Showing posts with label novels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label novels. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 December 2020

Thoughts on Writing 50 Novels

 Last week I hit a milestone in my writing career—I handed in my 50th novel. Novel #51 is in edits.

 

While it’s only a number, it did feel like an achievement. I came to writing late, when I was 30, so I’ve only had two decades of writing so far in my career. While that makes me feel like I’m always playing catch-up, it makes me work pretty hard too. I started out in journalism and moved into nonfiction books and professional blogging back when that was a thing. I dabbled in fiction writing during that time but only seven years ago did I get serious about writing novels and it became my bread and butter.

 

The majority of my novels have been written as a ghostwriter for various publishers and individual clients. While I have more than a dozen novels out under my own name, they do not sell enough to be my sole income. Instead, they act as a CV for my ghostwriting work, which fills out my income nicely.

 

So how do I feel about having written so many novels? Satisfied, I suppose, but putting it in perspective it isn’t all that big of a deal. One of my good friends is a contract attorney. He’s worked on more than 50 cases. The research, writing of briefs, consultation with clients, and court time must surely equal the amount of work that goes into a novel.

 

I also have a friend who is a dedicated long-distance runner. He’s run more than 50 marathons. I don’t know about you, but I’d rather write the novels!

 

These two people have a work ethic. They work continuously at law or running and over the years their achievements pile up. Having come to writing late, I’ve always looked at it as a job, and put in proper work hours. After all this time, the words have added up, and I didn’t even have to ruin my knees or go to law school to do it.

 

Besides satisfaction, I also feel grateful to all of you for reading my stuff. Without readers, a writer isn’t going to have much of a career. So thanks. I really do appreciate it.

 

See you later. I’m busy writing novels #52 and 53!

Monday, 1 January 2018

My Writing in 2017 and Looking Forward to 2018


Happy New Year! Well, at least if you use the Gregorian calendar like I do. It's been a busy year and I'm looking forward to an even busier one in 2018.
At the beginning of the year I set myself the challenge of writing a million words a year. I counted words the same way I did in 2016: fiction, nonfiction, and blogging all count. I also included editing at a ratio of 10:1, so editing 10,000 words counts as writing 1,000. I rounded down to the nearest 250 words.
So how did I do? I got to 927,000 words, up from 900,750 in 2016. So I missed my goal, but still had my best writing year to date. I'll be trying for the million mark again this year. We'll see how that goes.
Despite it being my best year, I was not entirely happy with my output. Much of it was ghostwriting, and while that certainly helped my bank account, it meant that no new titles came out under my name in 2017, a first in more than a decade. I also ended up in a higher income bracket and the taxman really nailed me.
I did have some successes. My neo-pulp mystery novel, The Case of the Purloined Pyramid, won the Kindle Scout program and got a contract with Kindle Press. The ebook edition comes out January 9 and the print edition later this month. I also got more than a third of the way through the next in the series, The Case of the Shifting Sarcophagus.
This year I'm making a concerted effort to work on more of my fiction. This will mean saying no to some ghostwriting offers, but I think it's best for my long-term career. Sales of my own books fell off sharply in 2017 because I wasn't bringing out more stuff, and that needs to change. In this new publishing world, visibility is the key. So, besides a million words for this year, here are some more resolutions I'll try to stick to:
Writing 1,000 words a day of my own fiction.
Writing a short story every month (more on that later).
Pitching a nonfiction article every month.
Getting more of my back list out in print, and sprucing up things like metatags and blurbs.
It's going to be a busy year!
If you're a writer, artist, or other creative type, how did your past year go? What are you plans for this one? Tell us in the comments section!

Thursday, 10 March 2016

Free Post-Apocalyptic Ebook!



For the next five days, through March 14, my post-apocalyptic science fiction novel Radio Hope is free on Amazon. This is the first of the Toxic World series, which has three books and a spin-off novella. Book Four is coming out in the early summer. Radio Hope, however, can also be read as a standalone novel. I'm not pulling you into some sort of crack dealer arrangement. :-) A blurb is below.

In a world shattered by war, pollution and disease. . .
A gunslinging mother longs to find a safe refuge for her son.
A frustrated revolutionary delivers water to villagers living on a toxic waste dump.
The assistant mayor of humanity's last city hopes he will never have to take command.
One thing gives them the promise of a better future--Radio Hope, a mysterious station that broadcasts vital information about surviving in a blighted world. But when a mad prophet and his army of fanatics march out of the wildlands on a crusade to purify the land with blood and fire, all three will find their lives intertwining, and changing forever.

Radio Hope is available on Amazon, Amazon UK, and all the other Amazons. Enjoy and please spread the word!

Wednesday, 2 December 2015

Insecure Writer's Support Group: Switching Genres

Here we are at another Insecure Writer's Support Group, where we air out our collective writerly angst to the world!

Today my topic is switching genres. I've done it before, having written science fiction, fantasy, horror, action/adventure, and western. For my latest book I'm switching genres again.

