A quick opinion about in-app purchases

I have wondered from the first time I downloaded the kindle app to my iPhone why Apple was letting them get away with violating their clearly stated and written policies regarding in-app purchasing. At first I thought it was because, when those apps were first approved, the in-app purchasing API was not yet ready – that once it was turned on, apps like Stanza, Kindle, and anyone else bypassing Apple’s cut (in violation of policy) would be required to come into compliance before an update could be released to the app store. I recall, when in-app purchases rolled out, being a bit surprised that this didn’t occur. Apple stated explicitly, from the day they announced the details of their App Store, that they would be taking 30%. This is not a surprise to anyone who was listening. If you happened to get away with violating this policy until now, it doesn’t mean Apple is wrong for trying to enforce it now – just as when you’ve gotten away with violating traffic laws in the past (ie: speeding, et cetera), it doesn’t mean the police are wrong for giving you a ticket now.

As for the idea that Amazon moving to a web-based solution will be a cunning strategy to hurt Apple – that’s what Apple asked everyone to do in the first place! Don’t you recall, the iPhone launched without an app store? Apple told developers “Safari is a modern, standards-compliant browser. Web apps can be just as good as native apps. Go build web apps.” Developers didn’t want to hear it, didn’t want to develop for the web, and Apple developed an SDK and the App Store – putting a price on the ability to use it. That was always the bargain: Develop a web app and maintain complete control, or, if you want to develop a native app we’ll take 30% of everything and we’ll be the ones in control.

Since that day, I’ve been hearing people complaining that Apple and the iPhone (and now iPad) are “closed” systems, “walled gardens,” et cetera, but that bargain has never gone away and I don’t expect it ever will. If you want control, and if you don’t want to give Apple 30% of everything, you’re free to build a web app. If you want to be in Apple’s App Store, you have to follow Apple’s rules and give them their cut. It’s not “closed Apple” vs. “open Android” – it’s (at least) a three way race between “closed Apple,” “a-little-less-closed Android,” and the “open web.” Did you notice that Android phones have pretty good web browsers, too? So weird. Too bad you’ve created artificial adversity where none needs exist.

Oh, and I think this little kerfuffle between Apple and Sony (& perhaps Amazon, B&N, et cetera) will be little more than a speed bump. The apps won’t go away, the retailers won’t move (entirely) to web apps, and Apple will get a cut of every single sale, just like they always told developers they were due. Don’t be surprised if Amazon adds a clause to their kindle-sales TOS to the effect of “that 70% cut we’ve been giving you? It also doesn’t apply when eBooks are purchased through 3rd Party sales channels. You get the old 35%, just like on global sales.” Prices stay the same, Amazon and Apple laugh all the way to the bank. Business will go on, and you’ll all forget this before the next time you can blow something Apple does out of proportion with reality.

debt paydown update, 1/31/2011

This is a followup post on the subject of my family’s efforts to pay down our debt, which I blogged in detail here. As I said there, I have taken to looking at a snapshot of all our debt accounts at the end of January, so I can have a year-over-year comparison and see how much progress we’ve made in a consistent period. Before I get to the numbers, an exciting thing (which I already mentioned on Twitter) that happened this week is that we paid off one of our cars. Mandy is teaching a couple extra classes every day, this block, and the first paycheck with the extra income came in this weekend, and it was enough extra to pay off her car today. Within a month or two, between her extra income and our expected tax refunds (we haven’t got any of our W-2’s or 1099’s yet, so I don’t know precisely what they will be), we expect to be able to both buy ourselves a few nice things (like a kindle) and pay off another of our credit cards completely. Depending on a variety of other factors (including income at the Phoenix Comicon), we may possibly pay off a third or fourth account before the end of the year. We’re making excellent progress. To see how excellent, here are some numbers:

Last year at this time, we owed $43,571 in consumer debt (including auto loans) and $40,750 in student loans for a total of $84,321 in debt. When I posted in October, I estimated we’d be at $30,683 in consumer debt and $39,954 in student loans for a total of $70,637 in debt – we did better than that! We actually have $29,439 in consumer debt and $39,840 in student loans for a total of $69,279 in debt! We reduced our total debt by $15,041 in one year! That’s almost $1,400 more than we expected to be able to pay off!

