The Meek

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The Meek

Meow.

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Bruce
Bruce
10 years ago

I usually cringe when I see lousy book covers. This one made me laugh. Thanks! I needed that.

So which one of those little guys is Brad?

James F. Brown
James F. Brown
10 years ago

Ripping off “The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957)”?

BTW, the wonderful closing monologue to the movie can be downloaded from YouTube:

youtube.com/watch?v=Bp3iHjGBfT4

S. A. Hunt
10 years ago
Reply to  James F. Brown

Nope.

It reads a bit like a cross between a survivalist TV show, a castaway story, and a 50’s drive-in sci-fi flick (only not the incredibly specific shrunken-man movie you specified in your knee-jerk trash-talking out of the literally dozens of other shrinking-man movies). The mechanic itself is tempered with a bit of fish-out-of-water humor reminiscent of the old Runaway Ralph and Stuart Little books.

If you actually read it–and you should, it’s good–you’d know. Are you a bad enough dude to overcome your prejudice? Or are you going to brick yourself up behind your first impression and ignore this comment?

Jen
Jen
10 years ago

I’d be feeling pretty meek too if I ran into a cat that big.

Jaha Knight
10 years ago

Just why?

Brenda
Brenda
10 years ago

…shall inherit the earth? Uh, maybe the meek will inherit the cat.

denise
10 years ago

More eeek! than meek!

S. A. Hunt
10 years ago

This is actually a really good book. It reads a bit like a cross between a survivalist TV show, a castaway story, and a 50’s drive-in sci-fi flick.

If everything you didn’t like was a rip-off of something you /do/ like, we’d all be in a world of shit, wouldn’t we?

Brad Poynter
10 years ago

Thanks for the unsolicited publicity.

To answer the questions posed;

Bruce : I am not in the book, I made it all up.

James F. Brown: No, but it’s a similar premise on a global catastrophe scale.

Jaha Knight: Because it hadn’t been done before and I wanted to do it. Oh, you mean why the cover. Well, it was the best I could do.

Brenda: Exactly. Some groups in the book believe that it is a fulfillment of biblical prophecy, while others believe it could be the precursor to an alien invasion or a secret experiment gone awry.

Whatever caused it, we don’t really fare well against our pets.

Thanks again!
Brad

SevenSapiens
10 years ago
Reply to  Brad Poynter

Here’s a thing. You should not do your cover yourself. You should pay someone to do it, so you could have an actually good cover.

S. A. Hunt
10 years ago
Reply to  SevenSapiens

While that’s true (and I’ve been trying to get him to let me make him a cover for quite a while), it doesn’t give you an excuse to sit here and talk trash about a book you’ve never read, behind the author’s oblivious back. This is petty as hell.

SevenSapiens
10 years ago
Reply to  S. A. Hunt

When exactly did I say *anything* about the book? When did *anyone* say anything about the book? Because I don’t see anyone talking about it anywhere here.

Brad Poynter
10 years ago
Reply to  SevenSapiens

Thank you for your advice. I am an old hillbilly from the hills of Arkansas, and raising three teenage daughters doesn’t leave much in the budget for pipe dreams. I did everything myself with the exception of editing, which I crowd-sourced, and I am proud of what I was able to accomplish on my own.

SevenSapiens
10 years ago
Reply to  Brad Poynter

Believe me, if you pay someone to make your cover (and you can do it for less than 30 bucks, or as low as 5 bucks, if you look for it), your book will certainly sell more, so you’ll profit more. You should just do it, no excuses.

Or, I don’t know, look for a friend with more talent in design than you, so they can make your covers for free (or almost for free). You probably have one.

I honestly wish you good luck.

S. A. Hunt
10 years ago

Like that James F. Brown guy up there talking about rip-offs of movies? I wouldn’t go behind your back and call your book a rip-off.

Stick to the cover and leave the premise alone.