Showing posts with label writer friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writer friends. Show all posts

Monday, June 7, 2021

The Unraveling by Benjamin Rosenbaum

Out tomorrow! The Unraveling, by Benjamin Rosenbaum

In the distant future, somewhere in the galaxy, a world has evolved where each person has multiple bodies, cybernetics has abolished privacy, and individual and family success are reliant upon instantaneous evaluations of how well each member conforms to the rigid social system.

Young Fift is an only child of the Staid gender, struggling to maintain zir position in the system while developing a friendship with the acclaimed bioengineer Shria—a controversial and intriguing friendship, since Shria is Vail-gendered.

Soon Fift and Shria unintentionally wind up at the center of a scandalous art spectacle which turns into a multilayered Unraveling of society. Fift is torn between zir attraction to Shria and the safety of zir family, between staying true to zir feelings and social compliance . . . when zir personal crises suddenly take on global  significance. What’s a young Staid to do when the whole world is watching?

I interviewed Ben for Black Gate, and you can watch it here: 


(Note, the links in this post are affiliate links. I make a very small amount of money on anything you buy from Amazon after clicking that link--at no extra cost to you)

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

LAUNCHED! Secrets of the Dragon Tomb by Patrick Samphire; Watch His Interview

A very exciting launch happened today, and no, I am not talking about my own book. What kind of egomaniac do you take me for? I'm obviously talking about Secrets of the Dragon Tomb by Patrick Samphire. This is a middle grade pulp adventure set in a British colony on Mars in the 1860's, with dinosaurs and dragons. Can you think of a more perfect book?!?! I didn't think so.

Lucky person that I am, I happen to know Patrick Samphire and he put up with me for an hour long Skype interview. In it we discuss not only this book, but his path to a writing career and his life in an all-writer household (he is married to Stephanie Burgis.)

So, first you probably want to go read Secrets of the Dragon Tomb, but once you've done that, come watch this interview. As always, if you click over to Youtube and expand the description, there are time stamp links that allow you to jump to the parts that interest you most.




Thursday, October 1, 2015

My Black Gate Interview with Laxmi Hariharan!

It's been a crazy few weeks around here. I got the final draft of my next chick lit (which will come out under the E.M. Tippetts pen name) finished, and I'm now working on a science fiction novel that an agent has asked to see.

But during all the insanity, I also had the opportunity to interview Laxmi Hariharan for Black Gate. I had the privilege of meeting Laxmi through a mutual friend, and I can't help but be chuffed that I got an interview with her. She's an indie author and a professional marketer, and one of the first indie authors to successfully launch a book in India! Given the size of that market, this is a BIG deal.

The company she partnered with to do this is Read Out Loud, and she was one of their first clients. Her book, The Many Lives of Ruby Iyer, is set in Bombay, where Laxmi grew up, and is a YA dystopia. It's unique setting and cultural world view really set it apart from the glut of other YA dystopias in the market. Ruby is a strong female character, unlike any you've seen before.

It's also part of a wider series, and the latest installment, The First Life of Vikram Roy, has just recently come out. Tune in to her interview below, and if you want to be able to skip to specific parts or topics, click the link to go to YouTube and expand the video description. Your timestamp links are there.



  

Sunday, September 13, 2015

My Black Gate Interview with T.L. Zalecki

T.L. Zalecki was one of the first speculative fiction authors to be published via Amazon's Kindle Scout program. She was kind enough to sit down with me for an interview in which she details their selection process, the terms of the contracts they offer, their publishing timeline, and their marketing package.

If you're interested in keeping the control you have in self publishing, but gaining some of the marketing and distribution support you can get from a traditional publisher, definitely check out this program.

As usual, there are timestamp links in the description on YouTube.




You can nominate Book 2 in this series here: https://kindlescout.amazon.com/p/1N2IKWX60FK2L and get a free copy if it is selected.



Tuesday, August 11, 2015

My Black Gate Interview with Victor Milan, Dinosaur Master

This week I've posted my recent interview of Victor Milan on Black Gate. Vic was kind enough to sit down with me to talk about his new release The Dinosaur Lords, which I had the pleasure of reading as he workshopped it through our writers group. George RR Martin calls it "Game of Thrones meets Jurassic Park," and that's a pretty good description.

Take a lost Earth colony which was seeded with dinosaurs, add some feudalism, and then toss in a dash of ancient religion proving to be shockingly real, and you've got The Dinosaur Lords. The book also has a lot of knights riding dinosaurs, and honestly, can you get cooler than that?

Check out our interview, and check out Vic's latest book!


Here's your Timestamp Table of Contents:


We begin with an introduction of Victor Milan (http://www.victormilan.com) and his newest releases, his short story in The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth, and more importantly, his novel, The Dinosaur Lords.