This time, though, it's a bigger leap. The Last Hotel Room is set in contemporary Tangier and takes on contemporary issues. It isn't speculative fiction like so many of my works. A marketer would probably label it as "literary" although I don't think that's a term an author should use on oneself.

I'm about halfway through the first draft and it's an interesting experience writing about a place where I often visit and dealing with issues that touch me like the refugee crisis. It's also a challenge to write a novel without any gun fights, magic, or spaceships! Whether or not it will work as a novel is still in question. It's also unclear if my readers will follow me that far from my usual path.

That's OK, I'm still writing plenty of the other stuff in 2016!

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Toxic World Book Two almost ready!

Book Two of my post-apocalyptic Toxic World series is almost ready for the readers. I'm doing final edits now and my cover designer is hard at work. It's titled Refugees from the Righteous Horde and picks up where Radio Hope left off. Like the previous book, it will follow the adventures of three main characters. Annette Cruz is back, now in her new role as sheriff of the Burbs. Good luck with that one, Annette!

You'll also be meeting two people from the Righteous Horde, everyone's favorite crazy cult. One went along with the mad crusade willingly, one didn't.

The book should come out in late June. Stay tuned!

Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Thursday, 2 August 2012

Trainspotting: Breaking the traditions of fiction and getting away with it

TrainspottingTrainspotting by Irvine Welsh

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


This book has been talked about so much that I'm not going to do a standard review. Instead I'm going to write about my reaction to it as a writer.

Like many great books, Trainspotting succeeds partially because it breaks so many conventions yet still manages to keep you turning the pages. There's a common consensus among contemporary writers that you shouldn't write in heavy dialect. This, they say, slows the reader down and risks disengaging them from the text. The first few pages of Trainspotting are pretty heavy going with all the Scottish dialect and slang, but Irvine Welsh is a good enough craftsman that I got used to it after a time. The dialect also lends a certain unfamiliarity to the whole thing, as if we've stepped into a different world. In a sense that's true, because the world these petty thieves and junkies inhabit is very far away from the one most of us are familiar with.

Another writer's myth this book shatters is that short story collections don't become bestsellers. Although marketed as a novel, Trainspotting is actually a short story collection. Some of the stories were previously published in various magazines. The stories hang together well with their shared cast of charactes, although there are a couple of outliers that, while good reading in and of themselves, aren't really crucial to the main narrative.

Another myth buster comes with Welsh's characters. Writers are always saying that the characters have to be likeable, or at least have a few redeeming qualities. I could find nothing likeable about any of these folks except for one female character who only appears in two tales. The characters were, in fact, so unlikeable that they drew me in and I couldn't stop turning the pages.

Trainspotting is a modern classic that shows that there are no rules in fiction, only traditions. Welsh is a great enough writer that he can shatter these traditions and still be embraced by mainstream readers.
View all my reviews

Saturday, 21 January 2012

My Civil War novel A Fine Likeness on sale for only $2.99. Happy Valentine's Day!

Um. . .isn't Valentine's Day February 14? Yes it is, but I love my readers so much I've decided to celebrate early. From now until the day after Valentine's Day (Feb. 15) I'm discounting my Civil War novel A Fine Likeness to $2.99.

My novel has been out two months now and I've received some wonderful reviews and a modest number of sales. I'd like to increase both by offering this discount. I love getting new readers!

I also love my existing readers, so if you've already purchased A Fine Likeness at full price, here's a deal for you: I'll send you a complimentary copy of my short story collection The Night the Nazis Came to Dinner and other dark tales. Just email me at seansontheweb (at) yahoo (dot) com and answer this question about the book: what Union officer was entrusted to guard Rocheport? (Hint: he did a really crappy job!).

I love my readers!

Friday, 16 December 2011

Deja-Vu Blogfest: My thoughts on my page 99

Today I'm participating in the Deja-Vu blogfest, where everyone revives one of their favorite old posts. This one is from more than a year ago and concerns my Civil War novel A Fine Likeness, which back then was still unpublished.

Ford Madox Ford suggested that if you want to know how good a book is, you should "open the book to page ninety-nine and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you."

A new website plans to let aspiring and published authors upload page 99 of their work for public scrutiny. The Page 99 Test isn't running yet, so I've decided to jump the gun and post page 99 of my Civil War horror novel A Fine Likeness here to see how it stands up. Regular readers of this blog will know that this novel made it to the finals of Dorchester and ChiZine's Fresh Blood contest before losing. Oddly enough, five months on, the novel's fan page is still attracting hits. The manuscript currently squats malevolently in ChiZine's submissions pile.

So here's page 99. Let me know what you think. I'll post my own thoughts in my next post.

“This the right way?” Hugh asked.

“’Course it’s the right way,” Morgan said. “You think I don’t know where I’m going?”

“Don’t seem the right way,” Hugh said.

“It ain’t,” Elijah replied.

“Shut your mouth,” Morgan said, looking around at the woods uncertainly. “What’s that old devil thinking making us come all the way out here for anyways? Why didn’t we meet back at his cabin?”

“Probably afraid we’d get followed,” the Kid said.

