the deception glass
Thursday, 19 July 2018–
A Clash of Ichor and Blood,
Amazon,
ebooks,
free fiction,
Kobo,
low-fantasy,
The Deception Glass,
Tindermass,
trade paperback,
YA/portal fantasy
So I’ve been quiet. Or I have
been as far as the e-ther is concerned. Has anyone noticed? Probably not. And
fewer have probably cared. But such is life.
I have been a bit lax,
though, I must admit, in recording a few more blog entries. And at least one is
deserved.
Which of course you can take
either way . . .
So. Deserved or not, here we
are.
As sales of my YA/portal
fantasy novel A Clash of Ichor and Blood roared off to a terrible start and
then declined rapidly, I put up a bit of a promotional ebook short story on a
couple of ebook retailers’ sites. It’s a piece called "The Deception Glass", and
like A Clash of Ichor and Blood, it’s low-fantasy. And just what, I hear you
ask, is low-fantasy? It’s essentially fantasy linked to a real-world setting,
in the way that CS Lewis’s fantasies were, rather than set in the high-fantasy
realm of Tolkien’s otherworldly Lord of the Rings. To use but two of the most famous
examples.
"The Deception Glass" is just
shy of 7,000 words, and comes with the first few chapters of A Clash of Ichor and Blood with it, to tempt the unwary into parting with the price of, oh, say
a cup of tea and a half for the ebook . . . or a few notes more for a rather
handsome and nicely designed UK trade paperback edition. Or US trade paperback edition for that matter.
If you are wise and lucky
enough to be a Kobo owner (or at least have installed the Kobo reading app on
your smart device of choice and/or affordability) then you can own a copy of
"The Deception Glass" for free. If however, you are one of the crowd and have
opted for the big river company Kindle e-reader (or app) I am afraid that – as
of the moment – it’ll cost you money. Less than most places will sell you a cup
of tea for, it’s true, but it’s still money.
Why does one cost money and
the other not? Simply because Amazon doesn’t allow you to list books for free.
Pretty much all the titles you see on there for nothing have been price-matched
to a competitor’s price. So if someone gives a tale or book away for free on Kobo, it
can take a while for Amazon to follow suit. If enough people get in touch with
Amazon and say, Oi, it’s free on Kobo, then they might knock the price
down to free. But I have no real say in this in relation to my tale.
It is my intention to put
perhaps a slightly longer version of "The Deception Glass" into a collection at
some point (yeah, yeah – always in the future with you, Lynchy. . .), but for
now it’s my hope that someone somewhere might stumble across it, maybe download
it, maybe even read, and perhaps – long shot – like it . . . and then buy A
Clash of Ichor and Blood after reading it. They might even put up a nice review
for it. Who knows?
If not, then not. But a boy
has to hope.
Anyway, the image of A Clash of Ichor and Blood over to the right on this screen should have links
to the ebook versions of the novels.
Here's a link to the UK free version of The Deception Glass. (Click on this, no matter which country you are in, and theoretically it should take you to the Kobo free version in your own land. If that doesn't work, there are links in the Free Fiction section of this website.) Also, while we're at it, here's a link to the UK Amazon version. The image of the short on the right hand sidebar should have links too. I sincerely appreciate any purchase, whether you pay for it or
not.
In the meantime, what else
have I been doing? Getting iller, slowly going about the process for getting
checked for cancer (something which may well curtail the future plans I
mentioned above, depending on the results, should I actually find the strength
to get through the tests), somehow staggering over the line with a second draft
of a new book that may or may not be called Tindermass if it is ever to see the
light of day, and trying to look after people and myself as best I can. It
ain’t easy, believe me. I had a nice few days away with my special one, up in
the Lake District, and the sun was quite kind too. What does tomorrow bring?
Time of its own, long or short.
Take care.