My Great Big Chicago RT 2012 Adventure

What happens at RT, stays at RT…except on Twitter, and cell phone pics, and Youtube, and blog posts–you get the picture!

So I won’t tell you that during my week at the Romantic Times Booklovers Convention in Chicago I mixed shots with a few well-known authors, or that I had a brief but satisfying “Scottish Fling” which ended in a threesome (photo, at least) with two cover models, and witnessed a male striptease the next night, or drank some strange foreign liquor (washed down with chocolate TimTams) with some folks from down under, or that I got thongs as a gift from a reader (book thongs, that is), or that I flew to Chicago with an automatic weapon packed in my suitcase…but I will show you pictures!

 

  

 

For more of the expose’ in pictures (of the cowboy nature) check out my blog post at the Wild & Wicked Cowboys Blog

Down the Rabbit Hole: Avoiding the Slippery Slope

It seems as if, like Alice, we’ve all slipped down the rabbit hole into a world that is less Wonderland and more WTF-land. In the year 2012, politicians are on TV actually discussing the legalities of birth control, even as banks are telling legal adults what we can and can’t sell and buy for our own personal use. It’s surreal. It’s frightening. It’s angering (if that is even a word).

It’s a slippery slope I don’t want to go down. So what can we do? Mark Coker, the owner of Smashwords, explains the situation better than I can in his email to indie publishers, which I have pasted below. He outlines steps we can all take to make sure we don’t go down that rabbit hole and find ourselves in a place we don’t want to be….

 

 

PAYPAL CENSORSHIP UPDATE
________________________________________

In case you haven't heard, about two weeks ago, PayPal contacted Smashwords and 
gave us a surprise ultimatum: Remove all titles containing bestiality, rape 
or incest, otherwise they threatened to deactivate our PayPal account. We engaged 
them in discussions and on Monday they gave us a temporary reprieve as we continue 
to work in good faith to find a suitable solution. 

PayPal tells us that their crackdown is necessary so that they can remain in 
compliance with the requirements of the banks and credit card associations (likely 
Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, though they didn't mention them 
by name).

Last Friday, I sent the following email to our erotica authors and publishers: 
https://www.smashwords.com/press/release/27 Then on Monday, I issued an update, 
and announced we would delay enforcement of PayPal's guidelines so we and PayPal 
could continue our discussions: https://www.smashwords.com/press/release/28

THE PROBLEM:

PayPal is asking us to censor legal fiction. Regardless of how one views topics 
of rape, bestiality and incest, these topics are pervasive in mainstream fiction. 
We believe this crackdown is really targeting erotica writers. This is unfair, 
and it marks a slippery slope. We don't want credit card companies or financial 
institutions telling our authors what they can write and what readers can read. 
Fiction is fantasy. It's not real. It's legal. 


THE SOLUTION:

There's no easy solution. Legally, PayPal and the credit card companies probably 
have the right to decide how their services are used. Unfortunately, since they're 
the moneyrunners, they control the oxygen that feeds digital commerce.

Many Smashwords authors have suggested we find a different payment processor. 
That's not a good long term solution, because if credit card companies are behind 
this, they'll eventually force crackdowns elsewhere. PayPal works well for us. 
In addition to running all credit card processing at the Smashwords.com store, 
PayPal is how we pay all our authors outside the U.S. My conversations with 
PayPal are ongoing and have been productive, yet I have no illusion that the 
road ahead will be simple, or that the outcome will be favorable. 


BUILDING A COALITION OF SUPPORT:

Independent advocacy groups are considering taking on the PayPal censorship case. 
I'm supporting the development of this loose-knit coalition of like-minded groups 
who believe that censorship of legal fiction should not be allowed. We will grow 
the coalition. Each group will have its own voice and tactics I'm working with 
them because we share a common cause to protect books from censorship. Earlier 
today I had conversations with the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), The 
American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE) and the National 
Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC). I briefed them on the Smashwords/PayPal 
situation, explained the adverse affect this crackdown will have on some of our 
authors and customers, and shared my intention to continue working with PayPal 
in a positive manner to move the discussion forward. 