We are in Page One Bookstore: http://www.page1book.com/ an independent bookstore that is very supportive of the author community.

The Dinosaur Lords


1:05 An overview of The Dinosaur Lords, "Game of Thrones meets Jurassic Park" - George RR Martin. First an overview of the world, Paradise.

3:38 We discuss the religion of Paradise, and the spiritual event that kicks off the plot.

6:15 How fantasy and science fiction blend in this series.

7:11 Vic introduces a few individual dinosaurs (some of the best characters in my opinion) and outlines his depiction of dinosaurs in general.

9:52 The political situation on Paradise.

11:51 A summary of the first book's setting and set up.

Victor Milan's Career To-Date


12:38 How to pronounce Vic's name.

13:28 Vic outlines his 31 year long career and lists off several of his pen names.

14:43 We discuss writing under house names and doing work for hire.

16:42 How Vic survived the publishing apocalypse of the 80's and 90's.

18:12 A summary of books under his own name and the early books he wrote.

19:32 We discuss Vic's pivotal role in the Wild Cards shared universe books.

22:40 Vic describes the process of relaunching his career of writing under his own name.

24:30 He outlines the process of selling The Dinosaur Lords books to Tor and having it edited.

25:46 The cover art, and why we love it.

26:30 Summing up The Dinosaur Lords one more time, including a discussion of a dinosaur with metallic paint.

Victor Milan's Bio:

I’ve been a professional writer of science fiction, fantasy, and other adventure tales my whole adult life – as in, forty years now and counting. I’ve also done time as a cowboy, semi-pro actor, computer support tech, and Albuquerque’s most popular all-night progressive rock DJ.
I live on Jupiter with my cats and a cat-loving dog named Emma. I serve as MC for Life for Archon’s unequalled Masquerade, as well as, apparently, for our fine home-grown con Bubonicon. I love reading, birding, games, recumbent cycling, firearms, hanging with friends, and walking Emma along the ancient irrigation ditches in Albuquerque’s scenic North Valley.
I’ve published over 100 novels, including the Prometheus Award-winning The Cybernetic Samurai, its sequel Cybernetic Shogun, CLD: Collective Landing Detachment, and numerous short stories. I’m a founding member of the Wild Cards shared-world project, which has a movie in the works.
My work appearing in 2015 includes the novella “The Seeker: A Poison in the Blood,” in S. M. Stirling’s anthology The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth (June 15th), based on his best-selling Emberverse series, and what is as of now the last-ever novel in the Deathlands action/adventure series, currently entitled Wrath Child.
The big news by far is that my long-awaited (not least by me) novel The Dinosaur Lords, first volume of an epic fantasy cycle, will be released by Tor on July 28th, 2015. It’s already attracting a great deal of buzz. I’m excited about it, to say the least. 
And thanks to all my friends and fans, whose love and support have literally kept me alive.

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Artemis Invaded has launched!

Many of you know and have read books by my friend, Jane Lindskold. Her Child of a Rainless Year is one of my favorite books of all time.

Today is launch day for her latest book, Artemis Invaded, book two of what I sincerely hope will be a trilogy of Artemis novels. I say "I hope" because publishing is a fickle business. My friend Melinda Snodgrass's third book in her trilogy is coming out five years after the previous two. How best to ensure that the third Artemis comes out in a timely manner? Buy the first two books, of course!

From the back cover:
[This book] returns to the world of Artemis, a pleasure planet that was lost for millennia, a place that holds secrets that could give mankind back unimaginable powers.

Stranded archaeologist Griffin is determined to make his way back to his home world with news of the Artemis discovery. He and his gene-modified native companion, the huntress Adara, and her psyche-linked puma Sand Shadow, set out to find another repository of the ancient technology in the hope that somehow Griffin will be able to contact his orbiting ship.

In the midst of this, Adara wrestles with her complex feelings for Griffin-and with the consequences of her and Sand Shadow's new bond with the planet Artemis. Focused on his own goals, Griffin is unaware that his arrival on Artemis has created unexpected consequences for those he is coming to hold dear. Unwittingly, he has left a trail-and Artemis is about to be invaded.

Go read this series while I finish formatting a collection of short stories by Jane, which I will tell you about as soon as I have a firm release date!

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Book Signing this Saturday

This Saturday, June 27th at 4pm, I and several other authors featured in The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth will be signing books at Page 1, located at: 5850 Eubank Blvd NE, Suite B-41, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Do stop by if you're in the area!

Other authors in attendance will include S.M. Stirling, Jane Lindskold, John Jos. Miller, Victor Milan, and Lauren Teffeau. Besides that, Page 1 is an awesome bookstore that has provided a lot of support to local authors, so if you've never been, you really should check it out!

