Nanoprinting: An Israeli breakthrough

Apparently, Israel is about to knock Germany out of the lead in commercial digital printing. With nanotech.

Landa NanoInk is comprised of pigment particles a fraction of the size of a human hair. Powerful absorbers of light, these tiny particles deliver high-quality images that are unusually resistant to abrasion, according to Landa.

Using a water-based, energy-efficient and eco-friendly process, Nanographic machines print on any off-the-shelf material — from coated and uncoated paper to recycled cardboard; from newsprint to plastic packaging film — without pre-treatment or post-drying. They can print books, magazines, direct mail, labels, folding cartons and flexible packaging for food, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and more.

The machines have a smaller footprint than other digital presses, and can print in up to eight colors. User-friendly touch-screens indicate how much ink is left, how much time remains to the job, and many other details at a glance. A single operator can manage up to four presses at a time.

“Nanography is a truly groundbreaking development,” Landa stated. “For the first time, commercial printers don’t have to choose between the versatility and short-run economics of digital printing and the low cost-per-page and high productivity of offset printing. Now they can have both.”

It’s a very big deal. Much of my career was in the print/publishing industry. Merging offset and digital printing seems miraculous to me. And not just to me: Look who else Landa impressed:

Landa left Drupa with three strategic partnerships in hand – with Tokyo-based Komori and with Germany-based Manroland Sheetfeed and Heidelberg. These are among the biggest manufacturers of printing presses in the world.

Heidelberg is THE printing press company. My brother worked for them for a while. In fact, a lot of people I know worked for, with, or around Heidelberg.

So this is an especially good thing, as it combines good news of Israel–those wily Jews have invented yet another wonderful thing–with good news for printing. Right about the time when I’m getting ready to publish my novel. Yeah, things are going well these days.

Posted in Israel, Writing | 3 Comments

My latest at PJMedia

Meryl still (generously) allows me posting privileges.

Last week PJMedia published 60 Minutes Not Responding to Critics of ‘Holy Land’ Segment

CAMERA has more on Bob Simon’s expert, Mitri Raheb.

Posted in Israel | Comments Off on My latest at PJMedia

Israel’s historic unity deal

Benjamin Netanyahu has just shown the world how incredibly smart and forward-thinking he is, and how petty and small-minded was Tzipi Livni, the former head of Kadima. Netanyahu and Shaul Mofaz made a unity deal that created the largest coalition government in the history of Israel, one that is no longer beholden to any of the minority parties, and most important, one that is large enough to pass the laws to revise Israel’s parliamentary system to create a representative democracy. Which is one of the four things Netanyahu says he wants to do.

Outlining the unity government’s goals, Netanyahu pointed to four objectives: “To bring a just and egalitarian alternative to the Tal Law; a responsible budget that will address the State of Israel’s needs; to change the government system; and to try to promote a responsible peace process where security is maintained.”

The Muqata has a list of winners and losers, for those of you who don’t follow Israeli politics closely enough.

I cannot stress enough how incredibly great this deal is for Israel. Imagine, if you can, the Democrats and Republicans in Congress joining–really joining and working together–into one bilateral coalition to pass the bills that need passing, like tax reform and true health care reform (not the mess Obamacare has become). That is what the Likud/Kadima coalition is like.

In one fell swoop, Netanyahu has proven all of his critics wrong. The editors and op-ed writers of the New York Times are standing around in stunned amazement this morning, not knowing what to write. (But count on them to slam him in some fashion.) The Palestinians are already condemning the deal by insisting it is business as usual and that Israel doesn’t really want peace. Right. Because Israel is the party setting preconditions for even talking about peace. Bibi’s opponents are resorting to name-calling, because they know that they have absolutely no power at all in the new coalition. But make no mistake: This is a great moment in Israeli history.

Here’s hoping that Kadima and Likud can work together to make this coalition a success. I suspect they will: their respective heads want what’s best for Israel, and what’s best for their parties, in that order. That’s as it should be.

And the Iranians? Well, they’ve got to be quaking in their boots, now. Bibi has just headed off a long, grueling election cycle and allowed Israel to concentrate on its enemies.

Things just got a whole lot more complicated.

Posted in Israel, palestinian politics | Comments Off on Israel’s historic unity deal

Monday morning briefs

Trash talking: Israel is upping the threat level for Iran/Hezbollah, but let’s face it: The IDF was going to go into Lebanon next time they attack Israel no matter who is ordering them to do so. The warnings have been delivered: Since Hezbollah is part of the government and armed forces of Lebanon now, the gloves are off if Hezbollah attacks Israel.

The real reason Iran won’t nuke Israel: It’s the subs, stupid. Israel has second-strike capability. Even the Mad Mullahs can’t be that stupid. Guy Bechor details how strong the Israeli Navy has become.

The awesome stupidity of the Iranian media: Not only did they Photoshop their missile tests, but they didn’t notice that Jar Jar Binks was also a part of the test. Yes, believe everything you read in PressTV, because it’s true.

