Kindle Sales Continue to Rise

My friend and cohort at Austen Authors, Mary Simonsen, shared the following information regarding the prevalence of eBooks.

From Amazon’s Kindle Newsletter:

Amazon Now Selling More Kindle Books Than Print Books

In November 2007, Amazon introduced the revolutionary Kindle. By July 2010, Kindle book sales had surpassed hardcover book sales, and six months later, Kindle books overtook paperback books to become the most popular format on Amazon.com. Today, less than four years after introducing Kindle books, Amazon.com customers are now purchasing more Kindle books than all print books – hardcover and paperback – combined. Since April 1, for every 100 print books Amazon.com has sold, it has sold 105 Kindle books. This includes sales of hardcover and paperback books by Amazon where there is no Kindle edition. Free Kindle books are excluded and if included would make the number even higher.

Amazon announces the Top 20 Most Well-Read Cities in America:

1. Cambridge, MA
2. Alexandria, VA
3. Berkeley, CA
4. Ann Arbor, MI
5. Boulder, CO
6. Miami, FL
7. Salt Lake City, UT
8. Gainesville, FL
9. Seattle , WA
10. Arlington, VA
11. Knoxville, TN
12, Orlando, FL
13. Pittsburgh, PA
14. Washington, D.C.
15. Bellevue, WA
16.Columbia, SC
17. St. Louis, MO
18, Cincinnati, OH
19. Portland, OR
20. Atlanta, GA

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West Virginia Day – June 20

June 20 celebrates the birth of my home state. West Virginia was founded in 1863. I just returned from WV on Sunday. I love driving the mountain roads, but I’m sure many others do not. They are intimidated by the curves. When I come out of the tunnel at Bluefield, the one which separates WV from Virginia, my heart always says “home.”
On June 20, 1863, West Virginia became the thirty-fifth state in the Union. The land that formed the new state formerly constituted part of Virginia. The two areas had diverged culturally from their first years of European settlement, as small farmers generally settled the western portion of the state, including the counties that later formed West Virginia, while the eastern portion was dominated by a powerful minority class of wealthy slaveholders. There were proposals for the trans-Allegheny west to separate from Virginia as early as 1769. When Virginia seceded from the Union in 1861, the residents of a number of contiguous western counties, where there were few slaves, decided to remain in the Union. Congress accepted these counties as the state of West Virginia on condition that its slaves be freed. “Montani semper liberi,” “mountaineers always freemen,” became the new state’s motto.

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Remembering Errol Flynn on June 20

“I am the epitome of Twentieth Century cosmopolitanism, but I should have an explorer in the time of Magellan” – Errol Flynn.

Errol Flynn was a rugged, handsome actor. I have watched him over the years, and I have enjoyed his films time and time again. We, normally, think of Flynn as the “king of swashbucklers,” but he was so much more. His acting skills excel. Take the sword away, and Flynn would still command the camera.

Errol Flynn burst onto the screen in Captain Blood, Michael Curtiz’ wonderful swashbuckler. At the age of 25 he made a movie called Murder in Monte Carlo, for Warner Brothers.Jack Warner, the studio head recognized Flynn’s magnetism and placed the Australian actor under contract.
The result was Sea Hawk, which garnered Flynn and Warner Brothers many new fans.

Both men and women admired Flynn’s movie characters: virile, courageous, honorable, and romantic.

Flynn Films:

Cuban Rebel Girls
The American Correspondent

1959 Goodyear Theatre (TV series)
‘Doc’ Boatwright
– The Golden Shanty (1959) … ‘Doc’ Boatwright

1959 The Red Skelton Hour (TV series)
‘The Duke’ – Gentleman Hobo
– Freddie’s Beat Shack (1959) … ‘The Duke’ – Gentleman Hobo

1958 The Roots of Heaven
Forsythe

1958 Too Much, Too Soon
John Barrymore

1957 The Sun Also Rises
Mike Campbell

1957 Playhouse 90 (TV series)
Capt. Bidlack
– Without Incident (1957) … Capt. Bidlack

1957 The Big Boodle
Ned Sherwood

1957 Istanbul
James Brennan

1956 Screen Directors Playhouse (TV series)
Francois Villon
– The Sword of Villon (1956) … Francois Villon

1956 The Errol Flynn Theatre (TV series)
Don Juan / Himself – Host / John Morton
– 1000th Night of Don Juan … Don Juan / Himself – Host
– Rescued … John Morton

