Filthy Lucre

Lifers In the 21st Century

Kids, many many moons ago, I published my first novel, called Lifers. It got reviewed in The New York Times and The Philadelphia Inquirer and sold about as well as a can of syphilis. What can you do? Everyone’s got to have a first novel, and this one is mine. I still have a great deal of affection for the book.

It went out of print years ago; aside from the copies currently selling for $87.45 on Amazon (!) I have a few hundred littering my crawlspace. Happy to sell a signed copy to anyone, make me an offer. And then I thought, well, why not put it out on Kindle and Nook? WHY NOT? Aside from the fact that by now anyone vaguely interested in this novel has purchased a copy and thus my sales will be crushingly low, there is no reason not to. So I did.

You can now buy Lifers at Amazon and Barnes & Noble for $1.99 to read on their respective reading devices:

Lifers for Amazon Kindle

Lifers for BN Nook

Go on! As an added incentive, if you ever see me in public, show me Lifers on your device and I will buy you drink, a bar of chocolate, or give you a hug (your choice) on the spot.

The Inner Swine on Nook

The Inner Swine Volume 17, Issue 1/2, Summer 2011A few months ago I managed to get my collective shit together enough to put my little zine, The Inner Swine, up on Amazon for the Kindle. I was pretty proud of myself. The Inner Swine has remained largely unchanged since its inception in 1995; the same basic layout, format, trim size, and style. You could hold a 2011 issue up to a 1995 issue and see no difference.

Hopefully the writing inside has changed (for the better), but that’s a different matter.

So, getting the zine into the Kindle was pretty big for me. Immediately upon announcing it, of course, I was inundated with emails from folks wondering when the Nook version was coming. Soon, soon, I swore to them, taking a deep pull from my unmarked bottle of ‘shine and typing with one hand. Soon.

Well, soon apparently = 6 months or so, but the glorious day has arrived! The last two issues of TIS are now available for the Nook:

The Inner Swine Volume 16, Issue 3/4, Winter 2010

The Inner Swine Volume 17, Issue 1/2, Summer 2011

Both priced at $0.99, both sloppily formatted and barely proofread, because this is a zine, man, and both DRM-free, because this is not Communist China. Go buy some!

Filthy Lucre

Per the deliriously entertaining IO9.com, author Lynn Viehl has posted one of her royalty statements on the web for all to see. This is balls, if you ask me. This is America, for god’s sake, and what we earn at our vocations or avocations is sacred privacy, because that way the secret lizard aliens who secretly run the world can keep us down through collusion. Doubt me? Then you’ve been hit by the lizards’ brainwash ray.

Author earnings are strangely fascinating to folks. I think this is partly because authors have been traditionally portrayed in media as rich people who tap a keyboard for a few hours a day – usually in remote, luxurious locations – and all have bestsellers. Look at Castle for a current example of this trope. The other part of it, of course, is the wish-fulfillment of aspiring writers; believe me, when I was a kid pounding out 90-page rewrites of The Lord of the Rings, I wished fervently to believe that authors had status and riches. Sadly, we do not. Or at least I have not – I wonder if I need to sue somebody.

One thing to keep in mind about this stunt, of course, is that Lynn Viehl has more than one book out for sale, and unless her books literally vanish from the face of the earth she’s probably got a royalty stream from some of them in addition to this one book she’s posted about. Another thing to ponder is that she did get a sizeable advance (though of course in real-life terms, that got nibbled down, as she says, to near poverty-levels if that was your only income that year). Even assuming that the earnings drop considerably after the first year, put together she’s making more than this one statement shows. That’s part of the gig, too. If you publish one book and then decide to go all Salinger, you better hope that one book is a classic, bubba.

And no, I won’t be posting my own statements. One reason is, I don’t want you to know about all those paranormal-romance-selkie novels I wrote under pseudonym. Part of it is that I don’t see the upside. And the final part is, this way I get to keep pretending to be a millionaire playboy author who writes his novels during the 22-hour flight between here and my secret island kingdom.

This is what you’re missing on Twitter

A recent conversation between me and Bill Cameron:

jeffreysomers: http://presentmagazine.com/ – there’s also a review of The Eternal Prison for those of you who remain unconvinced.

bcmystery: @jeffreysomers Wait. Are you saying I didn’t have to read the actual book? I could have just read a review somewhere?

jeffreysomers: @bcmystery No, because the book had all those hidden messages and dollar bills hidden inside the binding.

bcmystery: @jeffreysomers That’s a good point. I forgot about the dollar bills, probably because of all the alcohol I bought with them.

bcmystery: @jeffreysomers Probably didn’t help that I bought whatever solvent they were selling as booze in that one bar in future Venice.

jeffreysomers: @bcmystery My work here is done.

bcmystery: @jeffreysomers Why lookie there! I missed one!

jeffreysomers: @bcmystery There should have been $50 in singles in every copy. No one can explain how we make money that way, but apparently we do.

jeffreysomers: @bcmystery And on a related note. . .can I borrow a dollar? They made me use my own money for that.

Exhausted, New Video, and a Calendar

Hey there – I’m exhausted. Spent Sunday racing around New York trying to support my wife, The Duchess, as she ran the NYC marathon. We’d planned to meet her at miles 6, 11, 17, and 23. Due to startling incompetence (centering on my failure to look at the Sunday subway schedule) we missed her at miles 11 and 17, when apparently she was begging total strangers to hold her as she wept. The Duchess has done 7 marathons and runs every day, but this year she suffered a bad calf pull a few weeks ago and her training has been an uphill battle. but she finished! And I have been manfully keeping my whining about how exhausted I am to a minimum.

As you all certainly have heard through the massive media coverage, the Avery Cates books are being re-released as mass market paperbacks. The Electric Church MM dropped on 11/1, and The Digital Plague will hit the stores on 12/1. So, yesterday I decided I had to mark the occasion with a quick little video (It’s less than a minute long!):

Now that’s quality stuff. I tried for a fast-paced quick-cut thing, and I hope it isn’t too fast. Anyway, just for fun. Feel free to tell everyone you know.

Finally, I got this in the mail yesterday:

That’s the Stephen King Library Desktop Calendar 2010, in which I have a brief essay in the month of August. This was edited by the great Jay Franco, and other contributors are Peter V. Brett, Gary Jansen, and Jae Lee, among many others. It is a beautiful and useful thing, and I’m proud to be a part of it.

Mass Market Me

My sainted editor sent me a copy of The Electric Church mass market:

WO0t! That rocks. It’s purty. The design and packaging is amazing, and I wouldn’t be able to resist buying five or six of these if I saw their candy-like covers on the shelves. I AM GOING TO RULE THE AIRPORTS! And if you’ve been waiting to jump on board the Somers train because of filthy lucre, babe, this is your chance.

Besides, they’re adorable! Here’s a sense of scale:

You can have three or four in your pockets to hand out to people!

Now, seriously, it’s a fantastic package. As much as I love the Jae Lee trade covers (and I do love ’em), these are terrific and I applaud my publisher’s design sense and market savvy. Go on, buy five.

We Can Has Movie

Well, I’ve sold the film rights to the Cates books. This has actually been brewing for a while but I have a firm policy of “cash, or didn’t happen”, so I’ve been waiting around for a check before announcing anything.

Now, the chances that 18 months from now nothing has happened are pretty strong, so it’s not time to buy solid gold toilets yet. But it is time to start shopping for solid gold toilets, so I’ve requested a copy of Solid Gold Fixtures International for some bedtime reading over the next few months.

And no, none of you can be in the movie. Hell, even I can’t get a part, despite (or perhaps because of) my desperate pleading.

That is all.