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Review Process

September 30, 2008 in Blogs

We have commented in-house that Game Ideas Unlimited Volume 1 has not gotten much attention, at least in terms of sales.  It was admittedly an experiment–those of you who visit this site are undoubtedly aware that this book contains twenty-six of the roughly two hundred articles in that series, all of which are available on this web site for the individual patient enough to seek them, and indeed the ones included in this first volume easier to find than most, as work has already been done to clean up the articles themselves and the access links to reach them.  Thus on one level we’re not all that surprised that the book, available here directly through Cafe Press, has not been selling well.  On the other hand, we’ve also wondered whether we had adequately promoted the tome, indeed, whether gamers were at all aware of the effort.

One way to raise awareness is by getting reviews posted.  It is not always easy for authors to get reviews of their works; however, in the role playing game world there are sites eager to post reviews, and one in particular which is rather popular and which guarantees that any game-related books it receives will be reviewed.  We have dithered about sending a copy, because of course we have to pay for copies and are still uncertain how the book will be received by gamers generally (and reviewers in particular), but at this weekend’s Annual Stockholders Meeting, after being elected one of two new directors, former and now returning director Evan Young directed me to stop dithering and get the book to them.  After all, even a bad review would promote the availability of the book, and we do have confidence that the contents of the book are particularly good.  The doubts which arise come primarily from the question of whether anyone else will think it a good idea to release in print for money what is already available free electronically and has been for most of a decade.  Thus today I finished packing and mailing a copy of the book to the site in question.  It will take this week to arrive, additional time to be assigned to a reviewer, and ultimately will be reviewed.  I am watchful.

As long as I was sending a package anyway, and paying for postage and packing from my own pocket, I included a copy of Faith and Gaming, which is available here, for which I have similar concerns, although this has sold a few copies probably to members of the Christian Gamers Guild who consider the series one of their strongest assets and view the availability of the book as a boon even though the series has long been hosted in the Chaplain’s Corner of their web site.  Thus this has the double whammy, first that it is a collection of materials already available free on the Internet, and second that it is very clearly a Christian book about role play gaming, which can very quickly garner animosity in the gaming community.  But again, a review will put the book in the public eye, and to some degree a reviewer who is not “religious” himself cannot slam a religious book without blackening his own reputation, so hopefully it will get a fair treatment.

On that note, I wait.

–M. J. Young

Trust Pre-release

September 24, 2008 in Blogs

Those who are not interested in posts not related to Multiverser can skip this one.  It is entirely about one of my Christian books.

I have hemmed and hawed and dithered and dallied since receiving the cover art for my new book, Do You Trust Me? Part of the delay is that I had intended to put a couple of quotes on the back from people who had given favorable responses to copies of the draft, but I lost their comments and couldn’t find them.

In any case, I have posted the book and ordered proof copies, so I can spot any bugs that escaped me to this point and make sure the cover prints well.

I have also decided to make these pre-release copies available to those who have encouraged and supported my ministry, by announcing their availability through Lulu. The printed copies are currently priced at $8.97 and the PDF at $4.49. Once the proofs are approved, the book will get an ISBN and go into general distribution at prices closer to $12 for print and $6.00 for PDF, so it’s a 25% savings now. There might yet be bugs in the book, of course, and the ISBN is not printed on these copies (because it has not yet been issued), and I admit that I am still hoping to get a few positive words I can post on the back cover and credit to people who don’t sound like they’re my relatives.

Anyone interested can obtain either print or PDF at http://www.lulu.com/content/4225728.

Thank you.

–M. J. Young

Incentivized Shift

September 4, 2008 in Blogs

I have just been chastized by someone who is either a complete stranger or a new identity for a recurring “anonymous friend”.  The criticism is that my most recent Blogless Lepolt post has nothing whatever to do with Multiverser, and of course he is correct.  I may have again to rethink what I post here.