The EFF blogged about the issue a few days ago: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/02/legal-censorship-paypal-makes-habit-deciding-what-users-can-read 
Today, ABFFE and NCAC issued a press release: http://www.scribd.com/doc/83549049/NCAC-ABFFE-Letter-To-PayPal-eBay-re-Ebook-Refusal-2012

I will not be on the streets with torch in hand calling for PayPal's head, but 
I will encourage interested parties to get involved and speak their piece. This 
is where you come in...


HOW YOU CAN HELP:

Although erotica authors are being targeted, this is an issue that should concern 
all indie authors. It affects indies disproportionately because indies are the 
ones pushing the boundaries of fiction. Indies are the ones out there publishing 
without the (fading) protective patina of a "traditional publisher" to lend them 
legitimacy. We indies only have each other.

Several Smashwords authors have contacted me to stress that this censorship affects 
women disproportionately. Women write a lot of the erotica, and they're also 
the primary consumers of erotica. They're also the primary consumers of mainstream 
romance, which could also come under threat if PayPal and the credit card companies 
were to overly enforce their too-broad and too-nebulous obsenity clauses (I think 
this is unlikely, but at the same time, why would dubious consent be okay in 
mainstream romance but not okay in erotica? If your write paranormal, can your 
were-creatures not get it on with one another, or is that bestiality? The insanity 
needs to stop here. These are not questions an author, publisher or distributor 
of legal fiction should have to answer.). 

All writers and their readers should stand up and voice their opposition to financial 
services companies censoring books. Authors should have the freedom to publish 
legal fiction, and readers should have the freedom to read what they want. 

These corporations need to hear from you. Pick up the phone and call them. 
Email them. Start petitions. Sign petitions. Blog your opposition to censorship. 
Encourage your readers to do the same. Pass the word among your social networks. 
Contact your favorite bloggers and encourage them to follow this story. Contact 
your local newspaper and offer to let them interview you so they can hear a local 
author's perspective on this story of international significance. If you have 
connections to mainstream media, encourage them to pick up on the story. Encourage 
them to call the credit card companies and pose this simple question, "PayPal 
says they're trying to enforce the policies of credit card companies. Why are 
you censoring legal fiction?"

Below are links to the companies waiting to hear from you. Click the link and 
you'll find their phone numbers, executive names and postal mailing addresses. 
Be polite, respectful and professional, and encourage your friends and followers 
to do the same. Let them know you want them out of the business of censoring 
legal fiction. 

Tell the credit card companies you want them to give PayPal permission to sell 
your ebooks without censorship or discrimination. Let them know that PayPal's 
policies are out of step with the major online ebook retailers who already accept 
your books as they are. Address your calls, emails (if you can find the email) 
and paper letters (yes paper!) to the executives. Post open letters to them 
on your blog, then tweet and Facebook hyperlinks to your letters. Force the 
credit card companies to join the discussion about censorship. And yes, express 
your feelings and opinions to PayPal as well. Don't scream at them. Ask them 
to work on your behalf to protect you and your readers from censorship. Tell 
them how their proposed censorship will harm you and your fellow writers.

Visa: 
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/pr?s=V+Profile

American Express: 
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/pr?s=AXP+Profile

MasterCard: 
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/pr?s=MA+Profile

Discover: 
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/pr?s=DFS+Profile

Ebay (owns PayPal): 
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/pr?s=ebay+Profile

_________

Starting Sunday, if our email systems can handle it, we will send out an email 
to several hundred thousand registered Smashwords members who are opted in to 
receive occasional Smashwords service updates. The email will combine Read an 
Ebook Week with the censorship call to action. Let's start a little fire, shall 
we?

Thank you for your continuing support of Smashwords. With your help, we can 
move mountains.

Best wishes,

Mark



Mark Coker
Founder
Smashwords
http://smashwords.com
blog: http://blog.smashwords.com
twitter: http://twitter.com/markcoker

The ABCs of an Erotic Romance Writer

Ever wonder what all the acronyms and terms mean that we romance authors throw around? Here is a quick primer in the ABCs of Erotic Romance.

ARC- Advanced Review Copy (sometimes Advanced Reader Copy). It’s a copy of the book given prior to release usually to book reviewers.

HEA- Happily Ever After. Think fairy tales. It’s required by many of today’s romance publishers

HFN- Happy For Now. The hero and heroine don’t have to declare their undying love and get married, but there is a promise that they are at least happy…for now.

