Paying the Piper is the sequel to the Crime Writers' Association Debut Dagger Award long-listed thriller Hamelin's Child.
Kindle only right now at amazon.co.uk and amazon.com, but it will be available in other formats as soon as I can sort it. Check out the Buy Links page which I'll update as other markets arrive.
Paperback will take a few weeks.
Thanks to everyone for their support.
And thanks even more to the wonderful SM Johnson who has featured me on her blog today! Awesome that somebody 'gets' my writing so completely.
Wednesday, 30 January 2013
Saturday, 26 January 2013
Marmite and Reviews
I write marmite books. For those people unfamiliar with
the term, marmite is a yeast-based extract (actually a waste product of the
brewing industry) commonly spread on toast. It’s USP has always been “you either love it or hate it”.
Personally I can’t stand the stuff.
But I write marmite books. People either love them or
hate them – my thrillers anyway. That’s OK. But then friends and neighbours –
family, even – want to read them, and inwardly I cringe. I’m not worried about
whether they’ll like them or not; everything is subjective and we all have
different tastes in reading material. But that in itself is the key. I want people
to read my books because that’s the kind of thing they read, not because they
know me.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m grateful for the support – more than
you or they will ever know – but if people don’t normally read the kind of
stuff I write, then they’re not going to like it. It’s dark. It’s nasty. And
they’ll be reading the book, looking at me and thinking … well, I don’t really
want to know what they’re thinking. I have no excuses. It’s what I write – my
characters want me to tell their story and I do, to the best of my ability. The
bad bits as well as the good bits. Because without the dark, the light has no
real meaning, does it?
I sent Hamelin’s
Child off to a big US review blog site about a year ago or more. Now when I
send books off for review, I forget about them. I don’t hassle reviewers. If it’s
not their cup of tea, that’s fine. I’ve already moved on. In retrospect,
sending a marmite book to a general book reviewer is probably not the smartest
of moves, but there you go. So I’d totally forgotten about this review until it
appeared, and it rather threw me. 3* is fine – and in fact, given the review
itself, I’m surprised it got that high. I was a bit down-hearted, but everyone
is entitled to their own opinions and I have no issues. Comment on the review?
Never. Maintaining a dignified silence is the only way to go. Brush it under the carpet and forget about it – I’ve
had worse and I’m sure I will again.
And then I had a 5* review on amazon – both the US and
the UK sites. Somebody had read this blog site review and was intrigued enough
to download a sample which they liked so much, they bought the book. They
enjoyed the book so much, I not only got a glowing review but a further comment
to say they’d read it twice more in the week afterwards.
So what does this prove? That opinions differ,
certainly. But that all “advertising” works too. Remember those truly awful
television adverts? The ones that are so bad you swear you’d never buy the product on
principle? But you remember them. And when you see the product when you’re out and
about, you might just be tempted to see what it’s like, if it's really as bad as you thought it might be. It’s the same with a not-so-good
review – it’s still exposure. Even on a big site, where lots of book-buyers are
going to read how badly-written the reviewer thinks your book is, there will
still be people who want to see for themselves – and who turn out to be
pleasantly surprised.
The worst thing for the independent writer is obscurity.
You’ll never get a good or a bad review if nobody ever sees your product.
Friday, 25 January 2013
Paperbacks & Planning Applications
So Hamelin's Child is now available as a paperback via amazon (all sites - just replace the .co.uk with .whatever in the url). Costs a bit more than the ebook, but that's down to the printing process; physical paper and book-binding costs money unfortunately and then there's the postage. But it does look good and I'm very pleased with the result.
And Paying the Piper is (finally) on a last read-through on my kindle. I think I've dealt with all the feedback from my wonderful beta-readers (Marj & Laura - you are so much appreciated!). So if I can put aside real life at some point, I will try to get it uploaded shortly. As I've said before, if you haven't already, then do let me know if you want me to email you when it's available.
Real life? I'm currently embroiled with our local action group Moulton Matters, trying to oppose a planning application to build almost 150 houses on the edge of our lovely small Cheshire village on two fields that are used by dog-walkers and nature-lovers. Feel free to add your voice at the Cheshire West & Chester's website if you'd like to object to dumping a huge housing estate onto an infrastructure that is already creaking (primary school is full with a waiting list, narrow roads often gridlocked at peak times, Victorian drainage system full-to-literally-bursting, no jobs nearby, one small village shop with no car park). There are plenty of brownfield sites nearby perfect for re-development - but they make less profit, so they'd rather grab our greenbelt instead. Feel free to support us - you don't have to live here.
And Paying the Piper is (finally) on a last read-through on my kindle. I think I've dealt with all the feedback from my wonderful beta-readers (Marj & Laura - you are so much appreciated!). So if I can put aside real life at some point, I will try to get it uploaded shortly. As I've said before, if you haven't already, then do let me know if you want me to email you when it's available.
Real life? I'm currently embroiled with our local action group Moulton Matters, trying to oppose a planning application to build almost 150 houses on the edge of our lovely small Cheshire village on two fields that are used by dog-walkers and nature-lovers. Feel free to add your voice at the Cheshire West & Chester's website if you'd like to object to dumping a huge housing estate onto an infrastructure that is already creaking (primary school is full with a waiting list, narrow roads often gridlocked at peak times, Victorian drainage system full-to-literally-bursting, no jobs nearby, one small village shop with no car park). There are plenty of brownfield sites nearby perfect for re-development - but they make less profit, so they'd rather grab our greenbelt instead. Feel free to support us - you don't have to live here.
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