“Damn it, we should have made that road by now. He said head north five miles and we’d hit it,” Morgan grumbled.

“We would have if we’d gone north,” Elijah said.

“Course we’ve been going north!” Morgan shouted. “We’ve been going north the entire time, haven’t we Jimmy?”

Jimmy didn’t reply, looking down at the ground as the Kid led his horse.

“Don’t ask him nothing,” Elijah said. “He’s been told his end and that’s a hard thing to take. And we ain’t been going north the whole time. When we took off from the Schmidt place, remember how we cut along that streambed? That made us move east a ways before we straightened out. We’ve passed the road.”

Morgan frowned at him, not wanting to believe, but he knew as well as the rest of them that Elijah never got lost in the woods.

“Jimmy, what do you think?” Morgan asked, bringing his horse alongside him.

“I don’t know what to believe,” Jimmy said.

Monday, 14 February 2011

Writing links: travel writing contest and getting published with academic presses

It's Monday and I'm in my usual post-book slump, having finished Ride Around Missouri: Shelby's Great Raid 1863. It's my latest American Civil War book for Osprey Publishing and as you can see from the link it's already available for preorder and at least one fine person has already preordered it! I've discussed here before why readers preorder books. It's a sign of loyalty and interest, and I'm glad they show that!

Enough blather about this Midlist Author. I promised some writing links. Transitions Abroad is running a travel writing contest that's well worth a look if you are a student writing about travel. You can win up to $500 plus publication!

The other link comes from fellow writer Dianna Graveman, who recently attended a panel on getting published by the academic press. She gave a link to a post by Beth Mead, Lindenwood University's MFA Program Director took notes on the publishers' panel that are well worth a read for anyone writing literary fiction and thinking of submitting to an academic press.

Monday, 29 November 2010

Websites for Writers: Piers Anthony

It's Monday, so it's time for another website for writers. Today we're looking at Hi Piers, the official homepage of Piers Anthony.

In the unlikely event you haven't heard of him, Piers Anthony is a longtime author in many genres. He's most famous for the Xanth series of humorous fantasy, but he's also written science fiction, horror, and an increasing amount of erotica.

Piers has seen it all, and luckily for us tells it all. He's famous in the writing community for tangling with editors and even suing when he felt he was being wronged. Because of this, he's been blacklisted by many publishers. He says that no major house is interested in his work except for the bestselling Xanth series. To make sure his several novels a year see the light of day, he has resorted to various small presses and epublishers.

Of greatest practical use to aspiring writers is his no-holds-barred review of epublishers and vanity presses that he updates every month. Cheated writers often tell him their stories, which he then posts online, although he's always fair-handed when it appears the writer has unrealistic expectations of their publisher.

For inspiration, check out the section on books by Piers Anthony. He's published more than 140 in the past 50 years! This is what persistence and a solid work ethic will get you.

Also of interest is his newsletter, where he talks about his life, what he's reading, and his views on publishing. At times his views of the publishing industry seem to me to be overly negative, but then again he's been in this crazy business forty years more than I have, so maybe I'll feel that way some day. He's also a strong advocate of self-publishing, once being a co-owner of Xlibris. In his latest newsletter he states, "I think of mutation, wherein 99% of the changes may be deleterious, even lethal, but the 1% that survive power the forward evolution of all living things. We would not be here today without mutation. Editors reject 99%, but the 1% they accept is not necessarily the best; natural selection operates imperfectly in publishing. So yes, we need self publishing, even if it is 99% bad, for the sake of the 1% that may otherwise be lost."

Good point, but I think that for most writers self-publishing is a bad idea.

While I don't always agree with what Piers has to say, I always check out his newsletter and value his insights. It's rare to find a writer so brutally honest about the business.

Saturday, 13 November 2010

Good advice for writers

A while back I interviewed fellow midlist author Kathryn Meyer Griffith, who gave some insights into her 25+ years of work in the business. Now she's given another interview over at Dasef Central, a fun blog I'd never stumbled upon before. There are so many it's easy to miss the good ones!

Check out this interview for some great writing advice from someone who has been at it longer than many aspiring writers have been alive. Like me, she doesn't gloss over the bad stuff. For example, "I’ve had publishers go bankrupt. . .in the middle of my book editing, had a book pulled (after the final proofing, cover done) six weeks away from going to the bookshelves, agent dumping me, long stretches – 9 years once – when I couldn’t get anything published anywhere and a hundred other fears. Awful covers, awful editors. Cruel reviews. On and on. Too many to list here. Never writer’s block, though. So now nothing scares me….much."

Ouch! Been there, survived that. I like the comment about writer's block. I don't get writer's block either. So head on over to Dasef Central and check out what it's really like to be an author, and then come on back here for more midlist grumbling. We love our job, really!

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Another reason people buy books

I overheard an interesting conversation the other day. Two women were talking about Nora Roberts' new release.

One said to the other, "I tried to reserve it at the library but there were seventeen people on the list. It would take months to get it so I just went out and bought it."