If you noticed that the student loan debt went down by almost nothing, that’s partially because we’re only making the normal payments and it’s apparently set to be paid off in about never. But it’s only at 5.375% interest and the student loan interest (up to $2500/year) gives us a big tax deduction (in addition to the standard deduction), which is most of why we’re getting a refund from Federal this year (I finally got the withholding set about right, this year). We basically won’t be making headway on the student loans until after all the other debt is paid down. That’s alright. All the other debt is at higher interest rates.

That’s all for today, I think. Look! A short blog post!

Struggling; beginning writing again

I finally got back to writing Book Six after not making significant progress since … I don’t know… last year? I didn’t finish it in November, as you probably know. I meant to then finish it in December, but that didn’t work out well, either. I got ten or fifteen thousand words written in December, which was an alright start, but then I got stuck. I also ran out of cash for any further writing at Starbucks. As previously mentioned, my writing speed seems to slow way down when writing at home & without caffeine/sugar. And/or varies wildly with my depression. Which is pretty bad right now. …well, this paragraph got out from under me. I’ll try another:

Lightning Source, the printer/distributor of my paper books, is running a promotion I’d like to take advantage of, which ends February 28th. They’ll waive the $75/title setup fee if I order 50 or more copies of that new title. That’s a help toward reaching profitability on any title I can use it on, presuming I can sell more than a handful of copies. At the very least, I need to get the Untrue Tales… Books 4-6 combined trilogy paperback together and released on or before April 1st, in order to hit the release schedule I’ve got mapped out for these three books. If I can get it done before the end of February, that would be nice. If I could also re-do the Untrue Tales… Books 1-3 combined trilogy paperback in February, I’d like to. Both because I feel my ability to layout a book has improved since I put that one together four years ago, and because I’d like to have the opportunity to create a cohesive design that spans both paperbacks (and if it’s quite different, perhaps redesign all the eBook covers while I’m at it). Of course, that would mean ordering 50 copies each of two 400+ page books. Even without the $150 in setup fees, that’ll cost me close to $700. I’ll have to sell 28 books at $25 apiece to break even. Which feels like more than I expect to sell any time soon. I’m not doing the Art Walks any more; the only hand-selling I expect to do this year is at Phoenix Comicon, and last year, which I considered very successful, I only sold 27 books at Comicon, most of them at $14 or less apiece. On one hand: books don’t go bad, so I have forever to move that inventory. On another hand: if I order any fewer copies of each book, I pay the $75/title setup fee. 20 copies of each title would cost me almost $500, for both, or $250 for just the new one. 10 copies of just the one, which I’m pretty sure I could move this year, would cost me almost $200. The trick there being that, if I order 50 before the end of next month, the next 40 copies cost less than just the first 10.

That paragraph got away from me, too.

Getting done with editing the Book Five audiobook, with writing and editing Book Six, designing the book or books, inside and out, possibly doing a series of pieces of art (maybe eBook covers, maybe B/W illustrations, one per book, to put in the new editions) to sell to cover the cost of publishing, re-editing all six books for the new editions… it all seems to be looming, especially with the end of February coming up fast. It’s driving me a bit mad. Yesterday, when I sat down to try to get back to writing, it involved quite a bit of crazy and not a lot of actual writing. But the pressure of the deadline did manage to get my butt in the chair, in front of the typewriter.

Have I mentioned that I somewhat loathe the Untrue Tales… series, the last few years? When I’m actually sitting down working on it, I enjoy the work, but almost as soon as I stand up or switch tasks I’m right back to loathing it. Working on the audio version isn’t so bad, but for the last several thousand words of writing Book Six I’ve also been running up against a feeling/worry of not having enough words. I’m writing in the middle of a big blank spot in the structure/outline of the series. It’s roughly 10k words long, and until this week, I had roughly two sentences worth of idea how to fill it. I managed to write seven and a half pages of pretty good stuff over the last couple of days, but what I wrote was supposed to fill 14 pages. So now I’m in a position of when I’m not actively working on it, I don’t want to be, and when I am I’m half-frozen because I’m worried there won’t be enough words. (Self-fulfilling, that.)

