Games & Players is now available!

We are pleased to announce the release of the third book in the Administration Series, Games & Players by Manna Francis.

Games & Players begins with the novella Game, Set, which gives Toreth an up-close-and-personal introduction to the finer points of socioanalysis.

Socioanalysts can read minds and motives at a glance, predict the future, manipulate the smallest actions of their unwitting puppets, and crush careers with a single word…or so the popular rumors say. Their arrival is dreaded everywhere in the European Administration, even the Investigation and Interrogation Division. Para-investigator Val Toreth, accustomed to being feared himself, is about to discover the truth of the rumors at first hand, when he is assigned as personal liaison to Carnac, the socioanalyst seconded to I&I to root out anti-Administration sentiments among its staff. And to make matters worse, it seems that his admin Sara is smitten with Carnac and Warrick has a history with him. With his closest allies straddling the line of Carnac’s camp, Toreth must rethink the rules of engagement.

In addition to Game, Set, Games & Players contains nine short stories in which virtual-reality corporate genius Warrick and Toreth must face new players in the game, and discover whether their association can survive both the tensions between the unlikely pair and the pressures of life in the near future dystopia of New London.

You can read the first chapter here.

And if you’re just catching up to the Administration Series, we have just the deal for you! This month we’re offering a special sales package that contains all four books we have published featuring major gay characters, including the previous two Administration books, for only $40.00 while supplies last!

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For the Authors

A good article: Tips for Promoting Your Own Book.

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The News You’ve All Been Waiting For…

The first print run of Manna Francis’ Games & Players arrived today. Just sayin’.

Unrelated but still worth checking out: Michael Kimball wrote A. F. Rützy’s Life Story in postcard format here.

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Reviews

There’s a review of Sound + Noise and an accompanying interview with Curtis Smith in the current issue of ShowcasePA!. Click here to download a pdf of the relevant pages.

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Linkage

Paul Elwork has a guest blog about The Tea House up at Skepchick: Critical Thinking at its Finest, so check it out!

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Behind the Scenes

Well, the silence over the past few days had a lot to do with getting the spring list into shape, and it’s starting to look pretty good! We’re almost done with copyedits on three of our four spring releases (only task remaining is to check the comments that came/are coming back from the authors) and to move into production with those. The fourth of next spring’s releases went back to the author with a very detailed edit for some more fixing, and should then move into copyedits.

On the schedule for the next couple of weeks is reading four different manuscripts for possible publication in fall 09/spring 10!

In the meantime, I’m sad to report that Tenant B has moved out. Hopefully that won’t actually stop her from reading and commenting on submissions and manuscripts, but it’s still kind of sad not being able to yell across the courtyard, “Oh my God, you’ve got to read this.” We have a new tenant moving in on the 25th, so that should be interesting.

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It’s a good week for reviews!

One dedicated reader wrote a very detailed review each of Mind Fuck and Quid Pro Quo, NewPages posted their review of Sound + Noise, and M. J. Rose wrote a ringing endorsement of The Tea House.

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Sound + Noise by Curtis Smith

We are pleased to announce the release of Curtis Smith’s new novel Sound + Noise.

Sound + Noise tells the story of Jackie and Tom, two ordinary people living parallel lives. When their paths finally intersect, the background hum of their longings, hopes, and disappointments builds into something that neither of them could have anticipated. With deft, musical prose, Smith draws the reader into a heartbreakingly familiar story of family, community, and the accidental connections woven in between.

In Sound + Noise, Curtis Smith applies the classic philosophical question “If a tree falls in the forest, and there is no one to hear, does it make a sound?” to the human condition. By turns thoughtful, funny, and bittersweet, Smith’s second novel is a remarkable exploration of the resilience and complexities of the human spirit, and the liberating power of love.

You can read the first chapter here.

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Special Promotion

There’s an interview with Curtis Smith, author of the soon-to-be-released Sound + Noise up at What to Wear During an Orange Alert.

Unrelatedly, today is my birthday, and since the celebrations for that sort of thing usually entail gifts, we’re running a special, one-day-only promotion: Buy any Casperian Books title through our website today, August 22nd, and we will throw an extra completely free book into the shipping envelope with it!

