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Lurking Musings

~ Musings of a newly published writer

Lurking Musings

Tag Archives: guest posts

[Guest Post] What it feels like to be published by Julie Schriver

18 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

bbw romance, BBW Romance writers, guest blogging, guest posts, Julie Schriver, Love by Proxy, mundania press, paranormal romance, Publication, romance writers, Shades of Love, writing


Today we have a guest post from Julie Schriver who is another of the authors contributing to the Shades of Love anthology and a member of the BBW Romance Writers group. Her story, Love by Proxy, is out now and available from this link. 

Hello, my name is Julie Schriver, and this is my very first  blog post. Hopefully, it won’t turn out to be just a confusing jumble of thoughts.

First off, I want to say thank you to David for allowing me a small voice on here.  You’re very kind to invite me to make a guest post, and I’ll do my best to not make myself look like an idiot.

As has been posted about previously, I am a part of the group of writers who has, with much hard work, frustration, and ultimately elation, finally realized the end goal of our endeavors.  Our paranormal romance anthology is being published by Mundania Press.  One story is being released per month, and later on all of the stories will be put together in one anthology.

For me, this journey has been an incredibly educational one.  I could fill a book with the things I have learned from the talented people I’ve come into contact with while being a part of this project.  I will be forever grateful for having known and worked with them, and I hope we will continue to remain friends even after this collaboration is behind us.

This will be the first time I’ve had anything published, (Thank you, Mundania!), but I’ve been writing, mostly for my own pleasure, since high school.  It’s always been something I’ve truly enjoyed, although I never dreamed I would actually write anything that other people would want to read.  The stories that I write are a part of me, not in a biographical sense, per se, but they have been wrung from my imagination.  For this reason, I was always too timid to share my “brain children” with anyone.  Joining the BBWRomanceWriters group and jumping into this project was a big step for me in overcoming my fears and putting myself out there.  Truly, it’s been one of the best decisions I’ve ever made.

My contribution to the anthology, Love By Proxy, is about a woman, Gwen, who’s always fought her ability to see and converse with spirits.  Everyone, even her own family, believed that she was mentally disturbed when she would try to talk to them about what she could see.  She was finally able to break away and build herself a new life far away from everything that she knew.  Armed with an art degree, she settled into a small town in Colorado and opened up a shop where she sells her own artwork.  She lives in an isolated, old farmhouse that she shares with a spirit named Rose, a saloon girl killed by a stray bullet over a hundred years ago.  It’s a unique friendship, but it works for both of them.

Gwen is finally happy, but that happiness is threatened when a developer, Evan, blows into town wanting to build a new residential subdivision right behind her home.  More people means more spirits will be attracted to the area, and she is terrified that she won’t be able to hide her abilities any longer.  Her fight to stop the development is a losing battle as the townspeople are very much in support of Evan’s ideas for the land.  It also doesn’t help that she’s beginning to have feelings for him.  She will eventually have to decide whether to stay and hope for the best or leave the place she’s come to love.

If you’ve read this far, thanks! I hope I haven’t bored you too much.  If you decide to take a gander at my story, I hope you enjoy it!

[Guest Post] How do I write a book? By Andi Katsina

06 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

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Andi Katsina, books, chapter headings, Formatting, guest posts, Publication, Word processing, writing


Today’s guest post comes to you from Andi Katsina, a British born writer who has spent a lot of her life in Manchester but who now lives in Panama… later there will be an interview with her and her full bio. For now, however, here is an article aimed at absolute beginners – the basic fundamentals of novel writing with some tips on how to make it seem easy.

How do I write a book?

By Andi Katsina

Countless readers have told me they too have a great idea for a story, and have wanted to write a book for a very long time. My reply to them all is the same; you can do it if you really want to! More often than not that reply is often met with the admittance, ‘I do want to, but I don’t know how to go about it.’ To all of you who really do want to write a book but don’t know how, this is for you.

First and foremost, don’t be overwhelmed by the prospect! Secondly, believe that you can do it!

So let’s take it from there….

Having developed your idea into a coherent stream, you must further mold it into a story. Giving it a beginning, middle and ending is the easiest approach. Using material for a topic you have a strong desire to talk about can also make this first stage easy to achieve.

