Venting

I need to vent.

Something is really hinky with Amazon Kindle Scout, and I don’t know what or why.

It started on April 2nd, which was the day after my book was released on Kindle Scout. It was the same day that they announced that they wouldn’t be accepting any submissions after April 3rd because they were stopping the Kindle Scout program.

It was that next day that my data stopped.

I don’t know anyone else in the Kindle Scout process, so I don’t know how they’re faring with data. But I know that April 3 was the day that my data quit updating. In other words, on the first day, I had 254 visitors, on the second another 254, and no data (not zero, NO DATA) from then onward. which is suspicious in and of itself, because how could I have exactly 254 hits two days in a row?

If you voted for me, I don’t know if your vote counted. I don’t know if I’m getting any more votes. I don’t know if Amazon shut down the Kindle Scout program early, making us last entrants look like we’re being considered when we aren’t.

This looks, in a word, hinky.

This is what I received when I wrote them about the malfunctioning site:

Hello Lauren,

Thanks for you for letting us know about the issue. We are looking into the matter and will get back to you as soon as possible.

Rest assured that this will not affect your book’s chances of getting reviewed by the Kindle Scout team and potentially selected for publication. If your book has been shortlisted, you’ll receive a personalized manuscript feedback report from us when your campaign has ended, and once the publishing decision has been made.

There’s some interesting things implied/not implied in this email:

  1. “We are looking into the matter and will get back to you as soon as possible.” I sent this note twice; I got this same exact copy twice. 
  2. Related to this, this is AMAZON we’re speaking about. Amazon didn’t get where it is by losing data.
  3. If it’s only my book that’s getting data silence, are the votes out there somewhere or have they disappeared? Will I get penalized for those lost votes?
  4. “…will not affect your book’s chances of getting reviewed…” Does this mean they’ll review it without votes? Does it mean they’re not counting votes for anyone anymore?
  5. If they’re not counting/showing data counts purposely, is this a breach of contract?
Needless to say, I am not happy. Somewhere inside me is a grouchy little kid whose slightly older sister got all the nice things while she got the exasperated shrug from mom. That grouchy little kid believes that life is out to screw her over. So I’m fighting the good fight here — but I’m really grouchy.
And what do I do now that this route to publishing is closed to me?

Day 6 Camp NaNo — and a frustrating mystery

Day 6 Camp NaNo: I’ve made 10,000 works thus far, and hope to get another 2000 today. I’m pacing myself the way I would a regular NaNo, which is a 50,000-word month. Do I worry about writing too fast? Not really — the first draft is there to get the ideas down on paper, and then there’s editing. Lots of editing. Sometimes you realize that no amount of editing will save your book, such as when I finally gave up on Gaia’s Hands after the Kindle Scout campaign. Maybe I’ll write that whole book over from scratch some day. 

The mystery has to do with the fact that my Kindle Scout stats haven’t updated in three days. So last time I saw stats, I had 524 hits and no hours in hot and trending. That’s what I have now, because three days’ data is not showing up. Someone answered my email and said, “Thank you for reporting the problem, we will look into it.”
So I’m a little annoyed and a little paranoid (see what I did there?) If the data didn’t transfer is one thing, but if the data went missing entirely, I may have made the hot and trending list and never known it, in which case I would not win to the next step and I would not get published under their plan when I rightfully deserved it. 
So Dear Universe, cut me a break. 

Day 3 Camp NaNo — serious editing out.

Day 3:  I’m writing the last 30,000  words of a 80,000 word book, and I am so far off my outline now that I’m not sure about this book at all. (goes back and makes minor changes to book).

Day 3: I deleted some of the more hokey parts that had developed. My problem is that I loved Agatha Christie’s The Seven Dials Mystery, where seven sleuthing young adults in a secret society solve a murder. I had created a secret society myself of Prodigies protecting the wider band of Prodigies, complete with name and emblem. Too hokey for me, and thus I’ve lost a thousand words of progress.

However I’m one day ahead of writing, so I’m not really panicked. It’s just part of the process.

***********

Thank you for all of you who visited my book and boosted the signal yesterday! The book hasn’t made the hot list yet, but the hits to my site are gratifying. Remember that you can’t just visit the site — you must nominate the book for it to progress.

Here’s the link:
https://kindlescout.amazon.com/p/1KM8I0ZK97R9J/

Keep reading — I love to see you show up!

Day 2: So far, I’ve written 105 words of my allotted 1000 per day. My brain is a bit sluggish today; lots of external turmoil and lack of coffee is contributing to this state of being.