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News Roundup

While from a sales perspective, this time of year is what in German one would call “Saure Gurken Zeit” (lit. pickle time–the black hole during the summer when absolutely nothing is happening), we’re starting to ramp up for fall.

So far, three fall release dates are confirmed and another is pending:
Curtis Smith’s Sound + Noise will be released September 2nd, 2008, followed in October by Manna Francis’ Games & Players, the third book in the Administration Series, and an anthology with stories by many of our authors titled And Now for a Story… in November.

Side note on And Now for A Story: the cover (which doesn’t render nearly as well electronically as it does on the printed page, (hopefully) says the conceptual equivalent of “Once upon a time” in as many different languages as we could fit on there. I can only actually vouch for this being spelled correctly in about 1/4 of them and was relying heavily on Wikipedia and various acquaintances for the rest. Let’s just say that doing a visual match in Arabic turned out to be so difficult, that during a dinner party, I pushed the MacBook into the hands of one of my unsuspecting guests and, said “Please type ‘Kan ma Kan…’ out for me!”

On to author news: William Walsh has a new short story titled Dr. Maroon up at Flatmancrooked, fellow Sacramentan publishers. The first chapter of Curtis Smith’s Sound + Noise has just been published in Straightjackets Magazine, and the first two reviews for the novel are in as well. This one at Small Press Reviews, and this one at The Adirondack Review.

Finally, since we do not have merchandising rights for the cover image of Sound + Noise, we’ve updated the Cafepress Store with Games & Players merchandise.

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It’s a good media week!

Without Wax has a very nice review in the Boston Phoenix here, and there’s a feature with an author interview of William Walsh in the Providence Phoenix here.

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Reviews, Weddings, and so on

There’s a new review of Without Wax at Gently Read Literature, and Jeff Vande Zande has written a review of End Credits.

In other news, while I have been sitting on the SO’s couch here in South London, banging away at Casperian Books business and making a serious dent in the to-do list (two books uploaded to the printer’s in the last couple of days, a manuscript half edited, another half read), we decided that this whole transatlantic commuting business is getting kind of old after seven years, so we’re going to get hitched and the SO’s going to move to Sacramento at some point over the next few months–we’ll obviously have to arrange it around release dates :-)

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The World of Net Receipts

One of the things my Dad told me to blog about when we were happily sitting next to each other on my mother’s couch last weekend, both working on Casperian business on separate laptops, was how net receipts are calculated.

That’s not quite as easy as it sounds, because there are a lot of variables to consider. Generally speaking, what gets deducted from the total retail price of a book is the following: the book’s printing cost, the printer’s shipping cost, our packaging cost, our net shipping cost, and the Paypal fees.

The book’s printing cost is easy. Usually it’s (page count x $0.015) +$0.90, but sometimes it’s less due to volume discounts for larger orders. All other costs are variable. The printer’s shipping cost, for example, depends on quantity and weight of books shipped, and UPS’ current shipping rates (which are fuel dependent). Generally, that works out at around $0.80-$1.25 per book at the moment. The packaging cost currently is $0.60, which covers boxes/packing tape/shipping labels, etc. This gets adjusted on an as-needed basis and is charged per retail order shipment (i.e. if a customer orders three books in the same shipment, there is only one $0.60 packaging charge divided between all three books). Our net shipping cost is also variable depending on weight, shipping method, and ship-to location. For instance, media mail shipments in the US for a book of less than 1 lb incur a shipping charge of $2.41; international shipments to anywhere except Canada a shipping charge of $2.85 after deduction of the amount charged to the end customer. Paypal fees for payments received from domestic customers are 2.9% of transaction value + $0.30 (3.9% +$0.30 for international), so for a $15 book with media mail shipping in the US, the Paypal fee is $0.74.

So, for instance, for a copy of The Tea House that sells through our website for $13.50 with media mail shipping, today’s net receipts would be $13.50 – ($3.48+$0.93+$0.60+$2.41+$0.74) = $5.34. For a copy of Mind Fuck that gets shipped to England, today’s net receipts would be $15 – ($4.86+$1.23+$0.60+($11.35-$8.50)+$1.22) = $4.24.

