



by SB Sarah • Sunday, November 09, 2008 at 06:31 PM
All I’m saying is, for this much money, the Kindle better harness nuclear energy to make eggs, do laundry, and drive me to work every day. Holy shit. $6,232.00 for an EBOOK?! And that’s 20% off!
I mean, I get nervous wearing nice jewelry sometimes on the subway. Imagine having a SIX THOUSAND DOLLAR ebook on the Kindle?! I’d be afraid to touch the damn thing.
[Thanks to Student Tech News for the link.]


by Candy • Saturday, November 08, 2008 at 12:56 PM
My friend Schwern, by means unknown to God and Internet, found this little gem of a poster and promptly forwarded it to me:
Saucy, indeed. So saucy, Sarah and I decided we need to hold a contest for a Burma Shave-style doggerel contest. The prize? A $20 gift certificate to Babeland, where you can get any number of things, including any number of love sauces that hopefully won’t burn as much as Burma Sauce (not that there’s anything wrong with the burning, if you’re into that).
The rules:
Contest runs until midnight on Monday, 11/10/2008.
Submit your doggerel in the comments.
Winner will be picked by Sarah’s and my discerning judgment for terrible poetry.
Some verses to serve as inspiration:
Sarah:
Two cocks, one hole
I heard you say?
Only this
Can smooth the way…
Burma Sauce
As you drive down
the highway Hershey
Be a man
and show some mercy.
Burma Sauce.
Candy:
(Note about the reference to eel porn: If you Google “Japanese eel porn,” the top hit will link to the inspiration for my verse. So. Um. Yeah. Not going to link to it directly.)
The eels go where?
I dared to ask
I must endure
This slip’ry task
Burma Sauce
The well is spent
The hole is dry
To ease the the path
You’ll have to try
Burma Sauce









by SB Sarah • Saturday, November 08, 2008 at 09:49 AM
Today is a super busy day in my world (Freebird is 3?! How the CRAP did that happen!?) but I still manage to grab 10 minutes at the laptop.
I noticed that I’m very much a mood swing reader, in that I’ll glom onto a particular type of romance, then turn radically in a different direction. For awhile, I’ve been feasting on contemporaries: novellas, suspense mysteries, humorous, but straight up contemporary. Now? Historical?! YUMMY. I deviated from the line up of the TBR pile (for which I am giving myself a very hard time) and taking a side route through an angsty historical I picked up idly one evening and believe I have been sucked into.
Speaking of, let me ask you a question: do you want to know what I’m reading right now? Like, if I’m reading Angsty Historical that jumps forward and back in time, and I’m not sure what I’m thinking of it or how I’d evaluate it since I’m still Getting Into It, do you want to know what it is? Until now I’ve felt like naming book titles when I’m not sure what I think of them yet is somehow rude or teasing, and I don’t want to be a book tease. But hey, if you want to know, I’ll mention things as I read them.
Of course, if I’m reading a file I’ve emailed to the Kindle, until I look up the sent mail file I might only be able to say that I’m reading NC_Oc_R.PDF and no, I have NO IDEA what the hell that is. It’s like blind taste testing on the Kindle sometimes, because with some e-ARCs that I have, the title/author info doesn’t appear at the top of the screen.
I’m not usually big into angsty historicals, but it’s a foggy, rainy day here, and I’m tucked into the sofa cushions reading until nap time ends, and chaos descends, so it’s fabulous.









by SB Sarah • Friday, November 07, 2008 at 11:58 AM
It’s probably happened to you, if you’re an author, yeah? You gave a booksigning and no one was there?
Happened to Sherry Jones, author of The Jewel of Medina, too. Not even multi-national controversy and the threat of terrorism can get readers to a bookstore in the rain.



by SB Sarah • Friday, November 07, 2008 at 11:45 AM
From today’s Publisher’s Lunch:
Big Library Cuts in Philadelphia
As municipalities across the country face large gaps in their budget, Philadelphia is taking “drastic new steps” to face the “economic storm” that include closing 11 of the 54 branch libraries that comprise the Free Library of Philadelphia. Three other branches will have Sunday hours eliminated. Mayor Michael Nutter said the branches were chosen “after careful review of building conditions, utilization and distance to other libraries in the Free Library system.” Cutting 220 jobs throughout the city government, approximately one third of those layoffs will come from the library staff.
That fucking sucks for fucking hard I’m having a difficult time coming up with a response more nuanced and apt than: “Oh, FUCK that.”