Author Archives: Jesstern Rays

Self-publishing

Books
Photo credit: ginnerobot on Flickr

This is the last day of November and you should have finished your NaNoWriMo novel today. Once you’ve written your novel you’ll want to publish it, for what is a novel if not read?

Unlike Rowling who had her first manuscript rejected by several publishers, you can get yours published online with relative ease by the miracle that is modern technology.

Here’s a list of self-publishing resources to consider:

  • PubIt! by Barnes & Noble - get your ebooks distributed on Barnes & Noble. I couldn’t find any information about their royalty percentage on their website.
  • Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) by Amazon – sell your ebooks on the Amazon store. KDP offers 70% royalties.
  • Lulu – ebooks are distributed on Apple’s iBookstore and Barnes & Noble in the widely accepted ePub format. Unlike the others on this list Lulu also allows you to publish your books in print and even issues an ISBN. They also offer services such as pre-publishing, editing and marketing. Lulu offers between 80% and 90% royalties.
  • Smashwords – similar to Lulu, Smashwords also issues an ISBN and distributes your ebook to a host of online distributors, including Sony Reader Store, Kobo, iBookstore, Barnes & Noble, Stanza and more. They offer between 60% and 85% in royalties.

Google Nexus Announced!

Google Nexus runs on Android 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich. The features will indeed blow your mind. They’re integrating Google+ into the Android OS (or at least that’s what it looks like in the video) and will be getting Hangouts and Messenger built into the OS – Android’s answer to the iPhone’s iMessage and FaceTime. I’m curious to see if face-unlock will be a practical way to unlock the phone. If it takes too long to detect my face then it may not be ideal. The rest a frivolous features.

The real question is will the battery last? I’m currently using a rooted HTC Desire running on the lightweight Oxygen ROM and the battery is pathetic (it was worse before root, on HTC Sense). Say what you like about the iPhone, but they’ve taken drastic steps to improve its battery life and given that they have tight software and hardware integration they are bound to have a better battery-to-performance ratio than Android.

I have till June next year to decide on sticking with Android or switching to the iPhone.

Salman Khan on Charlie Rose [Video]

Here’s To The Crazy Ones [Video]

Singapore Writers Festival

Singapore Writers Festival starts this 22 October to 30 October and comes just weeks before NaNoWriMo. Their calendar is packed with workshops, lectures and meet the author sessions. Check out their list of programmes and their calendar of events.

Here are some noteworthy events that are definitely worth checking out. They’re very reasonably priced and if you’re looking for something to do over the next couple of weekends in October, check these events out.

22 Oct /2011
5:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Steven Levitt Economics/ Freakonomics
Featuring: Steven Levitt
Venue: Concert Hall, School of the Arts
Rate: $40

Steven Levitt has a PhD in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is the William B. Ogden Distinguished Service Professor in Economics and the College at the University of Chicago. He co-authored the non-fiction bestseller, Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything (2005), and its 2009 sequel, SuperFreakonomics: Global Cooling, Patriotic Prostitutes, and Why Suicide Bombers Should Buy Life Insurance. Meet the man in person at his SWF lecture, where he will speak about economics and the term “freakonomics”.

28 Oct /2011
8:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Hackwork: Using Craft to Sell Madness for Cash
Featuring: Michael Chabon
Venue: Drama Theatre, School of the Arts
Rate: $30

Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Michael Chabon (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay) has been described as “a flat-out wonderful writer” (Chicago Tribune), who “has been producing pitch-perfect, at times even dazzling, fiction” (Los Angeles Times). His other novels include Wonder Boys, which was made into a film, and The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, which won the Nebula and Hugo awards for Best Novel in 2008. His SWF lecture is enticingly titled, “Hackwork: Using Craft to Sell Madness for Cash”.

30 Oct /2011
9:30 am – 11:30 am
Screenwriting 101
Featuring: Lee Shinho
Venue: Seminar Room 2-4, School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University
Rate: $30

What moves and excites an audience? In this workshop, participants will have a glimpse of how to build feature-film stories. Through lecture, discussion and viewing of film clips, they will have a chance to explore the basic principles of storytelling for film and learn how to incorporate them in their own writing. Some of the subjects that will be covered include character, conflict, structure, visual narrative and dialogue.

30 Oct /2011
6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Building Other Worlds – The Fundamentals of Writing Science Fiction
Featuring: Joe Haldeman
Venue: Seminar Room 2-4, School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University
Rate: $15

Award-winning Joe Haldeman will share with participants how they can write and sell science fiction, and what makes a compelling novel in this distinct literary genre. Other questions that he will explore include: Is science fiction all made-up? And does the science all add up? Find out how you can incorporate real science into fiction and imagine worlds out of the ordinary.