thank you very much. I host my web site, www.garyshowalter.com, at the Microsoft Live site, and keeping my blog updated is important to me. The web site service is good, generally speaking, if limited. That’s all I need, so a few limitations are okay with me. But the other day Microsoft migrated their blog hosting to WordPress for one reason or another, and that meant my blog no longer appeared on my Author’s Blog page on the web site.

You can’t configure WordPress to automatically mirror your blog post to a blog page on your MS Live web page. They just ain’t innerested in doing that fer yeh, nosirree, Bob. So over the next several days I have to figure a way around this issue, or give serious consideration to my options.

On another note, I’ve got a neat little utility to play with. It’s called SnapIt, version 3.7. You can think of it as your PrintScreen button on steroids. Here’s a link to their web site:

http://www.digeus.com/products/snapit/snapit_screen_capture_3_5.html

It’s being marketed as a great tool for bloggers, and I can’t argue with that. But blogging aside, I’ve got a nasty suspicion there are a whole lot more uses for this little tool than snagging shots for a blog post. I’ll let you know as I give this little app it’s sea trials over  the next week or so.


Enjoy your weekend.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Wordpress migration headaches, audio book progress and “Twisted Key”

I am one of several bloggers using Microsoft Live Writer to produce my blog posts who suddenly found themselves dealing with an unexpected migration to WordPress. I’m still not sure everything is working as it should. Guess we’ll find out when I try to post this.

“Hog Valley”, my second novel, is in print and available now in both large-format paperback and Kindle. I am currently putting together a downloadable audio book version that should be available at most major audio book retail sites by the end of October.

I’ve got a few pages of edits for “Twisted Key” from one of my editors earlier this week. I’ll get them into the manuscript over the weekend and then start writing new material (Oh, Happy Day!) the first of next week. The novel is close to 30% complete, so a few months of concentrated work should see the first draft back in the hands of the editors.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Tropical Storm #16 VS Me

 

Nothing says dedication like driving in the rain all day. Or maybe not. But I’ve got to do it,  so I might as well have a nice slogan. I’ve got an appointment with my eye doc in Gainesville in the early afternoon, and then I’ll head for Ocala to meet with my editor, Eve Bell. After that it’s off to Silver Springs to meet with my good friends Mickey and Rayne Summers and Walt and Trudy Carroll. All four helped tremendously in the writing of “The Big Bend” and “Hog Valley”. I couldn’t have accomplished half as much without them.

Then I get to to drive back to Orange Park.

And because of Tropical Storm #16, I’ll be doing all of that driving in heavy rain and blowing wind. Golly gee, that’s beginning to sound exciting. Not.

I normally get up at 4:30 in the morning. I used to have a perfectly good reason for that. I can’t remember what it was, but I’m confident that I did once have a perfectly good reason. Knowing myself as well as I do, I’m positive I never would have gotten up so damn early if I didn’t.

The point behind that little rant is that when I checked my email this morning (technically, it wasn’t morning yet) is that the Voice Talent I have been in touch with about recording “The Big Bend” sent me an email saying he was ready and willing to do the job. I contacted the producer with that bit of happy news and told him to ship out the contracts.

So “The Big Bend” – and later “Hog Valley” - will both be available as audio books, probably some time early next year.

I’m just about halfway convinced that traditional publishing is in its waning days. Brick and mortar bookstores will always be with us, I am happy to say, but the rising costs of keeping such retail stores open and well stocked will force them into the realm of specialty stores, and their prices will rise accordingly.

POD – Print On Demand – makes sense today. It eliminates the need to maintain inventory, which means no warehousing, no stocking fees, no warehouse staff. Traditional publishing has always been a labor intensive affair, and the print industry even more so. The cost of paper and ink and the skilled labor to run the presses, create the graphics and print and bind the books, coupled with the costs of warehousing, distributing and shipping books all over the world has climbed exponentially throughout the last several decades.

Nowadays, most book sales – I think it’s about 60% on a yearly basis – are sold on-line. The sales of eBooks and audio books are rising steadily.

My goal is to make a good living from my novels. As much as it pains me to do it, I have to become a businessman about this. That means getting into as many revenue streams as I can, and market and promote as wisely and expeditiously as I can.

Being a good writer is a good beginning. Becoming a good businessman is the only way to get ahead.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

It’s Sunday morning

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My first book signing of the Fall was supposed to be at the Historic Grounds Bookstore in Green Cove Springs on 11 September, but I was way to sick with an upper respiratory infection to even think about it. I do apologize.

Yesterday I was at Flagler College in St. Augustine for a group signing for the Florida heritage Book Festival. It was held in the Rodhaver Student Union building. There were about fifteen authors and a very nice crowd throughout the day.

Frankly, I wasn’t feeling very well, but I did manage to finish out the day. Unfortunately for me, I had not yet received a single copy of “Hog Valley”, so my table looked a bit empty. But I did have “The Big Bend”, and sold several copies.

Unfortunately for all of the other authors in the room, Carl Hiaasen was there, with lots of copies of lots of his books, and he sold bunches. The poor guy spent the entire day autographing his books. His hand must have been really, really sore by the end. It must be tough being him.

The rest of us just sat and watched, for the most part (we’ll ignore the all of the hissing and catty remarks from the other authors in the room). The line of people clasping copies of his books stood patiently (it was a very long line) until they could get their copy signed. A few people bought several of his books and he had to sign each and every one of them.

But he’s earned it. Carl Hiaasen is a damn fine author.

My thanks to the folks at the Florida Heritage Book Festival for putting on on such a  great event!

You can find a list of events I’ll be attending this Fall on my web site. I’m pretty sure Carl Hiaasen won’t be at any of them, but you never know who will be…

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

“Hog Valley” is out the door

 

My second novel, “Hog Valley”, is now available through my web site, www.garyshowalter.com. It will also be available through www.amazon.com within ten days and other on-line retailers will pick up some time later.

In order to mark the release of “Hog Valley”, the prices on both novels have been reduced from $18.99 to $15.00. Please do not hesitate to purchase multiple copies for presents…

Truth to tell, if I had a day job, I wouldn’t quit it to be a writer.

But what the heck; you gotta make do with what you’ve been given, and make the best of it.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

I’m suffering from a burst of optimism

 

Hi, Folks:

I expect the printed Proof copy of “Hog Valley” to be in my hands very close to the end of this month. The novel should be available for purchase on Amazon and my web site within another ten days. Or so.

I've placed a thumbnail of the cover art for "Hog Valley" on my web site www.garyshowalter.com. It's worth a look.

I’ll let you know the day it becomes available.

“Twisted Key” is lagging. I haven’t written a word in the manuscript in a few months. Life has gotten in my way in a very big way. Health issues, mostly, and moving apartments, and more health issues. But I can see the end of the proverbial rainbow from where I’m sitting, so there is great cause for optimism.

I may not have done any writing, but I have done a lot of thinking about “Twisted Key”. And no plot I ever met suffered from an overabundance of thinking.

The moving is finished, though we are still unpacking . For another, the retinal surgery is behind me and the eye is doing very well, thank you very much. I recently had a nasty bout with an Upper Respiratory Infection, and the antibiotics are well on the way to clearing that up (all of the dust from packing up an apartment and unpacking may be the cause of the URI).

And I am now working on a 22” wide-screen monitor, which is truly a miracle of modern technology. I don’t have to squint at a small CRT screen, and any headaches I suffer will NOT be due to my monitor, ever again.

It’s been hinted at on my web site, but I’ll give you a bit more information. As much as I can at this time, anyway. There will be a major price break offered to folks who purchase “The Big Bend” and/or “Hog Valley” in the next few months. I’m doing this both to mark the publication of my second novel and to encourage folks to pick up a few Christmas and Hanukah presents.

I’ll drop the prices as low as I can, and try to keep them in place at least through the first of January, 2011.

But tomorrow I go for a blood test.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Waiting on “Hog Valley” and other stuff

 

I’m waiting on the Proof Copy of “Hog Valley”. The interior work and the Cover work are complete. As soon as I receive the proof copy in the mail

I’ll check it thoroughly and, hopefully, give my final approval. This week, I hope and pray.

In spite of my best efforts, I have not written a single word in “Twisted Key” in several weeks. Health issues – torn retina, gout (nasty, nasty stuff), moving between apartments, final edits and wrangling with the production teams on “Hog Valley” and most recently a really bad upper respiratory infection have gotten in the way of any writing.  That’s life, I guess.

But that does not mean I’m not thinking about the plot. I am, and when I can I’m running down leads and making contacts for information to flesh out the story.

The recovery from the URI is slow, unfortunately. Getting back to some semblance of normalcy from something like that takes time, especially when you’re not nineteen. Heaven knows I haven’t been nineteen in a couple of years. Heaven knows that – I’m just getting around to realizing it, myself.