Now, if you have your idea but don’t yet have an ending, fear not. Start with what you have, be that a ‘beginning’ or a ‘middle’. You have your story, or part thereof, now you must organize it into an order that will afford the reader the greatest understanding.

A good way of keeping your story on target, getting from the beginning to the ending, is to use chapter headings. At this stage in the process don’t be worried if you don’t have any chapters, simply think about your story and the logical way you want to relay it. There’ll be naturally divisible sections, places where you can break the story down; possibly a change of location, change of activity or the introduction of new characters. These things don’t always warrant a new chapter, but if you’re struggling to find suitable breaks in the story, these can be good chapter openers. As for those of you who do have chapters, you’re well on the way.

So, make a list of your chapter headings, numbering and naming each one. Yep, do not worry if you don’t have names for your chapters, if you do have, you’re almost ready to write. No chapter names? Then just go with numbers. Really guys, if you want to write a book, let’s eliminate the things that you think are there to stop you .

I personally think this next part of the process will really put you on the road to writing your first book. It’s very easy, though I ought to mention at this point that there’s a wide array of techniques  writers can choose from in order to get set up to write their next book. The method detailed here is extremely easy and you can do it, if you really do want to write a book.

Choose a word processing program, Open Office  (free), Microsoft etc. Open up a new blank document and then write in big bold letters, the title of your story, aligned in the centre of the page. Directly underneath that write, by  your name.  Insert lots of paragraph spaces and then type the word; Chapters, large, bold and aligned to the left of the page. Below this word insert your list of chapters with number and names. I tell ya’, that’s gonna look good, and it’s going to make you feel as though you’re about to create something rather special. At this stage you shouldn’t be concerned with formatting, sales, promotion or readership. These aren’t the considerations that drive real writers, a genuine writer writes to tell the story. We are storytellers. Everything else, apart from formatting, is a bonus.

Of course formatting will come into play, importantly so. However, if you’re new to all of this, then I strongly advise you to leave it aside until you finish your book. Wrestling with an unfamiliar word processing program can be time consuming, and if you haven’t even started writing, it can throw a spanner in the works and put you off ‘lifting the pen’. Maintain a standard amount of formatting as you type, this is easy to do, and please ensure you use page numbers. Admittedly if you’ve only written ten or so pages, you can scroll back and forth if you need to recheck a sentence. However, if you have fifty, a hundred, or a hundred and fifty pages, trying to scroll through your manuscript without page numbers… you get the message. To insert page numbers, go to the ‘insert’ tab along the very top of the screen, in between view and format, usually, you should find the insert page numbers option under that menu. Another tip, just a thought, if you do need to find something, a word, phrase or sentence; go ahead and use the ‘find’ facility, usually ctrl + F will bring this up for you.

If you want to dedicate your work, make a space in between by your name and Chapters, insert Dedicated to ——. The best way to do this is to use separate pages, but this is not essential.

Now, insert more paragraph spaces taking you way below the list of chapters, or simply break to the next page and type Chapter 1 in big bold letters. Underneath that, also in big letters, you can write the name of the chapter. No name yet? No problem, simply insert a short line of dashes, each time you see the dashes it will spur you on to coming up with a chapter name.

So as to be forward thinking, and also to give yourself a sense of progression, insert a load more paragraph spaces and then write Chapter 2, again in big bold letters, and again underneath that write the name of the chapter, or dashes. Repeat this until you have a tidy row, with big spaces in between, of the chapters, number and name, or dashes. For the last chapter, you can write the chapter number + Conclusion, if you like, again insert the chapter name, or dashes, immediately below.

Amazingly simple. You now have the basic structure of your manuscript, showing the beginning, middle and ending of your book. Let me show you an example:

Rick & Wylie’s Fantastical, Magical Adventures book 1

:: by Andi Katsina ::

Dedicated to ::

Chapters (Contents)

1) Dad!

2) Hawaii

3)….

:: Chapter 1 Dad! = write the text for this chapter here

:: Chapter 2 Hawaii = write the text for this chapter here, and so on until all the chapters are completed….

