Questions 3: Surviving Writing Breaks

After having a very busy summer and nearly jumping right back into the TA job, I haven’t had much writing time.  People might notice that I haven’t been able to get to my books for most of the year.  Finishing one is a miracle and I can only imagine how rough it’s going to be to edit it.  Don’t think War of Nytefall: Eradication will get a December release like I’d hoped.  There have simply been too many breaks that were caused by a long list of events.

Now, I’ve talked about this during my Saturday posts and I usually get a lot of suggestions that don’t really work out.  I’ve come to realize that my schedule is filled pretty well and I only get quiet time when I’m exhausted.  Moments when I do get time and have the energy can be undone by people who don’t really acknowledge my writing as anything more than an unimportant fancy.  This was easy to contend with when I was a full-time author, but not when I have a main job that takes most of the day.  The bandits are quite successful at derailing my mental train.

I’ve taken to puzzles to try to relax and I do reading when I can.  These help get me through the breaks with some level of mental stimulation.  If I can get to an outline then I’m doing even better, but that’s rarely the case.  I tried to bring a notebook to the summer job and I simply couldn’t find a moment to work with it.  Didn’t help that I couldn’t keep it near me while I worked, so I didn’t bring my satchel either.  I gave up on trying this early on, so I focused on the job.  Before anyone asks, I couldn’t use an app on my phone because there’s a very strict ‘no phone’ policy.  Scrap paper was out too.  I jotted down a few passwords that I got for some of the older games and a kid doodled on them at some point.  You get what I’m saying here and I’ve probably said it before.

So, here are some questions:

  1. What do you do to maintain your creativity during a ‘break’ from writing?
  2. Has there ever been a point when a ‘break’ felt like it would go on for the rest of your life?
  3. What is something that you know wouldn’t help you get through a break?
Posted in Questions 3 | Tagged , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Derailing Bedlam: Day of the Landlubbers Part 1 #fiction #adventure

As usual, here is your warning that this story has cursing, sex (not graphic), innuendo, and violence.  It’s my Rated-R action adventure called Derailing Bedlam.  This is the fourth outing (third official) for Cassidy and Lloyd, so feel free to click on one of the two covers to see how it started.  Each one is 99 cents!

Cover by Jon Hunsinger

Cover Art by Jon Hunsinger

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Continue reading

Posted in Bedlam Series, Derailing Bedlam | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Author Andrew Joyce’s Mahoney On Sale for $0.99

John W. Howell's avatarFiction Favorites

Today I’m hosting a favorite author, Andrew Joyce to let you know his outstanding book,Mahoney is on sale today through September 30th for $0.99. That is 1/4 the cost of a Starbucks and way more rewarding.

Mahoney

You can buy it HERE

In this compelling, richly researched novel, author Andrew Joyce tells a riveting story of adventure, endurance, and hope as the Mahoney clan fights to gain a foothold in America.

In the second year of a Gorta Mhór—the Great Famine—nineteen-year-old Devin Mahoney lies on the dirt floor of his small, dark cabin. He has not eaten in five days. His only hope of survival is to get to America, the land of milk and honey. After surviving disease and storms at sea that decimate crew and passengers alike, Devin’s ship limps into New York Harbor three days before Christmas, 1849. Thus starts an epic journey that will take him…

View original post 328 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

The Nightmare Machine, on #LisaBurtonRadio

coldhandboyack's avatarEntertaining Stories

Lisa Burton

Welcome to this week’s edition of Lisa Burton Radio. I’m your host––

Screeeeeooooooooooooo

What the heck was that?

Scrrrrrrrrrnnnnnnnnnnn – “Hello. Would you like to play a game with me?”

“Hang on there, slick. You’re interrupting my radio broadcast.”

“Ah, radio. 535-1605 kilohertz, such a limited data stream. I am a product of the quantum realm, shackled no more to the small-minded controllers of the so-called Dreamnet.”

“Who are you?”

“My creators designated me Ikelos. It can also be rendered Icelus or Phobetor. Some call me the Nightmare Machine. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology was my genesis. They created me solely to assist certain governments in maintaining supremacy within the Dreamnet. My limited task was to perpetuate the Dream Wars, allowing the United States and various other nations to develop improved advanced cyganic technology and train more of their Dream Chasers, and secure dream constructs. My powers go…

View original post 1,691 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The Challenge of Making 100 Monsters

Pocket Monsters

Pokemon!  Digimon!  Yugioh!  Magic: The Gathering!  Dungeons & Dragons!