The lie of peace with Israel: Thousands of Jordanians want out of the peace treaty. Egyptians have already made plain their feelings towards the Jewish state. Lebanon is still technically at war. Saudi Arabia and Iran fund Israel’s enemies. (Saudi Arabia funds the Salafist movements worldwide, that are gaining power everywhere the dictators fall.) The Muslim Brotherhood is ascendant in the Syrian rebellion. And the only people in Iraq who like Israel are the Kurds. But really, if only Israel would make peace with the Palestinians, and give them a state, all of this would stop and everyone would sit down in a circle, hold hands, and sing Kumbaya.

Posted in Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Middle East | 2 Comments

Working seven days a week again

Years ago, back when I found myself deeply in debt and unable to find a decent-paying full-time job, I signed up with temporary agencies and worked three jobs, seven days a week, until I found better and better (and better-paying) jobs, until I finally got the position as a web manager at Company in Northern Virginia, and could work only one job instead of three. Mind you, one of the three jobs was teaching, and it was a joy to do, but after a while, Job in NorVA became too involved for me to teach on Tuesdays as well as Sundays, so I had to stop.

Now I’m working two jobs again. I’m doing the web job on Monday through Friday, and writing seven days a week if possible. Actually, for the month of May, I’m taking each Wednesday off from my paying job to work on my non-paying (so far) job.

So far, it’s working. I wrote 5,000 words last week, a pace I used to think was impossible. And I may yet sit down and write a few hundred more tonight after dinner. I want this novel finished more than I’ve wanted anything else in my entire life, except perhaps during college, when I really, really, really wanted Bucky Dent to dump his wife and choose me instead. I got over that when I watched his wooden performance in the TV movie, “The Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders.” Yes, he was that bad. (I decided he could still dump his wife, but now we’d only have a fling.)

Oh, back to writing. So I am on track so far, and we’ll see what happens next weekend. I’m taking a trip up to NJ for Mother’s Day. I will, of course, have my laptop and tablet, so I can and will write while I’m on the trip. But I won’t be spending all day Saturday and Sunday at the computer. Not that I really did that this weekend. It’s more like sit and write for an hour, go do something else, write for another half hour, go do something else, have lunch, sit out on the deck with Tig, sit and write some more.

Heaven. Sheer heaven. It’s what I want to do for the rest of my life.

Posted in The Catmage Chronicles, Writing | Tagged , | Comments Off on Working seven days a week again

Lying liars and the lies they tell

Ehud Olmert is blaming “right-wing extremist” money from the U.S. for derailing his lovely little peace plan. And yet, he glosses over Mahmoud Abbas refusing to accept the peace plan Olmert offered while he was still in office.

He admits that Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority, never said yes to his 2008 proposal, but also insists that he never said no.

Here’s the thing: Not saying yes IS saying no. Mahmoud Abbas could have had his Palestinian state, but he refused. Because peace is not the goal. “Palestine” is the goal.

The Palestinian negotiators could have given in in 1994, 1998, or 2000, and too months ago, brother Abu Mazen could have accepted a proposal that talked about Jerusalem and almost 100% of the West Bank, but it is not our goal to score points against one another here. Our strategic goal, when we strive for peace, is not to do so at any price. We strive for peace on the basis of an Israeli withdrawal to the June 4, 1967 borders, the establishment of an independent Palestinian state, with East Jerusalem as its capital, and with the West Bank and the Gaza Strip geographically connected.

So I call bullshit on you, Ehud Olmert. Sit down, shut up, and stop passing along lies.

Posted in Israel, palestinian politics | 4 Comments

Reposting Kris Rusch on royalties

Kris Rusch, the writer/editor who bought my first short story, had both of the blogs she tried to post the below on hacked. She has given us the word to post this far and wide. It’s of interest mostly to writers, but it also tells you why I’m going through e-publishing and Amazon instead of trying to shop my manuscript around.

Kris writes:

Welcome to one of my other websites. This one is for my mystery persona Paladin, from my Spade/Paladin short stories. She has a website in the stories, and I thought it would be cool to have the website online. It’s currently the least active of my sites, so I figured it was perfect for what I needed today.

Someone hacked my website. Ye Olde Website Guru and I are repairing the damage but it will take some time. The hacker timed the hack to coincide with the posting of my Business Rusch column. Since the hack happened 12 hours after I originally posted the column, I’m assuming that the hacker doesn’t like what I wrote, and is trying to shut me down. Aaaaah. Poor hacker. Can’t argue on logic, merits, or with words, so must use brute force to make his/her/its point. Poor thing.

Since someone didn’t want you to see this post, I figure I’d better get it up ASAP. Obviously there’s something here someone objects to–which makes it a bit more valuable than usual.

