PHOENIX ARK PRESS RELEASE

Since this is about the adventure and love of writing and stories, Phoenix are proud to announce that we will first publish Fire Bringer and The Sight, by David Clement-Davies, to eBook on February 14th, 2011, Valentine’s Day.

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EXPLODING THE ‘KINDLE’/E-READER MYTH

Many book lovers, book worms, and avid readers alike are self-confessed ‘luddites’ when it comes to the revolutionary technology of the internet, and eReading tools like Kindle. Sometimes their fear that such things will drive out the conventional book is completely understandable, yet perhaps it is also a little like some 18th century country yokel looking at the first Steam Engine, and seeing there the work of the devil, or the end of the world. Perhaps every generation experiences the end of the world – as they know it. Part of the problem of course is mythification, and one of the ways to deal with that is to do it yourself. If you download the free Mobipocket creator, from the internet, you will very quickly see what an eReader really is. In fact, you have one in front of you right now. MobiPocket though translates the text from say a Word document, once uploaded, and allows you to preview it up on your web browser, on a laptop, PC or mobile, as others would view it too. There you will very quickly see the need for the simplest formating in the original document, if you are to go to eBook, and above all with text that is not ‘Justified’, ie squared to the shape of a page, because eReaders flow the text in to fill the screen size, and Justifying in the original can break text up, or spread it across a page. If you increase and decrease the size of your web browser page then, just by pulling in and out the edges, the text will adapt and you can recreate the size and shape of say a Kindle screen. Other tips include formating text to contain ‘before’ and ‘after’ spacing, at certain points, because the net langauge, html or Xml, will not always recognise spacing. The biggest mistake conventionally published authors make is to hope to simply translate the format of printed books, and that can’t happen because eReaders have different screen sizes. The rule of thumb is KEEP IT CLEAR AND SIMPLE.

Voila – that is all an eReader is too, and with your web browser open in Mobipocket you will have a primitive one in front of you, without spending a cent. EReaders and the Kindle are nothing more than viewing screens, like single, digital pages. Admittedly they can do specific things, like Justify, change font sizes, and bookmark, while the strength of the Kindle is that it is far superior to a web browser, or something like Ipad, in terms of the way it presents text, in front of your eyes. So it goes for maximum readability, light resolution, grey scale etc, to make it the most comfortable reading experience, and of course can store hundreds of books in one place. Kindle’s genius though is that it is led by Amazon, which has already dominated the market in terms of book sales and distribution, and probably seriously damaged conventional publishers into the bargain. That is also what the modern book revolution is about, dominating the market by creating the most succesful ‘platforms’ to publish on. It began with Self Publishing models too, like POD, print an individual book to order, or ‘Publish on Demand’. Though it remains true that is of most benefit to companies like Amazon and Lulu, by generating immediate income, and not to individual authors – although there are exceptions – who quickly find they are swamped by all there is out there. Then the self published authors face the greatest challenge of what publishing is so ruthlessly about nowadays – marketing. From Kindle to Sony Ereader though, to Barnes and Noble’s Nook, and many others, which will drop in and out of the market, they are all just publishing platforms, and in essence no more than handy screens, where you can access the ether cloud of books. No great mystery then, no great fear, and not to be treated with too much Hoo-Ha either. Conventional books meanwhile, now offer, and should see themselves as offering, something entirely different to eBooks, beyond the information or story; design, physical ownership, the love of the page, the delight of bookshops and libraries, a stronger sense of the author. But the eRevolution is unstoppable, with both positives and negatives, and there the key is not how things are being read, but what is being read and enjoyed – Phoenix Ark Press then can only hope to contribute and succeed with what is surely the true key to it all, certainly in terms of fiction: the love of great story!

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ONE FOR THE POET’S SWEATSHOP

With thanks to our chum Dinah, who may have contributed this seeing something of how Phoenixes need the flame. If you would like to contribute any remarkable, favourite, or appropriate bits of poetry to the Poet’s Sweatshop, please contact the blog direct.

So, when the crowd gives tongue
And prophets, old or young,
Bawl out their strange despair
Or fall in worship there,
Let them applaud the image, or condemn,
But keep your distance and your soul from them.
And, if the heart within your breast must burst
Like a cracked crucible and pour its steel
White-hot before the white heat of the wheel,
Strive to recast once more
That attar of the ore
In the strong mold of pain
Till it is whole again,
And while the prophets shudder or adore
Before the flame, hoping it will give ear,
If you at last must have a word to say,
Say neither, in their way,
“It is deadly magic and accursed,”
Nor “It is blest,” but only “it is here.”