I hope you have a really good week.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

“Hog Valley” vs. Moving

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It’s a tie, on several levels. Both projects have together drained me dry, where either project alone would merely have left me exhausted. As far as pure anxiety is concerned, “Hog Valley” wins with sleepless nights and nightmares of covers glued on upside down and interior text in Ukrainian or only half the pages have type in any language. I’ve just this afternoon seen the final proof for the cover. It is gorgeous. The final interior proof should be here in the next day or so.

But Moving has it over “Hog Valley” in physical strain, shortness of breath and just plain exhaustion.

All of us – my sister, her husband and yours truly, are now living in the new apartment in Orange Park, along with the furniture and all of the odd bits still in boxes or simply dropped in an empty spot. Which boxes are stacked in the middle of the rooms and along the walls. Meaning, of course, that you simply can’t get there from here. If you are stout of heart and willing to plot a very will he - nill he course (or no course at all) you can forge your way into the kitchen, but it is very unlikely you will ever be able to return to whatever civilization you left behind.

I was in the living room watching television yesterday afternoon, when I recalled a reference book I needed for “Twisted Key”. So I headed for the library room just behind the kitchen (I think that’s where it is, or at least was), looking for a particular box of books, and somehow wound up walking on Edgewater Drive in Orlando, carrying my dirty laundry bag. I turned around very quickly and found myself back in the apartment, this time in the laundry room, with the reference book in hand.

That was a very close call, I tell you. I didn’t have any change for the Laundromat.

Neither Richard nor myself have seen my sister in three days, though we can hear her cries. We can also hear the trumpeting and roaring of some large and hungry beast, hard on her trail.

Before you snort in derision, remember this is Florida, where anything is possible. In fact, in Florida, anything is very likely.

Friday, September 3, 2010

I can’t believe it’s Friday already

 

What a week this has been. Never mind all of the mess surrounding the move from one place to another (It’s not over yet. The movers only show up tomorrow). “Hog Valley” is in production, and I’m spending so much time in ‘Meaningful Discussion’ with the production teams that I don’t have any time or energy to work on “Twisted Key”.

First off, I stipulated a font sixe for the body text, but the proof came back two sizes smaller. I told them to use the font size I’d given them, and their response was to tell me it was going to cost $200.00 of my dollars to affect the change. I said ‘No’. More on this later.

That same day the cover art proof arrive in an email and it was suggested to me to get a better quality digital photo for them to work with, because the photo I’d initially provided was way too weak on detail. So I had to drive to the artists home a few hours away, re-photograph the artwork and come back, clean up the image and let them know I had it.

When I did that I found out that the publisher had ‘waived’ the charge for the font size change. I was thoroughly wiped out by the drive, and very relieved by the change in position of the publisher.

Now I’m praying the book cover design folks won’t try to bill me for the new artwork. They didn’t screw this one up – I did…

Well, it’s Labor Day weekend. Maybe nobody will notice that little fact…

 

Have a great Labor Day weekend!

Saturday, August 28, 2010

It’s been a very busy week

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Maybe I’m finally getting old. I don’t remember most of it. What I do remember is shifting boxes, rearranging my room to fit more stuff into it, building tables and assembling chairs, shifting more boxes, working out an events calendar for book signings during the Fall months and scraping together the cash to cover the expenses involved.

I hate moving. I love travelling, but I purely hate moving.

On the publishing front, I did receive the proofs for the interior design layout and the book cover for “Hog Valley”. The interior proof was right on the money, but there were a few issues with the cover design. As I mentioned in a previous post, I did get in touch with the artist and requested another round of photography to get a 300 dpi image I could pass on to the design team. With any luck I’ll have that early next week.

 

So here’s the Events Calendar:

Book Signing Events

September 11     Historic Grounds Bookstore, Green Cove Springs
            4 - 7 PM

September 25    Florida Heritage Book Festival, St. Augustine
            7 AM - 5 PM

October 9        Fall Festival - Calvary United  Methodist Church, Orange Park
            10 AM – 2PM

October 16 & 17 Orange Park Festival
            7:30 AM - 6:30 PM (2 days)

November 13    Historic Grounds Bookstore, Green Cove Springs
            5PM - 9PM

November 20    Andrea's Bookstore, Palatka
            12 Noon - 3PM

 

If you’re in the north Florida area, I hope to see you at one of these locations.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Well, one of my editors is very happy. the other is on vacation…

I got an email from Eve Bell yesterday. She said she was taking the rewritten portion of “Twisted Key” to the library with her. I’d sent her my rewrites about a week ago, before we started to move into the new apartment.