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

The Lost Citadel Kickstarter Campaign and an Interview with the Creator, C.A. Suleiman

I first met C.A. Suleiman (aka Colin) when I was doing a series for The Black Gate on Middle Eastern fantasy (and no, I did not just go email him because of his name, we were put in touch by someone who knew about my assignment ;-) For all who are unfamiliar with who he is, he's developed content and IP for franchises like White Wolf and Dungeons and Dragons and headed up the creation of Mummy: The Curse. Nowadays he is the Creative Director of Make Believe Games, Mark Rein-Hagan's game company (he's one of the co-creators of D&D). Their current property is I Am Zombie, a role playing game that turns the concept of zombies on its ear.

Because this is apparently not enough work for him, he's also spent the last three years developing The Lost Citadel, which is a post-apocalyptic take on Tolkein fantasy. Here's the nifty Kickstarter video about it:


Now go back the campaign already. 

Or if you're not yet sold, here's an interview I did with Colin - timestamp links to all of the topics we cover are below, so you can jump to whatever parts interest you. We discuss not only the Kickstarter, but Colin's career to date and the world of RPG development in general.




The Facebook Group for The Lost Citadel is here: https://www.facebook.com/thelostcitadel

Guide to the Interview


We begin with Colin introducing himself and outlining his career in gaming and IP development to date, including his stings at White Wolf and Dungeons and Dragons.

The Lost Citadel


1:16 Colin introduces the world of The Lost Citadel and its Kickstarter campaign, which was 3 years in the making. This is a shared world anthology set in a traditional western fantasy setting that has gone through an undead apocalypse. 

3:00 He explains the scope of this first anthology, Tales of the Lost Citadel, which will introduce people to the world of The Lost Citadel.

4:52 A discussion of the trans-media aspect of the anthology, and the art and music that backers can unlock if enough money is pledged.

5:21 The work done on this anthology as of the beginning of the Kickstarter, and a link to some teasers on Facebook.

6:00 Colin describes the expansive potential future for the Lost Citadel shared world, including more anthologies, role playing games and so on. A comparison to Thieves World.

8:12 The mechanics of the shared world, and the power the writers have to shape the milieu

8:47 A list of the rewards available to backers of the Kickstarter campaign, including art, a soundtrack, and a copy of the writer's bible that would be exclusive to writers and backers.

14:00 Going beyond the elevator pitch, a glimpse into the hard work that's already been put into this project.

C.A. Suleiman's Career to Date


14:29 How he got started writing game content and novels. 

15:39 He discusses his time at White Wolf and his first big break in the field.

17:26 Becoming the "undead guy," and his work with Dungeons and Dragons, then The Mummy (which he was the chair for).

18:32 Colin explains how the work in this field mixes mediums and formats, so a writer must be very versatile.

19:36 His work with Dave Arneson, the creator of the role playing game and co-creator of D&D.

20:25 Colin's work on Mummy: The Curse and his resulting award nominations

I Am Zombie, developed by Mark Rein-Hagen


20:55 The genesis of Make Believe Games and Colin's position as the Creative Director.

21:35 An introduction to the world and concept of I Am Zombie, a fresh take on zombies

26:55 Colin explains his role as Creative Director of a company staffed by telecommuters all around the world.

29:02 How Make Believe Games, and game companies in general, are structured, how many games they tend to develop and how many concepts the tend to focus on.

29:32 Make Believe Games science fiction take on zombies.

31:00 Colin discusses heading up two major projects at once, and working in the quickly evolving field of trans-media.

31:29 The philosophy of trans-media and what it encompasses.

33:28 Colin discusses the axiom system of I Am Zombie and gives us a peek at some of the very cool materials that are already out.


How to Get a Career in RPG design and IP Development


38:18 How to tell whether a job offer is worthwhile.

39:18 How to ensure you get good and interesting work to do.

40:08 How to pick winning projects/companies to work for.

43:01 Payment, how to set appropriate expectations without being taken advantage of.

45:26 Mentors and lessons learned in poor projects.

46:23 Where to get started finding a mentor or job in the field.


Friday, June 12, 2015

The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth LAUNCH Event - Come See Me!

Next Monday I'll be participating in the launch event for The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth, which takes place in the milieau of the New York Times bestselling Emberverse novels, by S.M. Stirling.

The event details are:

7PM Monday, June 15, 2015

Violet Crown Cinema
1606 Alcaldesa Street
Santa Fe, NM 87501

Preorder tickets here.

Other authors who will be there include: S.M. Stirling, Diana Paxson, Kier Salmon, John J. Miller, Matt (M.T.) Reiten, Jane Lindskold, Lauren C. Taffeau, Walter Jon Williams,  and Victor Milan. While I don't know the exact format, usually these are done panel style, so the audience is welcome to participate by asking questions. 