"I don't usually buy books but I would in that case," the other replied.

A waiting list for popular books is nothing new at a local library, and the standard practice is to buy more than one copy of popular titles in order to reduce the wait. What I didn't realize, however, is that some frustrated readers won't wait to read it for free and will go out and buy a bestseller so they can have instant gratification!

Nothing succeeds like success. . .

Friday, 1 October 2010

My thoughts on my page 99

As I mentioned in my post on What the Blogger Stats Page tells You about your Blog, I like to check out the data relating to Midlist Writer. In my last post I presented page 99 of my novel and asked for input. More than fifty of you read the thing but only one person left a comment. That just goes to show how many lurkers there are on the average blog! I'd really be curious to know what my readers in Colombia and Latvia think of my writing.

Anyway, thanks for the input, Sioux.

This scene shows our young band of Confederate bushwhackers riding through the woods of mid-Missouri after killing a Unionist civilian. They had never killed a civilian before but did it because they were told he was a spy who had gotten a local secessionist hanged. There's more to this, of course, and the ramifications of their actions power the rest of the novel. It's interesting that this page shows Jimmy, one of the two protagonists besides Union Captain Richard Addison, in an entirely passive role. He's usually in charge of the bushwhacker gang but he's so stunned at what they've done that he's momentarily given up trying. He will be given another chance to step back and wash his hands later in the book, and his choice will determine the ending.

So is this a good page? Well, it does have tension, and gives a bit of insight into some of the characters, but I'm not entirely happy with the Southern dialect. That's a tricky thing to get right, especially the Missouri dialect. Plus I have to put it back into the 1860s. It's something I'm still working on.

So. . .if any of you lurkers out there want to post page 99 of your novel on your blog, feel free to put the link in my comments section. I'll be sure to read it and give my two cents' worth.

Wednesday, 29 September 2010

The Page 99 Test

Ford Madox Ford suggested that if you want to know how good a book is, you should "open the book to page ninety-nine and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you."

A new website plans to let aspiring and published authors upload page 99 of their work for public scrutiny. The Page 99 Test isn't running yet, so I've decided to jump the gun and post page 99 of my Civil War horror novel A Fine Likeness here to see how it stands up. Regular readers of this blog will know that this novel made it to the finals of Dorchester and ChiZine's Fresh Blood contest before losing. Oddly enough, five months on, the novel's fan page is still attracting hits. The manuscript currently squats malevolently in ChiZine's submissions pile.

So here's page 99. Let me know what you think. I'll post my own thoughts in my next post.

“This the right way?” Hugh asked.

“’Course it’s the right way,” Morgan said. “You think I don’t know where I’m going?”

“Don’t seem the right way,” Hugh said.

“It ain’t,” Elijah replied.

“Shut your mouth,” Morgan said, looking around at the woods uncertainly. “What’s that old devil thinking making us come all the way out here for anyways? Why didn’t we meet back at his cabin?”

“Probably afraid we’d get followed,” the Kid said.

“Damn it, we should have made that road by now. He said head north five miles and we’d hit it,” Morgan grumbled.

“We would have if we’d gone north,” Elijah said.

“Course we’ve been going north!” Morgan shouted. “We’ve been going north the entire time, haven’t we Jimmy?”

Jimmy didn’t reply, looking down at the ground as the Kid led his horse.

“Don’t ask him nothing,” Elijah said. “He’s been told his end and that’s a hard thing to take. And we ain’t been going north the whole time. When we took off from the Schmidt place, remember how we cut along that streambed? That made us move east a ways before we straightened out. We’ve passed the road.”

Morgan frowned at him, not wanting to believe, but he knew as well as the rest of them that Elijah never got lost in the woods.

“Jimmy, what do you think?” Morgan asked, bringing his horse alongside him.

“I don’t know what to believe,” Jimmy said.

Sunday, 29 August 2010

Writing advice from William S. Burroughs

While hiking the East Highland Way this month I carried The Western Lands by William S. Burroughs in my backpack. Every good hike needs a good book! One passage struck me as good advice for writers, told in typical Burroughs style.

"Cheat your landlord if you can and must, but do not try to shortchange the muse. It cannot be done. You can't fake quality any more than you can fake a good meal."

Well put!

Thursday, 10 June 2010

New horror from Damnation Books

At the stroke of midnight on June 1, Damnation Books released its third catalog of horror ebooks and POD publications.

Barely a year old, Damnation Books has already made a name for itself in dark fiction, showcasing many new and veteran writers. They're also planning to rerelease out-of-print novels by long-established authors such as Kathryn Meyer Griffith.

This season's selection has a wide range of books, from historical to contemporary, grim to humorous. As a historical writer myself (both in fiction and nonfiction) I like that there are so many historical pieces. I got myself Vasilov's Demon, set during the Russian Revolution, and Dead of Night, which includes undead bushwhackers. Having used bushwhackers in my own (unpublished) horror novel, I'm interested to see how author C.M. Saunders handles them. I also bought the modern psychological thriller Desiree and the quirky Painter's Green.