:: Chapter 12 The Vupan Juniper Forest

:: Chapter 13 Rick’s Resurface

:: Chapter 24 Conclusion Dad!! Fin.

The only thing you need to add to the structure you’ve created is words, and I have great confidence that you can do that, if you really want to.

Begin by writing a few lines beneath Chapter 1. Or, if you are not able or willing to begin with there, select another from your contents  list and find the corresponding chapter number in your manuscript construction outline. Voilà, begin typing a few lines below the chapter name.

I told you not to worry about not having an ending to your story. No ending? Please do not let this stop you. A great many writers begin writing with no ending in mind. Ordinarily, what usually happens in these circumstances is that as they write the story they become directed by its contents, continuously being edged on to chapter after chapter, and before long even the ending pleasantly presents itself.

If you’ve always wanted to write a book, please understand that you can actually choose to write the book instead of simply wanting to, the choice is yours, my friend.

The very best of luck, you are about to write your first book : )

So, you want to write your story down and turn it into a book… a novel? Let’s get started then!

I hope this is useful. Happy storytelling.

Kind regards Andi Katsina Author of  Rick & Wylie’s Fantastical, Magical Adventures www.theindieoracle.com

Readers can purchase the book in hardcopy ; http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/095557952X/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=095557952X

or e-version ; http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00585CJSS/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B00585CJSS

[Guest Post] Opposite Attraction by Judy Bagshaw

24 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

bagshaw, BBW Anthology project, BBW Romance writers, books, ghost hunter, Ghosts, guest blogging, guest posts, mundania press, Paranormal, paranormal romance, parapsychology, Plus sized heroines, Publication, romantic suspense, writing


My name is Judy Bagshaw, and I am a Canadian author of romance and romantic suspense generally featuring plus-sized heroines. I’ve been published since 1999 and currently have three ebooks available through Fictionwise, two anthologies and a novel with Draumr Publishing, a short story collection and upcoming novel with Pearlsong Press, a short in an anthology with The Wild Rose Press, two novels with Mundania Press and one with their imprint, AweStruck.

A huge thanks to David for inviting me to guest post on his blog. I’m a little new at the whole blogging thing, so can’t promise that I’ll enlighten or amaze. I do hope I’ll interest you enough to consider checking out my upcoming paranormal romance, Opposite Attraction, coming out in ebook from Mundania Press, July 24. (www.mundania.com)

David told you a bit about our project in a recent post. Basically, to recap, several authors banded together to write romance novellas featuring ghosts. Five of us saw it through to completion. We took turns critiquing each other’s work, then did rounds of editing later. We polished them up as best we could, then started looking around for a home.

Finding a home was a five year journey filled with hope, disappointment, doubt, desperation, determination, and finally exaltation. We were thrilled when Mundania Press accepted our anthology for publication. They are releasing each story in ebook format first, giving each author a month to shine on their own, then the stories will be compiled into a print anthology…likely late in the fall.

The title, Opposite Attraction, nicely sums up my story. Serena McKay, my heroine, is a skeptic…someone who has made a career from exposing frauds and con artists in the field of paranormal activity. Carter Shehan, on the other hand, is a bona fide ghost hunter. He believes. And he has spent his adult life trying to find proof of the existence of the here-after and ghostly visitors to this plane. Both have written best selling books in their respective fields, and they have locked horns more than once, both adamant that they are right.

Challenged by Carter on a nationally broadcast television talk show, Serena agrees to spend the weekend with him at the famous “haunted” Shelbourne Manor, now a museum. It’s a ‘fish or cut bait’ situation, and Serena is determined to show Carter up as just one more charlatan, while he is determined to prove to her that ghosts exist.

But of course, as with any good romance story, something unexpected happens, and you’ll have to read the story to find out how it all ends up. Let’s just say that it doesn’t hurt that Carter finds the feisty Serena very attractive. And if Serena were being honest, she would admit to more than a passing interest in the laid back Carter.

I like the idea of bringing opposites together and seeing where fate leads them, and often my heroines and heroes are at odds with each other before finding their way into each other’s heart.