There will also be readings and of course the opportunity to have your book signed. Our original venue, the Jean-Cocteau Cinema is bound by contract to show Jurassic World during the same timeslot. I can't guarantee we'll be scarier or more exciting than this movie, but we'll do our darnedest!


Monday, June 1, 2015

New Short Story Out: A Missed Connection

The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth is out now!

This anthology, edited by S.M. Stirling (the creator of the Emberverse, where all these stories take place) features me and a lot of friends of mine, including M.T. Reiten, Jane Lindskold, Lauren Teffeau, John Jos. Miller, Walter Jon Williams, Victor Milan, and Terry England.

Does this mean I can't be objective about the quality of the stories?

I probably could be if I really wanted to, but I don't feel particularly motivated to do so. Instead I'll point out that S.M. Stirling is a discerning editor and he decided which stories would be included in this anthology.

My story, A Missed Connection, takes place on the campus of the University of Utah at the moment The Change occurs. Marc Branson is a recently returned Mormon missionary who thinks his biggest problem is avoiding his clingy ex-girlfriend, Chrissy. Fortunately, his online flirtation with Angela looks like it's about to bear fruit. The only problem? She lives in Chile, and the Internet just went down.

The fictionalized version of me has a cameo in this one, too (because I become the Premier of Western Canada in this universe - and if people feel like I point that out too often, it's because I much prefer that to what would actually happen to me after The Change. I don't think I'd make it a week...)


Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Black Gate Interview: Paolo Bacigalupi

My interview of Paolo Bacigalupi just went live on Black Gate. I'll also embed it below, here.

Paolo and I have been buds for over a decade now, since his very first science fiction convention ever. We timed this interview to coincide with the release of The Water Knife, his latest novel, which takes place in a mega-drought-stricken American southwest (which is where he and I both live, incidentally.)



For the first 20 minutes or so of the interview, we talk about The Water Knife and drought in general.

For those who are most interested in hearing the history of Paolo’s writing career to date, that starts at 21:50. 46:50 is where we discuss the specifics of how Windup Girl was published.

At the very end, my connection suddenly died, so sorry for the abrupt cut-off… Once you’ve had a chance to listen, go check out his latest book!

Monday, March 30, 2015

Black Gate: My Interview of Susan Kaye Quinn

I know it's been a while, but I'm back to doing interviews on The Black Gate. This month's is an old interview of Susan Kaye Quinn. I'm still having technical issues, such as having only her chin show up on the video... it's just a still shot of her as the interview was audio only.

So, go ahead and laugh at me. But don't miss out on Susan's interview. She's the bestselling author of The Mindjack Trilogy, The Debt Collector Serial, and The Dharian Affairs Trilogy. These titles were all indie published, so she doesn't just have cool stories to tell about her fiction. She also has great advice on building a writing career.

Check out the interview here: www.blackgate.com/2015/03/29/susan-kaye-quinn-on-mind-control-cashing-out-souls-and-publishing-your-own-way/

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

A giveaway! Wanderings on Writing by Jane Lindskold

Anyone following this blog will know that I had the privilege of formatting a book by Jane Lindskold that compiles twenty years worth of essays on writing. Anyone who knows any of Jane's books can appreciate what a valuable resource this is. Her essays are inspired, informative, and most importantly, candid. There is no "secret" revealed in this book, except perhaps that there is no secret to success. It takes hard work and discipline and in these pages Jane will teach you how to focus your efforts to produce quality fiction and a sustainable career.

We are giving away a signed copy of this book. Entry details below!




Whether You Live to Write or Write to Live, This is the Book for You…

Wanderings on Writing is not just a “how to write book.” It’s also a window into how one writer has managed to fit writing in around the demands of “real” life.

Over fifty essays address topics as diverse as hooking a reader, presenting conflict, creating vivid characters, and research strategies. Throughout, Lindskold provides examples of the unique challenges faced by writers of science fiction and fantasy. Lindskold also examines less commonly addressed topics, such as making time to write and organizing a developing project.

Jane Lindskold is a New York Times bestselling, award-winning author. She has had published over twenty novels and sixty-some short stories, as well as numerous works of non-fiction.

“I adore Jane Lindskold’s writing. Her novels are a rarity for me – fat, engrossing novels that still don’t seem long enough.” Charles deLint

“Lindskold is a writer with strong world-building skills and a knack for intricate yet comprehensible plots.” Romantic Times BOOKreviews


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Saturday, January 17, 2015

The Expanse: My Visit to the Set

I spent the day, yesterday, watching the filming of episodes of The Expanse, based on the book series by James SA Corey, otherwise known as my longtime friends, Ty and Daniel. It was my first time on the set of any television series, so I spent most of the time just watching and soaking it in.

There's a lot I can't say about the TV series, as it hasn't begun airing yet. I guess I can tell the hidden history of The Expanse, though.

