Elizabeth Sandifer
Posts by Elizabeth Sandifer:
Some Hastily Sketched Thoughts On Amazon and Hatchette
First, some context for those unaware of this particular issue – Amazon and Hatchette Book Group are having themselves a bit of a spat over ebook pricing, and Amazon is retaliating against Hatchette’s failure to agree to their terms by refusing to take pre-orders on Hatchette books, raising prices on them, and lowering their on-hand stock of physical books so that they take 2-3 weeks to ship. This has been widely criticized as being a massively dick move. Which isn’t inaccurate. But…
Thus far in my career I have not done a lot of work with traditional publishers. This is not because of any principled opposition to them, but mostly because thus far in my career I’ve consistently looked at manuscripts I’ve had and thought “I can make a couple grand off this right now or I can spend months or years trying to find a publisher with whom I may or may not make much of anything.” That may well change in the future, particularly as I slowly maneuver towards trying fiction, where self-publishing is much trickier.
Short Out The Time Differential (A Christmas Carol)
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In this scene, Clara is cleverly disguised as a carrot. |
Saturday Waffling (May 31st, 2014)
So, the Last War in Albion Kickstarter wraps today. If you’ve not contributed, please think about doing so.
All of which said, thank you. I say this often enough, but it really does bear repeating. I have a phenomenally cool job. The reason I can do this job, though, is that all of you are repeatedly willing to support me, whether by buying books or backing my periodic Kickstarters. (And I already have one in mind for 2015 that I think I can guarantee everyone will be very excited about.) You’re an incredibly generous, lovely bunch of readers, and I’m proud as hell to have earned the respect and love from people as fantastic as you.
I won’t lie, this Kickstarter was a bit scary for me. I’ve had the sense that Last War in Albion was starting to go well, but I didn’t really know if it was a project that was going to make it. It needed to find a way to start earning money, and I really wasn’t sure how much it could earn. And while it’s clearly not as popular as my Doctor Who stuff (which is unsurprising, given the relative size of television’s audience versus comics’ audience – in the US, Doctor Who at its lowest-rated episodes are seen by more people than buy the highest-selling comics several times over), it’s also clearly a project that has legs, which is heartening given that I absolutely adore writing it.
So here I am, about ninety minutes into what is technically Saturday morning, having wrapped up writing up A Christmas Carol (my buffer on Eruditorum is not what it used to be) and about to grill some burgers in a midnight drizzle before sitting down with them, a bottle of wine, and… actually, it would be spoiling things to tell you what the next episode I’m going to watch, wouldn’t it? Everything I get to write about for the next month excites me. Sometimes it terrifies me (the Swamp Thing chapter is 11.5k already and is not even vaguely in the neighborhood of almost done. I think that chapter is going to end up being longer than the Flood book), but it thrills me. I’m astonishingly blessed to get to do all of this work. Astonishingly.
So thank you. No clever discussion topic or anything like that. Just thank you. Thank you so much.
-Phil…
You Were Expecting Someone Else 30 (The Coming of the Terraphiles)
The Terror Answered: I Am Orc (The Last War in Albion Part 46: William Blake, Captain Britain in The Daredevils)
The Kickstarter to fund continued production of The Last War in Albion ends Saturday. It is currently $69 away from funding Volume 5 of the project.
This is the sixth of ten parts of Chapter Seven of The Last War in Albion, focusing on Alan Moore’s work on Captain Britain for Marvel UK. An omnibus of the entire is available for the ereader of your choice here. You can also get an omnibus of all seven existent chapters of the project here or on Amazon (UK).
The stories discussed in this chapter are currently out of print in the US with this being the most affordable collection. For UK audiences, they are still in print in these two collections.
Previously in The Last War in Albion: Alan Moore’s engagement with the question of Britain’s fundamental nature evoked the past efforts of William Blake to do the same thing.
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Figure 340: “Albion Rose,” by William Blake, from A Large Book of Designs, 1796. |
Pop Between Realities, Home in Time for Tea 79: Downton Abbey
Mega Man 3
I am out of persuasive reasons why people who have not donated to the Kickstarter might want to change their minds, so today I offer an unpersuasive one: you might gain psychic powers.
Long-time readers may remember when I wrote about video games on a blog called The Nintendo Project. It turned out, however, that there was such a thing as a project too mad for me to complete. It also turned out, however, that there is such a thing as someone madder than me, as a gentleman named Frezno asked if he could take up the torch and continue the project, which he’s been doing at The Nintendo Project, Resumed.
A while ago, Frezno asked if I would mind doing a guest post for his blog on Mega Man 3. Since Mega Man 3 is a fantastic game that I find really interesting and have things to say about, I was very much willing. That guest post went up yesterday, and you can read it here.…
Outside the Government: Goodbye, Sarah Jane Smith
Saturday Waffling (May 24th, 2014)
Happy Saturday, everybody. If you missed the announcement yesterday, the Last War in Albion Kickstarter has been updated with newly lowered stretch goals, such that we’re only $600 away both from Volume 5 and from thrice weekly posting for Miracle Day. There’s still a quartet of of custom essays available, as well as James Taylor’s art for the Grant Morrison portrait used in the banner and, of course, loads of ebooks, print books, and other fun goodies. For a variety of reasons, I could really use to see this get up above $8000 and into the $9-10k range, so if you’re on the fence, please consider what might tip you off of it and let me know.
So, we could discuss the flickering image of Peter Capaldi in orange silhouette, but I think that might be a short thread. Instead, it occurs to me, I don’t think I’ve ever done a basic old introductions thread here. So, dear readers, who are you? What do you do, whether for fun or money? How long have you been reading the blog for? Where did you find out about it?…