You can read more about my work, including excerpts and reviews, at www.judybagshaw.com

You can also find out more about our little writing group at www.bbwromancewriters.homestead.com

[Guest Post] What is Horror? by Rebeka Harrington

22 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Ann Rice, books, Gary Oldman, guest blogging, guest posts, horror, horror author, horror genre, horror writer, Rebeka Harrington, Vampires, writing


Today we have another post by Vampire author Rebeka Harrington in which she discusses the definition of ‘Horror’. Note, I was careful there to refer to her as a ‘Vampire author’ not a ‘Horror author’ for reasons which may become apparent in the post…

Earlier this year Angelic Knight Press featured yours truly in an article: “REBEKA HARRINGTON – WOMAN IN HORROR” (Many thanks AKP) As an indie author I’m always very happy, if not flattered, when someone out there in cyberspace spares me a mention. But until I saw this article I hadn’t even stopped to think I may be considered a “horror” writer. Sure I write about vampires, and they can be pretty horrible, but me…. a horror writer?

My first book, Vampires Revealed, was more like an autobiographical mocumentary than any other tag you care to throw about. Bektamun, narrator and star of the tale, relives some of the “horrible” things she has done; but only when forced to protect those she loves.

Desires Revealed, my latest release, is a love story first and foremost. And of course there are ample vampire shenanigans thrown in. (Got to feed the bloodlust)

Rebeka’s latest book – Desires Revealed

Does writing about vampires automatically mark you as a “horror writer”? When I think of horror fiction the first name that springs to mind is Stephen King, which I’m sure is the same for a lot of people. Mr King has dabbled with vampires (very successfully too, I might add), but his most famous and popular works are far removed from the world of vampires.

Also worth considering is whether or not, despite the vampire revolution, the general expectation is for vampires to appear in the horror genre. Maybe I’m just weird, because I really don’t think of vampires as characters of horror; well at least not so much anymore.

Dracula (as played by Gary Oldman)

Bram Stoker’s Count Dracula was pretty terrifying for the time it was written. Fast forward to The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice; doubt I would’ve bought and read the books if I’d thought I was buying horror. For me, books in The Vampire Chronicles, were about Lestat’s inability to understand humanity; not that he was a blood-sucking monster. Like I said, maybe I’m weird. No doubt my opinion of vampires as characters of horror would change instantaneously should I ever meet a Dracula, Lestat or Eric (Southern Vampires, Charlaine Harris).

When I think about horror, and the things that scare me, I only have to look at history to have shivers run down my spine.

Part of my vampire mythology is a group of extremist vampires known as the Eleiveb. While searching for inspiration as to what kind of things they may subject their human victims, I simply did a search for “torture”. One of the most interesting/horrifying sites I came across was Medieval Torture. The site features a myriad of tools and equipment which sole purpose was to inflict pain and torture on human victims.

While I may be uneasy being assigned as a horror writer, and steadfastly believe mankind is far more horrible to each other than legend or any creature we can imagine, the fact remains I will continue to write about vampires; and they will inevitably do horrible things.

About the Author

Raised in country Victoria, Rebeka started her writing career working for the local newspaper as a teenager. While she decided not to pursue this as a career, she has always enjoyed writing and being creative

With so many varied interests and eccletic taste in most things, Rebeka enjoys incorporating all of them in her writing. She particularly enjoys writing about vampires.

Rebeka seeks to define and explain vampires in a way not done before. This was achieved with her debut title “Vampires Revealed”. Following titles revolve around exploring the world and characters created in her first release.

Currently Rebeka lives inMelbournewith her “demented” but lovable cat, dividing her time between writing and managing a small boutique entertainment agency.

Her latest book Desires Revealed is available for purchase at:

Smashwords

Amazon

Catch up with her characters

www.vampiresrevealed.com

Follow her blog

www.rebekaharrington.com

Guest post: What has LRP ever done for me…

11 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#amwriting, guest blogging, guest posts, LARP, Live Roleplay, LRP, Roleplaying games, writing


Over at the Am Writing blog I have reflected on what writing skills I have acquired thanks to having been a LRPer for all these many years…

I think there is a lot there to think about for LRPers, writers and LRPers who are writers… so feel free to pop over and have a read and also feel free to disagree or agree with anything I have said in comments both here or on the Am Writing site.

