Lord of Scoundrels is an audiobook

Lord of Scoundrels.jpg

Exciting news from the world of audio.

Lord of Scoundrels is at last available for your listening pleasure, unabridged, clocking in at eleven hours and 39 minutes.

The link above takes you to the Amazon print book page because this offers a slightly lower price than what appears when one goes directly to Audible.  On the Amazon page, under Formats, click on Audible Audio Edition.

If you’re a member of Audible, here’s the direct route.

Thanks to readers Debbie Frey and Thea Maia for alerting me!


Vixen in Velvet Phase Two Completed

Valerie was busy 1911-001.jpg

Some wonder why it takes so long from the time the author says the book is DONE to when it appears at a book retailer.  It's because of the phases, as mentioned briefly  when I turned in the Vixen in Velvet manuscript

It seems like only yesterday I was celebrating.  In fact, it was less than a month ago.  Within days it came back to me for Phase Two, the Revisions (tweaking, filling in missing bits, clarifying unclear bits, etc.).

Today’s good news is, that part’s done, too.

Phase Three (coming soon) is the Copy Edit, which is when yet another editor goes over the manuscript with a microscope, looking for typos, infelicitous grammar, deranged punctuation, inconsistencies, phrasing that probably isn’t English, and that sort of thing.  For me this is usually the most aggravating phase of book production, because some things get “fixed” that aren’t broken while some ghastly errors get overlooked.

After seven hundred sixty-three years in the business, I can say with some confidence that both of these things will happen.  And at the same time, I know the copy editor will catch errors and make corrections desperately needed, so one can’t simply scream “Incompetent!” preceded by bad word adjectives and write STET STET STET all over the manuscript with a blunt-edged red permanent marker.  One especially can’t do it these days because we copy edit electronically, which is more efficient but less emotional.

Illustration :Valerie was busy," courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA