Legends of Windemere Fantasy Bundle #1

-
Recent Posts
Categories
- 100 Haikus for the Gamer's Thumbs
- Allure of the Gypsies
- Animal Posts
- Anxiety Journal
- Ask a Character
- Bedlam Series
- Beginning of a Hero
- Book Reviews
- Character & Book Themes
- Character Origins
- Charms of the Feykin
- Chasing Bedlam
- Crossing Bedlam
- Curse of the Dark Wind
- Derailing Bedlam
- do I need to use a dragon
- Family of the Tri-Rune
- Goal Posts
- Guest Blogging
- Ichabod Brooks
- Immortal Wars
- Legends of Windemere
- Merchant of Nevra Coil
- Monster Maker Fun
- New Project Progress
- Olde Shoppe Stories
- Path of the Traitors
- Poems
- Prince Profundus Vorago
- Prodigy of Rainbow Tower
- Questions 3
- Raven Series
- Raven's Dawn
- Raven's Game
- Raven's Hold
- Raven's Wrath
- Ritual of the Lost Lamb
- Sleeper of the Wildwood Fugue
- Slumberlord Chronicles
- Sneak Peeks
- Spotlight
- Teaser Tuesday
- The Compass Key
- The Mercenary Prince
- The Spirit Well
- The Starwind Egg
- Thoughts
- Tribe of the Snow Tiger
- Uncategorized
- War of Nytefall
- Warlord of the Forgotten Age
- Written in Israel
Member of the Dark

Featured Author

-
Join 7,280 other subscribers
- Follow Legends of Windemere on WordPress.com
Friends and Allies
Goodkindles

Goodreads
Meta
Saying “I Love You” Means Loving All the Parts, Not Just the Pretty Ones #MondayBlogs
Posted in Uncategorized
2 Comments
A Perfect 10 with Mae Clair
Today we sit down for our author interview series with Mae Clair. We’re going to learn about her and about her book, A Cold Tomorrow.
I hope you enjoy this interview and, if your an author, I still have some spots open on the interview schedule. You can email me at don@donmassenzio.com and I will get you scheduled.