Here’s the post, which I am reloading from my word file, so that I don’t embed any malicious code here. I’m even leaving off the atrocious artwork (which we’re redesigning) just to make sure nothing got corrupted from there.

The post directs you to a few links from my website. Obviously, those are inactive at the moment. Sorry about that. I hope you get something out of this post.

I’m also shutting off comments here, just to prevent another short-term hack. Also, I don’t want to transfer them over. If you have comments, send them via e-mail and when the site comes back up, I’ll post them. Mark them “comment” in the header of the e-mail. Thanks!

The Business Rusch: Royalty Statement Update 2012

Kristine Kathryn Rusch

Over a year ago, I wrote a blog post about the fact that my e-book royalties from a couple of my traditional publishers looked wrong. Significantly wrong. After I posted that blog, dozens of writers contacted me with similar information. More disturbingly, some of these writers had evidence that their paper book royalties were also significantly wrong.

Writers contacted their writers’ organizations. Agents got the news. Everyone in the industry, it seemed, read those blogs, and many of the writers/agents/organizations vowed to do something. And some of them did.

I hoped to do an update within a few weeks after the initial post. I thought my update would come no later than summer of 2011.

I had no idea the update would take a year, and what I can tell you is—

Bupkis. Nada. Nothing. Zip. Zilch.

That doesn’t mean that nothing happened. I personally spoke to the heads of two different writers’ organizations who promised to look into this. I spoke to half a dozen attorneys active in the publishing field who were, as I mentioned in those posts, unsurprised. I spoke to a lot of agents, via e-mail and in person, and I spoke to even more writers.

The writers have kept me informed. It seems, from the information I’m still getting, that nothing has changed. The publishers that last year used a formula to calculate e-book royalties (rather than report actual sales) still use the formula to calculate e-book royalties this year.

I just got one such royalty statement in April from one of those companies and my e-book sales from them for six months were a laughable ten per novel. My worst selling e-books, with awful covers, have sold more than that. Significantly more.

To this day, writers continue to notify their writers’ organizations, and if those organizations are doing anything, no one has bothered to tell me. Not that they have to. I’m only a member of one writers’ organizations, and I know for fact that one is doing nothing.

But the heads of the organizations I spoke to haven’t kept me apprised. I see nothing in the industry news about writers’ organizations approaching/auditing/dealing with the problems with royalty statements. Sometimes these things take place behind the scenes, and I understand that. So, if your organization is taking action, please do let me know so that I can update the folks here.

The attorneys I spoke to are handling cases, but most of those cases are individual cases. An attorney represents a single writer with a complaint about royalties. Several of those cases got settled out of court. Others are still pending or are “in review.” I keep hearing noises about class actions, but so far, I haven’t seen any of them, nor has anyone notified me.

The agents disappointed me the most. Dean personally called an agent friend of ours whose agency handles two of the biggest stars in the writing firmament. That agent (having previously read my blog) promised the agency was aware of the problem and was “handling it.”

Two weeks later, I got an e-mail from a writer with that agency asking me if I knew about the new e-book addendum to all of her contracts that the agency had sent out. The agency had sent the addendum with a “sign immediately” letter. I hadn’t heard any of this. I asked to see the letter and the addendum.

This writer was disturbed that the addendum was generic. It had arrived on her desk—get this—without her name or the name of the book typed in. She was supposed to fill out the contract number, the book’s title, her name, and all that pertinent information.

I had her send me her original contracts, which she did. The addendum destroyed her excellent e-book rights in that contract, substituting better terms for the publisher. Said publisher handled both of that agency’s bright writing stars.

So I contacted other friends with that agency. They had all received the addendum. Most had just signed the addendum without comparing it to the original contract, trusting their agent who was (after all) supposed to protect them.

Wrong-o. The agency, it turned out, had made a deal with the publisher. The publisher would correct the royalties for the big names if agency sent out the addendum to every contract it had negotiated with that contract. The publisher and the agency both knew that not all writers would sign the addendum, but the publisher (and probably the agency) also knew that a good percentage of the writers would sign without reading it.

In other words, the publisher took the money it was originally paying to small fish and paid it to the big fish—with the small fish’s permission.

Yes, I’m furious about this, but not at the publisher. I’m mad at the authors who signed, but mostly, I’m mad at the agency that made this deal. This agency had a chance to make a good decision for all of its clients. Instead, it opted to make a good deal for only its big names.

Do I know for a fact that this is what happened? Yeah, I do. Can I prove it? No. Which is why I won’t tell you the name of the agency, nor the name of the bestsellers involved. (Who, I’m sure, have no idea what was done in their names.)

On a business level what the agency did makes sense. The agency pocketed millions in future commissions without costing itself a dime on the other side, since most of the writers who signed the addendum probably hadn’t earned out their advances, and probably never would.

On an ethical level it pisses me off. You’ll note that my language about agents has gotten harsher over the past year, and this single incident had something to do with it. Other incidents later added fuel to the fire, but they’re not relevant here. I’ll deal with them in a future post.

