In the process of prospecting through the book storage for books that people have ordered, I found the Holy Grail: an entire box of A Wind in Cairo. This book is long out of print, and it is a cult favorite. It's an Arabian Nights tale with a historical basis (it has Saladin in it, for starters) about a very bad man who gets what he deserves--and what he deserves has a lot to do with horses. Mostly it's a YA, though it was published (with an infamously hideous cover) as genre fantasy.
If you loved the Brennan books, you'll really like this one. Suitable for the young horseaholics on your list, too, though it's PG-13. (But considering how many fan letters Caitlin gets from 12-14yo girls, I'd say this one is right up their alley.)
Mass market, limited availability. $25 includes shipping (this book, she is rare). Please add 3% to your PayPal payment if you're paying with a credit card.
And let me add a big THANK YOU! to everyone who has contributed to the cause so far. You guys are amazing--and I'm looking forward to seeing a bunch of you at Camp Lipizzan once that gets up and running.
If you loved the Brennan books, you'll really like this one. Suitable for the young horseaholics on your list, too, though it's PG-13. (But considering how many fan letters Caitlin gets from 12-14yo girls, I'd say this one is right up their alley.)
Mass market, limited availability. $25 includes shipping (this book, she is rare). Please add 3% to your PayPal payment if you're paying with a credit card.
And let me add a big THANK YOU! to everyone who has contributed to the cause so far. You guys are amazing--and I'm looking forward to seeing a bunch of you at Camp Lipizzan once that gets up and running.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 08:45 pm (UTC)It was excellent. I'm sorry I don't have it anymore. :)
no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 08:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 08:59 pm (UTC)Come to that, it might be worth talking to Wildside or someone similar about bringing it back into print in a POD edition -- it's the kind of book that ought to do well in that corner of the market.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 10:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 02:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 04:23 am (UTC)Only I'm not convinced about the Quality of some of them, I'd want to see samples before comitting, but yes, it might be a possibility.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 05:07 am (UTC)this page has a good overview of PoD publishers, and they all look pretty dire to me.
Most are charging huge setup fees offering only moderate discounts on copies for the author to sell, ridiculously small royalties...
There's also the matter of ISBN (making it possible for booksellers to order a book) and CIP (Library of Congress - making it possible for librarians to order a book)
(Yes, I'm a perfectionist. Why do you ask?)
Being the cynic I am, I am not convinced that doing it properly (in effect, becoming your own small publishing company) is going to be more expensive than making use of the services of one of the PoD houses. The trick seems to be to find a reliable PoD printing house that will churn out twenty or fifty copies each time you want them.
More research is needed.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 05:59 am (UTC)They all sound amazing and I would love the Camp Lipizzan myself at some point.
Many hugs.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 10:38 am (UTC)There are several small to Really Small specialty publishers in the SF/F genre who specialize in some combination of bringing out new editions of long-OP cult favorite books (like A Wind in Cairo) and bringing out new work by long-established authors that the big houses won't touch because while those authors have a viable reader base for those books, that reader base isn't large enough by Big NY Publisher standards to keep commissioning them. These include Wildside Press, Meisha Merlin, Embiid Books, FoxAcre Press, and others; at least some of these presses use POD technology to make that business model work for them. Some also focus on electronic texts (and there are at least one or two houses, such as FictionWise and Scorpius Digital, that are entirely or almost entirely ebook publishers in this line.)
This is a completely different strata of publishing from the sizeable group of POD operations -- listed on that comparison-page above -- that either offer writers the opportunity to self-publish books on a POD basis or (in some cases) charge writers for publishing the writers' books under their imprint. None of the publishers I've named charges writers at all for any sort of publishing expense.
I agree that self-republishing A Wind In Cairo doesn't make sense to me. OTOH, I think it's exactly the kind of title that one of the genre specialty presses mentioned above might be well-advised to pick up.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 10:42 am (UTC)And you are MOST welcome. You are really doing me a huge favor by filling in gaps that needed. filling.
Did I ever tell you how I discovered your books? Twas Serendipity, really! And you have email following up your emails of yesterday. All done!!
YAY!
no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 10:52 am (UTC)And here I thought it was me! Well... me and Serendipity.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-15 11:01 am (UTC)See, the serendipity came in when the hardcover edition of Lady of the Horses was on the remainders rack (sorry,
And they both sat on my bookshelf for MONTHS. (I do that, sometimes). And then, one day, I picked up Lady of the HOrses. And was gone. Lost. Around about that time, I also discovered on
But thank you, [Unknown site tag], as you were key to this serendipity!
no subject
Date: 2005-12-16 04:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-19 10:24 pm (UTC)