Does writing energize or exhaust you?
For the most part it energizes me. When I’m on a roll and the creativity is flowing, it’s a natural high. There have been occasions, however, when I’m working against a tight deadline, that the hours involved can be exhausting. Fortunately, I experience far more of the former than the latter.
Do you ever write under a pseudonym?
The name I write under is the only I have ever used. I know a lot of authors use different pseudonyms for different genres, but I haven’t encountered…
View original post 1,169 more words
Posted in Uncategorized
4 Comments
Sally’s Cafe and Bookstore – New on the Shelves – 50 Ways to Alleviate Boredom by Mary C. Blowers
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
In Search of a Series Title: Knew I Forgot Something
The video has nothing to do with topic, but it’s funny. Although, I really should write a scene where Lloyd does something along the ‘cake or death’ idea. It’ll be death no matter what, but he’ll have fun.
So, I was looking at the Amazon set up and realized that I have no series name for the Bedlam books. It’s listed as optional, but I probably need one to connect the books on Amazon. At least I think I do. Puts me in a tough spot since people might grab Chasing Bedlam and think they missed something. It should be easy to transition into this if you didn’t read the first, but you never know.
So, I’ve thought up a few that might work:
- The Bedlam Books
- The Books of Bedlam
- Shattered States
- Bedlam Series
- Letters from the Apocalypse
- Survivors of the Shattered States
- I No Need No Series Title!
- Some of these aren’t serious
- I really should stop using the bullets here
- Maybe one more
The tough part is that there isn’t any overarching story beyond Cassidy and Lloyd’s survival. So a series title would probably have to be vague. It won’t be on the cover either because this is purely for organization. This is why I’m leaning toward the first two options because it’s straight to the point. I know there’s a lot of humor in the book, but I don’t want to go full goofy with the series title. If people were telling me that the cover made them think it was a children’s book then a goofy title would get the same. What kind of children’s book has crashed cars and fire?
While I’m on this subject, I’m going with Life & Times of Ichabod Brooks for that collection. Unless something else catches my attention. So many Chronicles, Collections, Sagas, Epics, and Adventures out there.
Posted in Uncategorized
23 Comments
Smorgasbord Weekly Round Up – Music, books, blogs and Humour
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
Book Promo – Get ‘Love in Times of War’ Boxset for 99c/99p from 22nd Jan to 22nd Feb…
Posted in Uncategorized
2 Comments
This week in Indie Publishing
Literary Agent Breaks Down How to Win in Self-Publishing
The facts don’t lie. Everyone who publishes a successful book doesn’t have a deal with a major publisher. Over the last two decades self-publishing has flourished and the books sold by independent authors have done amazing things in the industry, including winning awards, becoming national bestsellers and even landing television or movie option deals. Whether you are working on a children’s picture book, a romance novel, a photography or business book, or writing your memoir, if you are choosing to self-publish the following tips will help guide your endeavors.
Read the rest of this story HERE.
4 Steps to Create a Blog or Podcast That You and Your Readers Will Love
If you’re a self-published author, in addition to writing and producing your books, you must take on the responsibility of marketing them. The most successful author-marketers foster strong relationships…
View original post 272 more words
Posted in Uncategorized
1 Comment
Goals Achieved? Now What?
First, I’m happy to announce that they caught the injured stray cat. Took a week, but it finally walked into a trap and got taken to the vet. Prior to this, the cocky beast would lounge on top of the trap and leave without investigating. Guess it finally got hungry enough to explore. Don’t know what will happen to him now, but I hope he gets healed and might even find a home. Before anyone suggests me adopting him, half of this household is majorly allergic to cats.
In other arenas, I met all of my major goals this week. March posts have been prepared and a list of some for April to hopefully promote Legends of Windemere: Ritual of the Lost Lamb has been made. The personal project has been prepped, but I’m finding myself falling out of excitement with it. I like the heroes and the world, but the villains aren’t coming out well. I’m trying to alter them, but the majority are nearly carbon copies of each other. There’s a reason I can’t stray too far or alter too much. Part of me wonders if I should and just change the pieces that prevent me from publishing. Although, that would mean this one doesn’t get much of a priority. Don’t you love the vagueness.
All of the outlines for War of Nightfall have been made, which was rough. My notes on this one were terrible because it’s a series I thought I’d always remember perfectly. Clyde being one of the Big 4 in my head made me arrogant here, which might stem from his personality. Going over the outlines, I’m seeing that Clyde isn’t always part of the action and I have to get used to that. It’s become another ensemble cast, which I like. Yet, it’s one that doesn’t have destiny pulling the strings and there is still a hierarchy with Clyde being the leader. Some of the outlines look ugly too because I already marked them up with merges, additions, swaps, and replacements. These are also coming in shorter than the Legends of Windemere books by about 5-6 chapters. Closer to Bedlam length, which might be what I do going forward. I can think of one other series that will have long books, but the rest might not be as hefty. Guess we’ll see what happens when I sit down to write the first one . . .
So . . .
I have no idea what to do next week. Part of me wants to simply take it easy and watch TV before tackling the Ichabod Brooks short stories. I really do think I should make that the next project since I want to release it in the summer. My estimate is that it would take 24 days at 3 sections a day to get it done. That’s going by my novel writing though, which is overestimating. Ichabod sections tend to be much shorter and concise. Doubt I can write one short story a day though, but it would be nice to get it done by the end of February. That leaves March for April post set up and editing the last two Windemere books. Then I can . . . Well . . . I mean . . . I really don’t know where to go.