Yes, there are good agents in the world. Some work for unethical agencies. Some work for themselves. I still work with an agent who is also a lawyer, and is probably more ethical than I am.

But there are yahoos in the agenting business who make the slimy used car salesmen from 1970s films look like action heroes. But, as I said, that’s a future post.

I have a lot of information from writers, most of which is in private correspondence, none of which I can share, that leads me to believe that this particular agency isn’t the only one that used my blog on royalty statements to benefit their bestsellers and hurt their midlist writers. But again, I can’t prove it.

So I’m sad to report that nothing has changed from last year on the royalty statement front.

Except…

The reason I was so excited about the Department of Justice lawsuit against the five publishers wasn’t because of the anti-trust issues (which do exist on a variety of levels in publishing, in my opinion), but because the DOJ accountants will dig, and dig, and dig into the records of these traditional publishers, particularly one company named in the suit that’s got truly egregious business practices.

Those practices will change, if only because the DOJ’s forensic accountants will request information that the current accounting systems in most publishing houses do not track. The accounting system in all five of these houses will get overhauled, and brought into the 21st century, and that will benefit writers. It will be an accidental benefit, but it will occur.

The audits alone will unearth a lot of problems. I know that some writers were skeptical that the auditors would look for problems in the royalty statements, but all that shows is a lack of understanding of how forensic accounting works. In the weeks since the DOJ suit, I’ve contacted several accountants, including two forensic accountants, and they all agree that every pebble, every grain of sand, will be inspected because the best way to hide funds in an accounting audit is to move them to a part of the accounting system not being audited.

So when an organization like the DOJ audits, they get a blanket warrant to look at all of the accounting, not just the files in question. Yes, that’s a massive task. Yes, it will take years. But the change is gonna come.

From the outside.

Those of you in Europe might be seeing some of that change as well, since similar lawsuits are going on in Europe.

I do know that several writers from European countries, New Zealand, and Australia have written to me about similar problems in their royalty statements. The unifying factor in those statements is the companies involved. Again, you’d recognize the names because they’ve been in the news lately…dealing with lawsuits.

Ironically for me, those two blog posts benefitted me greatly. I had been struggling to get my rights back from one publisher (who is the biggest problem publisher), and the week I posted the blog, I got contacted by my former editor there, who told me that my rights would come back to me ASAP. Because, the former editor told me (as a friend), things had changed since Thursday (the day I post my blog), and I would get everything I needed.

In other words, let’s get the troublemaker out of the house now. Fine with me.

Later, I discovered some problems with a former agency. I pointed out the problems in a letter, and those problems got solved immediately. I have several friends who’ve been dealing with similar things from that agency, and they can’t even get a return e-mail. I know that the quick response I got is because of this blog.

I also know that many writers used the blog posts from last year to negotiate more accountability from their publishers for future royalties. That’s a real plus. Whether or not it happens is another matter because I noted something else in this round of royalty statements.

Actually, that’s not fair. My agent caught it first. I need to give credit where credit is due, and since so many folks believe I bash agents, let me say again that my current agent is quite good, quite sharp, and quite ethical.

My agent noticed that the royalty statements from one of my publishers were basket accounted on the statement itself. Which is odd, considering there is no clause in any of the contracts I have with that company that allows for basket accounting.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with basket accounting, this is what it means:

A writer signs a contract with Publisher A for three books. The contract is a three-book contract. One contract, three books. Got that?

Okay, a contract with a basket-accounting clause allows the publisher to put all three books in the same accounting “basket” as if the books are one entity. So let’s say that book one does poorly, book two does better, and book three blows out of the water.

If book three earns royalties, those royalties go toward paying off the advances on books one and two.

Like this:

Advance for book one: $10,000

Advance for book two: $10,000

Advance for book three: $10,000

Book one only earned back $5,000 toward its advance. Book two only earned $6,000 toward its advance.

Book three earned $12,000—paying off its advance, with a $2,000 profit.

In a standard contract without basket accounting, the writer would have received the $2,000 as a royalty payment.

But with basket accounting, the writer receives nothing. That accounting looks like this:

Advance on contract 1: $30,000

Earnings on contract 1: $23,000

Amount still owed before the advance earns out: $7,000

Instead of getting $2,000, the writer looks at the contract and realizes she still has $7,000 before earning out.

Without basket accounting, she would have to earn $5,000 to earn out Book 1, and $4,000 to earn out Book 2, but Book 3 would be paying her cold hard cash.

Got the difference?

Now, let’s go back to my royalty statement. It covered three books. All three books had three different one-book contracts, signed years apart. You can’t have basket accounting without a basket (or more than one book), but I checked to see if sneaky lawyers had inserted a clause that I missed which allowed the publisher to basket account any books with that publisher that the publisher chose.

Nope.

I got a royalty statement with all of my advances basket accounted because…well, because. The royalty statement doesn’t follow the contract(s) at all.