M/M – Male/Male gay-themed romance (or F/F would represent 2 women)

M/F/M – a heterosexual threesome where the Male/Female/Male characters all have sex together however there is no direct same-sex sexual interaction between the men.

M/M/F- a threesome where the Male/Male/Female character all have sex together during which the men also interact sexually with each other.

GBLT – a genre in romance incorporating Gay/Bisexual/Lesbian/Transexual themes.

BDSM – a genre in romance with Bondage and Discipline/Dominance and Submission/Sadism and Masochism elements.

D/s or D/S  D usually stands for the dominant partner (or Dom/ dom) in the BDSM.  S (or s) usually stands for the submissive partner in BDSM

Galley – before a book goes to print, we review the galley and look for not only typos that may have been missed in the editing and proofreading stages, but also for formatting issues, page numbers, correct headers and footers, etc.

WiP – Work in Progress. Whatever book I’m in the middle of writing at the time.

FLE- Final Line Editor. After my editor is done, a FLE goes through the book to find any grammar, spelling, continuity or story issues.

The Big Six – the 6 big publishing houses who own most of the imprints you’d recognize.

Agency Model – a big mess where the publishers and the booksellers are in debate as to who gets to set pricing on third party sites like Amazon.

Legacy Publishing – the way publishing was done forever before digital came along. Authors (usually through an agent) submit, if contracted they receive an advance which will either be earned out or not. This model depends a very few huge name authors to sell many books and carry the rest.

Digital First- a publisher who releases the book in eBook format first and possibly will release some in print later. Generally authors are paid in royalties on actual sales and not with any form of advance. This model depends on sales spread among many authors.

Vanity Press – Author pays a publisher to put out their book.

Author Mill – a vanity press thinly disguised as a publisher.  They accept all author submissions and charge a lot of money (either on the front end or the back end) for the author to release their book through them.

POD – Print on Demand. A technology where books are printed as ordered. Usually in Trade Paperback size.

Self-publishing – the author acts also as publisher for either eBook, print or both.

Slush Pile – where your unsolicited book submission goes to wait for someone at the publisher to read it hopefully sometime before you die.

The above are fairly universal in the industry. Specific to my Tweet stream/Facebook page you may see the following:

ARe – All Romance eBooks, LLC, a digital bookseller who own AllRomance.com, OmniLit.com and ARe Cafe.

AAD – Authors After Dark. A convention for booklovers and authors held annually.

RT – Romantic Times Book Reviews Magazine throws a booklovers convention annually which we usually refer to just as RT.

PBR – The Professional Bull Riders organization (not Pabst Blue Ribbon if it’s in my Tweets!)

PRCA – Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association

NOTE: this is based upon my opinions, experiences and understanding from having written professionally since 1988. I may be wrong. Apologies if I am.

TOOLS OF MY TRADE: #5 PHOTOSHOP

I’m too cheap sometimes to invest even in my own career, especially when it’s for something I believe I can do myself. Now sometimes you have to go to a pro, and sometimes you don’t. I suppose you have to trust your own instincts or trust that your friends will tell you when that is the case. So far no one has said to me, “Cat, you ever think of hiring a cover artist?” so I’m going to make the assumption I’m doing at least okay on my own. The tool I use to create banners out of the bookcovers done for me by the talented cover artists paid by my publishers, as well as the actual covers I create myself for my self-pubbed titles is Photoshop. Here are 2 banners I created from my Samhain bookcovers.

I will be totally honest, when I first purchased Photoshop it was an exercise in frustration. I was totally lost. Even now I know the program is capable of doing so much more and I am barely scratching the service with my incredibly basic, novice skills. What I do know how to do I learned thanks to an old video author Mandy Roth made which walks the viewer through how to use Photoshop to make banner ads. A huge thanks to Mandy because through her I learned how to use so many of the valuable tools in Photoshop, including the blur button and the eraser.

Crossing the Line by Cat JohnsonI still wander around lost in the Photoshop program, but with it I have managed to create things I’m proud of. My favorite cover is for Crossing the Line. I used 2 separate images I purchased at a stockart site. The “ship” photo and the “couple” photo. With enough fading, blending, erasing and blurring, and thanks to the similar color stories of the 2 separate photos, it came together into one cohesive image.

