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Saturday, May 31, 2025
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Spinsterella Goth Girl Summer Now Available In Paperback & E-readers Everywhere!
Spinsterella Goth Girl Summer is now available in Paperback at Amazon.com and in digital format on Kindle other online booksellers!
In the summer of the year 2000, Matilda Crowley is about to leave a dead-end job in the cubicles of The Pit at Amalgamated Consolidated. However, in order for her to get her dream job as a junior executive in its Events department, her boss George insists she take a vacation to use her unused vacation days. As she deals with a boss who doesn’t appreciate her and a boyfriend that doesn’t love her, Matilda gets a call from her brother Brody with an offer to work as a Goth model for the internet startup Gothshop.com in Los Angeles.
As Matilda uses her vacation days to become Gothshop’s spokesmodel, she ponders if this new career will lead to her to a road to greater success than she had in New York. Making an impact on the west coast Goth scene over the course of the summer, she finds success in the world of Goth modeling and an opportunity at finding love with a childhood crush. Will Spinsterella’s new career lead to her living happily ever after? Or will her new career in L.A’s Goth scene be a nightmare?
Spend your summer vacation in the macabre world of Goth modeling in the New Millenium with Matilda with a copy of Spinsterella Goth Girl Summer! Pick up your copy today at online booksellers!
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Art That Wasn't Published In Spinsterella Goth Girl Summer
As a publisher I try to give up and coming artists a chance. And as I try to give them a chance I commission art from them. Usually after seeing their samples, I’ll give them a job on some pin-up and interior art so I can get a sense of their style and to see if they’re a good fit for my characters and my stories. Sometimes it works out. Sometimes it doesn’t. And when it’s doesn’t I’m stuck with art I can’t use.
For my recent book Spinsterella Goth Girl Summer I commissioned several pieces from up and coming artists who solicited me on Facebook. I gave them a chance. Unfortunately the art didn't meet my standard like this amazing Des Taylor Cover.For my recent book Spinsterella Goth Girl Summer I commissioned several pieces from up and coming artists who solicited me on Facebook. I gave them a chance. Unfortunately the art didn’t meet my standard.
The first piece was from an artist who did the first ever Spinsterella commission. She did a great job on that piece. This one…Not so good. Composition is off, the colors are awful and it just wasn’t fit for print. It was supposed to be used as Matilda’s first modeling photos at Gothshop.com. But it looks like a picture that was overexposed. So I had to scrap it.
The Second piece was by another artist who I commissioned to do a picture of Matilda with no makeup. Now they did an okay job on it, but it just wasn’t right for the book. No Matter what I did to make this image fit the specs for the page it just looked odd.
The third piece came from the same artist. It’s a second piece I commissioned from them after they did a decent job on the first one. But this second one is awful. And I was gonna leave it on the hard drive, but I felt it’d be great for a bad photo used in a hastily made flyer for Goth Night later in the story. So I used it for that.
Now I don’t mind giving artists a chance. However, what I’ve found over the last year I have is that some folks who call themselves artists just are not passionate about their craft. They just want to grab some cash at the expense of a publisher. In the past I wanted to give opportunities to aspiring artists, but I’m gonna have to be a lot more selective about who I work with. I can’t afford to spend money with people who don’t take my business seriously. I don’t have time for people who can’t follow directions, are poor communicators, can’t consistently do a good job or don’t have their payment processors straight.
After all the drama I dealt with from artists who would solicit me, I’m no longer eager to give artists that break like I used to. The way I see it, if artists want a job, they need to produce work that’s up to standard. And usually the ones who produce work up to standard don’t have to come to me looking for work. I have to go to them and ask them if they’re available. I’d rather spend money on a quality piece of art I can publish than spend it on art that isn’t fit for publication.