1955 King’s Rhapsody
Richard, King of Laurentia

1955 The Dark Avenger
Prince Edward

1954 Let’s Make Up
John ‘Beau’ Beaumont

1954 Crossed Swords
Renzo

1953 The Master of Ballantrae
Jamie Durie

1953 The Story of William Tell (short)
William Tell

1952 Against All Flags
Brian Hawke

1952 Mara Maru
Gregory Mason

1951 Adventures of Captain Fabian
Capt. Michael Fabian

1951 Hello God
Man on Anzio Beach

1950 Kim
Mahbub Ali, the Red Beard

1950 Rocky Mountain
Capt. Lafe Barstow (CSA)

1950 Montana
Morgan Lane

1949 That Forsyte Woman
Soames Forsyte

1949 It’s a Great Feeling
Jeffrey Bushdinkle, the Groom (uncredited)

1948 Adventures of Don Juan
Don Juan de Maraña

1948 Silver River
“Mike” McComb

1947 The Lady from Shanghai
Man in Background Outside of Cantina (uncredited)

1947 Escape Me Never
Sebastian Dubrok

1947 Cry Wolf
Mark Caldwell

1946 Never Say Goodbye
Phil Gayley

1945 San Antonio
Clay Hardin

1945 Objective, Burma!
Capt. Nelson

1944 Uncertain Glory
Jean Picard/Emil DuPont

1943 Northern Pursuit
Corporal Steve Wagner

1943 Edge of Darkness
Gunnar Brogge

1942 Gentleman Jim
James J. Corbett

1942 Desperate Journey
Flight Lt. Terrence ‘Terry’ Forbes

1941 They Died with Their Boots On
George Armstrong Custer

1941 Dive Bomber
Doug Lee

1941 Footsteps in the Dark
Francis Monroe Warren II

1940 Santa Fe Trail
Jeb Stuart

1940 The Sea Hawk
Geoffrey Thorpe

1940 Virginia City
Kerry Bradford

1939 Essex and Elizabeth
Earl of Essex

1939 Dodge City
Wade Hatton

1938 The Dawn Patrol
Captain Courtney

1938 The Sisters
Frank Medlin

1938 Four’s a Crowd
Robert Kensington ‘Bob’ Lansford

1938 The Adventures of Robin Hood
Robin Hood

1937 The Perfect Specimen
Gerald Beresford Wicks

1937 Another Dawn
Captain Denny Roark

1937 The Prince and the Pauper
Miles Hendon

1937 Green Light
Dr. Newell Paige

1936 The Charge of the Light Brigade
Major Geoffrey Vickers

1935 Captain Blood
Peter Blood

1935 Don’t Bet on Blondes
David Van Dusen

1935 The Case of the Curious Bride
Gregory Moxley

1935 Murder at Monte Carlo
Dyter

1933 I Adore You
Bit (uncredited)

1933 In the Wake of the Bounty
Fletcher Christian

Turner Classic Movies will celebrate Flynn’s film career all day Monday.
Errol Flynn, June 20, 1909 to October 14, 1959

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Description 101

Below, is my post from Savvy Authors from their “craft” series.

Description 101

Trained as a journalist and a grant writer, I have over the last three years assumed a quasi-methodical way of addressing description in my fictional writing. As a mode of discourse, description does not come naturally to me. My stories play in my head as I write, and it would be easy for me to ignore the fact that my reader does not see what I do. Of course, it is my responsibility to assure that he does.

Many writers saturate their pieces with long descriptive passages, while others provide only bare bone details. Finding a balance is the answer. Allowing the reader to see, hear, smell, taste, and touch what the author does is a testimony to the senses. The point is to create an image that closely mirrors an observer’s experience. Description should provide the same information that the reader might get directly if he was involved in the situation.

Objective description, the type one finds in technical or scientific descriptive writing, is unbiased and purposeful. In it, one does not convey an emotional response. Subjective description, on the other hand, is personal, but imprecise. Writing subjectively intrudes on the reader’s feelings. Description enlivens the narration. The writer becomes the means by which the reader experiences the situation. He assumes several roles:
• As the reader’s eyes, the writer must thoroughly describe what he sees. The relationship of items to one another. The light. The shadows. The distance. The texture. All of it must be described.
• As the reader’s ears, the writer must tend to the sounds. Loudness. Staccato. Rhythmic pattern.
• As the reader’s other senses, the writer must assure that he describes every detail. Feelings. Touch. Taste. Smell. Kinesthetic-Tactile experiences.
• As the reader’s conscious, the writer will enforce the mood he wishes to convey. Each detail layers the tone created. A mystery writer describing a deserted building will choose different details from that of an architectural slant. Choose the details, which reinforce the mood.

