Category Archives: Thought-Poke Thursday

Classics You’ve Never Read: Your Money or Your Life

Classic: a book that people praise and do not read.

– Mark Twain

CoMC_Treasure1Unless you live in Tennessee, I’m going to go out on a limb and assert that just like me, you did not win an unthinkably huge pile of money last month in the Powerball lottery. Instead, I contributed a modest amount to someone else’s dreams, and in return received the entertainment value of a few days mooning over what I would do if… I’m fine with it, of course, but that may only be because there’s the chance at another jackpot waiting in my future. I buy tickets on occasion, just one or two, and I enjoy the thinking, the dreaming. As much as I complain about vet bills and car repairs, I don’t truly need the money.

We all know and fear how wealth could ruin our lives: the two seem opposed. I’ve blogged before about Ebeneezer Scrooge, one of my favorite tales of all time. Among the funniest routines from the days of radio was the defining skit of famous comedian and infamous tightwad Jack Benny.

{sound effect, Jack walking home on the street}

Robber: Stick ’em up!

Jack: Don’t shoot!

Robber: Your money or your life.

{enormous pause, studio audience laughing}

Robber: I said your money or your life!

Jack: I’m thinking, I’m thinking!

This week I’m delving into the bookend piece of A Christmas Carol. Every few years I re-read the classic tale about the guy who gets it right, who uses an immeasurable pile of money to correct injustice, gain a much-needed revenge, reward the virtuous and win back CoMC2_Guy_Pearcehis life. It’s both, not either, for Edmond Dantes in Alexandre Dumas’ The Count of Monte Cristo.

The tale itself, I assume you know. If you have not read it, or at least seen it, I can have very little to say to you, on any subject. This is one of those books you’d have to have on the desert island: it’s seminal to my thought process and quite simply one of the most ripping good adventure tales ever told. I find longer and longer versions over the years and like its story all the more. It was decades before I realized it must have originally been written in another language. I still don’t know if I believe that.

Yes, a Fantasy

Let’s not argue about this. Edmond Dantes is first mate on board a merchant ship in the days just before Waterloo, with a fiancee’ in port and a secret letter in pocket, looking exactly like a character in a story about the Alleged Real World.

But come now.

He promises his dying captain to deliver a letter. One letter, he promised. And three unhappily-met enemies later, he’s been robbed of his position and freedom, deprived of his family and lover, and buried alive in the Chateau d’If while Napoleon’s return rocks CoMC6Europe. Yes, a bit far-fetched as bad fortunes go. Then he meets that combination of Sokrates, St. Francis and Da Vinci in the Abbe Faria (next cell over). A man who knows multiple languages, astronomy, mathematics, philosophy and history, but somehow tunnels too short, bringing himself to Dantes’ cell for the express purpose of turning our hero into a walking encyclopedia. The two men continue the tunnel (years of work), the Abbe dies just before they are done, and one body-swap-plus-near-drowning later, Edmond Dantes is free with CoMC5only the directions to a tiny island and its massive treasure to live on.

And by massive, I mean Powerball. Without the state and federal taxes.

Getting it Right

Now then, how many protagonists 1) get the treasure in the MIDDLE of the story AND 2) use it correctly? Aladdin, easy come easy go; not really good with money or power, he just loves the girl.  The Fisherman and his Wife, so not. The Dwarves in The Hobbit, almost no on both counts. But Edmond Dantes creates the mysterious Count of Monte Cristo, CoMC_Treasure2appearing in Paris years later, to find all his enemies have become important people by climbing a ladder that had his heart on the bottom rung. The tale is just getting warmed up.

Dumas misses no opportunity to remind us what we already suspect: if people think you have money, a lot of doors open for you. Money is indeed power, over the spirit of weak and villainous people, and Dantes exploits this. He tosses around a gem the size of a swallow’s egg just to get an informant’s attention. A half-million francs is the price of one acting job from a villain who doesn’t realize how much truth he’s telling.

