We had a wonderful experience at Swancon 2018 over Easter. Our first stall, and some amazing customers. Our thanks to Leonie Rogers who dropped by to help.
Author Archives: Andrew
7 steps to easier editing revisions
You’ve just got your Word file back from the editor. You open the file and blanch at the number of changes they’ve recommended. Certainly you can just accept them all – but don’t. It’s your book and we editors don’t always get it right.
Based on Lisa Poisso’s much more detailed post, however, the following 7 steps will speed up the process of moving to the final version.
Before you begin, remember that you really can’t go wrong if you save early and often. Keep saving regularly as you go so that if you make a big mistake (easy to do in the era of global search and replace), you can step back to a recent version.
7 steps to easier editing revisions
- read your editorial report
- get ready for your first read-through
- learn how to use Word’s Track Changes. For help on this see Track Changes video tutorial
- save your edited document with a new name. Use a descriptive file name for your new file that includes the title, editing status, revision status, and date: GirlLineEditedRev1_0613
- turn off the Revisions Pane.
- change the colour of the edits. Set Insertions to Teal and Deletions to Grey – 25%. Then set Moved From to Grey – 25% and Moved To to Teal (this makes the grey deletions fade away and the teal insertions pop out).
- deal with your editor’s comments on a first pass through the manuscript
- on the second pass
- Reject any edits you do not want to keep (i.e. things you want left as you originally wrote them)
- revise edits your editor has made that you’d like a different way
- skip over the corrections and edits you like and want to keep. Simply pass them by with no action.
- accept All on the rest of the edits
- check for remaining comments and edits
- get a fresh set of eyes on the manuscript to proofread it before you publish.
For more information, with step by step guides, visit at Lisa Poisso’s original post.
There’s nothing like an opinionated typophile
There’s nothing like an opinionated typophile. Having said that, Butterick’s Practical Typography is an extremely useful resource for those of us who know the difference between Bembo (hate it) and Garamond (love it). https://practicaltypography.com/index.html#toc
Goodreads Giveaway announced – Cold Faith by Shaune Lafferty Webb
To celebrate the recent of release of book 2 in Shaune’s ‘Safe Habour Chronicle’ we are giving away 5 of the first book in the series – ‘Cold Faith’
Giveaway ends June 24 June 2017
See giveaway details at Goodreads
Latest review for Jon Puckridge’s ON
The Future is ON by Joel Smith
I very much enjoyed this book, but it seems to me, (and maybe only me), that you have to read a “quantum-speculative-cyberfi” book differently than you would a traditional, or normal, novel. I’m a huge fan of writers like Hannu Rajaniemi, (“The Quantum Thief”), and everyone else who tries to predict the electronic, cyber and social media future and who tries to translate quantum principles and theories into “sciencey” plot points.
The basic thrust here is that humans are moving from wireless headsets connected to the grID, their current reality of choice, to neural implants that completely tie them in to a hive mentality. (This is what it means to be ON through One Network.) The question is, what will this do to any human sense of past and future, as opposed to the purely now. Additionally, what becomes of reality, individuality, free will, privacy, moral responsibility, and the like. It’s a dystopian, (or utopian, depending on your point of view), variation and elaboration on where we are now. The author sweetens, and confuses, the deal with a few other lines.
In addition to humans the world is populated by rooins, who are completely sentient robots with equal civil rights. Since humans are Darwinian, (evolutionary chance), and rooins are Lamarckian, (each new generation acquires improvements made to the prior generation), there is fear that rooins are outpacing humans developmentally. (BTW, they are.)
On top of that, and this may be the bridge-too-far that has lost some readers, all of this is destabilizing the boundaries of space-time and there are disturbances at the quantum level. I like this fluffy goofy pseudo-quantum stuff, but if you don’t like playing along then it could easily get old.
We also get a huge cast of characters, and a murder mystery, but that seems to be there so the main characters can go places and do things, and it would probably be a mistake to go into this thinking it’s just a futuristic mystery thriller.
