This will be the new cover for Quantum Soul. It was done by TwinArtistDesign, the same person (I still don’t know his/her name) who created the cover for The Illusion of Gravity.
I like it a lot.

Books Worth Reading
This will be the new cover for Quantum Soul. It was done by TwinArtistDesign, the same person (I still don’t know his/her name) who created the cover for The Illusion of Gravity.
I like it a lot.

Old McDonald had some pharms,
ee yi ee yi oh
And with his pharms there came alarms,
ee yi ee yi oh
With a side effect here and a heart attack there,
here a clot there a stroke,
bet you wish you never smoked
Old McDonald had some pharms,
ee yi ee yi oh
– A nursery song for our times –
Copyright 2017 John Greene Dyer
I’m very satisfied with how my contest is going at 99Designs. So much so that I’ve decided to re-title and re-package my first novel.
Anzu will soon be withdrawn and republished. Here’s the preview. In a couple of days, the first round will come to an end, I’ll start another poll, and the cover for Quantum Soul will be selected. Woohoo!

I used a wire coat hanger for filler rod to put the finial back on this iron screen. Also re-applied a leaf and repaired a hinge.
I’m really satisfied with my purchase. The DHC2000 torch is just as amazing as the vendor claims. It gets the metal hot right now!
I hadn’t had any experience with gas welding, partly because the torch that came with my compact oxy/acetylene kit couldn’t weld. This one can. I find it’s a lot like TIG: get everything hot, push the puddle around, try not to trip on the hose.
Walla!

Shortly after I published the eBook version of Anzu on Kindle, about five weeks ago, I decided to ease off on promoting the series until after I launch Quantum Soul.
The inspiration for this approach started with a post by Valerie Douglas at the Indie Author group on FB, when she wrote something to the effect of, “Nothing sells your first book like your second book”.
I recognize that Valerie may not have meant one should not bother trying to sell the first book, but that’s how I finally took it. At any rate, the Anye Legacy series is going to be eight books, so what’s the hurry?
There’s more to the decision, of course. Others have observed that a multi-book campaign promises that an investment in Book One will be rewarded by successive volumes. The reader can count on it, because here they are.
It makes sense to me, and that is now my direction. Quantum Soul stands at 118,000 words, and the next book — as yet untitled — is at 48,000, so a three-book campaign in 2017 is not out of the question.
But, eventually, I’m going to have to deal with the marketing part of authorship. In preparation for that, I’ve been collecting materials on the topic: notes from presentations, blog entries, excerpts from newsletters and the occasional email.
This week, I transcribed my notes, and was reminded that somebody — I forgot to write down whom — recommended I explain to readers why they will want to read my book.
This is why we procrastinate.
Sure, after having written 250,000 + words on Anye Legacy’s long arc, I have a sense of what I’m up to. If forced to confess, I will say the work is different from what you’re used to: not post-apocalyptic, or populated with teenagers who are “coming into their powers”, or about aliens arriving to destroy the Earth.
Which is saying what I didn’t do, and not part of the assignment. In my defense, can you imagine how hard it is for me to stand far enough away from my own work to talk about things like this?
So, I’d like to know what you think. Anzu can be previewed and/or purchased here, or you can check out a copy at the Sarasota, Florida county library system. Also, if you follow my WordPress site — see the navigation panel on the left — you will be queued up for free book notices, both for Anzu and its follow-on volumes.
After you read, please leave a comment and let me know if Anzu is special to you in some way, and how. It would be a big help, and much appreciated.
There is a sentiment which I am sure all writers experience that I have named Author’s Remorse. It is the sensibility that leads to editing, and I had a dose of it last night over yesterday’s WordPress post.
I haven’t deleted it yet, but I might, because it was terrible.
I am still trying to decide what the lesson is. Shall I be spontaneous on these pages, because that’s what one does in this setting, but reel it in when I am talking about my own writing? Will you think I don’t know how to edit when I leave the bad stuff out here?
Maybe I’m making too much out of it. It was honest, a little negative in spots, certainly not a promotional piece. I told the audience what Anzu is not, when I should have been saying what it is. The replacement can be found on Amazon Author Central this morning:
Anzu is a book for readers who enjoy discovery, who like to think, who want to be surprised by ‘aha’ moments, when one is motivated to turn back a few chapters and see if there was a clue to the thing just discovered.
I will be gratified if young readers take to it, but it’s written for people with experience in their lives. I hope it takes you someplace that is impossible to get to from here.
And, since editing is so important, I may not be done with it. Shall I speak of my ambition as a writer, the desire to write books with depth and insight, words that people want to read? How I would like to stake out my own territory within a genre that is overworked as space opera, and under-served along other lines?
Eh. Maybe. Right now I need to make breakfast.
Anzu was not written by a fifteen year old. It is not YA, although I will be disappointed if young readers don’t take to it. All the same, Anzu is not “Johnny had a gleam in his eye as he strode confidently to his rocket ship”.
This is a book for a reader who enjoys discovery, who likes to think, who wants to be surprised, who relishes ‘aha’ moments and turns back a few chapters to see when he or she should already have figured out the thing just discovered.
An agent asked me what the book is about, and then groused because I couldn’t answer in one sentence. Again, Anzu isn’t that kind of book. For some readers, it will be about a race that believes it is dying. Others might ruminate about the intractable differences that keep cultures apart, or the futility of war, or the efficacy of war. I hesitate to say the book has something for everyone, but there is a lot of material to think about.
More than one person has complained that they couldn’t relate to people with funny sounding names. May I observe that Anzu takes place on another planet? Nobody named Tim or Bob here, ma’am. The names are Sanskrit, so perhaps South Asians will like the book better than Westerners. I can live with that, but I hope it doesn’t turn out that way.
In the 8 days since I launched Anzu on Kindle, I have approached the author business like a business.
That is what one must do during launch month, lest the project languish. So, I have faithfully divined the portents, every day, to wit:

That is 7, count them, 7 books sold, including 1 each to myself and my brother.
This is after shamelessly pestering everybody I know, emailing my entire contact list, and running two paid Facebook campaigns that, I am told, reached almost 1,000 people.
Wow!
I must say, that’s enough success for one week. Today I will try to take a break.
In the meantime, Thank You to everyone who clicked through. You are, apparently, a very slippery fish.
Recent Comments