Sunday 30 October 2011

And now the paperback version.....

Finally, after a bit of tinkering with covers etc, here is the paperback version.

Currently this is just available from Lulu, but shortly it will be available from amazon as well.

Unfortunately I have no control over the price, the minimum is set by Lulu, so that is what I have left it at.

I will be checking this out myself shortly.

Note the download still remains free at Smashwords for the moment so you can take a look at the entire book so this is a no risk deal.

Going Nuclear - redux IV

Well finally, the news I had been hoping to hear.  "Scholarship" is now in the premium catalogue of smashwords so is now available through "the usual outlets".

When they say available, I believe it can take up to two months to get through to the various lists and catalogues.

That is also true of the paperback version which is just undergoing some minor formatting etc tweaks as we speak.

Friday 28 October 2011

Scholarship French style

I mentioned in a previous post that there are two French films which have some echoes of "Scholarship".  These are 1964's "Les amitiés particulières", a film about two boys who form a "special friendship" in a French style boarding school.  This affair is complicated by the "interest" of one of the priests in the younger boys, so he breaks up the friendship.  This is based on a well known book of the same title, written by Roger Peyrefitte.


The second film is 1997's "La ville dont le prince est un enfant" based on the book "The Boys" and the play "The Fire that Consumes" by Henry de Montherlant.  The plot is identical to "Les amitiés particulières"for the first two thirds of the film before veering off into a Catholic guilt trip of stupendous length and boredom.  However the first two thirds is very watchable as the sadness is palpable almost all the way through, summed up in a stunning scene where "hope" or "happiness" is imagined as a paper plane thrown by the younger boy (Souplier) and ends up crushed in the hands of the jealous priest.  It is one of the most powerful scenes in a film I know, yet few know it.  The authors knew each other, this explains the similarities.


The films are available from amazon.fr (tip if you have an amazon account elsewhere you can sign in for 1 click and get it sent to you from France) Les amitiés particulières and La Ville dont Prince est enfant (at an eye watering price).  They may be available elsewhere but that is one for google.








I recommend both films, they really do resonate with Scholarship (and inspired me to think "hey, I had something like this happen to me" and decide to write a fictionalised account).

Tuesday 25 October 2011

And with a dull thud

The shiny new preview copy of the paperback version lands on my doorstop.

The weight is impressive if nothing else.

I have already spotted one/two  minor tweaks that needs to be made to the cover (the publishing logo is fractionally off centre and I am going to experiment with different colour verbiage).  Update, see result below.  I was sorry to lose the purple, but the white stands out more front to back.

I also realise now that both front and back covers work really well, the front is a boy alone, the back is two boys together, which sort of sums up the plot.  Combined I think it says a lot.  A chance frame as it happens.

Now I am really, really pleased with how the cover has come out.  It gives a clue to what lies within, which was my main aim, and I hope it stands out.  That is a tough challenge in today's crowded e-store, but I am trying

I hope there are not too many more corrections to be made but I aim to scrutinise once more before unleashing this copy  in due course.  Friends, you know what my Christmas prezzie might be this year!

Sunday 23 October 2011

Blazer Fables

This book has been sitting at my bedside for a few weeks now.

A collection of interlinked short stories set in the stifling confines of a 1960s tradition obsessed Public School.  The boys are mildly rebellious, the masters daydreaming, both mostly oblivious to the world outside.

Buck Theorem has written each story in a slightly different style but over the course of the book you end up with a feel for the school and some of its inmates (yes, public school felt like prison to me).

The best is saved to last "Now that we are here" has a gentle build up to a powerful ending with a sublime description of an afternoon spent doing mostly nothing.  Really I wanted more of this one

If you liked some of the hinted stories around the edge of "If..." then this is for you.  But be warned, no machine guns at the end, but something else....

Blazer Fables - paperback

Blazer Fables e-book

New Cover for the paperback version of Scholarship

I have been busy going under the hood and hope to announce very shortly a paperback version of "Scholarship".