And really, I know that if I can just get me to sit down and write, and keep writing, the words will come. They always do. In fact, another motivator for my getting back in front of the typewriter this week has been that my mind has already moved on to the next books; I’m developing ideas, characters, structure, themes, setting, et cetera for a dystopian/vampire duology. Almost every time I’ve tried to figure out how to fill in this blank in Book Six, my mind has rapidly moved on to work on the vampire books. And if I let my mind wander much further, it gets back to the alternate history / zombies series I still need to do a huge amount of research for. The words are there. When I actually set myself down before the blank page, the words came. Two and a half pages yesterday, twice as much today, and a few ideas about the next seven pages, along with them. All beautifully structured according to the same Euclidean geometry Abraham Lincoln used to win the Lincoln/Douglas debates and the White House (though, since I’ve just learned the structure/geometry, not anywhere near as beautiful as Lincoln’s later work), which I just read a good book about; I couldn’t have written those pages that way (or half as well) more than a few days ago – it’s a good thing, I now see, that I didn’t finish Book Six last year. Everything in its right place, at its right time.

…one struggle I have with these books, with this series, is the problem of spoilers. Most of you have not read these books. Even of those of you who have read or listened to one of them, or even the first three, almost none have read or heard Books Four and Five. So I can’t freely write about Book Six. At all. Every single thing in it is a spoiler if you haven’t read Book Five. Most of Book Five is a spoiler if you haven’t read Book Four to the end. I want to be able to tell you what it is I’ve been having trouble writing about, for example, but not only is this a spoiler if you haven’t read the first half of Book Six, but even being vague about it would spoil the end of Book Five. I want to be able to tell you about my super-vague/I-have-no-idea-how-I’ll-get-5k-words-out-of-it idea for the section after this, but I’m pretty sure that, in addition to potentially being a spoiler, it flat-out wouldn’t make any sense without your having read the end of Book Five and the beginning of Book Six. My own family, who have read them all, doesn’t like me discussing this stuff with them, because they don’t want anything spoiled. When the whole thing is done, and especially as I try to consider how to write copy for Book Six (for its eBook) and worse for the second trilogy, and worse still for the full series, I have no idea how to talk about Untrue Tales… without being totally misleading and/or totally spoiling half the series. You may be aware I have trouble concisely describing “what’s it about” re: even single books I’ve written. One of the things I’m struggling with re: the vampire duology right now is that I’d like to be able to actually have an answer to that question in mind both before and during the writing of them. I generally have no such idea in or near my mind with regard to any of my books or stories. For Untrue Tales… this is true on a title-by-title basis, but it is further compounded by the fact that in any way trying to explain what the series is about requires that nearly every single twist, turn, reveal, or character development be laid bare… which isn’t a great way to try to convince someone the series is worth reading. This also relates to the dwindling number of Beta Readers I can share Book Six with when, hopefully within the next week, I finish writing it; most people haven’t read the entire series. Sigh.

Alright, I think I’m finally getting drowsy. I’m to bed. Don’t know whether I’ll be able to sleep; I’m also getting a bit hungry, and I don’t easily fall asleep hungry. My schedule has been as off as I have, lately, regarding both food and sleep. This is depression. One way or another, I’ll make it through.

my reading, mostly 2010

I’ve been trying to do a lot more reading, lately. If you’ve seen photographs of my bookcases, or have seen me mention my personal library here before, you surely know why. I read a lot more books this year than in any prior year I can recall (though I never had something as convenient as Goodreads and its iPhone app to help me track such things before the last few years, so I may be wrong – I read a lot more as a teenager than in the decade between 20 and 30), at least any recent year. Unfortunately, while my intention this year was to take a bite out of the books already in my library, it ended up that most of my reading was of books borrowed from the public library.

According to Goodreads, where I believe I’ve noted every single book (and comic – more on that later) in the last 2 (possibly 3) years, just one seven books I read in 2010 were books I own. If my Goodreads record is accurate for 2008, I only finished 18 titles that year, and not 1 of them was a book I own. (In fact, 6 of them were pirated audiobooks I listened to & deleted, 3 were audiobooks from the library, 2 were Podiobooks, 3 were “…for Dummies” books borrowed from the library, 1 was my one and only attempt to read a book via DailyLit, and the others were also from the public library: Watchmen, Blindness, and Seeing.) I did a little better in 2009, in which Goodreads says I read 24 titles; 6 were books I own, 5 of those (plus Marvel Zombies 2, which I read while sitting in a Borders, rather than buying) were zombie books I bought and read as part of my research for Cheating, Death (3 more were weblit (read on blogs for free (more zombies)) & 1 was a Podiobook I listened to for free, if you want to count that as the same as owning them), and the other 13 were borrowed from the public library. So far in 2010 (I have a few days left and intend to read a couple more books) Goodreads says I’ve read 113 titles 119 titles, all but 1 7 either borrowed or downloaded, including:

