erastes: (Default)
erastes ([personal profile] erastes) wrote2006-11-03 01:55 pm

Kitty update - The State Within - ebook cover yuk

I let The Snucius out today. Then I sat there worrying - but they came back! They've been charging in and out of the cat flap like loonies. They love the garden but they love coming back in for a cuddle too! I am so relieved.

More on "The State Within"

It's incredibly topical. A British Muslim man blows up an American flight to London and the plane explodes over Washington. The "shoulder-to-shoulder" attitude between the Americans and the English cracks and accusations are thrown out on both sides. Jason plays a very good part, he seems affable, caring and clever but you get an undercurrent that he's damned intelligent and knows exactly how the game is played. (which of course he does - you don't get to be Ambassador in the USA by kissing babies.)

Sharon Gless plays the secretary of state and she's overtly scary. She takes no bullshit, and she knows exactly what Isaacs' game is.

The Govenor of Virginia starts arresting all British Muslims (there are, according to Isaacs about 4000 of them - travelling, studying, working... ) and soon there are more than 200 in custody, with no right of arrest, no right of counsel - it's Guantanomo all over again. Isaacs is furious but impotent.

Then two young Muslims are killed "resisting arrest" when all they were trying to do (I think) was just trying to get out of the State. I'd be doing the same if I had been them.

I expect fireworks.

Add in to the mix a Brit and an American diplomat who are having a homosexual affair, some sort of conspiracy stuff going on with a British soldier killed on American soil(?) and then dumped into a river, and someone is following Isaacs and taking pictures. There's obviously a lot more going on than meets the eye.

Bloody hell, I hope it continues to be as good as the first episode promised. And WHY didn't I tape it????

*shoots self*

Also Jason is the hotness, proving (as he has been doing for years for those who have been following him) that he can play just about any part you give him. He was phoning a list of the bereaved and (I kid you not) he asked to speak to a "Mr Standish" I nearly died of the squee.

And I've been meaning to ask this for a while but.

WHY do so many e-book publishers have such revolting covers?

[identity profile] erastes.livejournal.com 2006-11-03 05:36 pm (UTC)(link)
The thing is that some of these covers look like the artist has spent flegging AGES on the artwork, and it's still utterly revolting.

I agree about some big publishers covers, but to me, the cover is the first temptation. "Do I want to read this book?" and if I see two deformed SIM-type men like so many of them, I'm just not going to go any further. I am more intrigued by something like Veinglory's "The Highwayman" with a hat and pistols than I am with "The Thing he Loves" by the same author. I know that's shallow of me, but it's the normal way people are attracted by books.

julesjones: (Default)

[personal profile] julesjones 2006-11-03 06:27 pm (UTC)(link)
One of the minor reasons I just keep sending my manuscripts to the same publisher is that they give me decent cover art, and decent cover art helps sell the book. God knows I've looked at some of the covers in the catalogue and thought "What *were* they thinking? That's going to end up being snarked at Smart Bitches...", but at least it's not that much more often than with the NY publishers.