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Author Appearance

Paul Elwork is going to make a guest appearance on The Odd Mind, a show on Blog Talk Radio on Tuesday, July 29th, at 9 p.m. Eastern Time.

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Author Events

This just in: William Walsh will be reading at Timothy Gager’s Dire Literary Series at The Out of the Blue Art Gallery, 106 Prospect Street, Cambridge, MA, on August 1, 2008. Featured readers begin at 9PM; open mic reading program starts at 8PM. Full details are here.

And don’t forget William’s reading at Ada Books in Providence, RI, the next night! Details here.

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Making Books

There are some interesting publishing statistics over at Para Publishing for anyone interested.

But that’s not really what I want to post about today. I want to post about lead time.

My daytime job involves lead times of about one to two years for the larger components and I’m currently living in roundabout 2010-2012 as far as that’s concerned. Publishing is slightly better, but that’s probably because we don’t have to worry about steel allocations…

That said, depending a little on the time of year when a manuscript is initially read by us, the lead time between signing a publishing agreement and a book hitting the shelves is usually 12-18 months. (We’ve done some titles a lot quicker–The Tea House was done in about eight months and the books in the Administration series are on a 9-month cycle, but that’s author-specific and shouldn’t be interpreted as the norm.) How do we come up with these numbers? Here’s how it works:

We have two release seasons, spring and fall. This is standard for the industry, and actually makes a lot of sense, since booksales drop off dramatically in the summer and around the holidays, when people have better things to do than to buy books. In each season, we have a limited number of publication slots. Once those slots are filled, any new titles roll to the next season. Now, ideally, a book should be completely finished at least 4 months before the “street date” (the date the book becomes available for sale), so that it can be sent out for review–which really means that four of those months don’t count.

So let’s work backwards. Best-case scenario, a good schedule without any shortcuts would look like this:

  • September 15th – Street date
  • May 15th – Review copies are sent out (-4 months)
  • April 15th – Book gets set up with the printer (10 days), a printer’s proof is generated and approved (10 days), and review copies are ordered (10 days) (-5 months)
  • March 1st-15th – Galleys are sent to the author. Per contract author has 30 days to submit corrections, and then those corrections have to be implemented. (-6.5 months)
  • February – Book block and cover are designed/generated (-7.5 months)
  • January – Final copyedit of manuscript and author’s approval of copyedits (-8.5 months)
  • November – December – Edits going back and forth between author and publisher (-10.5 months)
  • November 1st – Author submits final manuscript revised according to publisher’s comments (-10.5 months)
  • September 1st – Contract is signed and author receives comments/suggestions for revising manuscript draft (-12.5 months)

That would be the 12-month schedule. But what if the contract is signed in June (thus making the 12-month mark fall in the middle of summer when we don’t release any new titles)? What if half the fall list is already full? What if the manuscript requires 4 instead of 2 rounds of edits? What if the author misses the original manuscript submission deadline? What about crises with the eight to ten other future books being juggled at any given time? There are a bunch of other factors that play into that schedule.

Our contracts include very standard clauses that specify a date by which the author is supposed to deliver a final draft of the manuscript, as well as the number of months we have after that designated manuscript delivery date to publish the book before the author is released from his/her contract, both of which can be changed by mutual agreement if necessary. Those dates are based on a schedule such as the above, our internal publication schedule (first available empty slot), and some basic assumptions about the amount of work a manuscript requires.

For instance, in the case of Tea House, the author is a professional editor, and as such, the manuscript we initially read was one of the cleanest we had ever seen. That made us fairly confident that once a few niggling problems we had with the timeline of the story were fixed, the manuscript wouldn’t require much more than a light copyedit before moving to pre-press, which made it possible to get the book out the door in eight months, but those were a pretty stressful eight months for us and Paul alike, because it really didn’t leave any margin for error (and no, we didn’t get the full four months for reviews either).

Other publishers, by the way, operate on similar schedules (in total lead time, if not details). Of our current roster of authors, William Walsh has a collection forthcoming from Keyhole Press in 2009, Curtis Smith has a a release lined up for spring 2009, and another collection that was just accepted for publication in 2010, and Chris Owen is pretty solidly booked through, er, at least the next year. Other authors of our acquaintance see similar turnaround times, even when signed to larger and/or academic presses.

