rolanni: (Patience)
rolanni ([personal profile] rolanni) wrote2015-04-17 02:15 pm

All the poor soldiers are weary

In which several points are addressed, in no particular order, and with no particular connection.

1.  Have you pre-ordered your signed/personalized copy of Dragon in Exile from Uncle Hugo's Science Fiction Bookstore yet?  Time's a-wastin'. Here's a link to background and instructions.

2.  Sharon Lee and Steve Miller are writers.  We are published by Baen Books. We are not horses, and we are not in "Baen's Stable."  You may think it means "all of the writers who are published by Baen" -- and you would be wrong.  A human stable is understood to mean a group of people who have been trained, or who work for, a particular team or organization. Writers are trained by many, and they are self-employed.

3.  Pursuant to 2, above, we have nothing to say (and have therefore said nothing) on the topics of sick and unhappy canines, as they have Nothing to do With Us.  Sadly, some. . .outraged persons who are unable to make fine distinctions, have decided to make Grand Gestures, such as refusing to review all Baen Books, because they feel that Baen Books is the architect of the present silly shenanigans of a few. . . very loud authors.  If you see fewer reviews of our work, this may be the reason why.

4.  There is apparently more than enough Stupid to go around.  This does not mean you have to take a handful of Stupid out of the box when it comes to you.

5.  Eric Flint has written a cogent and sane piece about awards, and, coincidentally, the history of the SF/F genre, and the SF community.  It is the long view from someone who has been in the field for longer than five years, and who has taken the time to understand the field, and the community.  Well worth a read.  It is a lengthy essay, but take it in shifts, if you need to.  Here's your link.

6.  Yes, Korval's Game has been out of print for about a year.  How clever of you to notice!  The good news is that it's being reprinted by Baen this month, and should be available soon.  Now!  It used to be that the distributors would let indie bookstores know when a backordered book was reprinted, but apparently they don't do that, anymore.  So -- if you would share this happy news with your favorite indie bookstore, the next time you're in, you'd be doing everyone a good turn.

7.  Today's blog title comes from "The Banks of Sicily."  Here's one link     AND!  Here's another

EDITED TO ADD:  8.  I will deleting replies which are, in my sole judgement, the work of trolls, and also banning said trolls from posting here.  Ref 4, above.












Sooper Trooper rockin' the red basket







Sooper Trooper rockin' the red basket








[identity profile] rolanni.livejournal.com 2015-04-17 09:08 pm (UTC)(link)
People don't know what words mean. And, to be fair, the whole "stable" thing has bothered me for years and I'd cringe every. time. I. heard. it. However, I have never heard it so frequently as I have during the last few weeks, so I kinda...snapped, there. But I'm fine, now. Just -- no more stables.

I remembering a question I saw. . .somewhere. . .where a reader was wondering about an author who has two series, one with Publisher A, and one with Publisher B. And the fan was wondering why on earth Publisher A had "permitted" the author to sell the second series to Publisher B.

So. . .some people apparently aren't too clear on how publishing works, either.

[identity profile] ebartley.livejournal.com 2015-04-17 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
You could perfectly reasonably be referred to as one of Baen's frequent authors, usual authors, go-to authors, or any of a number of words like that.

Some people expect authors to only sell to one publisher? But what if Eric Flint wanted to write a history book? Or if you wanted to write a Regency romance with no magical elements -- or pick up your Maine mystery series again? Or - bah. Whatever. I enjoyed reading for years before I had the slightest interest in the means by which the books came about.

[identity profile] juliansinger.livejournal.com 2015-04-17 09:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Might be they're more familiar with comics, where they have had publisher-exclusive contracts for writers, at some points.

[identity profile] attilathepbnun.livejournal.com 2015-04-17 11:47 pm (UTC)(link)
They're out-of-date and genre-confused, is what. Such persons are confusing the present-day writer-publisher relationship with the actor-studio relationship of 1930s, '30s, and '40s

And Trooper looks very comfy