The Lost Ox

jbnbsn99

Well-Known Member
I've put my first toe in the water of self-publishing. As many of you know, I've been working on a novel for several years about the search for the Kouprey (hence my lovely avatar). I've tentatively put the book out there an Amazon's Kindle service.

A few ZooChatters have already read either the whole thing or bits of it.

If anyone is interested in more details message me, or if there's enough interest, I'll post a link to it on here.
 
"Sales Pitch"

In 1936, a French veterinarian working abroad in Cambodia sent a young calf of a forest ox to the brand new zoo in Paris. A year later, that animal was recognized as a new species never before seen by scientists. Since its discovery, the kouprey has remained an enigma. We have only had brief glimpses of the animal. In fact, there are only four known photographs of a living kouprey. Today, many believe that the kouprey is extinct. It was last glimpsed in the 1980s and last observed by scientists in the 1950s.

One man has spent his entire career searching for the animal. Dr. Byron MacDonald is a world renowned taxonomist and mammalian conservationist with many discoveries to his name, but he is haunted by the memory of the lost ox. His obsession has driven him, and in his quest he has abandoned everything and everyone that he loves.

Told from the point of view of his last ever grad student, the tale is an introspective look at the role of science and how humans are responsible for the planet. The characters the narrator encounters along his way not only contribute to the search for the kouprey, but also in the search to find himself.

The tale meanders from a failing and dysfunctional zoo in Texas, to a well-known university on the east coast, to the sophisticated museums of Paris, to the final climax in the forests of Cambodia where the shadow of war still lingers.
 
Just got this on my kindle - have to say at first glance it looks fascinating ( and well written ) about to start reading now ...
;)
 
how does the kindle thing work? Does Amazon pay you or do you pay them, and I guess people pay to get stories so do you get that money, or what?

Can you publish in book form or does Amazon now own it?
 
You put the book on Amazon for free in the Kindle version. I can unpublish it later if I get the chance to actually print the book. The author gets between 35 and 70% of the price depending on region and various other small print stuff.
 
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