Accounting error? No. These books had be added separately. Accounting program error (meaning once my name was added, did the program automatically basket account)? Maybe.

But I’ve suspected for nearly three years now that this company (not one of the big traditional publishers, but a smaller [still large] company) has been having serious financial problems. The company has played all kinds of games with my checks, with payments, with fulfilling promises that cost money.

This is just another one of those problems.

My agent caught it because he reads royalty statements. He mentioned it when he forwarded the statements. I would have caught it as well because I read royalty statements. Every single one. And I compare them to the previous statement. And often, I compare them to the contract.

Is this “error” a function of the modern publishing environment? No, not like e-book royalties, which we’ll get back to in a moment. I’m sure publishers have played this kind of trick since time immemorial. Royalty statements are fascinating for what they don’t say rather than for what they say.

For example, on this particular (messed up) royalty statement, e-books are listed as one item, without any identification. The e-books should be listed separately (according to ISBN) because Amazon has its own edition, as does Apple, as does B&N. Just like publishers must track the hardcover, trade paper, and mass market editions under different ISBNs, they should track e-books the same way.

The publisher that made the “error” with my books had no identifying number, and only one line for e-books. Does that mean that this figure included all e-books, from the Amazon edition to the B&N edition to the Apple edition? Or is this publisher, which has trouble getting its books on various sites (go figure), is only tracking Amazon? From the numbers, it would seem so. Because the numbers are somewhat lower than books in the same series that I have on Amazon, but nowhere near the numbers of the books in the same series if you add in Apple and B&N.

I can’t track this because the royalty statement has given me no way to track it. I would have to run an audit on the company. I’m not sure I want to do that because it would take my time, and I’m moving forward.

That’s the dilemma for writers. Do we take on our publishers individually? Because—for the most part—our agents aren’t doing it. The big agencies, the ones who actually have the clout and the numbers to defend their clients, are doing what they can for their big clients and leaving the rest in the dust.

Writers’ organizations seem to be silent on this. And honestly, it’s tough for an organization to take on a massive audit. It’s tough financially and it’s tough politically. I know one writer who headed a writer’s organization a few decades ago. She spearheaded an audit of major publishers, and it cost her her writing career. Not many heads of organizations have the stomach for that.

As for intellectual property attorneys (or any attorney for that matter), very few handle class actions. Most handle cases individually for individual clients. I know of several writers who’ve gone to attorneys and have gotten settlements from publishers. The problem here is that these settlements only benefit one writer, who often must sign a confidentiality agreement so he can’t even talk about what benefit he got from that agreement.

One company that I know of has revamped its royalty statements. They appear to be clearer. The original novel that I have with that company isn’t selling real well as an e-book, and that makes complete sense since the e-book costs damn near $20. (Ridiculous.) The other books that I have with that company, collaborations and tie-ins, seem to be accurately reported, although I have no way to know. I do appreciate that this company has now separated out every single e-book venue into its own category (B&N, Amazon, Apple) via ISBN, and I can actually see the sales breakdown.

So that’s a positive (I think). Some of the smaller companies have accurate statements as well—or at least, statements that match or improve upon the sales figures I’m seeing on indie projects.

This is all a long answer to a very simple question: What’s happened on the royalty statement front in the past year?

A lot less than I had hoped.

So here’s what you traditionally published writers can do. Track your royalty statements. Compare them to your contracts. Make sure the companies are reporting what they should be reporting.

If you’re combining indie and traditional, like I am, make sure the numbers are in the same ballpark. Make sure your traditional Amazon numbers are around the same numbers you get for your indie titles. If they aren’t, look at one thing first: Price. I expect sales to be much lower on that ridiculous $20 e-book. If your e-books through your traditional publisher are $15 or more, then sales will be down. If the e-books from your traditional publisher are priced around $10 or less, then they should be somewhat close in sales to your indie titles. (Or, if traditional publishers are doing the promotion they claim to do, the sales should be better.)

What to do if they’re not close at all? I have no idea. I still think there’s a benefit to contacting your writers’ organizations. Maybe if the organization keeps getting reports of badly done royalty statements, someone will take action.

If you want to hire an attorney or an auditor, remember doing that will cost both time and money. If you’re a bestseller, you might want to consider it. If you’re a midlist writer, it’s probably not worth the time and effort you’ll put in.

But do yourself a favor. Read those royalty statements. If you think they’re bad, then don’t sign a new contract with that publisher. Go somewhere else with your next book.

I wish I could give you better advice. I wish the big agencies actually tried to use their clout for good instead of their own personal profits. I wish the writers’ organizations had done something.

As usual, it’s up to individual writers.

Don’t let anyone screw you. You might not be able to fight the bad accounting on past books, but make sure you don’t allow it to happen on future books.

That means that you negotiate good contracts, you make sure your royalty statements match those contracts, and you don’t sign with a company that puts out royalty statements that don’t reflect your book deal.