Fortunately, my inspiration for posting today is related to Multiverser.  Some of you will recall that as part of my work on the novels, I was creating character sheets based on the primary characters therein.  Judging from the blog posts, it has been entirely too long that those efforts have been sidetracked.  However, recently in the forums I launched one of my players in one of the worlds from the second novel, one which I am preparing for use in the next Multiverser Triple Play–that is, next after the horror one that is currently in the hands of the art director, the space-based worlds.  I was going to run it mostly by the seat of my pants and the notes and writing I’ve done on the world description–but as often happens in Multiverser games, the player’s character did something that changed things significantly.  He prayed another character into his scenario, and that prompted me to shift the plans to involve the story of that other character.  It also meant that I needed detailed information concerning the particular character from the story, including skills and equipment, so that I could put together events well.

Thus I returned my attention to the novels, and particularly to the character sheets.  In so doing, I found I had nearly finished all the data gathering from the first, and was almost ready to start the second.  I pushed forward into the beginning of the second novel, and the first bits of information about the character already involved in play, and hoping that this will facilitate both the ongoing game and the work on the novels.

I should apologize for my absence yesterday, but an explanation would involve details of family matters not at all related to Multiverser, and would thus raise the ire of people on all sides.

–M. J. Young

Format and Queue

September 2, 2008 in Blogs

It’s amazing how quickly that step actually went, and particularly since it could have gone so much faster had I known what I wanted to do before I started.

For convenience in locating specific sections, my Romans notes were written in table format.  Each chapter of the epistle was a new “section” in the word processing software, and each section was comprised of one three-column table–the leftmost column for the verse numbers and broad outline, giving the point and parameters of each paragraph, the middle column containing my translation of the text, and the right-hand and widest column giving the detailed analysis.  I had considered publishing it in that format, printed “landscape”, that is, eleven inches wide by eight and a half high, probably bound on the long side such that it would be more like a flip chart than a book. However, there was more white space than I wanted, and even with the idea that users might wish to make notes I could not justify the expense of such a long book.  Instead, I decided to reformat it more traditionally, to a “portrait” layout, losing the tables and placing the outline, numbering, and translation between the sections of detail.  In doing so, I reduced the page count from near a thousand to under six hundred, so I obviously eliminated a great deal of white space.

There were several time-consuming aspects to this.  In particular, I wished to convert the tables to text such that there would be a double paragraph break at each cell break, but that was not an option of the conversion.  The simple solution was to choose a symbol which was not used anywhere in the text, use that symbol at the cell breaks, and then do a global replace of that symbol with the double paragraph break.  It worked, but at one point I forgot which symbol I was using and used one that was used in a few places in the text, so I had to return and correct those places where the replace should not have been made.

The other was that after I had reformatted all the tables to text, I realized that the verse numbers and translation text were not so easily distinguished from the commentary detail.  I thus had to go through and, verse by verse, reformat these.  I had to do some other reformatting at the same time, adjusting the line breaks, so I would have had to have done the verse by verse work anyway; but it would have saved several keystrokes on each verse had I reformatted that text while it was still in table layout rather than after the fact.  I made the decision that the table-to-text conversions had taken long enough that it would not be worth reversing them to save the time on the text formatting, but still spent quite a bit of time on it.  For what it’s worth, Romans, the longest of Paul’s epistles, has four hundred thirty-one verses plus a subscription (in the Greek manuscripts, the title and authorship and related information are appended to the end of a book), so I was at this for a while.

The result of this is, with the addition of a title page and the drafting of a brief forward, the Romans book is finished.  I will have to do the conversion to PDF, and upload it to the publisher, and design the cover (although being more on the lines of a “scholarly” work, a simple faux leatherette look with the title and author will be sufficient, so I need not hassle with cover art).

Of course, Do You Trust Me? is also waiting to be published, so I face the question of which to publish first–or whether to launch both at once.  That, though, is a decision that will have to wait until there is money in the bank, something that doesn’t happen easily in the beginning of September when school expenses hit.

–M. J. Young