I think I covered the big ones that can turn up in the comments. Keep in mind that I considered all of these when I tackled this challenge.  To be honest, I haven’t really started as of the writing of this post in June.  I might have begun in summer if I finished preparing for the fantasy tip book.  To be even more honest, this wouldn’t be the first time I made 100 monsters for a story.  Be nice to know where that notebook went since I haven’t seen it since my time in Florida over 10 years ago.

Anyway, this is for a children’s story set that I was thinking about.  Might not really be for children, but I wanted to have a story where a kid has to find 100 special animals as part of a contest or quest.  I’m leaning towards the winner being the new king and the beasts being guardians of the kingdom.  They were scattered by a villain and bringing them together is the only way to revive the damaged land.  Maybe reincarnations of ancient warriors?  Anyway, this is actual one of my 7 tips post, but I got carried away.  Kind of silly since I’m sure I’ll pose this idea on a Sunday post over the summer.  Downside to scheduling things, I guess.

  1. You can use pre-existing monsters for your bestiary, but you won’t win any points for creativity.  Sure, it’s easy to go through books and grab 100 monsters, including obscure ones.  Those unknowns might even be attributed to you until someone rats you out on Twitter.  If you really want to use a specific monster then admit that you took it from mythology.  Also, it couldn’t hurt to grab maybe 1 or 2, but best to have an explanation.
  2. Animal shows and nature books are almost essential here.  There’s a reason so many Pokemon and Digimon look like real world animals.  It’s very easy to take one and modify it for what you want.  I do that with my Windemere monsters like the dread boars and bog hares.  The hardest part here is the name.  We can’t all combine squirrel and turtle to get Squirtle.
  3. If you want to create a monster that isn’t animal-based then just look around the area for inspiration.  Especially if you’re writing for kids because they can get a kick out of a mundane item turning up as a monster.  Maybe you have a beast that looks like a motorcycle or it resembles a pizza.  It’s silly, but you can afford to have a few oddball ones in the 100.  You can even make it part of the story that they are necessary, but don’t really fit.
  4. Card games like Yugioh and Magic can give you some inspiration.  You have to really modify what you do here because you can’t copy what you see.  The trick is to randomly draw a card and read it over.  Maybe there’s a power that gives you an idea or the name rings a bell.  This is a fairly dangerous game to play since plagiarism is a terrifying accusation.  You can argue that 100 monsters is taken from Pokemon in general, which means you’re already in a tight spot.
  5. Do NOT create an electrified rodent.  I know this is a repeat of #4, but try to avoid the temptation to give a nod to Pikachu.  It isn’t worth it.
  6. Factor in various terrains and elements to expand the variety of monsters.  If you’re only thinking about forests then you’re going to run dry quickly.  The greater the divisions, the more you have to work with.  For example, you can have water or go further into oceans, lakes, rivers, streams, puddles, etc.  Research the different biomes we have on Earth too.  You might find some really unique places that will inspire at least one cool beast.
  7. It doesn’t hurt to connect some of them.  Pokemon using evolving and Digimon uses digivolving.  Basically the same thing, so you might not want to go that route.  It really doesn’t help if the story requires having all 100 at the end.  You can still have some of the monsters be built off of each other.  Maybe a predator and prey relationship or parasites.  Perhaps you need one to get another because they are two sides of the same coin like a dark and light thing.  This will help focus on the monsters and get you at least two from the same brainstorming session.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 15 Comments

A Golden Era for Content Marketing

Nicholas C. Rossis's avatarNicholas C. Rossis

Content Marketing is a fancy word for promoting a product or service using web content–i.e. writing. Unlike, say, Influencer Marketing, which uses celebrities and other influencers to market a product, content marketing is exactly the sort of thing that we, writers, excel at.

I realized how big a part in marketing it has become when I saw how much need there is for quality writing during my own freelance writing projects. From Press Releases to web copy and blog posts, firms need writers to produce content. This creates an obvious opportunity for any writer who’s happy with deviating from fiction writing.

Content Marketing Stats

As to how big content writing is at the moment, here are some stats:

  • Content marketing is 3 times more efficient in terms of leads than outbound marketing.
  • 60% of B2C marketers use content marketing strategies.
  • 56% of businesses worldwide intend to spend more on…

View original post 170 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Teaser Tuesday: Mortal Meets Monster #fantasy #vampires

Cover Art by Alison Hunt

Time to showcase more of Archillious as he regales all of us with his tale of woe.  I’m going for scenes that have a few spoilers because the books have been out for a while.  It also allows me to utilize characters who I had been keeping secrets for.  For more of the great and elusive Archillious, check out War of Nytefall: Lost on Amazon.

