tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5561924841201310368.post481947936645078202..comments2023-12-17T17:56:58.396+00:00Comments on Debbie Bennett - thriller/crime & fantasy writer: Are you Homophonic?Debbie Bennetthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06761474820689143835noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5561924841201310368.post-912385647971275572012-01-25T17:26:48.245+00:002012-01-25T17:26:48.245+00:00Typos are one thing - not understanding the meanin...Typos are one thing - not understanding the meaning of words is quite another IMO. But it wasn't you.... :-)Debbie Bennetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06761474820689143835noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5561924841201310368.post-64648840639147930722012-01-25T00:54:23.577+00:002012-01-25T00:54:23.577+00:00I'm sure everyone --myself included, having po...I'm sure everyone --myself included, having posted a link to my novel on a facebook forum you frequent -- is dying to know if it's their book you're talking about. I stared at my opening paragraph for a good while in a panic, but unless I'm more blonde than I appear to be, I'm guessing I'm not the guilty one. <br /><br />I definitely had a few typos in my first edition printing that five pairs of eyes somehow missed (yowza!), but the e-book editions are (believed to be) typo-free, as will be the second edition print version. I see typos in traditionally published books pretty frequently, so I'm not horribly upset. It happens. It's part of the risk a consumer takes with self-published novels.Kathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18199931219768023093noreply@blogger.com