This evening she sent me a reply. She is now a very happy editor, indeed. Lots and lots of happy words in her email about the marked increase in clarity and exposition of the plot, and she was really happy about the character development.

My other editor, Mickey Summers, who also does the cover art, is supposed to be back from vacation soon. He’s got the rewrites, too. I also need to see if he can send me new photography of the painting for the cover.

We’re shifting a lot of boxes into the new apartment this week, and with Richard (my brother-in-law) off work this weekend, I hope to have most of the boxes here by the time we quit lugging stuff on Sunday.

Because the movers are supposed to load up the furniture on Monday and bring it over.

Maybe I’ll be able to get back to work on “Twisted Key” some time next week.

Hope you’re having a more productive week than I am.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Late To Bed And Early To Rise

 

We’ve been moving boxes between apartments the last several days, working hard to get all of the small stuff out of the old apartment and into the new before the movers arrive to shift the furniture over for us. I don’t think we’re gonna make it, but that’s just my opinion.

Actually, it’s my back, and my legs and feet saying that. My sister isn’t big on lifting heavy stuff, and my brother-in-law is still tied down to a full-time job. So I’m doing most of the heavy lifting, and glad that my body can still handle it.

I haven’t treated it as well as I should have over the years, and it gets a bit cranky when I put more demands on it than it considers right and proper. It thinks it should be babied more. Personally, I think it could lose about twenty (okay, thirty) pounds or so, and it really should quit smoking, too.

But we still get along, my body and I, event though we do have our arguments over what’s right and proper. It gives a little, I give a little. That’s the secret behind any good, long-lasting relationship.

But my feet hurt, and my legs. We’re moving from a two-bedroom townhouse apartment to a three-bedroom flat. My sister and her husband have the master bedroom, I’ve got on of the smaller bedrooms and the third is going to be used as a library/office for my brother-in-law.

Right now (well, not right now) I’m sleeping in the new apartment while we move boxes in. I had to have my bedroom set up with my new bed and get my computer hooked back up. All of that had to be done before the weekend, which meant a lot of upping and downing on the staircase at the old apartment. I can now state flatly that I will never live in another house that has a staircase. I have had it with moving boxes and furniture up and/or down staircases. It’s dangerous, and it hurts.

I had all of my books and clothes stored in sealable plastic containers. ‘Stored’ is the operative word. ‘Stored’ means you don’t have access to what’s in those sealable containers, and you don’t move the damn things around will he-nill he. ‘Stored’ does not mean you haul them up a flight of stairs one month and then a few months later move them back down, stuff them into a car and then move them into another room. ‘Stored’ means you put those damn containers someplace and leave them be.

Well, Life will play its little games. I have another six containers filled with around eighty pounds of books in each, and four others packed with clothes, towels, bed linens, computer gear, letters, photos and nick-knacks I haven’t seen in years. And a large mahogany folding table that I write on (type on, as on a keyboard). And they all got moved into the new apartment, right along with a lot of other stuff. There is still a large amount of stuff to be moved, but I am living here, now. My sister and her husband will be moving in once we have all of the furniture shifted over.

I damn near killed myself moving all of that stuff in two days. Not to mention dealing with the service tech getting the cable internet and TV hooked up, setting up my bedroom and actually getting back to work on “Twisted Key”.

Which I haven't actually done yet, but I will, soon. I promise.

And I got a new bed. My sister and I went bed shopping on Wednesday, last week. There’s just me sleeping on it, so I was looking for a twin bed, or at most what’s called a double bed. I was sort of looking forward to it, because I’ve been sleeping on an air mattress since April. Several air mattress, actually. They seem to develop weak seams if you keep them in use for a month or so.

It’s not a large bedroom, unfortunately. Only about thirteen feet on a side, so a twin or double made a lot of sense. But this queen size mattress/box spring unit was only another twenty dollars and I damn near fell asleep testing it, so we bought it.

I’ve been getting into my new bed around ten or eleven the last several nights, and waking up between two-thirty or three in the morning, full of piss and vinegar.

Which is why I’m writing this blog entry well before six AM on a Monday morning. I started it around four AM, in case you’re interested.

I had a phone conversation with my publisher recently. I should have proofs of the interior and cover for “Hog Valley” some time late next week or the first of the week after. Which means “Hog Valley” just might be available in early September, as opposed to the end of the month.