  • 1 7 illustrated children’s books
  • 2 science books
  • 2 books on social theory
  • 3 biographies (Hitler (unfinished), Einstein, & Tesla)
  • 4 books on global economics
  • 7 poetry books
  • 16 novels
  • 78 graphic novels (sortof – more on that now:)

If you want to pretend the comics don’t count, that’s still a year-over-year improvement, since I’ve read 35 other books so far. 4 of the ‘graphic novels’ I checked out of the library; the first 3 books of Y: The Last Man, and V For Vendetta. (The one book I own which I read this year is The Fountain graphic novel, which, when I found it while cleaning realized I’d bought it and never read it, so read it before continuing cleaning.) The rest was this: I got it in my head in the first half of 2010 to read the entire Marvel Ultimate universe, so I went online and found a torrent which contained them. Then this summer, most of them in a single month, I worked through about 10 years’ worth of Marvel Ultimate comics, from Ultimate Iron Man, Ultimate Spider Man #1, Ultimate Daredevil, et cetera, right through Ultimatum… I read the first couple of the manga-style post-Ultimatum Ultimate Spiderman comics, but by then I was pretty burnt out on comics, and didn’t even finish the last few months’ worth of comics which had been in the torrent. It was too much, by then. I deleted the 6Gb worth of comics files and went on Goodreads and found the collected versions… and found most (not quite all) of the comics I’d read. It added up to 73 titles, each at least a hundred to several hundreds of pages long.

Goodreads knows how long all the books I read are; it says I read 4,933 pages’ worth of books in 2008, 6,864 pages’ worth of books in 2009, and 23,124 pages’ worth of books in 2010. Now, I’m sure it’s counting as whole books the 3 or 4 of those books I didn’t finish over the years, and it’s not counting any of the books I began and haven’t yet finished or given up on (ie: I read the first 3/4 of Atlas Shrugged in 2009, but still consider it “currently-reading”), but all-in-all I expect it’s roughly right. I’d like to aim for something in the neighborhood of 100+ titles (and/or over 20k pages) again for 2011, but would like the vast majority of them to be books I own. More on that later.

Let’s look at favorite books. Because I didn’t check them in and rate them as I went, and because I read so darned many of them, almost none of the comics have ratings on Goodreads. If I were to say which were my favorite, it would probably be the Ultimate Spiderman comics… though they’d gone well over the shark before reaching issue #100. Definitely not the Ultimate X-Men or the Ultimate Fantastic Four. Yech. Ultimate Iron Man was good, though I was frustrated when the most interesting things about it were retcon’d, since part of the point of the Marvel Ultimate universe was to avoid that sort of thing. The Ultimates 1 & 2 were good and The Ultimates 3 was crap and Ultimatum was … a frustrating jumble and mess which I’m sure contributed strongly to the bad taste in my mouth re: comics lately. Ah, but what about the books?

House of Leaves was awesome, and fun to read. Hunger was probably by favorite book of 2010, despite having been published in 1890. The only other 5-star book I have in my Goodreads list for 2010 was Next Life, which I don’t even recall right now. Volumes 2 & 3 of Y: The Last Man were good, and got 4 stars along with 14 others I read. (The Financial Lives of Poets, Beatrice and Virgil, Flashforward, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Shutter Island, and Predictably Irrational highlights among them – all recommended.)

Worst books include The End of the Free Market: Who Wins the War Between States and Corporations? and Ultimates 3, which were the only two titles I gave a single star to. Coming in just ahead of those, with two stars each, were Under the Dome, 7th Son: Descent, The Handmaid’s Tale, Filibuster To Delay a Kiss and Other Poems, and Einstein: The Passions of a Scientist. (I hear that the recent-bestseller-Einstein-biography is better; I plan to read it at some point.)

I’m down to just a few library books left checked out; I’ve been trying to cut back on having a stack of books out and holding on to them for months before I read them; at some points in 2010 I had over a dozen books checked out and many of them for over two months each, unread. For 2011 I’d like to read as many of the hundreds (possibly thousands) of books in my personal library which I’ve bought over the years and never yet made the time to read. That had (vaguely) been by intention for 2010, but I never did anything about it and clearly didn’t follow through. I’m going to make a concerted effort to accomplish it in the coming year.