About fifteen years ago, I was at a science fiction convention in Los Angeles and a guy wearing a nametag that said, "Slash" came up to me. It wasn't as creepy as it sounds. That guy was Ty Franck, whom I kept in touch with over the years. We even cowrote a couple of stories, and he also ran an RPG that took place in the near future when humanity had colonized much of the rest of the solar system.

Fast forward a few years, and I found myself in a kind of crazy situation. A Chinese company approached me about making an MMORPG. I was not equipped to design anything, or direct the designing of anything, so I contacted Ty and he began to organize and develop this near-future science fiction world he'd created. That deal fell through, which was the best outcome, in the end.

Soon thereafter, Ty and his wife came down to visit us in New Mexico and during that time went to the local science fiction convention, Bubonicon, where I took Ty to a reading by Daniel Abraham. Now there is some dispute about what story Daniel read; I recall it being The Cambist, but Ty argues. In any case, it impressed Ty to the point that he struck up a conversation afterwards.

A few weeks later, Ty and his wife opted to move to New Mexico so that she could go to architecture school, and once they'd moved, Ty joined Critical Mass and again set up his near future science fiction world as an RPG, which he ran for several friends of mine. One of them was Daniel, and Daniel was so struck by the milieu that Ty created that he asked if they could cowrite a book based on it.

I should add as a side-note that this doesn't happen. Don't plan for this to happen to you. Ty's the only person this would happen to because he doesn't exist in our reality. He is on an alternate plan for mortal existence, one in which he gets held up at gunpoint, stabbed, and asked to write books that end up on the New York Times Bestseller List, then later picked up as a television show for SyFy. It all balances out, I suppose.

What makes the situation even weirder is that when it came time to sell the TV rights, Daniel was sucked into Ty's alternate universe. See, the way it works in Hollywood is that once you sell your rights, you give up control and move on. Hope for the best and keep writing books. In the case of Daniel and Ty, they were both made producers of the series. Ty works with the writers, and while I was there on set, actors and crew were coming up to them to ask them questions about how things should go.

So I didn't just get to see my friends and their television show yesterday. I got to see something so rare that it would be like spotting a unicorn in the wild. It was fun and everyone was very nice (being a friend of the producers helped on that score, I'm sure.) Several of the actors came up to say hello to me, and yes, I met some that I'm a fan of from their other work. I got to see a general idea of how the plotting of the show is vs. the books, and all I can say is that fans will be in for a real treat.

I also was privy to some top secret information about some video games that someone on the set had worked on. Because I didn't know what they were talking about (my gamer days are well in the past right now), I couldn't leak the info even if I tried.

Definitely tune in to watch this show when it airs. The trailer shows the aesthetic and all that good stuff, but tells you nothing about the plot. I'm predicting this one will do well for the same reason that the books have; The Expanse has been in development in the brain of Ty Franck for over a decade and it shows. It's a lived in universe and there's a story behind everything from the ethnicity of the people who live in the Belt to the shape of the hatches on Ceres. It's a great place to set a strong story, and that's exactly what this team of professionals is doing.

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Interview with Jane Lindskold about Wanderings on Writing and other topics


One of the projects I've worked on lately is the formatting of Jane Lindskold's Wanderings on Writing, which has really been an exciting book to work on. It's impossible for me to compose a post that does it justice, but this interview should give you a good taste of 1) the book, and b) the writer who wrote it.

First a brief introduction. Most fantasy and science fiction readers will know your name, but for the rare few who don’t, can you tell us a little about yourself?

Gee… I never know what to say when asked that. I was born in Washington, D.C., which means – according to many of my college classmates, at least, – that I’m not a citizen of the United States, because I wasn’t born in a state.

I attended college at Fordham University in New York, where I had so much fun I took three degrees, all in English, in rapid succession. After that, I took my newly minted Ph.D. off to Lynchburg College in Virginia, where I taught English (both Lit and writing) for five years.

During this time, my life did some somersaults on the personal front and, in 1994, I moved to New Mexico and started writing fulltime. For those who are interested in more, there’s a longer bio on my website www.janelindskold.com.

Your latest book, Wanderings on Writing, contains a wealth of information on writing. Can you give us some history on your Wanderings essays?

In 2010, I started my Wednesday Wanderings blog. I named it that because I was absolutely determined to not feel obligated to write about writing. Strange thing was that I discovered how writing was tangled up in all sorts of interesting ways with most aspects of my life.

Various people began to tell me I should collect some of these pieces into a book on writing. I did.

I love your introduction, in which you talk about “forging the golden key.” So many people like to look for quick fixes and “secrets to success” and such, whereas I think you give an aspiring writer a very honest, and ultimately very useful answer to “what’s the secret to success?” Can you give everyone an idea of what the golden key is and what goes into forging it?