In Photoshop, I’ve also done designs for Romance Trading Cards to order direct from the printer. That saved me a bunch of money. I’ve done designs for other promo as well, including banners, notepads, bumper stickers and buttons. The program has paid for itself many times over and it gives me the freedom to be a control freak and handle things myself.

TOOLS OF MY TRADE: #4 WRITE OR DIE

I’ve mentioned this tool before but it bears repeating. In fact, Dr. Wicked and his evil productivity tool Write or Die were in the dedication of my book RIDE I used it so much to make my deadline for that novel.

You can use the lighter Write or Die online version for free, or buy  the enhanced desktop edition to install on your computer for use offline ($10 and compatible with MAC, PC & Linux). You choose your time limit (or word count) and for the duration chosen you have to continue to type into the window or it starts to “remind” you. Gently at first with flashing colors, then not so gently with horrible audio ranging from cars honking, to babies crying, to the Hansen Brothers singing. Once you start to type again, the annoyances stop too.

I find I can do 500 words easily, usually more, every 15 minutes when using Write or Die. So if I set a 1500 daily wordcount for myself, I can get my work done plus extra with one 48 minute session on Write or Die. IF I can force myself to sit down and actually do it, which I generally fail to do.

The concept is pretty simple–when things pop up literally in the case of email alerts and instant messages in front of your face and demand attention, you stop what you’re doing and run to deal with them. With this program, you simply can’t deal with them, you can’t stop writing for the duration of the time you’ve selected. It’s hard to train ourselves in this age of multi-tasking to believe it but unless there is a baby turning blue in the room with you, everyone else can live without you for 15 minutes, or 30, or 48 (the amount of time Dr. Wicked, the inventor of this tool, recommends).  Turn off the email alerts. Log out of Instant Messenger. JUST for the amount of time you decide. You can go back later. It will be okay. I promise.

The philosophy of timers as motivation is covered here in a blog I stumbled upon but I know from experience, it works. The biggest obstacle I’ve found with using Write or Die is that I feel like I have to go into it armed with words already in my head or I’ll stare at a blank page and fail miserably while it flashes colors and blares obnoxious sounds at me. The other thing is this–the hardest part of being a writer is facing a blank page, and psychologically the Dr Wicked page is exactly that. Perhaps I’ll have to paste in some text to get over it.

Anyway, if you ever do any writing, give it a look see. It might be a fun way to torture your kids into finishing their homework!

TOOLS OF MY TRADE: #3 TWITTER

I am a self-proclaimed promo ‘ho and proud of it. Day three of my favorite tools brings us one promotional platform I employ, Twitter.

Yes, I will admit when I first heard about Twitter I didn’t get it at all. When I try to explain Twitter to my non-tweeting friends, I really can’t (in spite of my vast professional expertise as a wordsmith).

So what is Twitter and why does it deserve to be named among my 7 most valuable tools of my trade?

It’s a social networking site that limits user updates to 140 characters each Tweet unless you employ one of the lengthening tools (which I do sometimes, though I feel like I’m cheating when I do, LOL). It’s kind of like the user status updates you see on Facebook, but it’s a one way system. I can follow anyone I want and see their tweets. Anyone can follow me and see mine (unless I block them for being a perv or a spammer). It is not the mutual “friending” you find on Facebook profile pages. Since I use it as a professional tool, I do like the Twitter “follow” system better than the Facebook “friend” system.

Now why is Twitter important? Well if you haven’t had your head in the sand, you know that behind Twitter is power. Tweeting brought down New York Congressman Anthony Weiner. Twitter users had been reporting Michael Jackson’s death for hours, meanwhile ABC News was still saying he was in a coma in the hospital. One of Osama Bin Laden’s Pakistani neighbors tweeted about the helicopters above his head before the SEALs feet hit the ground and long before Obama announced the successful operation. When the Wall Street Journal declared today’s Young Adult fiction too dark and dangerous for today’s youth, when some idiot reporter in Scranton, PA exposed the erotic author pseudonym of a respected local English teacher on a TV news broadcast and demanded her resignation, Twitter exploded. Users came together as a community and hashtags such as #YAsaves and #RomanceKills (used to identify the tweets in response to these issues) dominated Tweetstreams which had to be throttled because the updates were coming so fast. There have been instances of communications blackouts during elections in the Middle East, or disasters worldwide, where Tweets sneaking out were the only communication with the outside world. When there is no TV coverage of a rodeo or bull ride, there is always at least one person there tweeting results for the rest of us fans. I can read what a Soldier is doing in Afghanistan in one Tweet, and see what my favorite book blogger has posted in the next.

