Metrics

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:

2017-03-19

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.

Sell!

Anzu is now available in print and Kindle editions on Amazon.

Will you pass the word on Facebook, Twitter, jungle drum? I need reviews to appear during the first 30 days, while the book is on the “New Releases” list.

Kindle Unlimited subscribers can get it for free.

Amazon Prime subscribers can borrow it for free.

Else, what the heck, it’s only $2.99.

The game is to acquire enough momentum so that after the “New Releases” promotion goes away, it is still possible for Anzu to pop up through 300,000 books in the same category.

I know. It’s like seeing how sausage is made.

In marketing parlance, this is a “call to action”. Your tolerance is appreciated.

The share button is down there. Go, run like the wind!

Blurb

I’ve been struggling the past few days with the promo capsule for Anzu.

I’m not the first person to say this: The blurb is harder to write than the book.

I’ve tried flowery, street-level, sophisticated, wordy, brief, academic … The next day, author’s remorse sets in and I start over.

Ya, ya … start a thread on an author’s site … did that … wrote more junk.

Until today … Two gentlemen on a Facebook public group – Science Fiction and Fantasy Authors – pitched in for an impromptu workshop, and I think we hammered it out.

Ken Britz played the decisive card when he told me to write ad copy. Here’s what I did.

The Anye race is dying: A fading sun, a declining population and an estranged confederacy are collectively signaling the end of an advanced civilization.

 Rivan Saraf is tapped-out as a military first responder, too much the enlisted man to be an officer, and already trained as a physicist. When a discovery at a high-energy research lab puts him on the run from agents of a foreign power, Rivan must lead a technological revolution that could save his race from extinction.

The Anye Legacy series honors the visionary traditions of hard science fiction. Inspired by screenwriter Joss Whedons’ skill at wrapping the fantastic in the mundane (Firefly, The Avengers) and cyberpunk pioneer William Gibson’s holographic realism (Spook Country, Snow Crash), Anzu is a provocative story about a society confronting the apparent winter of its existence.

The last paragraph came out of advice I read elsewhere, directly turned out of long storage by Ken’s words: Give the prospective reader something to compare your book to. I can see how that might help.

Thanks, Jim Aikin and Ken Britz.

Dedicated

While preparing the Anzu print edition yesterday, I realized I omitted the Dedication page from the eBook version. Not that much trouble to correct. This is what I wrote …

In memory of Alan Maury Razovsky, who became my Dad in December, 1955.

He was the sweetest, kindest man ever. I still miss him.

Tagaytay

That’s us, in 1957. We were at Lake Taal, Tagaytay, in the Philippines. It was probably our first visit there.  Continue reading “Dedicated”

Another snippet from Quantum Soul

Please read an important message from your SatNet service company.

Dear Customer:

Please accept our apology for interruption of service. SatNet Partners has historically maintained that voice and data subscriptions are not constrained under the Vanya Quarantine Act.

However, a provincial court has ruled otherwise. Approximately two weeks ago, we received an order to exclude the Laghu continent from our service area, and we complied.

This morning, SatNet Partners received a directive from the Cadre military authority to restore service to Laghu. We have proceeded provisionally, pending clarification from our government.

The Anye Assembly has asked us to forward its statement regarding a military operation that took place on the Laghu continent two days ago. You may read the text of this message here.

As always, thank you for your patronage.

Cordially,

SatNet Partners – A Division of Asurya Horizon

Teaser – Quantum Soul Chapter 25

An hour after Tan and Uli departed, a woman knocked on Amil’s door at the Traveler’s Cave hotel. She was past middle-age, of Azanta extraction, with a dark flowing mane streaked with grey. Her name was Sumnaya.

She took charge of him at once. “You will not lock your door. I or one of my subordinates will enter at all hours. If you are modest, learn not to be. If you think poorly of the Vanya, you are not mistaken, but I must tell you I am Vanya. Are we reading from the same book so far?”

“Yes, aurata.”

“Good. Many of the women who work here are Vanya. They have come to escape from fathers, brothers and husbands. Do not court or flatter them. They are done with men, even beautiful and civilized ones like you. You will not sport with the Sadhu ladies, either. Do you understand me?”

“Yes.”

“Tell me what is wrong with you.”

Sumnaya helped him with his shower, and on the toilet. She put him to bed and brought extra pillows to put under his legs. Despite the stern lecture, and the fact that she was Vanya, Amil found her to be a person of exceptionally kind demeanor.

The next morning, he woke and could barely move. He lay in bed and studied everything he could see. He made a game of deciding which articles were made on Laghu, which were brought over before the Quarantine, and which came afterwards.

He thought: When somebody comes to get me, I will make a list.

It was much later before anyone checked on him. He had already urinated in the bed. The lady who found him alone cringed with shame and regret. “This will never happen again. I promise you.”

By late afternoon, Amil’s care team appeared to be fully engaged in their mission. He felt certain there would be no more incidents. Paca and his son visited, bringing him a robe, slippers, and a second armor vest to wear as a brace.

Amil prayed that evening, thanking the Gods for bringing him there.

Shortly after midnight, the building shook from side to side. Amil heard distant explosions, and shouts from the parking lot outside.  He lay in the dark, unable to help himself, unwilling to call through the open door.

It was only a few minutes later that Sumnaya came and sat on the edge of his bed. She gripped his hand so hard it hurt, but her voice was steady, her posture fearless.

“The Accord is firing lasers into the city from orbit.”

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