Sure, but I need to take a few steps backward to do this. I’ve seen so many books that promise instant bestsellerdom. This tends to make me very angry because – although this happens occasionally – the more usual reality is that there is no quick and easy formula to success.

If there was, everyone would follow it and then – if you think about it – becoming a bestseller would be even more impossible since this ranking is based on lists, not (as with music) on numbers of copies sold. Then, too, I find myself wondering why – if these people have the formula to write bestsellers – I haven’t heard of any of them.

When I resolved to write a book on writing, I wanted to make sure I wasn’t offering any false promises of this sort. Wanderings on Writing is full of examples, advice, and suggestions. Readers are invited to take what works for them, adapt ideas, and, in this way, forge their own “Golden Key” to success.

I even encourage people to disagree with my approach – as long as that disagreement leads them to creating an approach that will work for them.

When I formatted this book, you had me do things a little bit differently. You had me put all the essays one right after another without the formal chapter page breaks. How do you feel this will change the way a reader reads this book vs. one with the traditional breaks?

The essays in Wanderings on Writing are short, in part because they evolved from blog entries, in part because I wanted them to be the sort of thing someone could read quickly, then go on to another or stop and think.

I wanted the format to encourage this. I think of it as the “bowl of mixed nuts” structure. You start out to read just one, then try another and another…

Which have been your favorite resources on writing and helping you forge your golden key?

As I mentioned above, I have a Ph.D. in Literature. Most people assume this helped me to become a writer. Actually, it proved to be more a hindrance. The things that English professors love – ambivalent endings, layers of symbolism, complex and contradictory images – are things that drive most “real” readers nuts. This is one reason that even English majors don’t tend to curl up and read “literature” on their off time.

Therefore, one of my personal journeys as a writer was learning how to avoid these traps – while still feeling free to be “artistic” and “literary” if it suited a story. My first editor, John R. Douglas, provided me with a great deal of help on writing good endings. I talk about that journey in Wanderings on Writing.

Roger Zelazny and I became friends right as I finished graduate school. Since I completed my degrees by full immersion in the process, when I was finished, I had all this free time. I resolved to fill that time with fiction writing, before it got eaten up by other things. Getting to know Roger at exactly that time was wonderful for me. The letters we exchanged for the next several years often were full of chatter about writing.

This discussion was intensified when I wrote a literary biography of Roger for Twain Press, and needed to ask him a lot of specific questions about how and why he wrote what he did. Roger never tried to teach me to write, because he said that he thought I already had what it took, but our chats gave me a lot of to think about.

Here’s an example. Roger loved allusions, but he said that a story had to work even for those who didn’t “get” a single one of the allusions – but that for those who did there would be an added dimension or richness.

I have faithfully adhered to that in my own writing.

We have to talk about the gorgeous cover art. I had the privilege of laying out the cover, but you had this striking image done especially for the book. Can you tell everyone a bit about the artist and how she came up with the dragon at a computer?

I’ve known Tori Hansen, who did the cover art, since she was fifteen and she was a good artist then. Over the years, as she has pursued various adventures (she’s currently a Ph.D. student in Biology), she has never given up drawing and painting.

I wanted a different sort of cover for Wanderings on Writing. So many books on writing have the same sort of cover: book, pen, computer, whatever, all very grim and serious. I wanted something that would do two things: 1) capture the joy and whimsy in the process 2) hint that genre fiction was not “outlawed” in this book.

Although a wolf is more or less my “totem,” a dragon speaks to Fantasy/SF. I gave Tori a very, very rough (and truly horrible) sketch of my concept of dragon working on a computer. Tori saw a Mayan flavor and took the art in that direction. The “stone wall” the dragon is perched on, by the by, is made up of individual books…

While you’ve been putting together Wanderings on Writing, you’ve also been hard at work on other projects. I know your novel, Artemis Awakening, has just come out. Can you tell everyone a little bit about this one?

Artemis is the name of a planet, lost to mainstream civilization for over 500 years. When archeologist and historian Griffin Dane locates it, his shuttle suffers an accident that leads to a crash. He is rescued by Adara the Huntress and her puma demiurge, Sand Shadow…

Because this is one of my books, nothing goes like you might expect. Griffin’s simple goal – get off planet – leads to revelations that no one, not even the locals, expect.

When started reading SF/F, there were many “planetary adventure” books. (Think Andre Norton, Poul Andersen, Marian Zimmer Bradley, Larry Niven, Anne McCaffery.) Lately, most of what I see on the shelves are military-oriented, dystopian, or grim. I wanted to write a book that, while having some serious themes, wouldn’t be embarrassed to include the Sense of Wonder stuff I’ve been missing.

Animals often feature prominently in your work. I was trying to think of one of your recent books without a strong animal character, and I thought Child of a Rainless Year might qualify, but no, even that one has Blanco, a small character with big personality. People who know you know how much you love animals, can you share a little about what it is that inspires you to write about them?