Here is basically what is on my possibilities list once I finish Ichabod and editing:
- Derailing Bedlam
- Private/Special Project if interest remains
- Stand Alone book that stems from the Legends of Windemere finale. Can’t publish that until next summer.
- Dawn Addison story for October
- Start War of Nightfall
Doesn’t look like much, but they all feel so daunting. Part of it is because I’m back to getting asked on a weekly basis if I’m ready to get a real job. That really takes a toll on my focus and self-esteem. Aside from stressing me out, it makes me feel like what I’m doing now isn’t considered a real job. All the time, work, and effort I put in is nothing more than a hobby. This is the crap I don’t need when I’m in a state of creative vertigo. You know what happened when I finished the final outline for War of Nightfall? I started to cry because it was an ending. Call me stupid, weak, or foolish, but it’s looking like coming to the end of Legends of Windemere did a bigger number on my psyche than I realized and I haven’t even gone for the editing. The added blows from those that have no fucking clue what I’m trying to do or what I’m going through don’t help. So I find myself staring at this list and wondering where to go because part of me fears that it won’t amount to anything. If the pushes continue and the outsiders win then I find a ‘real job’ in 2018 and most of my free time goes to my son. This always makes me wonder how many stories have been lost to cubicles, mind-eroding tasks, and a push for the safe path instead of letting the imagination flow.
Normally, I’d leave a list of goals for the week, but I don’t have any. I’m solo-parenting today while the wife and parents go to NYC. Means I won’t be able to think much about what I’m doing. Maybe I’ll do a little more work on Sin’s series while I let everything else sink in. Part of me wants to start on Ichabod Brooks, but I think I need some downtime even though that seems to have been my entire month.
Posted in Goal Posts
Tagged author, Bedlam, cats, editing, fantasy, goals, Legends of Windemere, outlining, Windemere, writing
33 Comments
Rejection: the Ultimate Teacher – Guest Post by author Tina Frisco…
Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog
Image courtesy of Lucie Stastkova
Rejection comes in many forms, from many places, and is very painful. What makes rejection so devastating? What causes us to react in a particular way? How can we use rejection to our advantage?
On a purely instinctual level, rejection threatens to extinguish our life force by depriving us of vital nourishment. No being can truly thrive without some measure of love and acceptance.
Rejection devastates when we attach our personal worth to someone or something outside of ourselves. Feeling worthy only when liked and accepted by those with whom we engage sets the stage for rejection.
When feeling disliked or ignored by another, it’s wise to step back and view that person’s behavior as a mirror our own subconscious. Often the things we don’t like in ourselves are reflected back to us by others, giving us an opportunity to examine what…
View original post 752 more words
Posted in Uncategorized
8 Comments
Holding On To Hope & Horror
Full disclosure: This is another post off a note that I don’t remember the meaning behind. All I know is that it has to do with Chasing Bedlam.
Now, I think I know what I was talking about here. After looking at various dystopian stories or anything that involves a dark, harsh world, I’ve found that there are two important elements. There is the HORROR of the reality that the characters call home and the HOPE that they will either survive or improve it. One always seems to be following a hero or group that will make things right, but they travel through some of the worst scenarios the author can throw at them. This works to make the reader/viewer empathize with the characters’ need for hope while struggling in situations that we’re thankful are fictional to us.
I don’t know how well I did this with the Bedlam books. There are some horrific things like the cannibals, gangs, slave traders, and other dangers. Yet, Lloyd can count for one of these monsters too. Cassidy and Lloyd not being interested in anything other than survival reduces the ‘hope’ part of the equation. Is it still there? To some extent, but I don’t think it’s a conscious one. The characters can be pretty dark in their mindsets, especially when it comes to death. They play to the horror and accept it as their world instead of trying to change it. Makes me wonder if monsters can have hope or will it have to be twisted. I’ve had to think about what can take the place of that since most dystopian heroes use hope as the thing that drives them. All I can come up with is surviving from one day to the next.
Another question that comes up under this is: How far can one go with the horror before you lose people? For example, I’ve seen a lot of people complaining and giving up on the Walking Dead for a very gory scene. Not into the show myself, but it seems the horror went too far. Yet, it’s also believable. Humans are capable of great deeds of good and evil, but we really hate seeing the worst ones get shown in fiction. This is a challenge for me when I’m working in a world like the Shattered States. For some reason, fantasy worlds get away with more because the humans aren’t Earth humans or the victims aren’t human at all. Putting it in a familiar setting brings to mind that one’s self and loved ones could be the victim. Possibly even the perpetrator. It counters the hope because a reader/viewer is suddenly horrified by the act. Technically, it shatters the hope, which could be the intention of the bad guy. The challenge here is that the author might have a higher threshold for horror than the audience. One could even have a lower threshold, which starts the issue of being ‘spineless’ when it comes to hurting characters.
So, this is a choppy subject that I’m still trying to wrap my head around. Stumbling onto it by accident doesn’t help. What do you think about hope and horror, especially in dystopian stories?
Posted in Thoughts
Tagged action, adventure, author, Bedlam, Chasing Bedlam, Crossing Bedlam, fiction, heroes, hope, horror, humanity, salvation, Shattered States, villains, violence, writing
21 Comments