Stephen Vincent Benét

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Protected: NO MIRACLES AT ‘FAMILY’ ABRAMS THEN, IN FACT OR FANTASY

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SEEING WELL

In presentations and school visits, when I’ve read out excerpts from my books, I’ve sometimes told listeners I didn’t remember actually writing that bit, often coded with a Stephen Fry style joke – ‘well now, that’s rather good though!’ It’s been strangely emotional this week though, laying out Fire Bringer and The Sight to go to eBooks, on Kindle and Ipad. Firstly because it really is the end of an era, and the end of having any truck with big, conventional publishers. That’s strange, after 12 years fighting to be a writer. Secondly though because it put me back in touch with my own characters, characters loved by many readers, like Rannoch, Crak, Rurl, Larka and Fell. They came back, like old friends, and with a sense that in taking back my erights I have taken back some power in my own storytelling, snatched away by the very people who should have protected it. It reminded me too that writer’s lives are not that lonely after all, largely because they go on long emotional journeys, with others actually living inside their heads and imaginations, like true friends. Sebastian Faulks is doing a UK TV series soon on how we often know the characters in fiction far more than we do each other, friends, family and lovers too, and I can’t wait.

I wish someone I loved in New York, as I say in a new afterword, and at my own publisher too, had understood how books like The Sight were so close to my own emotional ‘coal face’ though, and my philosophical struggles. Because then they might have seen me more clearly, without projecting so badly, and The Sight is precisely about projection and labels, and their danger. I wish too they had read the sequel to The Sight, Fell, because it is also a love letter, and in a sense the full expression of what was happening in America. That book is all about the redemptive power of balanced love, to bring the mind out of darkness, fear, negativity or despair. What is still eerie though is that in all that writing about seeing properly, and being seen, there is so much in all my books about eyes. The fact that Scream of the White Bear has such an astounding ‘coincidence’ in it to real life though, involving eyesight, and actually events that happened around me, might make even the most ‘rationally’ and sceptically minded stop to ask if it is not powerful proof of precognition. Proof of the very ‘powers’ of The Sight I am talking about, which is really the visionary understanding of the mind and consciousness, true imagination, beyond what we see in the every day. It is not ‘God’, though the language of spirit may be vitally important, it is about levels of language, understanding, maturity and consciousness. Many people believe, with all those New Age ‘Aquarian’ and Mayan prophecies, Mankind has to wake up to its real power, and so real responsibility too, and so increasingly do I. Perhaps there is another stage of consciousness and awareness we need to reach, and one so abused in quick, side-driven, morally sententious but privately ruthless New York.

I was chatting to an American last night though, who when I started to talk about it, shrugged as if it was par for the course. ‘New York, they cover you in warmth on the surface,’ he said, ‘then stab you in the back, but they don’t mean to. It’s an accident.’ Perhaps that ‘not meaning to’ is vital, because it is really is about a lack of awareness, a boxed-in disconnection, a sense of ‘rights’ without wider responsibility, and a failure to see what is at the other end of all that aggression, those labels, that high-minded and morally superior front, at the cost of real hearts, real lives, and real careers. At the cost of the human. It really isn’t enough any more to excuse it as an accident though, and there may be some motor driving it on in the ‘bright, lights, big city’ machine of NYC, but it is certainly not limited to there. Indeed, the greatest surprise was to find it so close to home, with so-called ‘friends’ in London too, like the author of ‘Hew, Screw and Glue’, who so disrespected everything by working with my ex, desperate to hop on a bandwagon. Still, there are other friends, other journeys, and they are coming back, with the return of a say in my own books. Perhaps Fell needs a sequel, but there are certainly exciting adventures to come. DCD

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AMERICA SCORES ONE IN THE EYE AGAINST THE UK!