I guess what surprises me is that more people don’t include animals in their books. Humans are really only a very small part of the puzzle that is life. I like writing animals that are animals, not symbols for human traits or allegories or fables. I also enjoy switching my brain so that I can see from the perspective of the “other.”

Firekeeper, who is probably my most popular character, is completely insane if viewed as a human. However, she’s very sane as a wolf.

Your mention of Child of a Rainless Year reminded me of one of my favorite reader comments about that book. My friend Yvonne Coats called me when she finished. After saying various nice things, she ended, “But I had to laugh. There at the end, you make sure we know the horse is safe. That’s Jane. She’ll put humans through all sorts of things, but she lets us know the horse is okay.”

And that’s true. This isn’t to say that bad things don’t sometimes happen to animals in my books, but these will never be the gratuitous “animals die or suffer to be object lessons for humans” that so often happen in “animal books” – especially, weirdly, animal books written for children.

You and I also share a table of contents in S.M. Stirling’s upcoming Change anthology. Can you give everyone a brief synopsis of your story in this collection of post-apocalyptic stories?

My story is called “The Hermit and the Jackalopes.” It’s set some years post-Change, in the “badlands” – or el malpais – area of New Mexico. It’s about Brett Hawke, a young man who retreats from what’s left of society because he’s traumatized by the sheer amount of death following the change.

And not just human death… One thing that struck me when I started thinking about the post-Change world was how very many animals, especially pets, would die. Ugly.

I didn’t want to write about this, though… Too grim. Instead, I wrote about events that lead to my hermit beginning to interact with the outer world again.

Yeah, okay, I want to read that story right now! Jane and I will be publicizing Wanderings on Writing over the next several weeks, so watch this space for fun stuff like giveaways. Meanwhile, a huge thank you to Jane for this interview, and for the opportunity to help put this one-of-a-kind book together.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

The Long Run and Other True Stories by Mishka Shubaly.

There's a game I like to play sometimes, in which I imagine myself writing a letter to my younger self. I.e. after three years at Oxford, I imagined trying to explain to my eight year old self that this exotic city I was seeing for the first time on a trip with my parents would one day look very mundane. Or every time I finish another book I imagine holding it up to four year old me and saying, "See. You did it. Don't ask how long it took; you'd probably cry."

By far one of the strangest letters, though, would be to my twelve year old self. That was the year I was in seventh grade, and I had first period history and whatever period math with this kid from Canada, Mishka Shubaly. We didn't ever really talk to each other. Our fathers were both glider pilots, and I think we exchanged about four words on that topic. By eighth grade, his family had moved away.

This was before the internet and email were available to the public, before Netscape turned the world wide web into the image laden, interactive experience it is today. I think the next time I ran across Mishka was when I joined Facebook, more than a decade after seventh grade. At that time he was nursing a self destructive substance abuse habit, so although he accepted my friend request and I visited his website and MySpace page, he wasn't really there. I remember thinking that this was too bad. Even though I barely knew him and wouldn't recognize him if I saw him, he had seemed nice enough.

Our friendship, though, was the kind made for Facebook. We weren't best buddies used to talking every day. We were acquaintances. In middle school we saw each other in the hall, sometimes, and knew each other's names. Every now and then one of us might have overheard the other making ridiculous comments, and on even rarer occasions we might have flashed each other a sarcastic thumbs up. These are the interactions perfectly preserved in the form of the Facebook feed, comments format, and "Like" feature.

The fact that both of us had become writers meant that our virtual paths began to cross more often, and somewhere along the line, he sobered up. I can't say when exactly we transitioned from two people who really didn't know each other to two writers who kept in semi-regular contact via social media. He began to write Kindle Singles and became a rising star. I began to indie publish chick lit and he still admitted in public that he knew me.

I quoted him in one of my books, and he tweeted about it to his fanbase. I joked with him in Facebook comments and garnered more than one suspicious glare from female admirers who wondered if I were competition (which, given I'm Mormon, married, and a mother of two small children, I find hilarious.) One night I got an email from Mishka that said something to the effect of: "Emily, I want to do a collection of all my Kindle Singles and I just emailed Jeff Bezos to ask if he'd be willing to do the foreword, and he emailed back right away to say yes. Will you format it?"

And so I did, of course. He sent me all of his Kindle Singles plus some bonus material, essays he'd published elsewhere. He sent me all the draft covers for each and we went through and figured out which ones to put on the pieces. He threatened to drive me crazy asking for constant changes, but I must say, he fell short of that.