All books are discounted for a limited time, so head on over to Damnation Books to get some great deals on great stories. While you're over there check out my own horror short--Dannevirke.

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Interview with paranormal author Yolanda Sfetsos

Today here at Midlist Writer we're interviewing Yolanda Sfetsos, a talented author with several titles to her credit. Like many writers, she works in a variety of genres but her stories have a common thread of the paranormal.

1) Tell us a little bit about yourself and what you write.

Well, my name is Yolanda and I live in a suburb of Sydney, Australia, with my husband, daughter, and cat. I spend most of my time writing stories, thinking about ideas, developing them, researching, and revising them to an inch of their lives.

I write in a variety of genres, but every one of my stories has an element of the paranormal. There’s always something otherworldly lurking in the shadows. I enjoy stepping into those shadows, and delving into dark-edged stories with characters who find themselves caught up in this darkness.

Of course, I don’t spend all of my time in front of the computer, so when I manage to step away, I enjoy spending time with my family. I also love going for daily walks, working out, watching movies, TV shows, and anime. As well as reading, I love to read!


2) What inspired you to write BOUNDLESS: Book Three of the Alyce Kerr, Faith Healer Trilogy?

The inspiration for this story--which happens to be the last one in Alyce’s trilogy--was the other two stories. Seriously, the more time I spent in Alyce’s dark world, the more I wanted to write it. It was almost like all I needed was a paragraph to get my creative juices flowing.


3) What attracts you to write about the paranormal?

Oh, I love everything paranormal/supernatural. Even when I come up with a storyline that seems normal, something paranormal eventually turns up. I can’t help it. My ears perk up whenever I hear about new paranormal books, movies, or shows.

I think it all started when I was pretty young. I was one of those kids who didn’t turn away from a scary movie; it intrigued me. I also happened to be that teenage girl who loved horror movies, and enjoyed labeling herself as a ‘horror freak’. I encouraged my friends to go and watch scary movies all the time.

It’s an attraction I haven’t been able to fight. I can’t help wondering about what lies beyond our world, and choose to let my imagination go wild with the possibilities.


4) Where can we find you online?

This is where you can find me:

Website: http://www.yolandasfetsos.com/
Blog: http://ysfetsos.blogspot.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/yolandasfetsos
Newsletter: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/yolandasfetsos/
LiveJournal: http://yolandasfetsos.livejournal.com/
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/yolandasfetsos

I also blog on the 18th of every month at the RomErotica Writers Blog.

Thanks so much for having me over here today, Sean!

Wednesday, 12 May 2010

Small Press Profile: Atomic Fez, pt. 2

Yesterday I posted the first part of an interview with Ian Martin, the publisher of Atomic Fez, a new Canadian publishing company. Today Ian talks about what he wants to see in a submission, what it's like to work with Kobo, and what's coming up next for Atomic Fez!

Of course any potential author should read your submissions guidelines, but beyond what it says there, what really brings the Atomic Fez to critical mass?

This one's tough to answer. Do you mean 'what should a writer include in their pitch to ensure they get the best chance of being published?' If that's it, then the answer is "single malt whiskey is a damned good start; failing that, a case of wine."

If there's anything I won't publish, it's probably poetry, as I'm the wrong guy to be marketing it. There's huge chunks of Ray Bradbury's writing that's verging on prose poetry, especially in Something Wicked This Way Comes, and that very much affects me when I'm reading it. But 'actual poetry' is something that doesn't seem to move me. I can analyze it, or read it aloud, or recognize and respect the influences in it; but emotionally it doesn't do enough for me that I can be enthusiastic about it and sell it to people. Obviously I'm not the right person to be publishing someone's poetry if I can't get behind it enough to promote it. Put those words to music and I'm all over it! But Joe Jackson hasn't e-mailed me about doing a collection of his lyrics yet. Also, no teenage vampire romances. Please. No. Really, I mean it. Go away now or I will take a knife and stab you in the face. Don't make me come over there. . .


What three books would you have really liked to have published if you had been given the chance?

Golly. . .I could point to every book on my shelf and say it would have been great to publish it.
There are some specific authors' works I'd probably want to have had the initial release of, and none of them due to their sales figures.

Ray Bradbury's stuff is so very finely written and thought provoking, it would have been great to have been releasing that sort of material right at the start when it was so very 'edgy'.
Christopher Fowler's work is the same in some ways to Bradbury's, certainly with early titles like Roofworld, Psychoville, and Soho Black. Although they're far less political in nature, they certainly take the ordinary quality of every-day life and introduce an outside force, or foreign aspect to things, which really is effective. He's also a dear friend, so I'm likely biased as a result. He's got a wonderful handle on telling a story that mixes historical facts and legends into settings that are 'today' without being too specific to their year of release, so they have lasting appeal. It's like any good writing: it has to be about characters and human nature, and that is always something people can connect with.

Jules Verne's Around the World in Eighty Days is a favourite of mine that would have been grand to have published, just due to its romantic presentation of travel in general, as well as the vast block of information it provides about world cultures as well as the attitudes of the west about 'foreigners'.