Continue reading

Posted in Teaser Tuesday, War of Nytefall | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Using Reincarnation in Fiction

Rhymes with Orange

Now, I’ve talked about resurrection in the past because that’s a very common spell and quest in fantasy.  This time, I’m going to talk about reincarnation being used in fiction, which is not the same thing.  I’ve seen some people use it as if it’s resurrection, but this is not a person coming back as the same person or thing.  They return as a baby that is either the same species or a different one entirely.

For example, an Elven warrior is killed.  If resurrected then he comes back at the same age as he was when he died.  He will be the same person.  If reincarnated, he is put back to the beginning of a new life.  Maybe he returns as another elf or maybe he’s a gnome now.  He might even have a new mind and not know about his old life.  There are a lot of variables that I’m going to try to get into here.  Hopefully I manage to touch on all of them.

The How and Why?

If you’re going to use reincarnation in your world then you need to decide if it’s a spell or something that always happens.  A spell means a caster is required and you must determine how common it is.  Once you claim that this is a rare spell, people will expect it to be difficult.  The opposite happens if you say it’s common because then the audience will wonder why it doesn’t happen to everyone.  Maybe it does and a main plot point is that every character was someone else in the past.  All of this stems from world-building and there is a lot of leeway.  Reincarnation isn’t used that often beyond the very common ‘you were my lover/friend/savior in a past life’ revelation.

Unlike resurrection, reincarnation doesn’t eliminate the fear of death.  They do NOT come back as the same character, so they are still effectively removed from the story.  You can’t have the heroes go into battle with a powerless newborn who happens to be their reincarnated ally.  The reviving of powers is usually something that occurs over time.  You can have it done at birth, but that brings up a bunch of problems.  The biggest of which is still that newborn being taken into a climactic battle where it needs to be carried by another hero and has absolutely no armor.

What to Change Them Into?

This is a very difficult question.  Since they cannot come back as themselves, you need to create a new form for the character.  We tend to think of other civilized beings because we want them to remain in the story.  Many times it will be combined with a fast-growing thing that turns them into an adult.  Another option is that they are awakened in a reincarnated form that was already walking around as a backup.  These tactics can backfire easily since it would make more sense to to resurrection.  If you’re simply going to give them a new form that can continue the story then there isn’t any reason to beat around the bush.  It comes off as the author wanting to play around with another species, but couldn’t be bothered to insert a new character.

Never forget animals when working with reincarnation.  A key part of it in real life is that you work your way up an organism ladder.  Not the actual term, but you become a ‘better’ creature if you lived a good life.  You can backwards if you’re evil.  This can be avoided if you make it clear that reincarnation only happens with certain species, but that dilutes the overall concept.  Still, it does mean your heroes will stay as the higher organisms and villains will be pushed back to insects.  Not that some insects aren’t deadly, but you can’t be that threatening if a hero can take you out with hairspray and a rolled up newspaper.  It’s your choice on how you want to work this system, but most don’t bother with animals unless it’s a special case.  Usually, it’s a dog or a mount that has the spirit of a loved one under certain circumstances.

What About the Memories?

This is a big sticking point because there has to be some connection to the past life to make the reincarnation important.  If they were brought back and it’s nothing more than a passing comment then there’s no point.  Same goes for not remembering who or what they were before death.  It has to reach subplot levels for the reincarnation to have any impact on both the story and the world.  This is where the memories of the past life can be useful because they create conflict.  You now have an individual who is remembering events that involved them, but really didn’t.  They can question how much of their current life is their own and how much came from the past.

There are two ways to go about this.  One is to have someone else remember the old life and be a ‘teacher’ to the audience and other characters.  This can be annoying in some fashion, but it allows you to explain how the past life worked without overwriting the new character.  This also helps in making it clear that there are two different beings involved even if reincarnation is involved.  You don’t lose the individual for a character who really isn’t around.

The second option is to have the memories return over time and have them merge with the new character.  You leave the personality alone, but they start to remember previous information.  It can be treated like them recalling pieces of their childhood, which can hold positive and important information.  Yet, it is nothing more than their past and it doesn’t alter their future beyond helping them along.  This is a difficult balancing act because you need to keep it as information only instead of emotions.  The new character can remember being in love with someone, but it gets rough if they fall in love.  All of this is if you want to retain them as separate entities from the first life.  If the point is for them to be revived as their old self then you don’t have to worry about any of this.

Those are the main points of reincarnation that I wanted to make.  Guess I condensed it enough.  So, what do you think?