Yet everywhere you look, Dantes is not just getting his way with money, he’s passing judgment from it. Actually, his enemies are incriminating themselves: the wealthy banker jumps at each million the Count dangles like a treat before a puppy, and misses every time. By the same token, the noble and loyal from his former life are raised from poverty, saved from suicide, cleared to marry by Dantes’ wealth (aided, it must be admitted, by his love for theater).

The Obstacle of Wealth

CoMC4_Jim_CaviezelAuthors are often urged to throw down barriers to their heroes, for conflict. Chief among these I would say is poverty. Having a poor character creates sympathy, and brings in all its relatives like hunger, exhaustion, and spite from the “haves”; everything to do with time and distance is tougher because you can’t pay to overcome them. In Edmond Dantes, we’re looking at a man who has been horribly wronged, of whom it’s not too much to say that his life was taken from him. Now money, showers of it, and as much education as one might need, he already got that from the priest. It’s Batman without the mask– oh wait, he wears one of those too in the movies at times. And a cape of course. So it’s Batman, except his arch-villains have gotten themselves elected governor and federal judge and chairman of Gotham-Sachs. And who wouldn’t like to take down those guys?

Wealth brings a different obstacle.

Edmond Dantes is eagerly admitted wherever he goes, owns the fastest ship, employs the most loyal servants. Time and distance do not oppose him. His enemies are agog and ignorant of his intent. But he must be Justice itself: and who has sympathy for an avenging angel? The central question of The Count of Monte Cristo is whether he is after revenge or something more. By enacting his plans with perfection, he wreaks havoc on the lives of his enemies: you can hardly doubt he will succeed. It is not his goal, at first, to do justice. But when his perfect scheme causes worse than he intends, those plans must change. His next goal is not, at first, to survive. But a path to redemption opens when he places his trust in the one who wronged him least.

Mark these crucial moments in the unfolding of the plot, and you can see that beneath the layers of gold and jewels is still a man, named Edmond Dantes.

  • When his scheme to ruin the public prosecutor involves the man’s wife by indulging her CoMC3interest in poisoning, the Count fails at first to see that one of his worthy friends will be among her targets
  • He repairs the plan, but instead of simply humiliating or killing the prosecutor, he unexpectedly drives him mad
  • In the same way, his scheme for revenge upon the man who stole his fiancee’ centers around provoking their son to a duel, which the Count will of course win. But when Mercedes begs him with tears to spare the youth, the Count relents, and expects to be slain instead. Once again, for all his wealth and intelligence he fails to see the final outcome.
  • These blows to his omniscience bring Dantes humility, and in the end he even spares the man who robbed him of his position. He focuses instead on settling the fortune to his remaining friends (or their faithful children), and is himself stunned , as he re-enters the mortal realm, to find hope and a second life awaiting him.

Buying the Reader’s Love

So a staggering pile of loot is the means, rather than one of the ends of the story. How else can we sympathize with someone who has become rich and powerful, whatever he had suffered before? Edmond Dantes begins as a character with many admirable qualities,

Yes, it's me. Rodger Stebbins as Benedetto, Camp Dudley 1987. Sacre Dieu!
Yes, it’s me. Rodger Stebbins as Benedetto, Camp Dudley 1987. Sacre Dieu!

including courage, honesty, pride, perhaps much like the hero of your book. He suffers unjustly, in a way losing his life and passing through “death” in the Chateau d’If, then gains the means to balance the scales: most of us don’t know much about that, and in many tales when the hero gets rich we hear the happy-ending music. So the obstacle– indeed the peril of the mid-tale is that we will see thrills but lose this hero. The Count of Monte Cristo has wealth, but still no life. This angel of God’s vengeance comes down to earth again, where we can stop marveling and return to our affection. He is chastened, wiser, happier, and enjoys what is most important in human life, which is love and hope. Not wealth– or so those of us who didn’t hit the Powerball dearly want to believe!

