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Everly
(last edited Oct 20, 2011 11:27AM)
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Oct 15, 2011 10:37AM

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I recently read an article that stated that using double spaces after periods ending sentences was an archaic practice left over from type writer days.
Really?
Splitter




Believe me, as a writer/editor, you will make the person to whom you have submitted your work much happier.
I have a question for authors:
As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?
As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?


As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
I really have to have a purpose directed toward a specific book to read when I am in full writing mode. Writing is a powerful force, a wonderful mistress that demands full energy.
I read now specifically to handle the phase of marketing my book. Not much joy in that.
Books used to find me, enthrall and capture me until I finished them. It began with the romance inside bookstores. That dance of book and reader is nearly gone.
Though, I have done that dance with a few books of late I found on the web. I read The Foreigner by Francie Lin for pleasure. It was superb. I also read The Girl Who Played GO by Shan Sa, and it was very good.

As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
I read ebooks most often while I eat (three times a day) and sometimes before I go to sleep. If I have a paper book I'll sit and read for hours. I'm still an avid reader. I find it recharges my batteries. When I went for ages without reading I found writing becoming less fun. Didn't connect the dots until I picked up a new book and read the whole thing in 24 hours. Hadn't realised what I was missing :) Now I keep reading... :D

I recently read an article that stated that using double spaces after periods ending sentences was an archaic practice left over from type writer days.
Really?
Splitter"
I just found this out when my book went to e-formatting. I don't think I can stop doing it when I write b/c that was how I was taught and being a lawyer by day, and having it drilled into me during time editing for law journal, I don't think I can change it. So I'll just do a find and replace after I'm done to make formatters happy!
Sometimes I wonder if all our conventions/rules are out the window these days. So many people write *sigh* like this now, BTW I often don't know WTH they're talking about with all the symbols and abbreviations. LOL

As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
I read daily for about an hour, generally right before bed. If I'm really hooked on a book, I may read some during lunch too. I try to finish 4-5 books/month. I think reading is essential to writing. As they say, 'good words in, good words out.'

As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
When I'm in a good writing mode, I don't usually read anything. Maybe I'm in the minority, but I don't like to have other ideas muddling the ideas I'm developing. I want them to be mine.
On the flip side, if I'm reading a really good book, I won't pick up the pen (so to speak) until the book is done. I find myself squeezing a lot of extra time in for reading when the book is good.

I recently read an article that stated that using double spaces after periods ending sentences was an archaic practice left over from type writer days.
Really?
Splitter"
My wife teaches 8th grade English. They have been teaching single space after a sentence for many years now.

As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
I read a little everyday - well night - the last thing I do before I go to bed. I think it's important to "make time for it."

It is now one space. Previously, it was two spaces because when typed out it was easier to read. When typeset into a book, words are kerned to make them fit on a line more esthetically, so one space or two is irrelevant.
With digital word processing (and desktop publishing), most text is justified and is auto-kerned by the program. Word processors treat all space as characters; thus, if you input text with a double space after the end of a sentence this can create odd kerning of lines, often resulting in huge spaces between sentences.

As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
Elle, I find that when I am in the writing zone I don't read at all. But, otherwise, I read about 2 hours a day. Mostly at night when my husband is watching sports :)

I try and read everyday. I think to be a good writer you have to be a good reader. It's how you learn what works and what doesn't. Reading a good book also helps me to relax.

I find myself using the Kindle samples of many books. Some have as much as 20% of the book sampled, others use 10%. I can study various writers techniques for opening their stories, how they chapter and what other devices are effective. My own book, Blue Water_Red Shadows has six chapters sampled on Amazon and iBookstore.
Reading has become an exploration of technique unless I want a complete break from my daily writing and editing. The iPad and Kindle on my MacBook allow me to enter a variety of 'reads', some classics, all sorts of genres, some pure entertainments. It is as if I were in a writing seminar and listening to short stories from a table full of other writers.
Getting samples is a terrific feature of the digital publishing world.
And when the price is right, I add the book for later completion of the read.