Yet, for description not to drown the narration, the writer must first keep the intended audience ever present in his mind. What must one absolutely know about the subject or the place? What may one omit? Each descriptive passage should convey one dominant impression. Details must be carefully selected. Do not create tediousness by including every discernible detail.

A consistent point of view aids in the piece’s organization. Where is the writer when he describes the scene? The reader must be aware of where the writer places himself spatially. Order of location – presenting the details in a manner, which reflects their location in the scene – clarifies the nature of the details. Good description depends on the writer’s ability to convey his observations. Begin by describing the whole scene briefly and then focus on one specific part.

Remember to write unforgettable description, one must use vivid, reminiscent details. Use concrete sensory images and figurative language. Effective description conveys the experience exactly as one planned it. Use specific details, which are associated with actual items, and concrete language, which is coupled with the senses. Do not forget to cut the “deadwood,” especially vague words, such as handsome, tall, soft, etc., which offer multiple meanings/impressions. Also avoid the fancy (florid, ostentatious, embellished, lavish, etc.) choices. Use words that pin down the exact meaning. For example, using puissance instead of manliness serves no purpose if the reader must consult a dictionary to understand the passage. Impressionistic details are those, which an observer would see first? What would the observer see second? Third? And so forth? Present the details in the order in which someone would notice them.

As description acquaints the reader with the physical nature of things, certain standards are observed:
• Use “definition” when describing the unfamiliar.
• Use division/analysis, separating a whole, singular subject into its elements – slicing it into parts. This helps the reader follow the detailed description.
• Whether the previous two steps are necessary depends upon the familiarity the writer’s audience has with the subject.
• Use concrete words to describe material, color, weights, sizes, distance, etc.
• Limit the number of details to fit the purpose.
• Observe contiguity in moving from part to part.
• Use words that indicate relative postion. (i.e, to indicate space relationships, use words such as above, adjoining, abutting, alongside, below, beneath, beside, inside, left, outside, north, over, right, etc.; to indicate likeness/continuation, use words such as again, also, as…so, in the same way, likewise, similarly, thus, etc.)
• End with a brief description of the movements, behaviors, or habits of animate things.
• Include uses for inanimate things.
• Follow a thematic pattern by dividing the scene into mental categories, and regardless of their actual relationship to one another in space, describe elements that support one theme and then another theme, etc.

Overall, good description gives concrete details in a strategic sequence, which creates the piece’s mood/tone. The reader should have a strong sense of the whole scene, but should also be able to invoke specific details effortlessly.

About the Author
Regina Jeffers is the author of several Jane Austen adaptations including Darcy’s Passions, Darcy’s Temptation,Vampire Darcy’s Desire, The Phantom of Pemberley and Captain Wentworth’s Persuasion and the upcoming Christmas at Pemberley. In addition, Publisher’s Weekly called her Regency romance series about the Realm a “knockout.” The first book, The Scandal of Lady Eleanor, is currently available. Jeffers considers herself a Janeite and spends her free time with the Jane Austen Society of North America and AustenAuthors.com. A teacher for nearly 40 years in the public school systems of three different states, Jeffers is a Time Warner Star Teacher Award winner, a Martha Holden Jennings Scholar, a Columbus Educator Award winner, and a guest panelist for the Smithsonian. She’s served on various national educational committees and is often sought out as a media literacy consultant. Visit her at her website http://www.rjeffers.com for information on releases, excerpts, book signings, etc.