What it mostly is, though, is a thought experiment World’s Fair. Remember those fairs and expos in the 60’s and 70’s, (New York, Montreal), that showed us that the future is now? Jetsons cars and color TV and Dick Tracy wristphones? Well, that’s sort of what you get a tour of here. Every page, (I mean that almost literally), mentions or includes or describes some odd futuristic electronic, social, communications wrinkle. Almost none of them have anything to do with the story, but when all is said and done they really are the story. As we follow the characters, everything they eat, drink, see, hear, wear, or talk about or talk into, is next-level stuff. It’s all wild but plausible. It’s the next-gen extension of what we have now. And it’s all just a little twisted, or dark, or dehumanizing, or pointless, or meaningless.
So, this author has a firm grasp on the world he sees. He writes, and describes, great main characters and pretty interesting supporting and incidental characters, which helps to put the vision in context. He doesn’t miss the little details that sell this sort of world building. Plot and resolution? Not so much. But, as I say, it seems you have to read these novels a bit differently.
So, are you ON?
Links:
http://www.haguepublishing.com/sample/ON.html
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/1973513767
Faithless – released 21 April
Welcome back to the frozen and devastated world of Shaune’s Safe Harbour.
Ten years ago Rab learned the secret of the planet he calls home – and lost the young girl he’d vowed to protect; traded for a sweater, a set of gloves and a second-hand pair of boots. Since then, he’s wandered the barren surface alone searching for her, returning to the tunnels only when hunger, exhaustion or the inconstant seasons offer him no choice. When a freak accident occurs during the harvest, the death of an old friend finds Rab agreeing to abandon his search and guide Fin, now a tunnel-dweller, and Cloud, a former captive of the Top-siders, back to his old village to deliver a macabre and precious cargo. Although reconciled to honouring his word, Rab is convinced that their reckless journey south will tell him nothing he doesn’t already know and that the secret he has dutifully guarded all these years is in no danger of being exposed. He is wrong.
“I really enjoyed this book. Even though it’s the middle one in a trilogy, it stands alone perfectly. There’s always a sense of mystery in Lafferty Webb’s work, a mystery that seems to be conveyed between the lines rather than in them. This sense of mystery gives an extra dimension to everything she writes. The plot has some lovely, imaginative developments, and the ending left me keen to read the last book in the series when it comes out.” Danielle de Valera
Congratulations to Leonie for winning the Reader’s Junctions 2015 Book Award for Frontier Incursion
Congratulations to Leonie Rogers for winning the Reader’s Junction’s 2015 Book Award for Frontier Incursion.
And not bragging (much) but this is our first award as well!
ON by Jon Puckridge was released on Friday 15 January
‘ON’ by Jon Puckridge was released as an ebook on the 15th of January. With the proof now approved the book will be available for purchase as a paperback on the 19th of February.
It’s BLADE RUNNER meets THE WINDUP GIRL
Youren Cartouche writes advertisements for tech companies who promise to take us all into the future. But when a global corporation launches ON, a product designed to link everyone into a fully networked world, reality starts to unravel. Youren and Constantin Zann, a bio-mechanical detective must discover the truth before their world completely disappears.
Ian Wood writing in Novellum said of the book:
This felt like reading a William Gibson Novel, which in some ways was wonderful, because it was like Gibson used to be, before he lost his direction, but in other ways it was a bad thing because once you start down the road to inventing a new cool world, there’s a danger you’ll go too far and ruin it by rendering it in such obscure hues that it’s unintelligible to the human eye. Fortunately, while parts of this world were obtuse, this author didn’t overdo it, and the story – once I settled into it – was engrossing. It’s Gibson by way of I, Robot and A.I., with a tang of Blade Runner for seasoning, and an ominous dash of 1984 that tingles like Takifugu on the tongue.
Read Ian Wood’s review in full here.
Lesley Truffle’s first novel ‘Hotel Du Barry’ to be released by Harper Collins
The trailer for Jon Puckridge’s ON has just been released
What can we say – it’s smashing. The trailer is available on our YouTube channel here.