This version is the same (well apart from changing one sentence) to the e-pub version but you do get this nice shiny cover to look at!  I am rather please with it.  The picture is actually from a scene in a rather obscure Scandinavian film.

It will be available from amazon and also from lulu.  I will give links in due course.

I hope you enjoy.





Saturday 15 October 2011

Going nuclear - redux III

Well finally, the upload went through and the conversion process also sailed through in about an hour.  Smashwords could really do with a progress bar to let people know something is actually happening.

Anyway, it appears to have passed the vetting process and so now I await the manual vet and hopefully a premium listing. I will let you know, the clock is ticking.

That is the good news.  The unhappy bit to relate is that I really dislike the appearance of the epub version, but maybe that is because it is formatted for e-publishing and I am a bit of a traditionalist, I like paper books.

That will mean that I will shortly release a paperback version on lulu.  One is almost tempted to make it a redux version, putting in some extra text that I had previously edited out.  I am just thinking out aloud here.

Going nuclear -redux II

Back at base after a nice break from work.  I had thought I would get some writing done, but in the end very little happened on that front.

Anyway, having finally had some feedback from Smashwords on what needed to be changed to get on to the premium catalogue, I made the corrections.  Books come in two basic formats, block paragraphs for non-fiction which have a trailing space after each paragraph or first line indent, normally used for fiction, which do not have a trailing space.  That is fine, my problem was that I mixed both styles using a first line indent with a small trailing space.  Unfortunately, it is only at the manual review stage you get told this is the problem.  Until then you are left mystified.  Anyway, I have now removed all trailing spaces so fingers crossed it will work.

The only thing is, at the moment, Smashwords just will not accept any uploads from me (been trying at various times of day and night) for the last 24 hours.  All that happens is that you go to re-upload, select file, hit the button and then wait.... an eternity is seems. The first couple of seconds there is a lot of up/down traffic as you would expect, then it goes to zero... and stays zero.  You have no reassuring message saying percent uploaded or anything just a 0b/0b message.  If I am doing nothing else, Safari sometimes comes back with the "line dropped" message.

I have been looking around to see what other's say.  So far nothing like this from others.

All a bit frustrating when I think I am close to having the formatting right.  Sod's law in fact.

Monday 10 October 2011

Going nuclear - redux

Finally some feedback from smashwords on what hoops I have to leap through to get into the commercial market, it is partly a matter of trailing paragraph spaces (they don't like them if you have an initial indent).  That is easily fixed.

The other "problem" is the infamous "paragraph 7a" issue of incompatible headers.  I am going to have to wrap a towel around my head for that one.

But we will get there, honest.

Meanwhile, I am having some further thoughts about what comes next.  I will let you know when I know myself.

Sunday 2 October 2011

The Character Jonathan

Jonathan is important to the plot of Scholarship, he was a close friend of Pip.  However, in real life Jonathan did not exist, he is actually a composite of three boys.

Mostly Jonathan is R.  R had a great nickname, he was one of a large number of brothers from a Catholic family, so shared some of the guilt that Catholicism seems to thrive on.  That he trained to be a priest did not surprise me, nor that he decided that priesthood was not really for him, also did not surprise me.  I see he now works abroad, no doubt supported by his faith.

Jonathan also has a chunk of S in him.  S was up for anything.  He was the naughtiest boy in the school but only because that is what people thought he was.  He never did anything terrible, just a bit of a mischief but his name was often called out at assembly, and that meant big trouble for him.  Even then, S was good looking with short very blonde hair and a permanent suntan.  I saw him some years later, walking down the other side of the street.  I wish I had plucked up the courage to speak to him, but he was with another boy from school, so I did not as they looked like they might be an item.

Jonathan also had a bit of C in him.  C was another natural mischief, very high spirited and adventurous, often in trouble.  His father was a famous expert and used to appear on TV ever so often.  I thought C would go on to do something similar, but there is no sign of him since we went to different schools.