@starbreaker The noble thought process here is refreshing. I'm so used to authors on birdsite pouncing on any opportunity for exposure and readership.
Being from ruby red, God and guns, small-town America, I have a lot of sympathy for the animus toward the hometown, too.
You're doing good work, friend.
@starbreaker I am not published, and I freely admit I know next to nothing about the pressures of publishing, but I like to think I can tell the difference between when authors are trying to gain readers and when they're fostering a readership. There's an honesty that shows through, and I have a lot of respect for it.
@starbreaker BTW, my own principled stand led me to pick up Without Bloodshed on Kindle. :) It sounds good, and I look forward to it.
@kevinja Thanks. Looking back, it's pretty rough, but I hope you enjoy it.
@kevinja Want to tell us a bit about your project?
@starbreaker I have a near-future sci-fi about the end of the U.S. as we know it that I write on pretty sporadically when life doesn't get in the way. It has some foundational issues and I need to re-plot it, but one of these days, it just might see a completed first draft. :)
@kevinja Cool. Mine is set after the end, but the US had gotten annexed by Canada after the failed invasion during the War of 1812. That's why you'll see references to the North American Commonwealth. :)
@kevinja Got any particular characters in mind for your novel? Or are you still working on background and plot?
@starbreaker I have three or four main characters that the story is shuffling between. They actually came first before the story they were in, which makes me feel doubly guilty for the misery I'll have to put them through. :)
@kevinja Thanks, but the truth is that I'm reluctant to gain readers using underhanded means. My pride demands that I earn my readership, not have it handed to me.
Besides, it's easy to take a principled stand when you've got a relatively cushy day job. :)