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Posted By : RHFay - 3/4/2008 2:59 PM
sweet porcelain face
painted eyes full of evil
baby doll possessed

***

moonlight sparks in gems
jewelled dagger against dark sky
midnight sacrifice

***


"I'm going to do what the warriors of old did. I'm going to recite poetry!" 
 
Richard H. Fay - Azure Lion Productions 

Posted By : Hermit - 3/5/2008 10:44 AM

Nice imagery.

This kind of thing would make for a pretty cool chapbook done in tandum with pictures done by one of the terrific artists around here . . . idea


Read me soon in The Return of the Sword!
Blog: http://bitterhermit.wordpress.com
Buy wine: http://fringemonkey.org
Poetry Blog: http://fringemonkey.wordpress.com


Posted By : RHFay - 3/5/2008 3:14 PM

He, he, he...maybe artwork done by the speculative poet himself? smilewinkgrin

I've actually been tossing the idea around in my head for a while now.  I'm going to start thinking about such a venture in the future.  It's on my "to-do" list (along with several other things).

Any suggestions about such a thing would be greatly appreciated, by the way.  I really don't know much about putting a chapbook together, or getting one published.


"I'm going to do what the warriors of old did. I'm going to recite poetry!" 
 
Richard H. Fay - Azure Lion Productions 

Posted By : Hermit - 3/5/2008 3:36 PM

I'm an expert at making chapbooks. Not so savvy on marketing them.

To do really professional chapbooks, you need a serious trimmer. I usually use #24 paper at least (20 feels and looks cheap as well as tending to bleed through). My newest chapbook sports a parchment cover and a craft-paper wrap, which makes it look like something special.


Posted By : Constance - 3/5/2008 4:46 PM

Richard, I've done chapbooks for our state poetry society. I got bids from all the local printers, did the cover and interior art myself, it ended up being fairly inexpensive. Did it in Publisher, gave the printer everything on a cd with the artwork included in .png, .gif, and .tif formats. Even with a color cover and a small print run we didn't make out too bad selling them at $6.00 a copy.

For marketing, I hit our (only) bookstore, other bookstores in the state, then all the gift shops, including the little gift shops in the hotels, any place that sold local/state tourist stuff. The farmer's co-op, the organization website has a downloadable order form, sent out email notices to the arts councils and blogs, put a link on my personal blog, sent press releases to the newspapers and book reviewers, libraries, etc. We held a publication party in conjunction with the state writer's conference and got them in other writer's conference sale tables. We did a bunch of other things I can't recall at the moment, but after it was published, 6 months later, we only had 30 copies left. 

A lot of work, but it was worth it. --Although I didn't volunteer to edit our next one. Just do the artwork. :)

(I really like the second 'horrorku'. excellent imagery. tells a little story all by itself.)


Constance

Posted By : crystalwizard - 3/7/2008 10:05 PM
RHFay said...
He, he, he...maybe artwork done by the speculative poet himself? VIEW IMAGE

I've actually been tossing the idea around in my head for a while now. I'm going to start thinking about such a venture in the future. It's on my "to-do" list (along with several other things).

Any suggestions about such a thing would be greatly appreciated, by the way. I really don't know much about putting a chapbook together, or getting one published.


email me, Richard

Posted By : Thirdy Lopez - 3/12/2008 2:44 AM
Sweet horrorkus, Richard. ;)


Aurelio Rico Lopez III aka "Thirdy" has had fiction featured in COLD FLESH (Hellbound Books), THE BLACKEST DEATH I, II, and III (Black Death Books), SPORTY SPEC: GAMES OF THE FANTASTIC (Raven Electrick Ink), STAR-SPANGLED ZOMBIE (Maniac Press), RAW MEAT (Sideshow Press), SHADOW BOX (Brimstone Press), TRIP THE LIGHT HORRIFIC (RAGE machine Books), DEAD MEN (AND WOMEN) WALKING (Bards and Sages), and THE BOOK OF SHADOWS VOL. I (Brimstone Press).  His poems have appeared in Mythic Delirium, Star*Line, Dark Animus, Goblin Fruit, Scifaikuest, Electric Velocipede, Sybil's Garage, The Horror Express, Down In the Cellar, and elsewhere.


Posted By : Hermit - 3/12/2008 10:17 AM
Now that I'm an independent wine consultant again, I market direct to wine customers. Wine and poetry - what better marriage? If I could get to my website, which, thanks to Vista I cannot, I would spif it up and retouch that vehicle. I really should learn Web Expressions? At the moment, I'm still paying for the losses from my previous publishing failure. Once I've built my fortune back up, I'll be making chapbooks and books again. ;-)
Constance said...

Richard, I've done chapbooks for our state poetry society. I got bids from all the local printers, did the cover and interior art myself, it ended up being fairly inexpensive. Did it in Publisher, gave the printer everything on a cd with the artwork included in .png, .gif, and .tif formats. Even with a color cover and a small print run we didn't make out too bad selling them at $6.00 a copy.