But that’s not why I named Twitter here. It’s what Twitter has done for me. I have tweeted “Need an idea for a 8K word cowboy threesome. GO!” and low and behold, ideas poured in. Twice I’ve Tweeted “Need a title for so-and-so story”, twice I’ve gotten ideas I could use. I have my blog send out automatic tweets when I post, and my site traffic has never been higher. I can say, “I’m in a contest at this URL” and my followers actually take the time to go and vote for me. I Tweet new releases, but also the wordcount I’ve written that day, or the edits I’m doing, or even the insomnia or the writer’s block I’m experiencing. It never fails there is either a reader or fellow author there to commiserate or congratulate, day and night, from all corners of the globe.

I also use it for research. I learn so much just hanging out with the people who live and work in the world in which I’m writing. Reading Tweets from a stock contractor or a bull rider or a rodeo announcer brings me closer to the world of bull riding in which I write. Hanging out with the fans of the sport I’m writing about helps me create realistic worlds within my books. I immerse myself through those I follow and who follow me in the worlds of cowboys, rodeo, military, writing and publishing–all the things that occupy my day and comprise my profession.

I’ve made friends on Twitter, and I’ve made contacts. Sometimes people are both. And–authors still shaking their heads thinking this is ridiculous, this is key–I KNOW Twitter has sold books for me. I’ve seen Tweets where readers are hand selling both me and my books to others. Personal recommendations are both the hardest and the most effective form of promo. I had a Tweet-up with a few followers last January at the Madison Square Garden PBR event in NYC and luckily I thought to bring a few copies of my books with me because it turned into an impromtu booksigning right there in the lobby of the Garden. Strangers were stopping to take their picture with me because–planted in an booth no longer being used by a PBR sponsor and surrounded by people and promo and books and cameras, it looked like I was somebody. In reality it was me and my childhood friend meeting my Twitter friends.

Unlike most advertising which has a dubious return on investment, Twitter is FREE except for the time you devote to it and don’t get me wrong, I know my time is valuable. I know I should be writing more, rather than checking Twitter, but you really can spend as little or as much time on there as you want. It’s up to the individual.

I can tell you this, if all you do is Tweet what amounts to ads for yourself or shout ‘buy my book!!’ at your followers, it won’t work for you. I guarantee it. Of course, you don’t have to Tweet pictures of the pile of mouse guts your cats left for you on the floor like I do either, but it amuses me so I do it. My followers have come to learn not to open any pics I Tweet while eating their breakfast. What I’m saying is, the hard sell will not work!

The strictly promotional truth for me is this–romance lovers and my readers are already my readers and already my customers and will likely already buy my books. Yes, a Tweet may remind them of a new release, or inform them of a new review, but the key is to think out of the box, think out of your existing customer base. What if I want to promote to a broader community? Let’s say, rodeo fans who may have never read a romance in their lives. Or troop supporters who love the military and may not know there is an entire very popular genre of military romance out there. Or perhaps these two groups do know and  read cowboy or military romance–they may not know me or MY writing. By interacting with these groups on Twitter about topics we both love, they will get to know me, and eventually my books as well. It’s the softest of sells and it works.

That said never forget Twitter is a community and a family.  Luckily unlike your own family you get to choose your Twitter family, but they are family. Remember that and treat them well and Twitter will treat you well in return. I may have started Tweeting as a promo ‘ho with strictly mercenary intentions, but now I turn to it because some of my closest internet friends live there and I like their company. Amazingly, they like me too and I love them all for it.