When Edmond Dantes sails off to the horizon, it’s the end of the Count of Monte Cristo. But he is not yet forty years old. I think of his story often, as I re-read it often. Once since I began to chronicle the Lands of Hope, I thought myself at a crossroads and what came to me was his tale. Not because I sought revenge or justice, but I suppose I realized I was in the middle of a story (in fact, two of them). Dumas’ great classic can teach you a lot about where the end of the story lies. No matter what great tale you see, or how many you’ve told, there’s always an end whose place is “not yet”.  Like Dantes, you must always “Wait and hope”.sailing-into-the-sunset

I’ve Been Pirated. SO COOL!

I thought about not mentioning this. As an author, you’re not supposed to boast; it makes you look bad, maybe people will think you’re too good for them. I know. But sometimes the news is just so wonderful you’d be a fool to hold it in. And I mean way-good news. Above the joy of completing a big novel. Beyond getting great feedback from beta-readers and praise from reviewers (BTW, Kristen Lamb is spot-on about that). Far past winning one of those silver award-thingies shaped like a rhombus. Even better than having business cards, or book-marks, or a pingback on your latest blog post from AuthorsBeWritingGoodStuff.

LoHI_JT_CoW_webSeriously, readers. This is a sign. A big-time milepost on the road to fame and sure-fire success. Up there with getting one of those golden award-thingies shaped like a star, or meta-tagging your way to number one on Amazon in Bulgaria for the Epic Fantasy Classic Races  Non-Standard Genders category. Almost as good as selling copies.

I’ve been pirated. I know, squee, right?

Sure, we say it’s bad. I mean, it IS bad. Technically. Indies know how tough it is to sell, and we sometimes count the copies, check the sales a bit too often (is it 9 AM yet? Local?). And sure, somebody taking our work and putting it out there for free, or for half-price, or for AnyMoneyNotGoingToMe sure does seem like theft. I mean, it IS theft. Technically.

But I won’t lie to you. It’s also flaming cool to be pirated. And I’ll tell you what my fellow indies won’t.

I’ll tell you why.

But first, let me rave about the pirates themselves.

Why This Pirate Site is Just the Coolest Thing

The particular place which stole my tale is called E-Books Releases and the web-page of my pirated title is right here. There are so many reasons why this is a fantastic development, I’ll only focus on a few.

1) Come on, People- These are PIRATES

It’s very important to distinguish between plain old thieves, or plagiarists or copycats CaptainBloodFightingand Pirates, because the latter are obviously cool and romantic. I mean, everyone knows what pirates look like and how they act. They’re not grungy, or selfish, or money-grubbing scraggly bearded cowards. They come sailing in and take your hard-earned work away from you because it’s really DIFFICULT and heroic and dangerous. Think of all the personal risk involved, sitting back in a faraway country and ordering your computer to steal stuff from other places’ computers.

Pirate Bay founder. Poor light. Mom's basement?
Pirate Bay founder. Poor light. Mom’s basement?

And through it all, pirates are always so calm and polite and dash-it-all DASHING, you know? I mean, when’s the last time you saw a pirate tell the original authors or law enforcement to F-off? It’s really a privilege to be victimized by them: I feel like Olivia DeHaviland, a little. Hard not to fall in love with the guys (or gals) who did this.

2) I’ve Been Robbed- That Means I’ve Arrived!

It’s simple. If I was a COMPLETE unknown, nobody would have bothered to pirate my work.

Pirate Bay founder welcoming attention
Another PB founder welcoming attention

Having a title of mine taken by these pirates means my visibility is rising. I can be seen, noticed, plundered. This is the proof! See, here I am a newish kind of unknownish author and I’ve been chronicling for about eight years. Have I had a title pirated before? Heck no, not so far as I know. I waited, sure, and I hoped. But my good friend and much more prolific author Kat Gerlach? She’s got TWO titles over there, which just goes to show you, right? And other author friends of mine are also included in the catalog (who I won’t name here, because they’re kind of shy about admitting how really jazzed they are to be in this select company. But we know the truth, don’t we guys? Gals? Yeah?).