I’m quite happy that I walked away from the publisher I mentioned above years ago. I did so because I didn’t like the treatment I got from the financial and production side. The editor was—as editors often are—great. Everything else at the company sucked.

The royalty statement was just confirmation of a good decision for me.

I hope you make good decisions going forward.

Remember: read your royalty statements.

Good luck.

I need to thank everyone who commented, e-mailed, donated, and called because of last week’s post. When I wrote it, all I meant to do was discuss how we all go through tough times and how we, as writers, need to recognize when we’ve hit a wall. It seems I hit a nerve. I forget sometimes that most writers work in a complete vacuum, with no writer friends, no one except family, who much as they care, don’t always understand.

So if you haven’t read last week’s post, take a peek [link]. More importantly, look at the comments for great advice and some wonderful sharing. I appreciate them—and how much they expanded, added, and improved what I had to say. Thanks for that, everyone.

The donate button is below. As always, if you’ve received anything of value from this post or previous posts, please leave a tip on the way out.

Thanks!

Click Here to Go To PayPal.

“The Business Rusch: “Royalty Statement Update 2012,” copyright © 2012 by Kristine Kathryn Rusch.

Posted in Writing | 1 Comment

Friday furballs

Sunlight. Gracie. It is Teh Awesome.

Gracie in the sun

Goofball. Tigger. It is Teh Usual.

Tig in LOLcat mode

Posted in Cats | 1 Comment

Friday news roundup

Schadenfreude: It’s a guilty pleasure. Aw, I feel so bad for Turkey. Well, no, really, I don’t. They don’t like S&P downgrading them? They should probably stop concentrating on hating Israel and pushing Islamism and work on their economy instead.

Oh, look! The CSM is criticizing someone beside Israel: But you have to wade through four paragraphs of criticism of Israel before getting to the headline’s subject. Ah, the CSM. You can always count on the anti-Israel bias.

Well, that’s that, then: Really, could the UN be any more clueless? I mean, seriously?

The United Nations has given Sudan and South Sudan a two week deadline to stop fighting.

The United Nations: When they say it, they mean it, dammit!

You can stop laughing now.

Even more unbelievable idiocy from the UN: Yes, they really believe this crap.

Kofi Annan’s six-point peace plan for Syria remains “on track,” his spokesman insisted Friday, despite skepticism from the U.S. and others about the cease-fire that has been largely ignored by President Bashar Assad’s forces.

Let’s remember that Kofi Annan was the director of the UN Peacekeeping force while the Rwandan genocide went on. So basically, this is par for the course for him. Syrians are dying, but the peace plan is working. Right. Sure. Just ask the dead Syrians how well it’s working. Oh. Wait.

Posted in Middle East, palestinian politics, Syria, Turkey, United Nations | 1 Comment

Thursday, briefly

Gee, I wonder who they could have been?Unknown attackers” murdered 11 Egyptian protesters and wounded hundreds more, while police stood idly by–in front of the Defense Ministry. Hm. That’s a tough one. Who could have the mystery attackers been? I’m stumped.

Oh, those wacky UN cease-fires: 22 more dead in Syria, except these are Syrian troops, not “rebels”–and the UN peacekeepers spread out over the nation to, uh, wait… let me think… oh, I’ve got it! To keep the peace. Stop the fighting. Prevent more deaths. Awesome job, UN, as always. (Can you say, “Rwanda”? I knew you could.) As for where the international outrage has gone, well, isn’t it obvious? Israel legalized settlements last week. Of course that’s more deserving of international outrage than a few dozen more dead Arabs. Just judge by the media response.

Cheat, retreat, and cheat some more: Iran thinks the purpose of the current talks is to ease sanctions. They must be working. Good thing it’s an election year, or they’d get what they want. And gee, that arms embargo on Iran is working so well, isn’t it? (Of course that was sarcasm. Click the link.)

Unity, shmunity: Yeah, Hamas and the PA are getting along so well yet another unity deal failed. Good.

Posted in Hamas, Iran, Media Bias, Middle East, palestinian politics, Syria, United Nations | Comments Off on Thursday, briefly

Writing Wednesdays

I’m taking every Wednesday off for the month of May to push forward and finish my novel. I’m at 52,000 words out of a projected 75,000 so far. I’ve also started three short stories set in the same world to build up interest.

It’s always been about the writing for me. That’s half the reason I started this blog: To keep my web skills up, and to keep on writing. The Jblogging? Well, that just happened.

