Archive for January 2012

Regarding re-shelving…

23/01/12

“Oh, people come in and move stuff all the time.”

I was talking to a bookseller a while back. The topic got around to re-shelving – that thing people do when they go into bookshops and move their favourite books (or, rather less creditably, their own books) to visible positions in the front of the shop.

I’m never sure whether I’m a particularly rule-bound person or whether I’m just pathologically polite. The latter seems infinitely more likely; except when I’m totally shattered or very annoyed and stressed, I can generally work myself into a state of profound guilt over the possibility that I did not make sufficient polite eye-contact with the checkout guy when I buy a yoghurt. I was recently caught so completely flatfooted in New York by someone suggesting I’d been rude that I actually didn’t know what to say. Which does not happen often. I know now, of course. But now is rather too late.

Anyway, re-shelving bugs me because it seems to put other people to trouble and aggravation. So I asked this person how the dealt with it at her shop. Did she intervene when she saw it happening?

“No,” she said, “but there’s way more of us on staff than there are of any given individual who is re-shelving, so we just wait a few minutes and then put everything back exactly as it was. After a few rounds, they realise they’re not going to make it happen and they go away.”

(Note carefully that this exchange of high levels of passive aggression is very British, and possibly very London-British.)

Just recently one of my parents’ friends called me to tell me she had engaged in a massive re-shelving project on my behalf at her local bookshop, and the only thing I could think of to say was “please don’t”, which of course I couldn’t say at that moment because she already had, but which I have subsequently said very gently in the least passive-aggressive way I could find.

Aside from the fact that it just messes up the stock of a bookshop, thereby making it harder for booksellers and indeed customers to find books, it is incredibly unkind to those authors who are in the high-visibility shelves legitimately. They’ve been picked out by staff, won prizes, made the bestseller list, or maybe the position has been out-and-out purchased from the book’s budget. They have a narrow window to make use of that opportunity, and for some of them – especially the literary titles – every single sale is a huge win. Some books don’t really sell very many copies. Like they sell in the hundreds. Many sell in the low thousands and vanish forever. They get one shot at becoming this year’s breakout hit, and it isn’t really fair to them to come cover them up with my book. My book is a streetfighter. It can handle itself in a crowd. It has a really strong jacket, a powerful design, and its author is a bigmouth. I myself have a selection of strong jackets (people have even been unkind enough to say they are ‘loud’ or ‘nauseating’) and I like to get out there and mix it in person, in print and on the Internet. And, you know, if positions were reversed and Angelmaker were in a ‘staff picks’ bin taking its shot at fame and fortune and someone came along and dumped five copies of “The Life And Loves Of Pogo Yaxminster: A Biography of Britain’s Greatest Stamp Collector” between it and the customers, I would be pretty pissed. So I extend the same courtesy to Pogo Yaxminster, knowing that the truth is he’s unlikely to do a lot of trade outside the philately community unless the book is absolutely brilliant. In which case it does not deserve to be smothered in the crazed adventures of a man, a woman, and a vile dog.

And that is all I have to say about that.

True Definitions (1)

18/01/12

Democracy

A form of rulership buttressed by the twin pillars of popularity and pedantry. Rulers are put in place when they win a popularity contest, during which they will say and do things they have no intention of repeating subsequently. It is acceptable and indeed expected that candidates should lie, kiss babies, and promise things which are mathematically, economically, and physically impossible. They should also freely pledge mutually contradictory things to interest groups.

The second pillar, pedantry, becomes apparent after the ruler has been appointed, and is mostly composed of careful parsing of the statements made during the first. This parsing inevitably reveals that what appeared to be promises to do something amount to assurances to maintain the status quo, and that solemn undertakings given as part of the popularity contest were in fact merely hopeful speculations. Some statements will be revealed as meaning the converse of what they appeared to mean when they were uttered, and these will be the object of particular derision by those who applauded them at the time and particular approbation by those who did not.

On the whole, Democracy yields a society which is moderately capable of seeing to the needs of the citizenry by a tacit policy of paternalism (that style of social governance in which a ruler acts in an entirely selfish fashion while asserting a common good) and neglect. It is therefore one of the fairer and freer forms of rulership, but also one of the most frustrating.