 

[Review] Baker Street Beat

22 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Reviews

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Tags

books, Dan Andriacco, Essays, guest posts, reviews, Sherlock Holmes, sherlock holmes books, Short Fiction


This is the third and final of the MX Publishing Sherlock Holmes books I have reviewed…

http://www.cultbritannia.co.uk/2012/04/22/book-review-baker-street-beat/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=facebook

It is an entertaining collection of essays and fiction that is well worth a read…

[Vampire Month] Skyla Dawn Cameron interview

03 Tuesday Apr 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Angelus, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Count Chocula, David Boreanz, guest blogging, guest posts, Louise Cooper, Persephone Takata, River, Skyla Dawn Cameron, Vampires, Werewolf, writing, Zara Lain


Our final entry into Vampire month is Skyla Dawn Cameron. Yes, I know it is April now and Vampire month was March but it’s OK. By the powers vested in me by the fact I am ultimate controller of this blog, I now declare today to be honourary March and therefore still Vampire month. Hurrah!

So, here is Skyla…

Award-winning author Skyla Dawn Cameron has been writing approximately forever. Her early storytelling days were spent acting out strange horror/fairy tales with the help of her many dolls, and little has changed except that she now keeps those stories on paper. She signed her first book contract at age twenty-one for River, a unique werewolf tale, which was released to critical and reader praise alike and won her the 2007 EPPIE Award for Best Fantasy. She now has multiple series on the go to keep her busy, which is great for her attention deficit disorder.

Skyla lives in Southern Ontario where she dabbles in art, is an avid gamer, and watches Buffy reruns. She’s naturally brunette, occasionally a redhead, and will probably go blonde again soon. If she ever becomes a grown-up, she wants to run her own pub, as well as become world dictator. You can visit her on the web at www.skyladawncameron.com for free fiction, book news, and tons of other totally awesome stuff. She tweets like a fiend at www.twitter.com/skyladawn. Info about the current series she’s working on—which begins with Bloodlines—can be found at www.ZaraLain.com

What is the earliest memory you have of writing? What did you write about?

I remember sitting in my bedroom, on the floor, with stacks of blank paper with the logo of the hydro company my mum worked for on the top (as she’d brought me some from work), writing. I mixed fairy tales with horror; my influences were Disney princess movies I’d just watched along with Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” playing on my little record player (I loved the Vincent Price part).

When did you decide to become a professional writer? Why did you take this step?

In high school, I took everything—I was interested in so many different areas. So on top of creative writing and art classes, I took all the advanced sciences, law, philosophy, maths—all kinds of stuff. Of course, I didn’t always do my homework, but I sat and paid attention because that that point I was just interested in amassing knowledge and learning, still unsure about what I wanted to do for university.

I was about seventeen, sitting in an Advanced Biology class a grade level ahead of me, fairly confused because at that point of the semester, it was a lot of biochemistry, and required a working knowledge of a class I wouldn’t be taking until the following semester. We had a supply teacher who put on a video and I was drawing in my sketchbook. It was a terrible picture but I was practicing shading techniques.

I sat next to the two top students in the class—people a year older than me with like 98% in the course. And they were watching me draw. One whispered to the other, “If I could draw like that, I wouldn’t be in Biology.”

I don’t necessarily believe that and my drawing skills are nothing to write home about, but something clicked in my brain. Why was I spending all this time in classes that weren’t where my talents lay? The next day, I went straight to the guidance office and dropped everything but two art classes, English Literature, and Creative Writing. I filled the rest of my time with spares, which I used to write and draw. I finished writing my first completed novel that spring and pursued writing as a career straight out of high school.

What would you consider to be your greatest strength as a writer? What about your greatest weakness? How do you overcome this weakness?

Probably character and dialogue would be my strength. I love T.V. I’m picky in what I watch, but it’s one of my favourite storytelling mediums and for the longest time I wanted to be a screenwriter. Early on, I picked up a lot about dialogue writing from television, and I still think it—along with well-developed characters—is the strongest area of my writing.