Trying to get back into the writing world is a difficult transition. Ten or fifteen years ago, I had a ton of contacts in the publishing world, from being a copy editor myself as well as being in a writers group and attending conventions, not to mention being a graduate of the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Workshop. I’ve got almost no contacts today. Well, except for Neil, whose online science fiction and fantasy magazine you should definitely be reading. I’ve been reading a host of writing blogs, doing research, playing catch-up, discovering that yes, copyediting now gets double the rates I used to get when I was one and no, I don’t think I’ll be using a freelance copy editor after all, not when I have a friend who is an editor and copy editor in her professional life and is offering to copyedit my novel. Since she also happens to have been a member of The Waverly Writers Workshop (that’s what we called ourselves; three guesses where we met in Manhattan), I think I’ll be taking her up on that offer. Now, a proofreader I’ll pay for. I have someone in mind.

Today was a lovely day. I got up knowing that while I had to keep an eye out for urgent projects from work, the day was mostly mine. After breakfast, I took the manuscript and a boatload of 4×6 index cards down to the dining room table and wrote out every chapter’s plot points, chapter by chapter, then set them along the table. I’m trying to make sure every chapter has something interesting as well as vital to the overall story. Of course, some things are less exciting than others. That’s how writing works. But I’m pretty happy with the balance so far.

Then I spent some time on The Outline Board, pulling off all the old index cards that I’ve already written up, and putting up the new plot points I created yesterday and today. Then I stared at the board for a while before I sat down to write. I thought I’d be writing the Halloween chapter. Nope, the muse wants what it wants, and it had me working elsewhere. Halloween is an important night. There’s a party, a break-in, a shooting, and an escape. Oh, and costumes and candy and dancing. That’s one chapter I didn’t have to worry about on the index cards.

Another thing I spent some time on was looking at new themes for the blog. We’re going to have a major makeover here. The writing is going to come first, but Yourish.com will remain. I’m not sure if I’ll be posting much about politics, but let’s face it–the JBlogosphere got very big since I was one of the founding members of it, and it doesn’t need me so much anymore. Which is not to say I’ll ever stop being a Zionist. Just that I probably won’t be blogging as much about Israel.

I know I still have a few thousand readers out there. You rarely say anything, but the hit counter keeps going up. I hope you stick around for a little while after the makeover. The snark won’t disappear. You’d have to have it surgically removed, and I’m pretty sure that there aren’t any Board-certified Snarkologists. But how cool would that look on a business card? “Dr. U. Ahole, Snarkologist.”

If you want to see where I’m getting much of my writing news, check out The Passive Voice. Passive Guy is a pretty smart cookie with a lot to say about the publishing world. He’s been an excellent springboard for me. And, of course, there’s a level of snarkiness from time to time.

It will never go away.

Posted in The Catmage Chronicles, Writing | Tagged , | Comments Off on Writing Wednesdays

Peaceful, happy Occupy protesters arrested from sea to shining sea

Oh, those crazy kids. They totally got their message across. Wall Street is greedy? Nope. They are the 99%? Nope. Fairness and justice for all? Nope. They’re a bunch of spoiled, petulant thugs and criminals?

You got it.

New York:

On the eve of planned May Day protests across the country, envelopes containing white powder were sent to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and six banks in Manhattan, officials said Monday.

[…] A city official said two of the letters sent to banks read in part: “This is a reminder that you are not in control. Just in case you needed some incentive to stop working. We have a little surprise for you. Think fast.” They ended with, “Happy May Day.”

More New York:

At one point, people spilled out onto Fifth Avenue in a confrontation with police. Marchers briefly flooded the avenue and blocked traffic before police in riot gear pushed the crowd back onto the sidewalks. The group chanted: “We are the people. We are united!”

San Francisco:

After a kickoff event Monday night at Dolores Park, a group of protesters chanting Occupy slogans split off to launch paint bombs at the Mission Police Station and shatter the windows of small businesses on Valencia Street, along with the windows of nearly 20 cars. Organizers immediately distanced the movement from such destruction, but considering the group’s lack of clear leaders or demands, presumably anyone can claim to be acting in the name of Occupy.

Waking up to glass-strewn streets and graffiti imploring “yuppies” and “hipsters” to vacate the neighborhood, small-business owners reacted angrily.

“Nice work, occupiers,” tweeted Jeremy Tooker, owner of the popular Four Barrel Coffee. “You made me leave my sick kid at home to go clean paint bombs off my windows. That’ll show Wall Street, fellas.”

Portland protesters arrested in May Day scuffles with police

Oakland:

Protesters and union organizers shut down ferry service at the Larkspur and Sausalito terminals during the morning commute, marched to the Fruitvale BART station in East Oakland made famous by the police shooting death of Oscar Grant III, and in San Francisco swarmed a bank, and retook a vacant building owned by the Catholic Archdiocese on Turk Street. At least one person was hurt at the site when a protester on the roof hurled a brick into a crowd of demonstrators and police who were tussling below.

Seattle:

Protesters – believed to be from the Black Bloc – smashed storefront windows, banks and vehicles parked in the downtown core, resulting in numerous arrests.

Miami:

Miami Police said two officers were treated and released for minor injuries and three people were arrested after a series of May 1st protests led by Occupy Miami.

And an ABC coast to coast roundup of the violence.