Are some of the biggest names in writing also on this great site? You bet, but here’s where you can really see how right I am. George R.R. Martin is the world-famous author of Game of Thrones; but the pirates know all about that. Everybody knows about that- including Mr. Martin’s  publishers, and all their lawyers just for an example. So, what do the E-Noobs Re-fleeces guys bring to the readers’ attention? One of his obscure sci-fi pieces from 12 years back called Dying of the Light— the kind that’s only in reprints now, where the e-book is still being charged at those outrageous paper-subsidizing prices. See, that’s just the kind of radar-ducking, thoughtful choice you would expect a quality site to bring to you, the discerning price-conscious reader. I just felt a warm fuzzy. Did you?

3) Pirates Really Care

These guys could have taken my title, slapped up the cover art and blurb and just moved on, you know? But not this gang of pirates, who by the way I’m sure don’t look anything like chubby nerds using PCs to steal other peoples’ work. No, these pirates found READERS who actually-factually REVIEWED my work. Look, the comments are right here:

William

A book on the “Faves” shelf, long time no see!

Barajas

thanks! I really love this book.. starting reading now…

You probably heard there is nothing more important to an indie author than knowing that someone has read and reviewed your work. Sure, in this case the books didn’t really “sell” because We-Took Ye Cheeses GIVES away the copies (more on that later). But hey, we give away copies to reviewers all the time, so what’s two more going to matter. They head-hunted some feedback for me, no charge.  And you just KNOW these are real readers, real reviewers. BTW, I looked at my friend Kat’s books and what do you know, also two comments. GRRM’s, two comments. Stephen King’s Thinner, two comments, Ursula Le Guin’s Earthsea #6… reminds me, I’ve never gotten around to reading that one, maybe I should download it right now. But hey, two comments. So what I’m saying is, that PROVES they really care. One of the GRRM comments was even two sentences long! Have to say, I wasn’t that envious of him until then…

4) More Proof of Caring- They Update

It’s true! No matter which day you visit the site, look at the comments, and you’ll see they will always have been made TODAY. Isn’t that wild? Obviously, See-Nooks in Pieces has such dedicated reader/reviewers they take the time and trouble to come back and re-validate their critiques 7 x 365. I have to say, I’m really stunned.

PirateWill1But nothing could have prepared me for this whopper. They made an AUDIO BOOK version of Clash of Wills! It must be true, the link is right there. How I wish I could listen to that right now: I never got around to it on my own. But this brings me to another point, really in their favor and just my bad luck I can’t take advantage of it.

5) The Best Pirates are Free

What’s the point of being a pirate otherwise? There are all kinds of scammers out there– check out Anne R. Allen’s most-excellent post for the list and what you can do about it. But when you see that your book has been stolen and is now being offered for FREE, that’s when you can sit back and enjoy the highest accolade. You are in the noblest of company.

Why free? Because all pirates give stuff away, don’t you know anything? Pirates are so not-thieves, instead they’re driven by the highest of motives. Same guy played Robin Hood and Captain Blood- word. They just want to give stuff away to the poor (in this case, the CaptainBloodLovingpoor reading public with PCs and internet access). If these guys were taking my book and SELLING it, I might get a bit suspicious. Honestly, though I have to say I’d probably treat them more like a high-cost channel to market. Those kind of thieves are selling my book– maybe in Bulgaria– and that’s something I’ve never

See? Same!
See? Same!

cracked. Sure, their cost to me is a little high– like, 100%– but hey, I’m selling! If they were changing my name on the cover and selling my work, that would be the sincerest form of flattery, I must admit. I’d be so struck with admiration I might stop writing and just wait for THEM to come out with the sequel. Because you know, my WiP is giving me fits at this moment, and who am I to say they couldn’t invent a better outcome?