My goal for Modern Evil Press is to publish “two to four books a year” and I’ll be putting out Untrue Tales… Book Five and Book Six in January and April, so my thought is that if I do nothing else but get those books out and spend the rest of the year reading a hundred books or more, that’ll be alright. (Of note: the numbers above do not include any of my own books, each of which I’ve read several times in the last 3 years.) I’d also like to get back to painting in 2011, but I think my primary job during 2011 will be reading, and 80% or more of that books from my personal library. (I’ve got to start listening to Nathan Lowell‘s Golden Age of the Solar Clipper series soon, too – he’s begun posting the final book!) Of course, I never know how things will go. Maybe I’ll be able to get all that reading done while writing the vampire duology I’ve been brainstorming lately… I’ll probably do another post this time next year to let you know how I did.

Oh, and look for a numbers post early next week (or this weekend, if I’m feeling really ambitious (or nocturnal)), in which I will announce that the numbers posts are going to be quarterly in 2011. (Though I’ll still have to do the collecting data part every month.) Ooh, and I better get to work on those eBooks page updates soon, and a blog explaining them. Year’s almost out. Gotta get a move on.

(In case you care, a bunch of the links in this post are Amazon affiliate links. I think I made $0.28 last month from them. It’s not really influencing how I write here, or even what I read. Silly FTC.)

(Updated 12/30/2010: I was reading my wife one of the Bugg Books we bought at the last Friends of the Phoenix Library book sale, and she reminded me I hadn’t been checking in the Bugg Books and Mr. Men books we occasionally read together. This added (including the one I read tonight) 6 books to my “read in 2010” book list.)

NaNoWriMo 2010

I “cheated” for NaNoWriMo this year. You’re “supposed” to start a new project from scratch and finish it during the month…

Though the focus has certainly shifted significantly in the direction of paying more attention to reaching 50,000 words than to finishing a novel. For a lot of pro- and aspiring- authors, there is much derision of the ideas that 1) 50k words constitutes a novel or 2) 50k words is a lot to write in a month. Still, none of the writers I know who have made such comments have come close to keeping pace with NaNoWriMo this year, and quite a few people I know who have no intention of ever seeking publication (or worse: becoming a professional writer) have kept up or outdone themselves, and while carefully following the rules. Others are struggling, even while including all the words they write for school, their blogs, short stories, grocery lists, anything they write all month.

Of course, a struggle I see every year (my sister & wife, included) is in reaching the 50k word goal but not getting near the end of the story. My sister thought she was about 1/4 of the way through her story at ~30,000 words. She’s revised her plot since then, to reign it in to a reachable target. My wife is about to hit 50k tonight (the 27th), but is planning on continuing to write for the next week or more until she gets to the end of the story. And because the focus of the people in charge at the OLL, and thus of the participants, is on the 50k instead of the finished book… They’re both going to be winners. As a 9-year veteran of NaNoWriMo I have no disagreement with this assessment; anyone who sets themselves an ambitious goal like this and succeeds is certainly a winner. 50k words in a month, a book in a month, a screenplay (Script Frenzy is in April, I think), a long reading list… Set yourself a challenge that you never thought you could beat, then beat it, and you’ll certainly feel like a winner.

Within three or four years of discovering NaNoWriMo, I’d already ruined myself of the idea of writing a book / 50k words in a month being a challenge. Certainly not one I don’t think I can beat: the first year I tried, after setting aside 2 partial manuscripts, I wrote a 50k-word novel in under 8 days. The next year I wrote Dragons’ Truth on a manual typewriter in (I think) 26 days. For my third try, I wrote Untrue Tales… Book One in 14 days. (I intended to write Book Two in the 2nd half of the month, but when my writing stalled, I instead edited Book One, designed its cover, wrote its copy, did its layout, and got it printed & available for sale by Nov. 30th. Because I was already teaching myself to be a publisher by 2004.) Book Two came out of me a couple months later, within about 2 weeks. In September, 2005, I wrote the first 48k words of Book Three in a “single sitting” 60 hours long. So writing a book in a month is… Not a challenge, as far as getting the words down, for me. It makes it so NaNoWriMo isn’t much more of a good/winner feeling over simply finishing a new book, which is something I do 2-4 times a year, most years.