Ngaio Marsh's series of classic English mysteries would be nice as well, just so that I could have a complete set as a result. I'd also have been tempted to encourage a broader range of structure to her writing. There are a bunch of them which, if read in succession, demonstrate a sameness that almost makes things too predictable. I love them, and they're great reading, but they might have had a bit more variety than they did, and this may be why she's not quite as widely known than she is.

Terry Pratchett's 'Discworld' series is phenomenal as well, and the new Transworld / Corgi covers finally present the books with the class they deserve, especially as the images on the covers add an ominous frisson of what may occur inside the book. Just to work with someone writing stories as entertaining and intelligently funny as that would be awesome. They're also a great 'gateway drug' to get people to re-think their attitudes about what 'fantasy' is like, so that's attractive as well. Jasper Fforde's stuff is the same thing to my mind: although his alternate universes are considerably different in nature to Pratchett's, he's got the same knack for the satire and absurdity which life presents, and that's fantastic stuff.

You’re offering your books through Kobo. What’s it like working with the new kid on the block?

All of the books Atomic Fez publishes are released through Kobo, as well as in 'dead tree' format, and will continue to be so. Having signed up with them when they were called "Shortcovers", this is something I've approached thoughtfully. I've also set-up ZIP-files with multiple formats of e-book files for purchase on the web-site if people would rather manage their own e-books, instead of using the Kobo platform.

Don't get me wrong, I'm fully committed to both the traditional and 'space-age' versions of books, because there's no chance of paperback and hard-cover books disappearing anytime soon; there's far too much infrastructure invested in their distribution and ownership, for one thing. That said, there's no denying the convenience of e-books is much the same as the true 'pocket books' of the 1940s and '50s had, and who could deny the inherent ecological approach to having books without the killing of trees, wasteful packaging and shipping, and the ease of getting the authors' words into the brain-pans of readers?

Working with Kobo is great. Honestly, I've not got a single complaint. Their splitting away from Chapters/Indigo Books and Music so they can be their own, autonomous company was smart, and they did it in a very intelligent way: by making Indigo a parent company along with Borders in the USA, the antipodean REDgroup Retail, and Cheung Kong Holdings owned by Li Ka-shing. With those industry leaders behind them, they're getting doors opened that most companies wouldn't get near. Kobo's approach of making electronic books available on any device you happen to be using — smart-phone, Kindle, iPad, Sony Reader, Kooler Reader, Blackberry, Palm — and making it possible for you to switch between any of those you're using and not lose your place, is so very intelligent. Buy a book from the iBookstore, and you can read that on your iPad and that's about it. The Kindle is pretty-much the same again: buy the e-book from Amazon in Kindle format, read it on your Kindle, and you're stuck. With Kobo, you can mix and match to your heart's content, always syncing with the account, and now you can even add their wildly inexpensive e-reader to the mix.

Okay, I'm starting to sound like a commercial now, but honestly Kobo is the bomb! If they had been running about five years ago, people wouldn't be talking about the iPad being a 'Kindle killer', the Apple boys would be marketing it as the 'Kobo killer'. One of the basic needs anyone has with electronic books over paper books is "what happens to all of my books if I lose my reader?" If you invest hundreds of dollars in e-books, you don't want lose all of it just because your cat knocked the device onto the floor, shattering the screen. The way Kobo is set up, your device has a copy of the book's file, but you also have constant access to another copy on their site; so if you lose your device, that's all you're going to have to replace, not the content as well. Brilliant!

I predict really good things will happen for Kobo. They've got a smart approach to things, because they're making it easy for the readers to get what they want without any technological hassles, as well as keeping things fair for the authors and publishers. Other outfits will end up using Kobo as the model to shift to, I'm certain of it.

What’s coming up next for Atomic Fez?
Only the finest of experts' made-up stuff! Prepare yourselves for lots of really yummy book goodness! At the moment I'm working on a few things in the back room, but until things are set in stone, any specifics will remain there. It's important to get publishing dates, titles, and the rest of it fully locked-down before announcing any of it. I can safely say that there will be many more books to come over quite a long time, however. I'm working on a long schedule basis, and will not be disappearing for the foreseeable future.

Unless I get hit by a bus. That would probably be tough to overcome.

Tuesday, 11 May 2010

Small Press Profile: Atomic Fez

Welcome to Small Press Profile, an occasional series here at Midlist Writer focusing on, you guessed it, small presses! Today we're speaking with Ian Martin, publisher of Atomic Fez, a new fiction publisher out of Canada that recently came out with their first catalog of four books. I met Ian at Odyssey 2010 last month.

OK, first thing’s first — what’s with the name?

