—and stand ready to help anybody who’s having trouble. A tip: easiest reader to handle is the Mobipocket reader or the Adobe pdf reader. Either one—just click on a .prc or .mobi file (for Mobipocket) on your computer, and if you have those readers installed on your computer, the reader window will pop up after a brief delay to load the book. Calibre requires a 3-step process, first clicking on an .epub file to bring Calibre up, 2 THEN clicking on the file title that should appear in the white window, 3. then clicking VIEW, and THEN your reader window comes up. I’ve got a walkthrough above, in the Page menu; I’ve got another on the Closed Circle site; and I’ll be online periodically today, happy to help anyone who’s unsure of the process or having trouble.

We had a nice New Year’s Eve; but this afternoon we’ve already had a day. I gave Jane a copy of Dragon Age for her New Year’s gift, and when she attempted to run it, the new HP laptop went dead. Not just froze—lost all its lights and went to a doorstop. Jane was quite rattled, since she has done an immense amount of cover work and text work on CC on that computer, and was not sufficiently backed up when this happened.
Well, I got online on my laptop, read the help files from HP, and it suggested the power source had just died, and to do a power-drain and start, with no battery, plugged into a different power supply: procedure worked. Jane started breathing again. I fed her a nice Captain and Lime, never mind it’s not the hour yet—and she tried the game again. Which froze as before—without taking out the power supply, however. Bummer. I owe her a nicer New Year’s gift. That one has been no fun at all. Score, one dead power supply, and an upset computer, with (now) a backup.

So…I wish that had gone differently. But at least the computer’s all right!

Note: Jane, like any good games-player, has not given up on Dragon Age: she’s got a query in to the company asking for a work-around for that demand for, of all silly things, a mouse-wheel, without which it wants to freeze solid. We’ll see. Does everybody have a mouse wheel? I think not. Sort of like feathers on a fish, in my case, since I have no mouse.