Greatest weakness is description. I used to write first drafts that read like screenplays. Dialogue advanced everything, and description was more like set direction. I always knew this but it wasn’t until I really got analysing books that painted a vivid picture of the world that I truly understood I needed to step up my game—and wanted to. One of the writers was Lilith Saintcrow, probably my favourite living author. I was reading something of hers, marvelling at her word choice for sensory details and the sense of rhythm in her writing, and just thought, “Holy shit. I want to be a better writer.”

I am still nowhere near that level, but I take a lot of care now to slow down, immerse myself in the scene, and add flesh to the bare bones of my writing.

Tell us about the place where you live. Have you ever derived any inspiration from your home or from anywhere you have visited?

I went from living in a small town for twenty-seven years to an even smaller town for the past two; I live in rural, cottage country Ontario now.

Inspiration? Yes, it’s something that’s popped up in a lot of my WIPs. There is this wonderful isolation in a small town that is perfect for the horror elements in anything paranormal. Although this area is bustling in the summer with tourists travelling the canal, in winter it can be absolutely dead and lonely, and that’s wonderful to play with while writing. In fiction, I feel the setting needs to be its own character, and small towns have a lot of personality.

Which book, if any, would you consider to be your greatest influence and inspiration?

I don’t really know if I could pick a book. In terms of writers, hands down the top is Joss Whedon. Buffy the Vampire Slayer was pretty foundational for me: I learned about character arcs, plot arcs, dialogue, etc from watching and re-watching the series since I was fourteen.

Though perhaps not a direct influence in what I write, but definitely a contributing reason as to why I write, would be Louise Cooper’s The Time Master Trilogy. I had been writing all my life—including attempting YA horror novels when I was a preteen—and then I drifted into poetry and other stuff for a while. When I was sixteen, my mum got a box of fantasy novels at a church sale, which was a genre I’d never really read before. The first I picked up was Cooper’s The Initiate.

Blew. My. Mind.

It actually inspired me to try writing fantasy. While I quite firmly suck at writing straight fantasy, my fantasy novel was the first I ever finished (at 85 000 words) as a teen. I still have first printing copies of The Time Master Trilogy and was fortunate enough to work with Ms. Cooper for a short time before her sad passing years later when I started working in publishing.

What drove you to write about Vampires?

Well, first we have to go waaaaaaay back.

My fourth finished novel, River, was a contemp teenage werewolf tale, written in the fall of 2003. Prior to that, the books I’d finished were Gothic horror, epic fantasy, and suspense thrillers. I’d finished River, submitted it, and started poking around with what else to write.

Then, honest to god, this vampire chick strolled up and tapped me on the shoulder while I was out walking one night.

Granted, she was in my head. But I heard her. Her voice, her observations. I tried to ignore her, but then she gave me her name: Zara Lain. So I started her first book, Bloodlines, not really feeling like I had a choice in the matter because she might cut me. Now, that book was first published in 2008, and I let the series languish for awhile before revisiting it, totally rewriting it, and re-releasing Bloodlines in 2011—which reinvigorated my interest in the series.

So there you go. I write vampires because the vampires make me do it.

What do you think is the attraction for Vampire fiction? Why is it such a popular topic?

I…honestly don’t even know. As far as traditional mythological beasts go, I prefer a very wolf-like werewolf—and really, my preference is to write monsters from more obscure world myths.

I suppose it’s the beauty and immortality of the vampire—there’s a certain wish fulfilment they provide. And, despite the fact that it’s 2012, there is still a lot of sexual repression in many circles—so along comes a sinful, highly sexualized, seductive creature of the night, who promises eternal life, beauty, and freedom of everything our culture knows. Vampires today—just as they did in Bram Stoker’s time—provide an outlet for issues we’re struggling with as a society.

In a fight between all the greatest Vampires of fiction, who do you think would come out on top?

Count Chocula. C’mon, no one would ever see that coming.

What about in some other contest such as sexiness or dress sense? Who would win that one?