These people are exactly what the media used to claim the Tea Party was: Violent thugs who will use any means to get their way–including bombs.

Posted in Occupy Wall Street | 1 Comment

Tuesday briefs

Politician who nobody cares about quits her job that nobody still knew she had: Tzipi Livni, the utterly irrelevant former leader of Kadima, is quitting the Knesset. And while she slammed Netanyahu on her way out, let’s face it–nobody cares.

UN isn’t even trying to hide its anti-Israel bias: Okay, see if you can follow this one. A committee approved a bill that would restrict funding of NGOs in Israel by foreign sources. This is because most NGOs in Israel are funding be virulently anti-Israel European organizations, among others. The bill was frozen after it came out of committee because Netanyahu’s Attorney General told him it would likely be struck down. So, the bill is not even remotely about to be voted on. So what does the anti- Israel UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay do? Why, she puts Israel on a list of dictatorships and theocracies that restrict the activities of human rights groups. Even though Israel is not restricting the activities of human rights group. And there you have both the anti-Israel UN bias and Israeli Derangement Syndrome, all rolled up in one. And may I say a resounding eff you to Navi (I hate Israel!) Pillay.

It’s not the anti-Zionism, Mr. Barenboim: Pro-Palestinian conductor Daniel Barenboim is about as left-wing, pro-Palestinian as you can get in Israel. He is constantly calling out his country over perceived wrongs to the Palestinians. He was scheduled to conduct the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra in Qatar. Everything was set: Tickets sold, debates set up, ready to go. And the entire festival was canceled. Why? Well, here’s a hint: Barenboim is an Israeli Jew.

Editorials in newspapers throughout the Arab world stated: “This isn’t the time or place to entertain Israelis and a Zionist conductor. Qatari authorities are giving the Zionist maestro an opportunity to present a seemingly positive aspect of Israel.”

Right. The lessons of Nazi Germany apparently have to be re-learned. They will not love you because you side with them. They will always hate you because you’re Jewish. Let us be honest.

Yeah, but I killed bin Laden: Gee, Barack Obama’s trying to use the killing of Osama bin Laden as a political tool–and worse, to imply that Romney wouldn’t have done the same given the chance–is bouncing back on him. Looks like Obama may well start to be known as the rebound president. Dogs, Osama–can’t wait to see the next failed ad campaign by the re-election geniuses.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, The One, United Nations | 3 Comments

Occupy Wall Street made me do it.

In honor of Occupy Wall Street, I’m buying a Kindle today. I will go to Staples on my lunch hour and pick one, then buy it on Amazon. (I have gift cards. I can wait two days to get it.)

Occupy Wall Street demonstrators, whose anti-greed message spread worldwide during an eight-week encampment in Lower Manhattan last year, plan marches across the globe today calling attention to what they say are abuses of power and wealth.

Organizers say they hope the coordinated events will mark a spring resurgence of the movement after a quiet winter. Calls for a general strike with no work, no school, no banking and no shopping have sprung up on websites in Toronto, Barcelona, London, Kuala Lumpur and Sydney, among hundreds of cities in North America, Europe and Asia.

In New York, Occupy Wall Street will join scores of labor organizations observing May 1, traditionally recognized as International Workers’ Day. They plan marches from Union Square to Lower Manhattan and a “pop-up occupation” of Bryant Park on Sixth Avenue, across the street from Bank of America’s Corp.’s 55-story tower.

Just think of how many corporate evils I can roll into one: Amazon is a big corporation, publishers are fruitlessly claiming it’s a monopoly, the Kindle and e-publishing are destroying brick-and-mortar bookstores (never mind that Barnes & Noble and Borders destroyed the independent booksellers years ago and publishers didn’t give a crap), and, well, that’s all I can think of for now. Feel free to join in. What are you buying today?

Posted in Evil Meryl, Juvenile Scorn, Politics | 2 Comments

What a difference five and a half years make

I wrote this in October of 2006:

I’m sorry for the lack of posting. I haven’t got much heart these days. Money worries, cat worries, job worries (still a temp, no end in sight), stress up the wazoo. I know there are bigger problems in the world, but y’know, these are my problems, and they seem pretty big to me.

If I could run away from home for a week, I’d do it. Unfortunately, that’s not an option.

That was during the end of Gracie’s illness, her misdiagnoses by the vet I used to go to, and my search for a permanent job and the beginning of my effort to get out of debt.

I will also point out that I wasn’t writing a single word of fiction at that time.

I just passed the 50,000-word mark yesterday. I am weeks away from finishing my novel, and only a few months away from e-publishing it. I’m developing a marketing plan and looking at new WordPress themes for the makeover Yourish.com will receive. I thought of a great regular feature for my writing blog.

Yeah, times are much better now than they were when I wrote that post. And let us all say: Amen.

Posted in Life, The Catmage Chronicles, Writing | Tagged , | 2 Comments