***** i couldn,t put it down
***** i couldn,t put it down
By nikcgreen
The author strode purposefully into the living room,
which was the main chamber of residence in the house in which his family lived.
His family were in there. Boldly the author stood before them and folded his
arms in brazen fashion.
“My family,” he insisted. “I wish you to open multiple
Amazon accounts and review my novel many times, giving it five stars. This way
I will be able to sell many books and put food on the table for you, and also
lord it over my so-called fiends in the IT department at work,” he explained
curtly.
His wife looked at him curiously, full of questions.
“Why don’t you just let readers read the book and
review it themselves?” She asked questioningly. “I may be soarly mistaken but
isnt’ that how its supposed to work?”
The writer laughed scornfully, giving a disdainful
shake of his head, to let his wife know what he thought of this strategy. His
scorn spoke for itself.
“You don’t understand,” he demonstrated. “Amazon has a
dirty trick up their sleeves that will put paid to my dreams of bestsellerdom.
Customers can click on ‘Look Inside!’ and read the first few pages of the book
before they bye it.”
His disdain spoke for itself.
“Isn’t that good?” asked his wife, with a frown of her
deep brown eyes.
“No it isn’t good,” the writer exploded suddenly, in a
rage of anger. “It means that people will see that I can’t write for coffee.”
“Toffee,” murmured the youngest member of his
offspring, loudly under his breath.
“Not now, son.”
“I mean the word is toffee,” said the irritated child,
blinking pale blue eyes like his mother’s. “You can’t write for toffee. Or
coffee, come to that.”
Frustrated, the brooding writer looked in the mirror.
He saw a tall, square-jawed man with windswept sandy hair, with some seashells
in it too.
“What’s that man doing in here? Get him out,” snapped
the writer, turning back to the image of himself in the
mirror, a short and balding man with a beer gut, and sand in the turnips of his
trousers. (It had been a windy day at the beach.)
“Now you’re meandering off the point,” his wife
pointed out unnecessarily.
“My point is this,” bellowed the writer, raising his
finger to point with. “Whom in their write mind would buy a book by someone so
incapably with the English language as me? As I? As me? I don’t even know which
it is. And as for getting a hundred suspiciously similar five-star reviews,
forget it.”
‘I have an objection’ objected his middle son,
sweeping back her luxuriant head of long cropped treacle-coloured blonde hair.
[revise this bit]
‘What is it?’ asked his irasibcle father.
‘If customers see that you have a hundred five-star
reviews,’ continued his daughter [son?]
‘but the prose style of a mole rat using Google Translate, then won’t the star
system gradually become meaning less?’
‘Star system? This isn’t my sci-fi book. Which is even
better, by the way.’
‘I mean the rating system,’ said his son, batting her
eyelashes. He put down his cricket bat. ‘How will customers be able to find
genuinely good indie books, that actually deserve four or five stars, if people
like you go around devaluing the system? It’s runaway inflation, that’s what it
is.’
‘Huh,’ harrumphed the author. His disdain spoke for
itself. ‘That’s there problem, not mine.’
‘Fare enough,’ chorused his family.
The author excited the living room with a brisk
stride.
Comments
Love it!