If I don’t say Zara is the best dressed vampire, she will probably stab me. Sexiest? It makes me a terrible person but I loooooove David Boreanaz in season two of Buffy as Angelus. He was horrible. That season was utterly heartbreaking and gutted me. But that pure evilness was sexy as hell.

How well do you think your character would fare against the winner(s) of the above?

My money is generally on Zara to survive anything. That’s what she does: she survives. Even if she’s not the strongest and she’s up against something big, she’s resourceful and a bit Machiavellian, and she’d manage to pull an ace out of her sleeve at the last moment.

Tell us the basic premise behind your latest novel.

It’s called Lineage and is the second sequel to Bloodlines and follows quarter-demon merc, Persephone Takata. Peri’s deeply damaged and suicidal after an attack meant for her kills her husband and children. The novel picks up five and a half years after that event, when the shadowy mercenary organization she works for at last gives her the name of someone who can help track down who killed her family. That someone is the vampire Zara Lain.

And, of course, wackiness ensues from there.

 

[Guest Post] The Newby Church Ghost

02 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts, Musings

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Tags

Ghosts, guest blogging, guest posts, newby church, News From the Spirit World, Photography


Over on News From the Spirit World, I talk about my first experiences of ghost photography:

http://newsfromthespiritworld.wordpress.com/2012/04/02/ghostly-pics-the-newby-church-monk/

Expect more on this topic later…

The state of the Blog

01 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Musings

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#amwriting, Absolute Write, books, epublish, guest blogging, guest posts, Ninfa Hayes, Pirates and Swashbucklers, productivity, Publication, Realm Fantasy Wargame, Rebeka Harrington, respectable numbers, reviews, Secret Project


It occured to me recently that it has been six months since I first started this blog with the post New Beginnings. Actually, it was six months ago on the 18th of March so it is actually six months and, er, some weeks exactly. However, I got so distracted with Vampire month that it slipped my mind.

So, how have things been going since this blog began? Quite well in my opinion, though still plenty of room for growth. The recent Vampire month guest posts have done very well with Ninfa Hayes so far racking up the highest number of post views with her post Giving Birth to my Muse and all the other participants gaining respectable numbers of readers too. Posts I have made myself have also done reasonably well, with my post for the AW Blog Chain, Rainy Days, racking up the second most views of any post. Which is amazing since that was a random piece of nonsense I babbled out following a prompt and based on some stuff I came up with while on holiday. All of this is reasonably promising after a mere six months of activity. I am getting hits from all over the world (at one point Australia was the place I was getting the most hits from, I blame Rebekah Harrington, but the UK soon took the lead with the US second and Australia third) including some far flung places such as the Phillipines, Peurto Rico and Mexico (actually quite a lot from Mexico, I have my suspicions).

My work on other blogs has also done rather well. I am now a regular reviewer on the ePublish a Book website and on Cult Britannia. I am also starting to post on the News from the Spirit World blog and my contributions there will get more common over the next few months. I am enjoying all of these, especially the opportunity to read self published books and see what is out there – both good and bad. I’ve posted on the Am Writing blog and also on the blogs of a few other writers (and am always willing to do a guest blog if anyone out there wants me to).

I’ve also ventured into writing a wargame called Realm for a company called Serious Lemon and this, along with the royalties from Pirates and Swashbucklers, constitute my first professional writing achievements. There are a few more irons in the fire so hopefully some more writing projects will start to come to fruition in the near future.

So, there you have it. In the next six months, I am hoping for the following:

 – More people reading this blog

 – More people commenting on this blog

 – My ascenstion to ultimate god king of the universe and ruler of all I survey.

If I manage to achieve two out of these three I will be very happy…

[Vampire Month] You’re only given one shot by Jason Petty

30 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Crossbow, guest blogging, guest posts, Jason Petty, Publication, self publishers, Self Publishing, traditional publishers, Vampires, writing


For his Vampire month blog post, Jason has decided to post about his reasons for choosing self publication as his method of getting his work out there…

“You’re Only Given One Shot…”

                Thanks for having me on! I think your readers might enjoy a quick recap of how I got to where I am. Sick and tired of condescending rejection letters, I decided to self-publish. It amazed me how rude agents thought they could be toward me and how offended they got when I’d reply with similar tact. I was just tired of the mess and sick of eating crow from my family.