At some point I ought to come up with a snappy one-liner to explain it, but haven't so far. I've always had a thing for fezzes, mostly because I've always associated them with the late-1950s and early '60s 'lounge' period. As a lover of Jazz and martinis, it isn't an odd thing to also love the brimless headgear, to my mind. The same period of history was a time of great optimism and open-mindedness regarding art and culture. Books were a part of everyday life in the same way that movies, television, painting, and theatre were. People generally were looking forward, searching for better ways to do things, new solutions to old challenges, and alternative ways of thinking which might provide further growth in technological and cultural advancement. There were some daft ideas that came up—nuclear-powered stoves, a continued policy of racial segregation, communist witch-hunts, the embracing of the Monroe Doctrine which purports that it is America's destiny to police-force the world from 'tyranny'—but on the whole, while things may not have been better then, things were getting better or people were looking to find ways to make them so. This period is often termed 'the atomic age', mostly due to the widespread acceptance of atomic power as the new source of cheap, clean, and long-lasting energy.

Besides, who doesn't love something with the word 'atomic' attached to it? Naming anything an "Atomic __________" is the way to make it way retro-cool, isn't it?

This optimism; this feeling of joy and possibility; this heady amalgam of a pro-active, open-minded approach to problem solving using a "let's try…" mind-set instead of the current "we can't…"; this is the place from which Atomic Fez approaches decisions and planning. The road to success is not paved with constant victory, but only by trying things does one make any movement at all. We learn from making mistakes, but we must risk making them by trying things in order to make that success.

So, basically, Atomic Fez is 'fun', 'future', and 'optimism' directed, but very much has its tongue firmly planted in its cheek.

The first reaction everyone had when I tried the word out them was the same: they smiled, no matter what their age, gender, sense of humour, or taste in fiction. I knew I had nailed it.


Everyone’s talking about the crisis in the economy, the crisis in publishing, etc., etc. What made you decide to launch a new publishing venture in such troubled waters?

Warren Buffet, probably the single-most influential financial analyst in the world today, repeatedly says that the best time to do something is when everyone else isn't; sell when people are buying, buy when people are selling, be fiscally conservative when people are throwing their money around like water. By the point everyone realizes 'the right time' to do something has come along, you're already doing it and others have to catch up to you. This seems to be the best thing I can do with what talents are available. My father went into university expecting to graduate a pharmacist, yet ended-up with a B.Ed. with which he taught high School Geography, and now he's in upper-management of one of Canada's largest ground-based shipping and long-haulage companies. Those sound entirely unrelated, but if you work through the flow of his progress with all the additional steps and details, you see all of those dissimilar bits of experience add up to him being perfect for the position in which he now finds himself.

I'm no different. Why a publishing venture? Because it's right for me; it's right for now, because no one else really is doing it; and it's what will make sense to have done at this point when looked from the future in a decade's time.

The key to avoid the 'crisis in publishing', as well as any 'economical crisis', is to examine the old models of how to do things, stack them up against the ways that how things ought to be or need to be done in order to be ecologically sensitive and economically intelligent, then mix and match while keeping an ear to the ground for new technological advances that permit 'doing more with less'. Being small helps, as the internal structure of any large company is the single biggest stumbling block to any fundamental change to how things get done. People's minds are often the most difficult thing to alter, and the luxury any small press outfit has over the large publishing houses—and they're the ones who will be hurt the most with this 'crisis', if that's even the right term—is that publishing and budgeting schedules are not locked in stone. Getting a story from writer to store shelf is easily a three-year process with a large publisher. Marketing campaigns, editing, production stages, shipping of inventory, all of them very much rely on each other to begin or reach completion at very specific times. For a real 'sea change' to take place, the resultant alteration of a publishing processes would require at least those same three years to filter down through the complete schedule. This is why the rapidly changing publishing processes have first been embraced by the small press houses, where the methods are more protean in nature. Adaptation is our day-to-day activity. It's not that the large, multinational publishing houses such as Random House or Simon & Schuster will not change to adapt to the new economy, they just cannot do so overnight; much like steering an ocean liner requires factoring in proceeding in a straight line for miles before the ship responds to the wheel being turned. If they can hold on long enough to permit the new ways of accomplishing things filtering through the system, they will survive. If not, they won't.

I don't see the small press picking up all the trade the big houses have now; the headaches involved in satisfying that size of a market are astronomical, for one thing. The future is to locate the people that like the kind of books that particular publisher releases, in however narrow a niche that may be.

There are lots of small press genre publishers. How will Atomic Fez stand out?

Beyond the name, it's the approach of Atomic Fez which will be unique, probably. The 'niche' I'm looking at isn't one specific 'genre', nor is it exclusively 'genre' (a term many agree is more confusing than clarifying). As with music, categories in fiction may have served a purpose at one time, but no longer do so. Terry Pratchett writes comedic stories based in an alternate Elizabethan-aged world with a dollop of modern technology, there are wizards and dragons all over the place, and throughout the thing are references to late-20th Century popular culture which are used in conjunction with character types to make social commentary on modern society.