Having a word goal, though, is a great incentive, as is having a group full of people in my “cabin” — my group of fellow writers in Camp NaNo — yes, Camp NaNo is a deliberate kitschy metaphor. I might manage to finish Prodigies yet.
Here’s an excerpt of Voyageurs, my Kindle Scout entry at https://kindlescout.amazon.com/p/1KM8I0ZK97R9J/ .Boost the signal if you can.
p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; text-indent: 18.0px; font: 12.0px ‘Times New Roman’}

“Why did you make me jump right then?” I hissed at Berkeley. “We could lose Kat!”, by which I meant “I could lose Kat.”

“Because Kat deserves the best life possible, whether or not it involves you. The worst part is that, if she disappears and goes her own way, we won’t even remember her.” Berkeley sighed. “Besides, we need to change back the changed futures or else timelines become unstable.”

“I don’t want to forget her,” I insisted. “Especially as I plan to dance with her tonight.”

“In that outfit? They’ll never let you in.”  Then Berkeley popped out of the scene.

I suspected he placed me at the right place and time to see how events unfolded, but I would choose the right moment. I staked out a spot near the front facade of the Nelson-Atkins Museum, which had been torn down in 2045 to make room for a new public safety complex, one that could house armored personnel carriers. I could tell from the elegantly black-clad doormen and the young women in petticoated dresses that I would never get into the ball. So I had to think quickly of an alternative. 

I wasn’t given much time. I looked up and saw Kat, in a flowing yellow dress with drop shoulders and a light shawl. She walked alongside Harold, who looked a little younger than he had when I had met him. Harold, of course, wore a black tuxedo.

Kat didn’t sound enamored as much as she sounded vaguely vexed. “So why, Harold? I don’t like to dress up, I don’t like to dance with people, and I don’t like you.” Interesting words for someone who was in love with Harold.

“It’s an experiment about time. I’ll leave you here, Kat, and you see if you can get in. I’ll come back later and dance with you.” I realized I had an opening, but I had to act quickly. As soon as Harold had bounced away, I ran up to the dark-haired young woman with the long white lock of hair hanging into her face. 

Fifteen-year-old Kat looked me up and down and raised her eyebrows. “Hmm,” she said. “Did you want me to give you oral in the alley? That’s twenty.”

I felt sadness wash over me. “No, not at all. I want to dance with you.” 

“Nothing for money?” she asked skeptically.

“Nothing for money.” I meant to keep this child safe; realizing that this teen was my Kat left me confused and queasy. I determined I would dance with her as if she were the cousin I never had, dance enough to tell her that she could dream.

Young Kat stared through me with those scornful ice-blue eyes. If I failed, there would be more pain, more cynicism in this child, and in the adult Kat. 

“Would you like to dance with me?” I bowed to her.

“I won’t go in there,” she responded. “Harold will have to drag me inside if he wants me there.”

“No, here. On the sidewalk.” 

She looked at me, and the shrewdness dropped. “I put my hands on your shoulders, right?” 

“Yes, and I put my hands around your waist like this.” 

(“Mom, Dad, what are you doing?” I asked as my parents whirled around the sparsely furnished dining room.

“It’s called dancing. We used to do this when we were young. We do this in memory of the culture we have lost.” My dad spun my mother around, and she laughed. “Would you like to learn?”

And my beautiful red-haired mother taught me the box step that night.)

The young woman took to the box step immediately as we danced to music that maybe she remembered in her head, because of course she led. She stood a little shorter than my Kat did, a little skinny and fragile from her life on the street. 

I whispered, “Would you like to find a place to live?”

“I knew there was a price,” she muttered, and I wanted to cry. 

“No. No price. Just a Traveller who needs to teach you how to be strong and fly.” 

I thought she would reject this plea as well, but she stopped dancing and mumbled, “Take me there.” 

I put my hands around her waist and she mine. Then I bounced to 2065 and then to 1994 and  Berkeley’s familiar porch down the road from the museum. When a younger, just-balding Berkeley opened the door, I said, “This young Traveller needs a place to live. She’s been on the street, and she’s in grave danger.” 

Rebirth

I believe everyone experiences rebirth —

  • There are many religious festivals that follow the motif of rebirth, with Easter being the most present in my mind at the moment
  • Some people experience rebirth through transcendental experiences like walking in the woods or standing in a silent cathedral or looking out in space
  • Some people feel reborn through restorative justice — not just the wronged, but the one who has done wrong.
  • Some people feel reborn through new insights into life
  • Some reinvent themselves — when they fail at one thing, they open themselves up to another possibility. 
I believe in the potential for constant rebirth. It might be a bipolar thing, because I’ve lived much of my life with that enhanced glow in the religious/spiritual part of my brain. But I seek out opportunities for rebirth as often as I can, hoping I can hatch a more whole part of me.
Happy Easter/Good Passover/April Fool’s/Camp Nano time!
**********

And now for my re-hatching:

My Kindle Scout entry, Voyageurs, can be found at:

Voyageurs

And I’m looking forward to you reading (and hopefully nominating) me!

