12 January 2013

Notes - you pays your money


          You were home at dusk, unloaded the cat and the car, drove to Smashburgers for a leisurely supper and are now stopped at Kroger on Tylersville for a variety of items with skim milk and bananas high on the list. After visiting with the members of the Paik family at Chuck E Cheese and having a good time at Owen's third birthday (he had a very good time) you drove up to see the MI subdivision and another custom home neighborhood close by that Kim and Paul are looking at. They are going to build wherever as long as it has the public schools (Olentangy) they are looking for. On the way from the area near Lewis Center Road and Rt. 23 you took the back way to the Paik's home in Dublin, stopped a visited for a bit then picked up Ellie the Cat and arrived home safely. - Amorella

         That is a summary of our day. I would like to continue to work on Pouch-9 when we get home but we might have chores before bed.

         2230 hours. We watched the DVRed "Elementary". I liked the British production on PBS (modern Sherlock in London) last September and the year before better, but this is good, too much American accent with Watson as a woman, but at least she was a surgeon. Too late, I think, for writing on Pouch-9. I would like to complete it tomorrow though and move on with summaries and such, then on to Chapter 10, 11 and 12. I may be finished with book one revised by summer.

         I feel you should publish one at a time as before. - Amorella

         I have thought about that and don't agree. I like the blog notes and work. If I publish I will have to take off the blog and begin a new one for book two. Even self-publishers have rules. They would still like to sell the books or go through the sense of it in Amazon. I really don't want to go through that again either now that I think about it. What would be the point?

         When the time comes we can look at all the practical options. You do want the books in print to give to Kim and Paul to later give to the boys. - Amorella

         That is true. I was excited to see the books in print the first time. I have put them in the small spare bedroom. I have seen them and skimmed through them. That excitement is gone. Anyone can publish a book these days, probably so since the 18th century. You pays your money and you can see your words in print. It costs nothing to see one's work in electronic print and it can be made just as readable, perhaps even more so. Shoot, I can create my own audio book and make my own CD's of each book.

         You're tired boy. Post and go to bed. - Amorella


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