The Evolution of Atlas: A Breeding (and Chat) Thread

We are in the 30's today. Feels so warm out. I can feel spring. Hopefully we get an early spring. A march warm up would be nice. Unfortunately we can get a lot of snow and cold into April, but weather isn't the same anymore, so maybe. ::fl

Birds are definitely feeling the increased light. Had to lock the oldest rooster up so he doesn't keep getting beat up. Let the young ones beat each other up instead. So far they are just focusing on the old one in the pen through the fence. Geese are getting much louder by the day too.
 
Every time I interact with Gunnar, my last remaining splash rooster, I think "Lisa would just love him." He is the sweetest, most precious boy and solidly on the bottom of the heap in dominance. Even crippled Forrest tries to beat him up all the time. I am so glad he appears to have been skipped by that weird, likely genetic thing that lost me Bodie, Axel and Dane. Sadly, he's about to turn 5 yrs old in April so I don't know how long he'll be with me. He is so adorable.
 
Angus will be fine. He just has a surplus of youthful energy. And spring is coming :wee
I agree. I think I was right to be leery of him at first, he's so big and bouncy, but I have a handle on his personality now. He's just a bundle of energy, but he's usually very obedient. When he sees me standing on the deck of my house and is out in the old garden area where they free range, he immediately starts for the pen and almost always goes inside when I tell him.
 
I am almost to publish date for Book #2 in the Clancy Mountain Series, hit a speed bump. Their A.I. review process for the manuscript went insane and said there was a problem, that it was not allowed to say "Printed in" or "Uses Recycled Paper"....neither of which I did, of course. So, I can't remove what isn't there. Because of all the fraudulent books written by A.I. bots, I had added a disclaimer that the book was written entirely from the author's own imagination, and the cover was designed by the author using a digitally-generated image, then refining the elements of it, the layout and manually adding cover typography. A.I. flagged my transparency statement that says I did not use A.I. to write this book and I designed the cover.

I need to get a human to get on it tomorrow so I am not held up for another two weeks, but once they straighten it out, we're good to go. I assume it was the word "typography" that sic'd their robots on me, giving it a false positive. I asked on the internet what would have caused them to flag the manuscript and they say it was the words "A.I." and "generated" though the meaning was the opposite of what the bots picked up. The A.I. internet gurus suggested I hide my transparency statement in the back of the book to make it less likely to be flagged. Say what? Hide a transparency statement, sheesh.
The cover is ready and I updated the cover for the first book to reflect that it is #1 in a series and to make the covers look cohesive, as if they are part of a set. I'm about 29K words into Book #3 now. The first book had 60K, the second 75K and I have no idea how long this one will be, maybe in between the first two in word count.
Would you like to see a preview of the cover for Book #2 and the revamped Book #1 cover?
 
Here you go, Mary, first look at both. These are the full wrap covers w/spine and back. Book One: Irises in September: An Unexpected Life
Book Two: Brewster's Farm: A Resolute Life
They won't be in retailers in this form for a bit. The ebook of the first one has the new cover, but the print cover is the old one at this point.
Hopefully, Book 2 will be available by the end of the month. It's still under review because the humans don't work weekends there.
I'm starting an "AuthorTube" channel on YouTube in addition to the main one, so I can have just the book news and other related stuff on there.
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FINAL Cover Feb 11.jpeg
 

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