Aside from Viggo Mortenson, that last post was appalling. I have since climbed out of the tree and stowed the saw neatly where it belongs.
I spoke to my website designer and marketing expert yesterday, Kismet Design. Steph has so many wonderful ideas for promoting The Moonstone! The big launch will more than likely be in January but before that I plan to have a presale here as well as a giveaway. Since I'll be gone for the month of October and won't be around to go over the proof, publication will have to wait until mid-November. Soon I will be directing you all to my website which will be under my name, NikkiBroadwell.com. It is going to be a shazam site, specifically geared to the Wolfmoon trilogy.
Since wolves play such a big part in the trilogy thought I would post a picture here. Isn't he gorgeous? He's very much like Maeve's wolf in the third book...but not to jump ahead too much.
about writing, books, interviews, thoughts about the universe and more... to reply: nikkibroadwell@comcast.net "I can't go back to yesterday--because I was a different person then." ~Lewis Carroll~
About Me

- nikki broadwell
- working writer wending her way through the labyrinth that is self-publishing
Showing posts with label kismet design group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kismet design group. Show all posts
Friday, September 23, 2011
Thursday, September 15, 2011
giving up and other wise decisions
As I said, I've given up on doing the website myself--for one thing I don't have time since I'm in the final edit of the first book of my trilogy--and...I'm completely incompetent! anything I could manage would look like shit!
If only IWeb was what they say it is, *sigh*--
Yesterday I got the first sample cover design for The Moonstone back from Createspace. I was very pleasantly surprised. With a couple of small changes I think it will work! and they had done a mock-up of the interior and I like that too! Last night I slept better than I have for many days. Now the push to get the book uploaded...I've been editing like mad, hence the lack of sleep, adding details and funny bits. In the past week I've increased my word count by 5000. At 57,000 it just wasn't long enough and I want the spine to be wide enough to include my little Celtic knot icon to go with my publishing name--Airmid Publishing--you know, the healing goddess?
Kismet Design Group will have a detailed calendar for me when the time comes for THE BIG PUSH. What she talked about is completely alien but I will leave it to her and follow whatever she tells me to do. I have discovered that Web Design is expensive. But honestly in the long run I think it will pay off to have a shazam site.
So...for those of you who are having trouble finding an agent and are on the fence, I say take the reins. What do you have to lose? (besides some cash) And for those of you who have published the traditional way, congratulations! I won't even say that I wish that for myself anymore--Of course, who knows what the future holds? Right now I'm just enjoying having control of the process.
If only IWeb was what they say it is, *sigh*--
Yesterday I got the first sample cover design for The Moonstone back from Createspace. I was very pleasantly surprised. With a couple of small changes I think it will work! and they had done a mock-up of the interior and I like that too! Last night I slept better than I have for many days. Now the push to get the book uploaded...I've been editing like mad, hence the lack of sleep, adding details and funny bits. In the past week I've increased my word count by 5000. At 57,000 it just wasn't long enough and I want the spine to be wide enough to include my little Celtic knot icon to go with my publishing name--Airmid Publishing--you know, the healing goddess?
Kismet Design Group will have a detailed calendar for me when the time comes for THE BIG PUSH. What she talked about is completely alien but I will leave it to her and follow whatever she tells me to do. I have discovered that Web Design is expensive. But honestly in the long run I think it will pay off to have a shazam site.
So...for those of you who are having trouble finding an agent and are on the fence, I say take the reins. What do you have to lose? (besides some cash) And for those of you who have published the traditional way, congratulations! I won't even say that I wish that for myself anymore--Of course, who knows what the future holds? Right now I'm just enjoying having control of the process.
Saturday, September 10, 2011
the new the good and the beautiful
So...I've decided to turn my website design over to my friend, Steph Wilder and her business, Kismet Design Group. I have too many things on my plate to fiddlef___ around with it. And she's an expert with many ideas for marketing my book! I have enough to do with getting the book ready for publication...on that note...
I have a guest blogger today--Caroline Miller, a local writer and author. Her website is www.carolinemillerbooks.com Enjoy!
I have a guest blogger today--Caroline Miller, a local writer and author. Her website is www.carolinemillerbooks.com Enjoy!
THE WRITER’S HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER
I’ve talked about the solitary nature of writing before. One isolates oneself from others in order to create stories one hopes others will read -- which means the end game is anything but isolation. I thought about this irony the other day as I reread Walter de la Mare’s poem The Listeners. The poem’s setting is a dwelling in a forest. Whether it’s a hermit’s cabin, a peasant’s cottage or even an abandoned castle is never made clear, but it’s a moon lit night when a rider and his horse pause before it. The horse nibbles on the grass while its rider knocks upon the dwelling’s door. He waits but there is no answer. He senses someone listening, so he knocks again, loud enough to wake the dead; but the phantoms hovering on the darkened stair make no reply. If they could communicate, what would they say to the world of men? The Traveler seems to wonder, for he knocks a third time.
Tell them I came, and no one answer’d
That I kept my word,’ he said
Having done whatever he was meant to do, horse and rider disappear into the distance, erased by the stillness that follows.
Sometimes, I think writers are like that Traveler. We pay our visit to an audience we can never meet, sensing their presence but never seeing their faces. They are shadows hovering in a library or a bookstore or on Amazon. They pass us as if we were a disparate element -- water flowing through air. Still, the writer keeps his faith that someone is listening, that someone does hear or read his message. Yet there are times when the silence becomes too lonely. Then, like the Traveler, the writer cries out:
Is there anybody there?
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