This is my link to the latest book I’ve put on Kindle Scout, and the campaign opens tomorrow:

Here’s what you’ll see when it opens up tomorrow:

Voyageurs

by Lauren Leach-Steffens

The end of the world is a matter of Time.
In this tale of time travel, mystery, and love, two time travelers — Kat from the present and Ian from the ecological disaster in the future known as the Chaos, get together to explore the attempts on their mentor’s life. Prodded by their mentor, Berkeley, they discover evidence — from the mysterious deaths of Ian’s parents to disturbances in the timeline –that a time traveler is plotting the end of the world.
You’ll need to not just visit, but vote if you like it!
*************
I’m not confident that this book will pull enough acceptance to be picked up by Amazon, and here’s why: 
  1. The process is driven by votes (aka popularity)
  2. One source of votes is friends. I’m not one of those people who have a lot of friends on media. For example, I don’t have more than 400 Facebook friends. If one-tenth of them voted, I would have 320 votes. If they all nominated me on the same day, I might earn the coveted “hot” stamp for that day. Might.
  3. The second source is the readers/nominators on the Kindle Scout site. They are more likely to mark the ones labeled “hot”, so some items sink and some remain “hot”, and it all has less to do with how good a book is than how popular it is. 
Although I don’t have much faith in the process, I want to go through with it again, and I need your help. If there’s any way you can boost the signal, I’d appreciate it as well!

So here I am, sitting at my desk with the dregs of the flu, looking at snow showers in the forecast on Sunday, and hope still springs eternal — I’ve decided to submit another book to Kindle Scout for voting on/potential publishing.

The name of this book is Voyageurs, and it is still under review, with the hope that this time it will get picked up. If this doesn’t work, I will put one of those books (probably Gaia’s Hands) on self-publishing, so I can say I accomplished my goal and get on with my life.

Voyageurs is the one about time travel, ecological catastrophe, and the outer edges of megalomania. It also has an edgy relationship and a lot of coffee.

I’ll let you know the address tomorrow. Please consider looking at it and voting!

Dusting myself off and trying again

It looks like I’m going to subject myself to another round of the Kindle Scout campaign process.

I’m just finishing one more edit of the book Voyageurs for a possible Kindle Scout campaign. It, like Gaia’s Hands (which, with fewer than 15 days left, will not make the cut for publication), is a standalone book for the moment. Voyageurs doesn’t happen in the same space as the Archetype series, so it wouldn’t break up a series (which would make it unattractive to an agent).

Voyageurs is very different than Gaia’s Hands. Where Gaia’s Hands is a delicate, pastoral slice of magical realism, Voyageurs features the sardonic daredevil Kat Pleskovich and the bookish Ian Akimoto from the disastrous ecological future called The Chaos. What begins as a string of suspicious deaths among the Travellers, or time-jumpers, becomes the uncovering of a plot to destroy the world.

Although it would be easy to dismiss this book as a time traveller romance, I’ve skewed things a little too much to use that label comfortably. Present-day Kat’s streetwise manner and her prickliness make her anything but the girl who needs a big man to protect her. Ian from the future, frail and bookish, has more empathy but a tendency to try to ingratiate himself to Kat. Their mentor, Berkeley, is a frustratingly droll time historian who revels in the Socratic Method. The bad guys? You’ll have to read the book.

I would call this book a crossover — soft SF with a touch of mystery and a relationship that helps pull things together.

If you have any ideas about the timing of the book campaign, please let me know.

Thank you for sticking with me!

Today’s the beginning

It’s February 28, and my Kindle Scout campaign is up and running! I myself am at the National Preparedness Institute, which is not nearly as impressive as it sounds. I’m setting up for moulage as you read this, possibly. This link should be live now:

https://kindlescout.amazon.com/p/250Q7OJ0R0F8W

But here’s the story again according to Kindle Scout (2018):

  • A book is a new, never-before-published work of 50,000 words or more that you’d like to see published. In my case, the book is called Gaia’s Hands.
  • An author is the person who has written and submitted a book to Kindle Scout. That would be me, Lauren Leach-Steffens, also the author of this blog.
  • Readers (that means all of you) scout the site and nominate books they want to see published.
  • Nominations are how readers show support for a book. Readers can nominate up to three books at a time. This is what I’m asking you to do.
  • A campaign is a 30-day scouting period during which readers nominate books to be published. Mine is from February 28-March 30.
  • The Kindle Scout team makes the final call on which books are published by Kindle Press. This will depend largely on how many nominations. This is what scares me, because it sounds like a popularity contest and I’ve never been popular.
  • Kindle Press publishes the books discovered through Kindle Scout. This is my goal — not for the $1500 cash advance, or royalties. I want to be read and enjoyed and maybe make people think. (Although I could get a new computer with the royalties, one that can handle graphics so I can map my landscapes using SketchUp without bombing the computer)