One caveat regarding Twitter–spammers can and will find you. If you dare Tweet the words “iPad, or Writing, or Porn, or weight loss” you will be bombarded with @ replies or new followers hoping you’ll click on their link to buy whatever they’re selling. Just click on Block & Report Spam and they are gone, to go and open a new account and start spamming again, but I do enjoy doing it anyway. If I could get some evil genius to invent a system where we can send an electrical shock through the spammer’s keyboard, that will be even better. But the pros in Twitter far outweigh the cons.

TOOLS OF MY TRADE: #2 WORDPRESS

Day two of my favorite tools week brings WordPress.

Yes, WordPress was originally a blogging format, but it is so much more. With WordPress, there is absolutely NO reason to not have a FREE professional-looking, unlimited, easy to maintain website. Yes, I said free for the basic account which includes tons of free templates in addition to premium templates you can choose to pay for, unlimited pages and your own wordpress URL. So for instance, when I first signed up, I claimed www.authorcatjohnson.wordpress.com as my own. That was when I was still paying lots of money to GoDaddy to host my website. For a monthly fee, GoDaddy limited me to 5 pages maximum, charged me extra if I exceeded my bandwidth for the month, had a very limited amount of images I could host there, their design templates weren’t very nice and it used to take me all day to update my site with their built-in design program. I still pay a small annual fee to GoDaddy to register my catjohnson.net domain name, but now, for a nominal annual fee (something like $12 a year paid to WordPress) my domain is redirected to my free WordPress account so http://catjohnson.net appears in the top URL bar instead of my original wordpress-identified URL. I don’t have to keep my domain name or redirect it–I could have this website for absolutely free if I choose–but it looks more professional to have a custom domain.

Updates on WordPress are so quick and easy. I can even update by email if I want. I can create as many pages and subpages as I need. There is an app for my iPad and iPod Touch so I can easily approve comments and check stats from the road. My homepage is my blog page, but I can change that if I want to designate another landing page. If I could come up with what I’d want on that landing page, besides the latest news which is usually what I blog about anyway, I would. There are widgets, sidebars, link lists, image hosting, document hosting and a way to have your YouTube videos appear on your pages.

Blog Search Terms

If I had the skills I could pay a small fee and edit my CSS so I could customize the appearance even more. Alas, I don’t have the skills or the time to learn, and I’m too much of a control freak to hire it out, so I’ll live with what I’ve got.

And the analytics are incredible! I can see how many page views I have daily and on which pages, what search engine terms visitors used to find my site (which proves endlessly amusing), incoming links, visitor clicks on my outgoing links. Everything I need to track traffic, which helps me determine which marketing efforts are yielding results.

You can register as many free blogs as you want. Both of the group blogs I contribute to–the Eat Something Sexy “Confessions of a Romance Writer” as well as the Wild & Wicked Cowboys blogs–are hosted on WordPress.

Now there is one catch–there seems to be both a WordPress.org and a WordPress.com. They’re kind of related but separate. .Org has more features (plugins) I think? I’m not exactly sure of the difference. .Com may be free and .Org a charge? Maybe someone better at this stuff than me can explain it. In anycase, I love the one I’m hosted on. It’s not perfect, but far more so than GoDaddy was and much cheaper! Check out some of your favorite authors’ websites and I bet you’ll be surprised at how many say “wordpress.com” at the very, very bottom of the page.

TOOLS OF MY TRADE: #1 DROPBOX

I’ve been thinking lately about what I use the most, what I love the most, and what makes Cat Johnson, both the brand and the author, who and what I am. I’ve narrowed it down to 7 things (for now) so I’ve decided to do a series of posts, one each day this week, and share my favorite things. I’m only as good as my tools, and I’m sharing them with you here with the disclaimer that just because I love these tools doesn’t mean they’ll be to everyone’s taste. So, that said, here we go.

Tool of the trade #1: Dropbox

Though they won’t be in order of importance or value to me for the entire week, tool number one truly is THE MOST VALUABLE TOOL I USE, hands down, all caps because I can NOT stress this enough or love it more. Dropbox in an online file storage system that is FREE to use for the basic account which I have yet to even come close to filling up even with keeping all my writing, stockart, coverart, music files and other assorted important documents in it.

What’s so cool?

From my MAC I can open, edit and save files to the Dropbox, then turn on my PC and VIOLA! open the Dropbox folder and see all the same files there, updated and ready to be used, edited, etc. But it gets better, I can open the Dropbox APP on my iPod Touch and my iPad and yes, there are all my updated files to be read.

