
When I started BooksForABuck.com, I only had a few authors (mostly me) and doing quarterly royalties took a few minutes. Since I don't pay myself (all the money goes back into the business so far), I just had to sort out a few bucks for the few other authors and I was done. As I've grown the business and my author base, it's gotten a bit more complicated. Maybe this is why companies like Harlequin only pay royalties twice a year rather than every quarter the way I do (some publishers pay monthly--but clearly they're more mechanized than I am.) So, my big plans for getting a lot of editing done didn't pan out.
I have no idea how many pages I wrote today. I plugged in yesterday's work and then started working, only to find out that a good chunk of yesterday's was repeated. I have no idea any more whether I added positive pages yesterday or not but compared to Monday, I'm about 11 pages ahead. I hit the page 227 mark (compared to 216 on Monday). This doesn't mean yesterday's work wasn't good. Sometimes the best writing comes from taking things out rather than adding things in. Of course, stuff has to be there first before you can take it out. Writing's a tricky business.
This evening, I was back at fencing. Things seemed to work a bit better for me, or maybe my opponents were just going easy on me. At any rate, I had fun, got a workout, and got a break from sitting at my desk all day. Tomorrow, I'll try to get some real editing done--and finalize my first video review. I'll keep you posted.
I'm going to make WITCHY WOMAN by Karen Leabo the www.BooksForABuck.com book of the day. A reporter spots a former child star--Moonbeam Majick, a TV psychic and thinks he's found a perfect 'where are they now' story. But when he stumbles on an ancient statue, he learns that magic can be real--and so can curses. The two have to work together to head off some really nasty stuff. It's a sexy and fun paranormal romance and it's only $3.99. Learn more, read the excerpt, or buy the entire eNovel here: www.booksforabuck.com/rompages/rom_2004/witchy_woman.html. (Available in HTML, Adobe Acrobat PDF, Mobipocket, Palm DOC, and Microsoft Reader formats). Here's the cover (cover design by Karen Leabo):

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