And that would be a very good thing, indeed.

I hope you have a good week.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

An Update between Downtimes

 

Tuesday of last week we were warming up to the task of moving to another apartment. We were in touch with our cable service provider, the electric company, my publisher, the new apartment complex manager and anyone else we could think of to keep everything on track.

Well, I was in the middle of uploading the last material to the publisher when the wheels came off. The service provider chose that day to cut off the entire town of Orange Park while they carried out some “Scheduled Maintenance”. For the entire day. Without telling anyone.

After several frantic calls we learned two important things. First, my Belkin wireless router/receiver should never have been able to handle any traffic between the cable modem and my computer, and the estimated time to complete the scheduled maintenance was unknown. And I couldn’t contact my publisher, since my email was down, right along with the rest of my life.

The service provider did say they would send out a NetGear wireless router that was compatible. It arrived two days later. Without a wireless receiver, which they said would arrive some time in the middle of the next week. Which brings us up to today, which really is the middle of the next week.

The publisher now has all of my files and production work on “Hog Valley” is continuing apace. The folks working up the book cover are concerned about pixilation on the cover art. I am hoping to hear from the artist some time soon to get better digital photographs to send to them.

Today, as we know, is Wednesday. I will be breaking down and packing up my computer, along with everything else, to move into a larger apartment Starting Friday. The service provider will meet me at the new apartment Friday afternoon, so this next round of downtime should only be a day, as opposed to a week. Since I am only moving myself and my gear into the new apartment on Friday, the technician may want to connect their modem directly to my computer to verify the data stream. I’m not at all sure what that is going to do to my current setup, since my computer is normally the Client and my brother-in-law’s computer is the Host.

That has the potential to become a real fur-ball.

Never mind moving boxes, clothes, plants and whatever for the next ten days until all three of us are living there.

We’ll see.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The Short Version

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Back in March of this year, I was living in Silver Springs, Florida. I’d moved there in April of 2008 to do research on my second novel “Hog Valley”. Much of the story takes place in and around the Ocala National Forest, so that seemed to be a real smart move.

But that March the vision in my left eye started to go all wonky. It started out with a lot of ‘floaters’ in the eye and in a matter of a few days it just started raining floaters in what seemed to be several depths. Some seemed to be real close and others further out. I got scared when my vision became completely blocked and went to the emergency room. They sent me to Shands in Gainesville.

I love Shands. The initial surgery took place at the end of march. If you need a retinal repair, go to Shands. I’ll not afflict you with the gory details of the surgery itself, but I will say those were ninety very interesting minutes. I did try to get up and leave a few times, but the docs managed to talk me out of it. After draining the viscous fluid out of the back of the eye, the doctor cranked up the laser and stitched the torn retina. Then he filled the cavity with a silicon-based fluid.

Two months later I went back for what was to be the final operation to have the silicon extracted and the cavity filled saline solution. But there was a problem. When I went to the docs office the day after for the post-op visit we found that a large glob of silicon oil remained in the back of the eye.

So a month later I went back for another procedure to remove the oil, flush the cavity and fill it again with saline. At the post-op the next day I found that the vision in the center of my left eye was clouded. Somehow the cones in the center of the eye are ‘grayed out’. At first the doc thought it might be due to ‘photo toxicity’, or light poisoning due the the very bright lights they need to see what they’re doing way back there, but now the most likely culprit might be the silicon oil itself. Nobody knows why, or how, or even if for sure it is the oil. But they will figure it out.

So today I went back for another visit with the eye doc. I’m back on eye drops and I’ll go back to visit him in another two months. It seems that out of the thousands of surgical procedures he’s done, five patients, all in the last year, are reporting the same problem. The docs are working on it, and I have no doubt they will figure it out.

These folks are good, and dedicated. I have vision back in my left eye, and I am a happy camper. With both eyes working I do not notice any loss of vision due to the grayed out area. I am a happy camper.

But all of this to-ing and fro-ing to Gainesville, and the loss of the use of my left eye for extensive periods of time, and the resulting eye strain in my right eye have conspired to keep me away from my computer and my writing.

I am sorry for that, because if I don’t write you can’t enjoy my novels.

“Hog Valley” is in production now. It should be available near the end of September (in spite of health issues). I am back at work on “Twisted Key” now that “Hog Valley” is all grown up and out of the house, both of my eyes are working properly, and I am writing new material at a decent rate.

All may not be well with the world, but on the whole I’ve got no real complaints.