Edie Investigates is up!

12/01/12

Angelmaker is coming to the UK on Feb 2nd – but until then, there’s Edie…

This is a quick taster, a meeting with Edie Banister before she comes to town in a major way in my new book. It’s eleven thousand odd words of sneakery, dirty deeds, and cake which I really enjoyed writing. It’s a standalone. It’s a species of prologue. It’s a murder mystery.

Oh, and they threw in Chapter 1 of Angelmaker. I’m not sure if that’s a sweetener to get you to buy Edie Investigates or if Edie Investigates is a sneaky way of persuading you to buy Angelmaker. Well, yes I am: both are true.

Anyway… you can get it on Amazon, the iBook Store, and Kobo. It’s priced around 99p, although on Amazon that mysteriously becomes £1.06 including delivery. Go figure.

I hope you like it…

Apple link: http://bit.ly/Aejedg

Amazon link: http://amzn.to/xgINDg

Kobo link: http://bit.ly/zHHdOr

Questions:

Are there spoilers?

What do I look like, a monster? No. You learn a very little about Edie, and it’s stuff which is already out there in the publicity materials. I worried about that, but actually it’s not a thing. As far as I can see, there are no secrets in Edie Investigates which affect the flow of how you perceive the narrative in Angelmaker. Just additional fun.

Why isn’t it free?

Essentially, because I lost that argument – and rightly. Here’s how it went:

The Guys: It would be cool if you would write a short about Edie.

Me: Yes! And we could totally put it out free. That would be awesome, because then I wouldn’t really have to quality control it so much and it would be kind of a nugget rather than a proper story.

The Guys: Uh, dude…

Me: And then I could invite people to participate! We could cloud-source the ending and I wouldn’t have to do any actual work at all!

The Guys: Uh, dude…

Me: I’m really tired. Can I please not do this?

The Guys: No.

Me: Waaaaaaaaaaah! [Exeunt toys from pram, pursued by bears]

The Guys: Dude, you will actually enjoy this. Go. Write something fun.

Me: I’m going to New York, I have no time, and I need a holiday. I want to hibernate until February. I want a massage and a glass of wine and some of those little chocolates which look like the Jungfrau. I want to go skiing. I want to ride an elephant. I do not want to do anything involving work. Also, the kids love the free stuffz. You peeples R lamerz.

The Guys: You need to do the thing you love. Go. Make it so. We will charge cash money, it will be an actual story worthy of publication. (Uh, nine or ten thousand words would be ideal, and you need to finish it kind of by yesterday.)

Me: I want a sweetie and a hug. Also a Tesla Roadster, a movie deal, and a secret volcano base.

The Guys: This is what you live for.

Me: Maybe just a nap?

The Guys: Go. Do. Act your age, man. You’re supposed to be a pro.

Me: Yes.

The Guys: We’ll charge a pound. It’s an app price. It’ll be fine.

Me: You don’t think free?

The Guys: No. Show some self-respect. This is work you are doing. It will be good work. Get a spine.

Me: Y’okay.

Can I get it in Belgium?

Yes. I am assured that you can. If you can’t, let me know, and I will beat the bad electronic elves of Belgium until they beg for mercy. (They love this.)

Can I get it in the United States of America?

Ummm… You’re not going to be happy about this. Yes, but not yet. For a while it was going to get released in the US today alongside the UK version. But, um, now it isn’t. That’s something which is beyond my control, and not in the creepy Valmont way but really. I believe you get it in mid-Feb. On the upside, there is a smokin’ hot US specific jacket for it which I believe will please you.

Can I get it in print?

No. It has no dead tree reality. It exists only as pure mind derived from a dimension of cognitive energy known only as FZADDOIINBLY! (No idea where that came from. I’m a bit jazzed right now. Think of it as excess energy from my recent regeneration.)

Will you be doing more Edie stories?

Maybe. There are a couple of minor characters in Angelmaker and in TGAW I’d like to play with some more. But then, there are other characters I haven’t written about yet who deserve and demand my time. It’s crowded in my thinky parts.

Where do you get your ideas?

Canada.