All of which adds up to: if you want instant gratification and publication, we are not the right place to query. We’re pretty damn proud of the quality of our titles–we won’t let a book hit the shelves unless we’re absolutely certain it’s the best book we can possibly make it–and producing a book of that quality takes time. If an author doesn’t share that same goal, we’re probably not a good match.

And in case you’re wondering: we’re currently reading for the last few fall 2009 slots and beyond.

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This and That

There’s a rather excellent critical essay about Curtis Smith’s Sound + Noise, which is being released in September, at Prick of the Spindle.

In other news, Friday’s e-mail from Dad (who’s taken over doing a lot of the link gathering and other web-based stuff): “In other news, slack US paperback sales are attributed to a lack of romances. I infer that every book of yours is a romance (with the dead, with death…)”

He has always had a strange sense of humor, but he’s sort of right. Let’s see how this would play out.

  • Mouth of the Lion is a romance with the dead, death, addiction, mental illness, and family–roughly in that order.
  • Adagio is actually a romance, but not only a romance between the two protagonists, it’s also a romance with Australia.
  • Motor City Blues is a romance with the city of Detroit.
  • The Tea House is a romance with ghost stories and the dead.
  • Mind Fuck does actually have a romance running through it, in a very twisted and wrong way.
  • Without Wax is a romance with the adult entertainment industry.
  • End Credits is a romance with the absurd.
  • Quid Pro Quo, the sequel to Mind Fuck, continues that thread of very wrong and twisted romance between its protagonists.
  • Sound + Noise, again, is actually a romance.

In yet more absurd news, I did not check the premiership fixtures table on the ESPN website to plan Tenant B and my football schedule for the fall. Not at all.

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Reviews & Readings

The Philadelphia City Paper did a very nice write-up of The Tea House, in preparation for Paul’s reading at Port Richmond Books in Philadelphia, this coming Saturday at 2 p.m. (full details).

William Walsh’s next reading will be at Ada Books in Providence, RI, on August 2nd. Details here.

And getting back to the football (it’s almost over, don’t worry!):
Germany’s through to the final two (not necessarily deservedly by how they were playing), and even my 86-year-old grandmother was screaming by the end of that semifinal. That means I will be hosting a Euro 2008 Finale party on Sunday, which I imagine will be somewhat like a Superbowl party (I’ve never been to one of those, so I can’t say for sure). There will be tons of Greek food, beer, football on the 45″ flat-screen TV, and a bunch of German-speakers yelling at the TV. Should be fun!

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End of an era

Cody’s in Berkeley closes. I loved that store (the one on Telegraph). We used to spend hours in there and then go up the block to Moe’s and spend some more hours in there. Years ago, my partner-in-crime Casper was actually banned from ever using the Cody’s bathroom again because of an incident. Anyway, the article is kind of interesting because it puts some numbers to what’s been happening to independent booksellers over the past few decades. Guess I better not give up my day job, huh?

In football-related news: my nerves are going to be totally shot by the time Euro 2008 is over–that is, if I don’t stroke out before then.

Here are my predictions for the rest of the competition:

  • Berlin will burn on Wednesday, no matter who wins, but that would be a sucker bet at this point (actually, during the Croatia : Turkey match, we were trying to convince everybody to root for Croatia purely in the interests of world peace…)
  • And in keeping with the complete unpredictability of all matches so far and the elimination of favorites left, right, and center, I’ll go out on a limb and say the final’s going to be played between Turkey and Russia (because that would be really, really funny in a tragic sort of way)
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Two Blogs in One Day!

This one’s actually even book-related… There’s a not-so-stellar-review of The Tea House at GUD Magazine–though rather interestingly they give the book three out of five stars on their goodreads. I guess the reviewer in this case hated everything we really liked. Oh well, win some, lose some.

(And yes, bad reviews are good when they’re very specific about what the reader didn’t like. Like that review of Quid Pro Quo the other day, where the reviewer was very specific about not caring for plot but wanting porn–rather excellent review. Anybody who likes plot is sure to want to read it now, right? Same difference here.)

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