For marketing, I hit our (only) bookstore, other bookstores in the state, then all the gift shops, including the little gift shops in the hotels, any place that sold local/state tourist stuff. The farmer's co-op, the organization website has a downloadable order form, sent out email notices to the arts councils and blogs, put a link on my personal blog, sent press releases to the newspapers and book reviewers, libraries, etc. We held a publication party in conjunction with the state writer's conference and got them in other writer's conference sale tables. We did a bunch of other things I can't recall at the moment, but after it was published, 6 months later, we only had 30 copies left. 

A lot of work, but it was worth it. --Although I didn't volunteer to edit our next one. Just do the artwork. :)

(I really like the second 'horrorku'. excellent imagery. tells a little story all by itself.)


Read me soon in The Return of the Sword!
Blog: http://bitterhermit.wordpress.com
Buy wine: http://fringemonkey.org
Poetry Blog: http://fringemonkey.wordpress.com


Posted By : RHFay - 3/12/2008 11:14 AM
I dread the idea of eventually getting a new computer because of Vista. My wife works from home on days of bad winter weather, and she would not be able to connect to the office system if we had Vista.


"I'm going to do what the warriors of old did. I'm going to recite poetry!" 
 
Richard H. Fay - Azure Lion Productions 

Posted By : Constance - 3/13/2008 12:16 PM

Hmm, I sucked up and went with Vista on my new laptop, and it really hasn't been that bad. It doesn't play nice with a few older programs I have, so I left them on the old XP laptop. Other than that, it hasn't been the devil incarnate I was led to believe it would be. In fact, several times it seems to have 'healed itself' from some problem without my intervention. It's been a fairly stable platform for me, and I'm running graphics and other memory intensive programs at the same time. *cough* iTunes

The pop up permission thing is annoying, though, unless you accidentally hit install when you didn't mean to. Then it saves you.  Oh, and finding where MS hid some programs is an adventure in itself. It's my computer, damn it, I'll decide what programs I want to see or not see. :-)

 


Constance

Posted By : Hermit - 3/13/2008 1:21 PM
My biggest beef with Vista is that it does some really funky stuff with drivers, and it's biggest problems are compatibility issues with previous MICRO-freakin-SOFT software. It jams me up with Office, though that's gotten a great deal better. And I'm really pissed about them not even bothering with a patch for FrontPage. Granted, FP is kind of lame and fraught with ameteurish stuff, but it worked for me.

Posted By : Constance - 3/13/2008 1:52 PM
I have to agree on the Front Page gripes. I think I reinstalled it 5 times before it 'took'. And now page elements shift at times when I'm editing it in
design view. Annoying. But not enough for me to go back to doing it by hand. :)


Constance

Posted By : Hermit - 3/13/2008 4:13 PM

You got it to work? Cool. Maybe they finally did create the patch. I'll try again. Last time I tried was around last October or so.

Also, I'm certain a great deal of the difficulty I had at first had to do with using Laplink to migrate an XP system to the Vista system. There's also a lot of Toshiba trash I can't seem to shake. Thanks for letting me know you got it to work. That's a good sign! Made my day. Thanks. yeah

PS: RH, sorry to hijack the thread. Here's a horrorku for you:

geeks gabbing techno
hijack poetry thread
systems failure looms


Read me soon in The Return of the Sword!
Blog: http://bitterhermit.wordpress.com
Buy wine: http://fringemonkey.org
Poetry Blog: http://fringemonkey.wordpress.com


Posted By : Constance - 3/14/2008 9:26 AM
I'm using FP2003. YMMV....
(Isn't "geeks gabbing techno" a given?...) smilewinkgrin
here, the anti-hijack component, born of Microsoft nightmares:


Underbed slobbering
Dreaming, I float a dank sea
of demon spittle


Constance

Posted By : Hermit - 3/14/2008 10:22 AM

Terror dulls senses
shadows rise, ambiguous
heart knows Death's approach

screaming, she bleeds long
prey to what she loved, she loves
death seduces still


Posted By : Nathan Jerpe - 3/17/2008 3:57 PM
Ahhh...the baby doll possessed, I should have known!
 
That's my favorite so far, well done.


http://roguelikefiction.com


Posted By : RHFay - 3/17/2008 4:07 PM
Nathan Jerpe said...
Ahhh...the baby doll possessed, I should have known!
 
That's my favorite so far, well done.

I must do an illustration for that one.  Yes, I really must.


"I'm going to do what the warriors of old did. I'm going to recite poetry!" 
 
Richard H. Fay - Azure Lion Productions 

Posted By : Dark Agnes - 3/18/2008 1:48 PM
RHFay said...
sweet porcelain face
painted eyes full of evil
baby doll possessed


My mother still tells people I became a tomboy because I became afraid of my dolls when I six.
Your three lines reminds me of why I became afraid of them. lol