But not these guys. Gee-Look at Geeses is GIVING away my book! Or maybe just the first few pages, the kind of peek you get on Amazon already. It could be that. I confess I’m not sure, because you have to set up a TOTALLY FREE account on Be Took Fleeces in order to start downloading.

And as part of your account set up for TOTALLY FREE access, you need to just include some bits of information. For example, your credit card number.

I was so sorely tempted, I tell you, really strongly moved to give these wonderful guys my credit card information. Problem is, I only have a debit card (because the whole relatives-with-cancer thing carries a side effect of bankruptcy, and that ironically will cure you of having credit cards, so good on me). So these 22 digits, that’s like a direct line into my bank account. And while I absolutely LOVE these guys, I’m just not sure how, um, how secure their site is? I mean, someone else who’s not cool like a pirate could come in and… well, I’m positive that Three Cooks JackSparrowScaredDe-Quiches would be simply mortified if anything happened to my bank account over such an unfortunate mistake. So I’m just working on trust here. I trust that it would be better, just a little bit better, if I didn’t give my bank information to pirates. But that in no way means I feel the least bit unsure about them. I’m totally sure about these guys, completely.

And you should be too.

I’ll say it again in case there’s any doubt. These guys are definitely giving away something (maybe something you can already get, but that’s not important). They are sincere pirates and you can tell because they give it away for free (once they have your credit card info). Totally. I’m flattered to be their victim, and so should many of my peers.

Open to Suggestions

They even have a great contact line authors can use: it’s the link called “DCMA” on each book page and I’m thinking about using it. DCMA stands for the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, and it’s a way for spoilsport authors who don’t understand how romantic and cool it is to have their work taken, to be a party-pooper and get them to pull down the page they so thoughtfully put up for you. I might contact these guys, once I gather the proof they need (which evidently includes my birth certificate, fingerprints of all six of my cats, a retinal scan plus a blood sample of my firstborn male child, and that last one is going to be really rough). I’m also charmed by the all-caps warning they have there, which tells me I could be going to jail just for saying I’m the author unless I am, or that this is my work unless it is. And can prove it. Sections like that really help you put in perspective how important it is to tell the truth. I get it.

PB founder, presumably before prison weight-loss
PB founder, presumably before prison weight-loss

But I don’t want to leave them with no message at all, no gesture to tell them how cool and romantic I think they have been. So after some thought, I’ve decided to put a comment on “my” page with a link to this article! That should tell these fine buccaneers just how much I appreciate their attention and approval. And I’m sure you’ll all be able to see it, once it passes their moderation process. Been five days now…

Pirates as Role-Models

In the end, semi-seriously, I got a charge out of being pirated because it reminded me of some things. Like risk, and daring and going outside the “law”: indies need all those qualities if we’re going to write anything, publish anything. Can we seriously say that we fear losing a copy of our work to a thief more than getting a negative review? For me, it’s not even close. There’s a slew of dangers out there, emotional challenges to our venture on tricky seas, and piracy is not a bad image for how we should respond. Yes, the wealth, we’d all like plunder. But when you stick a broad-bladed knife between your teeth and clamber over the rail onto a hostile deck, you’re thinking about fighting for your life. We don’t need to take coins, we’re here to take prisoners! We must capture readers; if we do, then everyone gets a share of the plunder afterwards. What arouses my disgust at pirate sites is not that they’re there, but that they are cowards, operating safely and aiming only to take money. I’m not too old to climb. And I have the clothes, even a knife.

Fellow authors, I urge you to hit this site, find “your book page” and comment with this link too. Let’s really tell the pirates how much we appreciate them!

Just go to Glee Crooks De-Greases and find your title, then pingback here. Who they gonna’ sue?