Why is this important? I do most of my work on the MAC, but my Photoshop is on my PC. In the past I used to email files to myself. Now I can create a bookcover in Photoshop on the PC, save it to the Dropbox folder (filled with my created subfolders), open the MAC, grab that cover and upload it to my website, or insert it into the Word .Doc I’m writing on the MAC.

That’s not even taking into consideration that every time my files autosave while I’m working on them, every update I make, is automatically backed up on the Dropbox cloud servers and accessible by me from anywhere should something catastrophic happen to my computer so I will never lose files. I’ll never have to take the time to back up my work in progress on a thumbdrive that I can lose, or email it to myself, or any of the other extreme measures I used to take.

AND there’s more! I’m the editor in charge of the Just One Bite Short Story Writing Contest at All Romance eBooks, which means I get to pre-read all the entries before they go to my team, who will help me select the finalists. After 12 hours a day on the computer, when my eyes are so tired I can barely focus, and when the husband looks at me like if he sees the laptop in my lap for any longer he’ll divorce me, I can put away the laptop totally, whip out the iPad and open the Dropbox app. There, I touch the Contest folder where I’ve previously saved all the Word .doc or .rft files from my email account. From the App I can open and read all those Word Doc contest entries on the iPad, which may just save my eyesight and my marriage.

You can set a password on the APP in case your iPad or iPod Touch is a shared device with other family members and you want your files to be private. You can also set up sharing folders within the Dropbox and share specific files with others.

NOTE: Some of you may remember a year or two ago I was a proponent of a similar tool, Mesh. I have since moved to Dropbox for 2 reasons, the device support and the reliability. After Mesh failed to update my files a few times, sent me a complicated email about upcoming changes, and didn’t come through with the promised device support, I moved to Dropbox and haven’t looked back since.

Check Dropbox out for yourself! 

When you love somebody…

When you love somebody, let the whole world know.

Being self-centered (I blame it on the fact I’m an only child), I’m talking specifically here about readers and authors. Love an author? Leave them a written review on Amazon, or Barnes & Noble or Borders or AllRomance for the books of theirs that you have read. Hell, even if you love their written voice and their other books but didn’t particularly care for this one certain book, write that too. That’s perfectly fine.

Honest, well thought-out, intelligent reader reviews are always welcomed by any author. Tastes are subjective. I refuse to drink Diet Pepsi but love Diet Coke. Half of the world probably feels the exact opposite. The same goes for books. As long as the reader explains what they did or did not like about a particular book then everyone can benefit from the review–the author, other potential readers and the reviewer themselves.

So when you love something, don’t set it free like that old saying goes. Review it instead!

Oooo and I almost forgot. I just posted the first three complete chapters of Educating Ansley as a free sample. HERE

The RT Booklovers Convention (#RT11) in Pictures

 

TUESDAY NIGHT~WE ARRIVE

1 of the 3 living areas in our suite on the 32nd floor at the Westin Bonaventure for RT

WEDNESDAY~LET THE FUN BEGIN!

Some wonderful Aussie booklovers brought me treats all the way from their homeland!

Me & my swag at the Western Reader Round-up Wed afternoon

Ellora's Cave threw a fab Bollywood party with a hired Indian dance troop performing a stage show, authentic decor, henna tattoo artists, great 80s dance music & of course the usual EC enticing swag including the cover model playing cards & calendar

THURSDAY~Panels, Parties & the Faery Ball

The Digital Trends Panel Thursday

The MLR Suite Party

More from the MLR Suite Party

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reader & Costume Guru Carol Brown, Author Eliza Gayle & Me at the Venetian Faery Ball

FRIDAY~ Passed in a whirlwind with my Club RT time,  the eBook signing, the ARe Cafe Suite Party & Heather Graham’s Vampire Ball, none of which I got pictures of. (I hang my head in shame)

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SATURDAY~ The big book signing & Mr. Romance Contest

The Big Book Signing. I sat next to Sabrina Jeffries

Lots of abs as 9 contestants vied for the Mr. Romance 2011 title

 

SUNDAY~ the long journey from CA to NY

Finally home in NY w/ a carry-on bag full of books and swag collected at RT