The Phantom of Pemberley
A Pride and Prejudice Murder Mystery
By Regina Jeffers
HAPPILY MARRIED for over a year and more in love than ever, Darcy and Elizabeth can’t imagine any thing interrupting their bliss-filled days. Then an intense snowstorm strands a group of travelers at Pemberley, and terrifying accidents and mysterious deaths begin to plague the manor. Everyone seems convinced that it is the work of a phantom—a Shadow Man who is haunting the Darcy family’s grand estate.
Darcy and Elizabeth believe the truth is much more menacing and that someone is trying to murder them. But Pemberley is filled with family guests as well as the unexpected travelers—any one of whom could be the culprit—so unraveling the mystery of the murderer’s identity forces the newlyweds to trust each other’s strengths and work together.
Written in the style of the era and including Austen’s romantic playfulness and sardonic humor, this suspense-packed sequel to Pride and Prejudice recasts Darcy and Elizabeth as a husband-and-wife detective team who must solve the mystery at Pemberley and catch the murderer—before it’s too late.

The Scandal of Lady Eleanor
A Regency Romance
By Regina Jeffers
A sweep-the-reader-away story of romance, adventure, and intrigue set in the Jane Austen era.
A master at capturing the elegance, grandeur, and literary style of the Regency era, Regina Jeffers has developed a loyal following with her many popular Jane Austen spin-off novels. In The Scandal of Lady Eleanor, Jeffers offers a completely original Regency romance featuring highly engaging characters and exciting—even shocking—plot twists. James Kerrington, a future Earl and a key member of the British government’s secret unit, the Realm, never expected to find love again after the loss of his beloved wife. Kerrington’s world shifts on its axis when Eleanor Fowler stumbles into his arms. Eleanor, however, is hiding a deep secret: she had hoped the death of her father, the Duke William Fowler, would give her family a chance at redemption from the dark past, but when Sir Louis Levering proves her father’s debauchery, Eleanor is thrown into a web of immorality and blackmail. Kerrington and his friends must free Eleanor from Levering’s diabolical hold.

Christmas at Pemberley
A Pride and Prejudice Holiday Sequel
By Regina Jeffers

A festive holiday novel in which personal rivalries are resolved, generosity rediscovered and family bonds renewed

It’s Christmastime at Pemberley and the Darcys and Bennets have gathered to celebrate. With such a mix of eclectic characters under one roof, bitter feuds, old jealousies, and intimate secrets come to the surface. Stubborn Lady Catherine seeks forgiveness, shallow Caroline Bingley finds love, and immature Kitty pursues a vicar. Forced into playing hostess, Georgiana tries desperately to manage the chaos while wishing Darcy and Elizabeth would return from their trip.
Enroute home, Darcy and Elizabeth are waylaid by a blizzard that forces them to take shelter in a nearby inn. Elizabeth is tormented that they will spend Christmas away from their families, but when a young couple arrives at the inn in need of a place for the night, Elizabeth’s concern turns to the pregnant girl. As Elizabeth and Darcy comfort and soothe her through a long and painful labor, they’re reminded of the love, family spirit, and generosity that lie at the heart of Christmas.

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BBC Magazine on “Why We Love the Tale of King Arthur”

A new television series is the latest dramatisation of the Camelot myth. But why is the legend of King Arthur such a compelling one in culture?

For a man who may or may not have wandered Britain some 1,500 years ago, King Arthur retains the enviable knack of making his regal presence felt.

Merlin, Excalibur, Guinevere, Lancelot, the Lady in the Lake – all the components of his story are instantly familiar both in his erstwhile homeland and in much of the world.

Modern historians might query whether there is any real evidence for his existence, but none doubt his lasting hold over the popular imagination.

His, after all, is a tale that takes in romance, heroism, chivalry, honour and, of course, the promise that its hero will one day return to rescue his people.

Channel 4’s adaptation is the latest in a very, very long line.
Little wonder, then, that the entertainment industry continues to cheerfully plunder it.

Camelot, a Channel 4 drama starring Eva Green and Joseph Fiennes, is only the latest in a series of big-budget takes on Arthurian legend. Recent years have witnessed the 2008 BBC series Merlin, 2007’s Colin Firth blockbuster The Last Legion and 2004’s King Arthur, starring Keira Knightley and Clive Owen.
I admit to being hooked on the new “Camelot” series on Starz.
To read the complete article go to
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-13696160

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D-Day Remembered

The Denver Post has 56 magnificent images to commemorate the D-Day Invasion at Normandy. Check it out at http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2009/06/05/the-65th-anniversary-of-d-day-on-the-normandy-beaches/306/

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“Jane (Austen) in June”

Join the “Jane in June” read along of the timeless classic Pride and Prejudice on The Book Rat website. Go to
http://www.thebookrat.com/2011/06/jane-in-june-ii-main-page.html for more information.