I’ve just joined the US Author’s Guild, and boy do they beat the UK in the support stakes. As charming as the Society of Author’s magazine is, as useful as 10% off books in shops may be, the US Authors Guild’s hello email virtually blows you away. Not only do they invite you to make use of immediate members advice and support, and to link your websites to their system for improving rankings, but they also offer to build you a website in a week, free. Of course they may benefit, but it is typical of that most appealing thing about the US, for us fustian, guilt-ridden Europeans, that instant can do attitude. Except of course when you get into their bad books, and then the US quickly proves they can-do you! Now we’ll see if they have anything helpful to say about what happened in New York with a publisher, but in this instance, God Bless America! DCD

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FIXING YOUR EYES ON THE HORIZON

Sir Paul Nurse’s excellent programme on the Science-Understanding gap, for the Horizon series, was accessible, human, and very measured. It was a delight to see him trip up journalists like James Delingpole, who exposed the so-called ‘ClimateGate’ story, and accuses others of ‘political’ interests, as if journalists don’t have their own interests too. In the Global Warming debate, which a majority of Americans and 30% of Britains still don’t believe in, he highlighted time and consensus, and there is plenty of both. But if there is a doubt about wider ‘environmentalism’, in a subject that can sometimes become a blinding catch-all, not to mention very doom laden, why don’t scientists just point out the blindingly obvious? If you balance the time they took to create – gas, coal, oil, fossil fuels – are simply finite resources. Obvious fact, that might force us to set our eyes on our children’s futures, and the Horizon. It’s why, apart from dealing with carbon emissions, technologies must change, and as quickly as possible, to generate new and cleaner energy sources, quite apart from the ghastly prospect of BP now joining up with Russia to drill in the arctic. Unless BP truly did learn something from Mexico, with true heart, and not just responding too late to public outrage. Time and again though the lesson is that profits cut the corners, and we learn, but often learn too late. Quite apart from melting Ice Caps though, what are all those drilling platforms going to do to a complex and fragile biosphere, and what can really be protected? It is the same issue with primary rainforests, the massive deforestation of the Amazon that perhaps only united Global political action can stop, and reminds you of the Anthony Newley song “Stop the World, I want to get off!”

Then Paul Nurse turned to more delicate subjects. First the hugely emotive issue of GM products. He pointed out how unreasoned are the attacks on GM, very often, as atavistic as that ‘thou must never meddle’ orthodoxy, in a world and with a species that has always been about ‘meddling’. But more interesting was the New Yorker who tore up the medical prognosis of having just two years to live, after being diagnosed with HIV. Then he treated himself with a diet regime and has been alive for thirteen years. It might inspire the joke ‘Don’t trust me, I’m a Doctor’. In response, Nurse talked well of the complexity theory, the danger of assumed cause and effect, and why in the mysteries of medicine, the New Yorker might have a point. We know the complexity of the immune system, and sense the role the mind takes in it, and there are many people who have refused to swallow the ‘truth’ of a medical situation, and found a way through. Nurse attacked the arrogance of scientists too, who do not engage with the public to tell us what we need to know, and more importantly to understand. They might think like the layman more, sometimes, to be more persuasive. To me the issue with the assumed truths of science is that the whole history of science has time and again been about waking up to new conceptions of ‘reality’, and increasingly complex levels of interrelations and possibilities, but the nobel prize-winning Nurse stressed those vital bulwarks of experiment and observation, and is a very attractive addition to the presidents of The Royal Society.

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DRAGON IN THE POST – NEXT INSTALMENT, AND A LITTLE MOVIE TO SPREAD THE ONLINE MAGIC!

DRAGON IN THE POST – NEXT INSTALMENT, AND A LITTLE MOVIE TO SPREAD THE ONLINE MAGIC!.

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KEEPING AN EYE ON THE DEEP

One of the most charming stories Phoenix has heard recently came from a friend directing a programme on Nuclear Submarines, and their bases in Scotland. With one always at sea, the key is supposed to be a stealthy secrecy, fearlessly patrolling the oceanic depths, and maintaining the sterling defence of the realm. What has some of the more secrecy minded vaguely exasperated though, among all that billion pound technology, is a little live webcam sitting somewhere on a hill, overlooking one particular estuary, so that every time the warhead carrying subaquatic juggernaut sets off on a jaunt, the fact is relayed straight to whoever happens to be watching at the time. You can’t imagine that happening in the US or Russia, but in dear old Blighty we clearly have an eye on those universal democrat values!

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THE PHOENIX CULTURAL ESSAY SERIES

Phoenix are proud to announce the coming of a series of cultural essays, on varied subjects relating to publishing, media and the arts, and from people not necessarily directly involved, yet who share a passion for that often nebulous beast called ‘culture’. The first will be by the enormously exciting abstract painter, and one time artist-in-residence at the House of Commons, following in the footsteps of Turner, Philip Mount. It will be followed by an essay by the former BBC Producer, music specialist and hugely acclaimed biographer of Roald Dahl, Donald Sturrock. We hope it will instigate a great little tradition at Phoenix, of short, stimulating and entirely free articles, for Phoenix followers to enjoy. Please watch this space.

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