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photo 2015-12-14 17:29
The Fridgularity - Mark A. Rayner
Slaughterhouse-Five - Kurt Vonnegut

Having my novel next to Kurt Vonnegut's masterful Slaughterhouse-Five on the Amazon bestseller list for satire and humor is an early Christmas gift. 

 

You can get the Kindle edition now for 99¢!

 

Vonnegut is my literary hero, fyi :)

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photo 2014-07-23 16:19
The Fridgularity - Mark A. Rayner
Marvellous Hairy - Mark A. Rayner
Pirate Therapy and Other Cures - Mark A. Rayner

Why I still kill trees for proofing

 

I’m a big fan of printing when it comes to proofing you manuscript. I have a few reasons for this:

 

Resolution

 

You get way more resolution on paper then you do with the average screen. I suppose if you’re looking at an e-ink reader (Kindle, Nook, etc.) or iPad, you have similar levels of resolution, but with the latter technology, you still have the problem of image refreshing. (This is what happens with a backlit screen — the image is recreated over and over as you look at it.) I actually like my Kindle for reading because it doesn’t have that refreshing issue, and it behaves like paper. In fact, it’s not a bad choice for some proofing activities, but the problem with it is you can’t write on it.

 

Noodling

 

Unlike the Kindle, paper allows me to scratch my thoughts, proofing marks and rewritten sentences right on the manuscript. The downside is that I still have to go back to the electronic file to make the changes, but the upside is I can noodle and doodle as I please. Plus, red pen!

 

Dimension

 

Unlike electronic files, paper allows us to move back and forth in physical space. It’s easy to lose track of how long something is when we’re typing words in electronic ether, but when you see it in loose leaf paper, it’s obvious. That gorgeous paragraph, about the sunset and how its light reflects off the blonde hair of the protagonist’s lover? Well, it’s two pages long and it has to go.

 

The Bearable Weightiness of Prose

 

If you're not guaranteed of being published, this may be as good as it gets. I’ve written at least two novels for which this is true. (I can’t account for the future, so at some point it may be more than two.) There is just something so real about looking at that big stack of paper, filled with lines and lines of your words. You wrote that, motherfucker! Good for you!

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photo 2014-07-08 17:20
The Fridgularity - Mark A. Rayner
Marvellous Hairy - Mark A. Rayner
The Amadeus Net - Mark A. Rayner
Pirate Therapy and Other Cures - Mark A. Rayner

So I guess the somewhat worrying message in this is that if I want to write as much as Kurt Vonnegut, I have to get up earlier in the day!

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photo 2014-02-20 21:27
The Fridgularity - Mark A. Rayner
Pirate Therapy and Other Cures - Mark A. Rayner
Marvellous Hairy - Mark A. Rayner
The Amadeus Net - Mark A. Rayner
99-cents!

You can get all my books for sale right now, including the collection for 99-cents and my first novel for $2.99.

 

My Amazon page is here, where you can find The Fridgularity, Marvellous Hairy, Pirate Therapy and The Amadeus Net.

 

Smashwords options are the same.

 

 

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photo 2013-12-12 21:00
Winner of an Indie Reader Discovery Award for best humorous novel.

Available for $2.99 on Kindle

 

And other formats for $2.99 at Smashwords (use coupon: YU86X)

 

Review

"With plenty of humor and much more, The Fridgularity is an exciting, sci-fi view askew, highly recommended." ~Midwest Book Review

"If you're looking for a combination of humor, romance and a power hungry refrigerator, look no further than The Fridgularity, a very enjoyable read. 5 stars!" ~IndieReader.com

"I've only come across a few writers who are truly funny, and Mark A. Rayner is one of them." ~Terry Fallis, author of Best Laid Plans
 
Chill out. It's only the technological singularity. 

Blake Given’s web-enabled fridge has pulled the plug on the Internet, turning its owner’s life – and the whole world – upside down.

Blake has modest ambitions for his life. He wants to have his job reclassified, so he can join the Creative Department of the advertising firm where he works. And he wants to go out with Daphne, one of the account execs at the same company. His fridge has other plans. All Blake knows is he’s at the center of the Internet’s disappearance, worldwide economic and religious chaos, and the possibility of a nuclear apocalypse — none of which is helping him with his career plans or love life. 

The Fridgularity is the story of a reluctant prophet, Internet addicts in withdrawal and a kitchen appliance with delusions of grandeur.
 
Prefer paperback? Get it for $12.99 here. (Coupon: YGMVFZZY)
Source: markarayner.com/books/fridgularity/index.html
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