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Jane(Austen) in June

The Book Rat Blog is celebrating “Jane (Austen) in June” throughout the month. I will be adding an interview and giveaway during the last week of the month, as well as contributing to several summary posts with friends from Austen Authors. Check out the items already on the site. There’s a whole list of giveaways. Join in the Read Along discussions of Pride and Prejudice. Go to http://www.thebookrat.com/2011/06/jane-in-june-ii-main-page.html for more details.

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Extra Mile Race


Symphony Park in Charlotte, NC, hosted the Extra Mile Road Race as part of its Memorial Day celebration. I was up at 6 A.M. – not to run, but to watch my son run the 7:30 race. It’s hot here today, and the course was a demanding one, with lots of rolling hills. That’s my son in the orange Try Sports jersey. He finished 11th overall and 3rd in his age group, but more importantly, he set a base for his return to running. He’s been too busy coaching cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track to tend to his own running history. Congratulations, Son. As always, I’m proud of you.

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Pride 47 – Prejudice 5

5/27/2011

Pride 47 – Prejudice 5
Pride and Prejudice was originally entitled First Impressions, which is a much better title when one considers how Jane Austen bombards her readers with the theme of “impressions”: first, flawed, and founded. However, that is material for a future post.

What I would like to consider today is why did the publishers deem it necessary to change the title to Pride and Prejudice? There are several of us on this site who have had title changes at our publishers’ suggestions. For example, I have seen Wayward Love changed to Captain Wentworth’s Persuasion; Darcy’s Dreams to Darcy’s Temptation; Darcy’s Hunger to Vampire Darcy’s Desire, and most recently, A Touch of Gold to The Scandal of Lady Eleanor. Changing titles is a common practice among publishing companies.

Can one imagine the conversation between Thomas Egerton Publishers and Jane Austen?

Egerton: Miss Austen, we believe the reading public would respond to a title change.
Austen: Are you implying that I must add the word Darcy or Pemberley to the title to sell books?
Egerton: No, that will not be necessary for another 200 years.
Austen: (in awe) Do you expect my works to survive and become part of the British literary canon?
Egerton: Of course, not. You are a female. We will be fortunate to sell a few hundred copies, Miss Austen.
Austen: (a bit disconcerted by his condescending tone) But my book is about misconstruing others – of the weakness of making judgments based on first impressions.
Egerton: (ignoring her objection) We will follow the pattern of your first publication. Sense and Sensibility will be followed by Pride and Prejudice. It will give you a “hook” to capture your readers. Now, if you will sign the contract, we can begin publication.

But why did Austen’s publishers choose those two words: pride and prejudice? Was it to stimulate a debate among those who wonder whether it was Darcy or Elizabeth who was prideful? who acted with prejudice? College professors base entire semesters on just that concept. Or, perhaps, it was how often those two words are found in Austen’s text: The publishers’ belief that such repetition would create resonance and “connectiveness.”

The word “pride” appears seven and forty times in the text. One of my favorite uses of the word occurs in, “Vanity and pride are different things, though the words are often used synonymously.” I am also found of, “With what delightful pride she afterward visited Mrs. Bingley, and talked of Mrs. Darcy, may be guessed.”

“Prided” is used but once, as is “proudly” and “proudest.” Meanwhile, “proud” is used one and twenty times. “Some may call him proud, but I am sure I never saw anything of it,” is spoken by Mrs. Reynolds. Later in the story, Elizabeth considers Darcy’s actions in dealing with Wickham. “For herself, she was humbled; but she was proud of him – proud that in a cause of compassion and honor he had been able to get the better of himself.”

“Prejudiced” is found once in the text; “prejudices” is used twice, and “prejudice” appears five times. “The general prejudice against Mr. Darcy is so violent, that it would be the death of half the good people in Meryton to attempt to place him in an amiable light.”

When I originally entitled my second book Darcy’s Dreams, I did so because I mimicked Austen’s repetition. I used the word “dream” seven and fifty times in the book. When Ulysses Press added the word “temptation” to attract readers, I made a mad scramble to add temptation to the manuscript. The process made me wonder if Austen did the same thing with pride and prejudice. Although I know it’s an illogical assumption, I like to imagine our dear Jane adding those two words as motifs within her text and also imagine her grumbling, just as I did with temptation.

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