                So I started looking for a good self-publishing house. Step one, as you will find, is not getting scammed. I looked around for a place that let me keep the copyright and had good prices. I found Lulu and was happy with them at first. But then their customer service was kidnapped by Somali pirates or something. With the new management traipsing about, “fixing” everything that made the service remotely usable, I left. Finally my wife found Createspace and we were back in business.

                So now I had 25 copies and a $100 hole in my wallet. Since my family had bought most of my previous orders I knew I’d have to find real fans now. And so began the legwork. I hit every shop and book store I could find knowing full well that most of them weren’t going to give me shelf space. I didn’t even bother with big chain stores: they only stock stuff corporate sends them.

                I hit used book stores, coffee shops, local produce shops, campus newsstands…any place that looked like they might carry pages with ink on them. After talking to dozens of places I finally got two stores interested. One of them was so snooty I finally gave up dealing with them, the other still orders books from time to time.

                So I had venues selling my wares! I was in! I felt like the big dog! I WAS the big dog! I made the front page of the paper (narrowly beating out a story about a dog that caught a quail) and that helped some, too. And then it all came down. Everyone who gave half a crap had bought it, read it, and moved on.

                So I decided to do an audio book. I was reading through it and realized something: the book sucked. I couldn’t read it and keep a straight face. I was embarrassed, depressed and ready to give up writing. I couldn’t, though. This was my only job and is still my primary bread winning effort. But I couldn’t stand behind a product I didn’t believe in.

                So I did the hardest thing I’ve ever done. I pulled the book from shelves so I could sort out some of the overly descriptive crap. About half way through I realized I didn’t want to read any more of it. It just went on and on and on! I worked on one chapter for two weeks because I couldn’t find the give a damn to fix the dead plot. It was over. I knew it. It was time to stop kicking this horse, get the shovel and give it a proper burial.

                I was literally about to cry one night when I pounded my fist on the desk and just said “Ugh! If only she’d have CALLED instead of showing up on the door step I could skip this and…GREAT SCOTT! THAT’S IT!”

                That simple tweak changed everything! And I mean everything! That moment made the whole ugly thing worth it. That “little tweak” was no small venture and I knew it. I’d have to change the entire second half of the book, throw out two of my favorite scenes and rework some motives. Say goodbye to 60 thousand words. When I had sat down earlier that month I’d planned to change a few things, edit some of the descriptions and make what I had read better, like buffing the paint and hitting it with a coat of wax. This wasn’t just a wax job anymore. It was major surgery. It was like gutting the thing to the chassis, replacing the old and busted engine with a race motor and reinforcing the entire car to hold up to the abusive new motor. And you know what? It worked like a charm. Those sixty thousand worthless, boring words I disparaged over deleting? They were replaced with 80 thousand fast-moving, exciting words.

                What I had before was a boring book about two characters with no clear motives with a good ending and final plot twist. What I have now is a murder mystery thriller with Grindhouse leanings and paranormal twist starring two characters that almost everyone has a strong feeling for. The only gripe I really get is that I need an editor. I have that now and the spelling mistakes will be fixed by early April. And right now, even with the typos, repeated words and all of it, people tell me over and over again that they can’t put it down! That’s a book I can stand behind!

                With my new-found confidence I’ve gone at it like I’m, killing snakes! Sales are up! Fan count is up and generally climbing! I’m back on the road, and with much style, I might add. So if you want to be an author my advice is simple. Step away from your book for three months, then read it aloud. When you hate it (and you will) make a backup, tear it down, build it up and go for broke.

Look around on facebook till you find a page that reviews books like yours. Concentrate on finding one that favors books with similar plots, characters, events, etc., but is willing to give a bad review to a bad book. Don’t worry about a bad review. If you’ve done your homework and read up on their page and your book is good, that threat evaporates. Pick that first reviewer strategically and watch the fans come tumbling in! Make sure you have it available for the Kindle and Nook and you’ll be shocked how well you do. I sure was.

                You only get one shot, so aim well!

                                Jason Petty

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