ART 53, day 28

This Is Fifty-Three, day 28

After a very productive day yesterday, I spent today going through all the sections of the book, making small adjustments here and there, swapping out photos, and even taking out a couple of inadvertent duplicates (the poem ‘Sinistrata’ appeared in two sections, for example).
Continue reading

ART 53, day 26

This Is Fifty-Three, day 26

Minor adjustments yesterday—matched images to the handful of poems that did not yet have any, deleted a couple of poems I changed my mind about, and shuffled around the order a bit. Continue reading

ART 53, day 25

This Is Fifty-Three, day 25

Thanks to a lull in the action, I was able to work a bit on the book yesterday. It had been long enough that I sort of lost track of where I was, but the main task was to update some of what I had already worked on, incorporating some of my newer poems, and taking out others. Continue reading

Still happening

Greetings and Salutations one and all!

My car—variously known as Spot, Otto, Stella, and simply The Beast—is still grounded after it started having alternator/generator problems last Friday, so I need to get it fixed. So, I have discounted all my e-books on Smashwords to $1.99 each (that’s 50% off, in most cases—and your choice of ePub or Kindle formats) until June 30th. The coupon codes and handy-dandy links appear below. Thank you for your support! Continue reading

Kevin’s auto repair sale starts NOW

Greetings and Salutations one and all!

My car—variously known as Spot, Otto, Stella, and simply The Beast—started having alternator/generator problems last night, so I need to get it fixed. So, I have discounted all my e-books on Smashwords to $1.99 each (that’s 50% off, in most cases) until June 30th. The coupon codes and handy-dandy links appear below. Thank you for your support! Continue reading

ART 53, days 22 & 23

This Is Fifty-Three, days 22 & 23

I finished the preliminary layout for the Oddities section today.

As the screenshots below demonstrate, I did not necessarily give every spread the wacky treatment. In part, that was to let the poems speak for themselves, but it was also to let the material dictate the treatment of each spread. Continue reading