This year, I’d intended/hoped to get the entire Untrue Tales series finished (at least first drafts) by the end of November/NaNoWriMo. I started Book Four in July, didn’t write much in August or the first half of September, then buckled down and finished it by … October 14th, I think. Started Book Five a few days later, hoping to get it done before November, but only wrote 20k words by the end of the month. So the first 30k I wrote was the end of Book Five. Which is “cheating” unless I also wrote the whole of Book Six by the end of the month (which had been my plan), right? Sorta. But not really. Last Thursday night, around 10PM, I began working on Book Six. On a manual typewriter (my ‘new’ Royal Futura, which I wrote the bulk of Book Five on), so these word counts are estimates: I wrote the first 14k words in the next 18 hours, took a 6 hour break for my nephews’ birthday party, then wrote another 6k words by ~7AM Saturday morning. Which put me at 50k total new words in November. Yay!

Then … I’m thinking something in my brain chemistry must have shifted, dopamine levels dropping or something, because my writing speed and quality dropped precipitously. In the next 3.5 hours I wrote one page, in which one of my characters was suddenly and unexpectedly suicidally depressed. Probably a reflection of what was going on in my own head at the time. I knew I probably ought to give up writing, but I was already committed to going to an all-night write-in Saturday night, so I just kept trying to write, all day Saturday, not calling it quits until around 4:30AM Sunday morning. I managed to write about 4k words in around 20 hours trying. Which is slow. And I think a lot of them are repetition of things I’d already written. Or out of character. Or wrong in other ways. So probably that 4k words will be deleted. But… I still wrote 50k words in November, right?

This week I thought I’d try re-reading Book Five and what I’ve written of Book Six before trying to write any more. To try to get a handle on what was repetition, where the story was going, et cetera, and get the rest of Book Six well in hand. Alas, whatever was going wrong with my brain, which began Saturday morning, continued at least until Thursday morning. I couldn’t read my book for very long, I couldn’t stay awake, I felt terrible, I couldn’t concentrate. All reasonably normal symptoms of depression. Not being able to work is a key problem of real mental illness. I managed to get through a day and a half of baking and cooking, getting Thanksgiving ready, and everything turned out good enough. (I still need to work on my pie crusts…) But I’ve decided that, as long as I actually have several months to get all this completed and still be on schedule (a schedule I invented), there’s not really any reason to be stressed out or trying very hard to struggle through to the end of Book Six by the end of the month. I’ll probably get it done in December. After my mind has a chance to recuperate/repair/recover from whatever this is.

Thursday they turned on the NaNoWriMo word count validator. I took Book Five and a few extra words to get what I uploaded to equal my actual (estimated) word count and threw it in. So I’m officially a “winner” again this year, at 54,150 words. I didn’t start a book from scratch & finish it during the month, but I worked on a book I was 40% of the way through, finishing it, and I got another one started and worked on it until it was 40%-48% done, which is mathematically very similar to writing one book from start to finish, right? Once again, I don’t like this year’s shirts. Mandy, who did win while I was writing this post, says she would like the winner T-Shirt if it didn’t have the arrow pointing up at her face. I definitely agree that the arrow makes the shirt less wearable. The only shirt design they have in stock right now that I really like is … only for women? Sigh. Mandy wants me to order it for her, instead. I’ll check finances, but I think the bill for eating at Denny’s tonight (at the write-in, where she passed 50k) ate the money we would/might have spent on that shirt.

Anyway, that’s that. My ninth year, fifth definite win (finished my 14th book & started my 15th). Mandy’s second attempt, second win. My sister’s first real attempt, and it looks like she’s going to win, too. I think I’ve decided not to try to take over the ML duties for Phoenix for next year, but my sister thinks she will, so that’ll be better than either: 1) the main ML they’ve had the last few years, or 2) no one, since both MLs are talking about quitting. We mostly participated in the East Valley region, this year, even though it meant several long drives back and forth from North Phoenix to Tempe and Mesa. The events were awesome, though, even when my writing was going badly last weekend, so it was a good decision. I’ll keep my eye on the situation, next year. It’ll be my tenth year doing NaNoWriMo. The books I’ve been working on this year will certainly be published by then; I don’t know which of the many ideas I have waiting to be worked on will be at the front of my mind when November rolls around again, but I know I’ll work on something. I think the challenge, for me, isn’t in hitting 50k words but in having my mind in the right state with an idea properly matured & ready to go when November hits. Last year I wrote Cheating, Death 6 weeks early, and wasn’t ready with anything else in time for NaNoWriMo. Always a crapshoot, but I don’t think I’ve ever been able to just do 1667 words/day, all month long: Like every other attempt I make at writing, it comes in fits and starts, bursts of writing 5k, 10k, 20k in a day, sometimes several such days in a row, and then days or weeks or months with nothing. …and 1k- to 2k- word blog posts every week or two, too, eh?