I HAVE A QUESTION:
My husband wants me to do audio versions of my books and sell them on itunes. Has anyone else thought about doing this? or has anyone done it?
My husband wants me to do audio versions of my books and sell them on itunes. Has anyone else thought about doing this? or has anyone done it?

My book is also available on ITunes and some other podcast sites. I have to say that recording an audiobook, especially a long one, is quite an undertaking. You need to learn how to record and how to edit sound files. I would be very happy to share any experience I have with you.
Murdo wrote: "I have recorded my novel Roses of Winter as an ebook. For anyone who wants to record and publish an audiobook there is a lot of useful information on podiobooks.com. They provide a site where you c..."
Thank you so much for the info. Did you narrate it yourself? Do you think it was worth the process?
Thank you so much for the info. Did you narrate it yourself? Do you think it was worth the process?

Overall, I am happy I recorded the book. I learned a lot in the process. Also, it reaches an audience who might not have bought the print or ebook version.


I'm working on revising my first novel. It follows a young woman as she returns to Argentina after years of living in the U.S. where she and her family sought refuge from the Dirty War. It's all about her discovering what really happened to her mother, who mysteriously disappeared during the height of the war. It is really different and I'm having trouble figuring out where exactly my book will fit in.


I recently read an article that stated that using double spaces after periods ending sentences was an archaic practice left over from type writer days.
Rea..."
I agree with you Natalie. I was taught in my high school typing class to double space after a period in a sentence. It was drilled into our absorbent little minds. See? Even now I'm doing it. I can't stop. My thumb goes space space.
I double space in my own books because it looks funny to me otherwise. I believe it will take me some time to unlearn this habit.



Recording a novel is a huge undertaking. I have only attempted it once thus far. Good thing I didn't fully comprehend what was involved when I started. If you do decide to do it I would recommend getting help.
Hi all. Spaces and reading? I write by touch typing and am conditioned to use two spaces so I now use the find and replace function on Word to correct to single space when I edit. Saves worry when in a creative flow.
I am conscious that I have read less fiction since I began to write full-time. I guess my head is too full of my own process. I try and I have taken on a few reviews but it's hard work. Once it was a daily refreshment. I've heard this from a lot of writers.
davidrory
I am conscious that I have read less fiction since I began to write full-time. I guess my head is too full of my own process. I try and I have taken on a few reviews but it's hard work. Once it was a daily refreshment. I've heard this from a lot of writers.
davidrory


Murdo, we have done a lot of recording, but you are right, it scares me just thinking about making audiobooks of our works, and most of them would be considered shorter than average. Sigh.

And, yes, I will ask this as a new post too so as not to be contradictory. :-)






My husband wants me to do audio versions of my books and sell them on itunes. Has anyone else thought about doing this? or has anyone done it?"
I think that be an interesting idea...especially for short stories.

Murdo Morrison

I often have to go back, too, but I find it useful because it keeps me from going too far off-track.
As for the italics, I'm old school, too -- and too old to change.


I, too, find the practice to be effective. I've read novels that do not use italics in such a manner, and at times, the passages are confusing. I wonder if others feel the same way....
Elle wrote: "I have a question for authors:
As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
I rarely get to read much any more. I'm not only busy writing and all that goes with it, but I attend events and those require a great deal of planning. Come mid- April to July, I'll be in 4 different states at 7 events. After up to 13 hours on my feet, all I want to do is sleep.
As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
I rarely get to read much any more. I'm not only busy writing and all that goes with it, but I attend events and those require a great deal of planning. Come mid- April to July, I'll be in 4 different states at 7 events. After up to 13 hours on my feet, all I want to do is sleep.

Shawn wrote: "Elle wrote: "I have a question for authors:
As an author myself, I love to read but rarely get as much time as I would like. How often do you read in a week?"
I rarely get to read much any more. I..."
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