Now is that "Fantasy"? The dwarfs, dragons, and magic suggest so. It's an alternate reality, though; perhaps it's "SF"? Some of the stories involve solving a case of murder or intrigue, bordering on English police procedurals, so should those ones be placed in "Mystery"? Then again, the comedic social satire suggests it ought to be in "Fiction (General)", as does the inclusion of all the literary allusions to Shakespeare, the Bronte sisters, and so on.
Arthur Conan Doyle mostly wrote horror stories, and even attempted to focus on those exclusively by killing Sherlock Holmes off at one point. The public screamed until he brought Holmes back again, leaving Doyle known almost entirely as a 'mystery writer'. In fact, The House of the Baskervilles is considered by some to be the finest of the stories featuring the detective, yet Holmes doesn't show up until well past the midway point, there's not much of a mystery to be solved, and the only thing anyone has to accomplish is the actual defeat of the beast itself; making this a fantastic horror story, and not a Sherlock Holmes mystery at all (except that Holmes and Watson are in the damned thing).

I could go on and on about how categories of fiction only make sense to marketing departments, so please stop me now. More than likely everyone's heard all this before, has agreed to everything said, reorganized their own shelves accordingly, and wonders why the discussion has continued for so many years now. The catalogue I'm building with Atomic Fez doesn't specifically get built with cross-category material in mind, or even with an eye to "the big publishers would call that a 'hard to market' title". The titles are selected because they are well-written stories, which I think are worth people spending some time enjoying. That 'broad swath' of selection is something which is very subjective; tastes vary wildly between one person and another, and that's a very good thing. While there's no intention to create a list of titles which could be called "safely appealing to everyone", there's not a specialization in any one story type either.
I'm all about making well-written books available, without relying on any one fiction type or specialty collector's editions.

Your first catalog manages to pack quite a range in just four books—grim horror, humor, erotica, and noir, often with more than one of these elements in the same book! Will future catalogs be this varied and is there anything you won’t publish?

Well, 'erotica' isn't quite the right term for John Llewellyn Probert's collection, which I presume you're referring to. Wicked Delights has a certain amount of reliance on the stories' common theme of sex, but it's only a thread which runs through the collection to bind it together. There's actually one story that hasn't so much as a reference to kissing in it, but there is an off-hand reference to a wedding, which is its sole, vague connection to the act of the carnal embrace.
Chances are the future will hold more of the same eclecticism, yes. If there's any one thing that does come up a bit more than anything else with the books selected, it's a bit of humour. You need some levity in order to make the downward shift of horror or anything akin to shock make any impression. Without some light, it's tough to see how dark the shadows are, if you will.
I'm leery about publishing nonfiction, purely because it's such a small market, and the material is often something less than 'a fun read'. It's certainly possible that nonfiction will appear in the catalogue, but it would be a specific project that would win me over; a specific topic or subject matter would do it, but until that comes along, there's no rush.

Is there any difference between running a small press in Canada and one in the United States?

Yes and no. The USA has more people in it than the Dominion of Canada does, obviously, and there seems to be a more open attitude to readers listening to any sort of marketing there — Canadians are very wary of any promotional style, while Americans listen with an informed ear and filter as they see fit—but other than that, not really.

If there is one difference on the production side, it's the ability to print and bind books for less money there than in Canada. Importing US-produced volumes isn't an answer, due to the customs duties on them leveling the playing field. As a result, the North American printings are done in Manitoba for the most part.

E-books do seem to be far more accepted in the USA, however. I'm not sure why, though, unless Canada's got so much damned space in it we don't need to worry about miniaturization until we start filling up the Prairies with our stored belongings.

There certainly is a difference between the acceptance of anything which is tainted with 'horror' when you compare the United Kingdom with North America. In the UK, horror is only now becoming acceptable after several decades of being almost 'the genre which cannot speak its name'. North America, on the other hand, only had a brief period in the 1980s and early '90s when the 'slasher films' gave horror a bad reputation. But, as with anything, the pendulum has to swing to its extreme before it comes back again; it's just swinging a little slower in the UK than on this continent.
Coming up tomorrow: the second part of the interview where Ian tells us what he wants to see in a submission, what it's like to work with Kobo, and what's coming up next for Atomic Fez!

Monday, 12 April 2010

Still in the running for a publishing contract

My Missouri Civil War horror novel A Fine Likeness is still in the running for a publishing contract. It's a finalist in Dorchester Publishing's Fresh Blood Contest. After making it through the slush pile, I and the other eight finalists had our first chapters analyzed by the judges. Only five made it over that hurdle, and now it's up to the public to decide.

For this round the public is judging cover copy, often called the back cover blurb. The judges were pretty positive with mine, although they made some fair criticisms. Drop on by the contest website and check it out. If you like my stuff you can vote by sending an email to freshblood (at) chizinepub (dot) com with the subject line "Fresh Blood Vote: A Fine Likeness by Sean McLachlan". You should get a confirmation that you voted. Voting ends this Wednesday, April 14.

I've put a lot of work and research into this novel, which inserts supernatural horror into real history. Jesse James even gets a bit part. I'd love to see it get into print!

You can also check out the book's fanpage here.
Looking for more from Sean McLachlan? He also hangs out on the Civil War Horror blog, where he focuses on Civil War and Wild West history.

You can also find him on his Twitter feed and Facebook page.