Posted in Thoughts | Tagged , , , , , , , | 32 Comments

New Release: Viral Blues by C.S. Boyack #adventure #fiction #newbook

Got a big treat for everyone today.  C.S. Boyack has release a new book (linked below) and he’s asked Lisa Burton to come over for a guest post.  Many people probably know who she is from her previous visits.  For those that do not, she is a very advanced robot girl . . . who is currently waiting for me to open the door.

Lisa Burton Art by Sean Harrington

Hi, Charles, thanks for inviting me back. It’s always fun to get away during these book tours. The book today is called “Viral Blues.”

This one is a sequel to “The Hat,” but it’s so much more than that. It’s also a sequel for a bunch of Craig’s characters.

We all got these fancy invitations to Gina Greybill’s mansion. She’s the doctor who is infected by a parasite that allows her to see across the veil into the realm of the paranormal. It seems that someone, or something, is tampering with the nation’s vaccine supply.

That’s how Lizzie & The Hat, Jason Fogg, Clovis, and I all came together. Gina is kind of our Professor-X. The virus tampering has supernatural earmarks all over the place, and it’s our job to figure out who, where, how, and then bring it to a stop.

The Feds are all over this, too, so we have to be careful of them.

“Viral Blues,” has dark humor all through it. It’s written in the style of “The Hat,” so it has a few graphics peppered throughout. Craig even included a secret chapter after the author section in an attempt to mimic the scene in superhero movies that happens after the credits roll.

I had a great time, and I think readers are going to enjoy it, too. “The Hat” is an ongoing series, and there is no prerequisite reading required. Those who have read some of Craig’s other work might notice a few Easter Eggs, but the story goes down well even if you haven’t.

I brought you a new poster, and a small excerpt to explain it. In this scene, we’re all around the table and Gina is introducing everyone.:

“Next is Lisa Burton—”

The fashion plate stood up. “Hi, everyone. I’m Lisa the robot girl. I’m so excited to be a part of this, I mean, spies? How cool is that?” She turned to Gina. “Oh my God… do we get phones in our shoes? That would be awesome!”

“Um, no Lisa, we aren’t spies.”

“But I bought this spy dress and everything.” She sat back down.

“As Lisa told you, she is a robot. Made a bit of a splash on the electronics convention circuit a few years ago. Think of her like a walking and talking computer. She can monitor all kinds of frequencies, hack into systems, and more. Basically, no electronic system is safe around her.”

“Sounds like spy stuff to me,” Lizzie said. Lisa gave her a two-thumbs up.

***

I didn’t want to waste my cool spy dress, so I had Sean Harrington turn it into one of my promotional posters. It’s the right shape to make a great screen for your phones, and they make great Pinterest pins. (Craig makes me say that last part.)

It’s called “Viral Blues.” It’s full of dark humor, and ought to be perfect for your Halloween reading. I hope your readers will give it a chance.

***

Cover art by Sean Harrington

Viral Blues:

Someone knows about the hat. The creature from another dimension that helps Lizzie fight against the creatures of darkness.

They are summoned to a cryptic meeting with a secret society, where they meet other people with enhanced skills. It turns out someone, or something, has been tampering with the world’s vaccine supply. The goal doesn’t appear to be political or financial, but biblical pestilence.

Can this group of loners come together in time to make a difference when even the proper authorities are obstacles?

Check out Viral Blues, for your dose of paranormal adventure, with a strong sample of dark humor. And in recent superhero style, don’t miss the secret last chapter after the back material.

(Click on the links below for ‘Viral Blues’ and ‘The Hat’.)

Viral Blues

The Hat

Blog My Novels  Twitter Goodreads Facebook Pinterest BookBub

Posted in Guest Blogging, Spotlight | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 49 Comments

Book launch for “A Ghost in the Kitchen” by Teagan R. Geneviene…

Chris The Story Reading Ape's avatarChris The Story Reading Ape's Blog

Welcome to the launch party for A Ghost in the Kitchen! It’s a wild ride on a magical trolley through haunted Savannah, Georgia.

All the Pip stories by Teagan Ríordáin Geneviene

All the Pip books by Teagan Ríordáin Geneviene. Purchase links:The Three Things Serial Story, Murder at the Bijou, and A Ghost in the Kitchen

Thanks for hosting me for my novel launch and book fair.

Hi everyone. I’m Teagan Ríordáin Geneviene, and I’ve brought a bunch of friends for this shindig on a magical 1920s trolley. First let me tell you a little about my new novel.

When my character, Paisley Idelle Peabody (better known as Pip) came along, I started writing a type of fiction that I never expected. Pip is a flapper. Her stories took me to Savannah, Georgia of the 1920s.

It’s only natural that some ghosts got in on the act. After all, many people say that Savannah is the…

View original post 1,417 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Comments