I hadn't known about it until today, but the updated 2010 edition of my 1990 book What's That Pig Outdoors: A Memoir of Deafness (University of Illinois Press) is now available on Google eBooks ($9.99).
It's best read either on the Web or on an Android tablet or iPad, the Google page says, partly because the pages are scanned images of the printed pages, not flowing electronic versions of the text. On a small device the print would be so tiny it might be hard to read.
The U of I Press reports that sooner or later Pig will also be available in other formats, such as Kindle and Nook, and presumably will be readable on them.
[Feb. 25. I bought Pig from Google eBooks and downloaded the free Google Books app for the iPad from Apple's App Store. Works fine on my iPad 2. The text is quite clear but a little small when read in horizontal double-truck fashion, but when the iPad is held vertically, the single page presented yields a very readable text.]
Friday, February 24, 2012
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Pain
Hang Fire survived the publisher's first edit. Now it goes to the copy editor for final humiliation.
Labels:
Publishing
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
As promised, a rail report
The 19th century Baltimore & Ohio roundhouse at Martinsburg, W. Va.. |
By the way, the GPS atop my camera as described in a January blogpost does work aboard a moving train. When a photo is examined in Lightroom, I simply click a button and Google Maps shows me exactly where the picture was taken. Life doesn't get better than that.
Labels:
Railroading
Friday, February 3, 2012
'Hang Fire' gets a publisher
Finally. Yesterday the contracts arrived from my agent for the fourth novel in the Steve Martinez series, Hang Fire, and were duly executed and mailed back.
The publisher is Five Star Publishing, a subsidiary of Gale, the research book giant. It will bring out a hardcover about a year from now, then, if sales warrant, a paperback and an e-book version shortly afterward.
Five Star historically has marketed chiefly to libraries, not bookstores (although its wares are available on Internet vendors such as Amazon.com and Barnesandnoble.com). It's now expanding into the ebook market.
This publisher is not well known to ordinary readers, but is familiar to younger mystery and other genre writers as a first stop on the way to acclamation. (It is also familiar to old hands as a last stop after abandonment by traditional publishers.) Its advances are minuscule, but its royalties are generous and paid on time.
Five Star's books are respected in the trade. They are reviewed by advance services such as Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, Booklist and Library Journal. Even the New York Times Book Review notices them now and then. They win industry prizes. They establish careers and save them, too.
I have hopes.
The publisher is Five Star Publishing, a subsidiary of Gale, the research book giant. It will bring out a hardcover about a year from now, then, if sales warrant, a paperback and an e-book version shortly afterward.
Five Star historically has marketed chiefly to libraries, not bookstores (although its wares are available on Internet vendors such as Amazon.com and Barnesandnoble.com). It's now expanding into the ebook market.
This publisher is not well known to ordinary readers, but is familiar to younger mystery and other genre writers as a first stop on the way to acclamation. (It is also familiar to old hands as a last stop after abandonment by traditional publishers.) Its advances are minuscule, but its royalties are generous and paid on time.
Five Star's books are respected in the trade. They are reviewed by advance services such as Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, Booklist and Library Journal. Even the New York Times Book Review notices them now and then. They win industry prizes. They establish careers and save them, too.
I have hopes.
Labels:
Publishing
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Year of the Train
An eastbound California Zephyr approaches Castle Gate, Utah. |
We are longtime rail travel lovers. We love to watch scenery unfold before our eyes. We love to go to bed on the prairie and wake up in the mountains. We enjoy meeting new friends in the lounge and dining cars. We simply prefer relaxed and unhurried travel.
And we don't miss the exciting experience of strangers prodding and fondling us at airport security.
We're starting the travel year in early February with a round trip on Amtrak's Capitol Limited from Chicago to Washington in sleeper roomettes. Our tickets include dinner upon departure and breakfast upon awakening.
Many people think Amtrak sleeper accommodations make train trips far more expensive than flying, and in many of not most cases that is true—but not on this route. We booked early, in December, and got refundable round-trip sleeper tickets for $588. Two refundable economy round-trip tickets on United or American would go for $577. Of course, two nonrefundable "super saver" airline tickets would be $380, but add $50 (each way) cab rides to O'Hare and the cost rises to $480. Without meals.
The lesson: Don't assume that taking a sleeper room on a train is always going to be more expensive than flying.
Next up is a short 5 ½-hour coach round-trip in early March aboard a workaday Amtrak local, the Lincoln Service from Chicago to St. Louis, where I'll be delivering an address. Roundtrip rail fare: $40.50 each for senior citizens. Roundtrip air fare: $162. Plus cabs to and from both airports.
Pricewise, the Lincoln Service wins. Timewise, air travel is faster—tt's only half an hour. But those taxis might add an hour to the overall trip, and then if you get to each airport an hour before departure, you're looking at 3 1/2 hours in transit. Plus the aggravation of TSA's wandering hands.
Then there'll be a ten-day trip in late March on the California Zephyr to San Francisco Bay, in the service of getting trackside photographs for the upcoming e-book version of my 1994 book Zephyr: Tracking a Dream Across America. We'll stop in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, for a couple of days to take the waters as well as gather information and photos.
On the train we'll spend one night in a roomette and three nights in a large bedroom, all of the latter paid for by points amassed over five months on our Amtrak Guest Rewards Master Card. If we were paying cash, a round-trip in that big bedroom would be a staggering (but refundable) $3,532 for two people. Refundable round-trip air fare for two would be about $1,900, or if one wanted to take one's chances and book a nonrefundable ticket, $1,020.
All that scenery and relaxation on the long Western train trips is costly, no doubt about it. But if saving time is not an object, you do get three days of rolling comfort with amiable fellow travelers as well as Rocky Mountain and Sierra Nevada vistas rather than four intense hours at 30,000 feet among indifferent strangers in cattle-car conditions. Some people would consider that priceless. We do,
Winding up our travel plans for the year: A fall round trip on VIA Rail's The Ocean from Montreal to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with a ten-day ground tour of the Maritime Provinces. We'll of course fly from Chicago to Montreal. We could get there by Amtrak (Lake Shore Limited from Chicago to Albany and Adirondack from Albany to Montreal), but that would require a night's layover in Albany, not exactly the City of Gold for us.
It will be costly, of course. VIA's overnight trains are as pricey as Amtrak's, but we haven't yet decided which sleeper accomodations we'll choose—a standard bedroom for two (meals included) or a roomier, more upscale compartment in the classic 1950s Park round-ended dome/observation car that brings up the rear of The Ocean. More about this later.
Of course, I'll put up full reports on all the trips on my rail travel blog at Trainweb.org.
VIA Rail Park observation cars (here on The Canadian at Capreol, Ont.) also bring up the markers on The Ocean from Montreal to Halifax. |
Labels:
Railroading
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)