If I were to write a letter to my twelve year old self, it would go something like this:

Dear Emily,
Twenty-seven years from now you will be trying to get your car checked in at a body shop and waiting on a promised rental car that is not there, when Mishka Shubaly will message you on your cell phone to explain that Jeff Bezos just emailed an updated draft of his foreword. You will need to put it in Mishka's ebook before upload time. As a result you will have some very tense conversations with several people at the rental car firm and end up being given the luxury sedan that the employee on site drove to work in that day. You will drive the entire length of Santa Fe with Mishka's texts pinging on your phone and get home just in time to get that forward redone and the file sent.
Oh, and the reason that random guy from Ms. Hue's class will be texting you is because that kind of thing happens now in 2014. You are also beta-reading his first novel and he owns a paperback of one of yours - you'll discover this when a mutual friend complements you on it and says, "Mishka loaned me his copy." By 2014, you'll even have met up with him again in person a few times, once in front of a pirate ship in London, where you greeted each other with a hug, and another time at a taco restaurant in Los Alamos, where neither of you lives anymore.
In fact, twenty-seven years from now you will talk to that guy, sitting a few tables away, more often than you speak with anyone else in this classroom. It's a long story, but a good one. I suppose I should also explain what cell phones and ebooks are and who Jeff Bezos is, but you'd likely find that every bit as confusing as the thought of being friends with that guy over there sporting a skater cut.
Enjoy the next quarter century and change,
Yourself
All of this is a very longwinded way of saying, The Long Run & Other True Stories: Foreword by Jeff Bezosis out and for sale. Go buy it. It contains fantastic writing by Mishka Shubaly who is a great guy, and - I'm very happy to say - an old friend of mine.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Clarion West and latest sale

There's a secret I've been sitting on for a while now that I can finally divulge. This year I had the privilege of being one of the admissions readers for the Clarion West Workshop for Science Fiction and Fantasy, and it was a thoroughly humbling experience. As I read the short stories and bios for some of this year's applicants, I kept thinking, "How did I ever get accepted to this workshop???" Obviously I can't give any details about submission stories that I read, but I can say it was a very competitive group. (And for people who tried to talk to me about how to get into CW in the last couple of months, sorry I had to be so guarded, but obviously, I couldn't tell you anything more than what the Workshop's website details. Had I known any of the people I was reading, I would have had to recuse myself from rating their stories.) Doing this little bit for Clarion West was also a chance to give back to an institution that's given me so much. Clarion West opened the door to my science fiction writing career.

Including the sale I recently made to S.M. Stirling's Change Anthology, a set of stories by different authors set in his Change universe. Clarion West didn't just hone my writing skills so that I could earn a slot in this anthology. My CW instructors and classmates helped me through my first WorldCon, where I went to a roundtable event with George RR Martin, who mentioned he was in a writer's group here in New Mexico. My completion of Clarion West made me eligible for that critique group, Critical Mass, which is where I met, got to know, and got tuckerized by S.M. Stirling. (Here, unfortunately, I have to give a disclaimer. Critical Mass accepts new members rarely and no, I can't get you in. I've had a few requests for that lately.)

Stirling's Change anthology will be in print by this August, and we'll do part of the launch, I gather, at Bubonicon in Albuquerque. I really look forward to this - I've been in anthologies before, even with a group of people I love dearly, but hey, each new occasion is still exciting. I'll post more details on the antho as I get them! I'm not sure if I'm the only tuckerized character who contributed a story, but I did give myself a cameo in my story (a very brief one!)

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Launched! Carnival of Secrets by Linda Demeulemeester

Linda Demeulemeester's next book from the Grim Hill series is out! I've read all of these, of course. They're just fantastic. I know they're written for a middle grade audience, but they transcend that.

Set in a fictional North American town, these books begin with the protagonist, Cat, moving in and trying to get her bearings at her new school. Unbeknownst to most of the townsfolk, there are fairies living under the hill overlooking said town, and they aren't the cute, Tinkerbell kind. They are straight out of Celtic lore. Each book is driven by one of Cat's run ins with their magic and each time the story twists and turns in unexpected ways. My favorite feature of Linda's writing is how she portrays important life lessons without being didactic or dogmatic. Cat's not perfect, and she suffers the consequences of this and has to grow as a result. Now the synopsis of this book:

In book six of the award winning and best selling Grim Hill series, is the thrilling Grim Hill climax. Cat has lost everything she holds dear. Sookie has gone over to dark magic and is a diabolical threat. A sinister carnival has crept into town and has everyone under its thrall. Only Cat’s fairy friend Lea thinks there might be a sliver of hope that all the harm can be undone. But even she quakes at the danger. Still, Cat is determined to do whatever it takes, except this time even the gang isn’t prepared for the most harrowing adventure of all. Has Cat gone too far?

As is often the case, I know the author (but I know a ton of authors, so I can't help it if some of them are really, really good ones). Linda and I were Clarion West classmates back in 2001 and the very first week, one of my short stories and her short story were used for the first critique session. Octavia Butler was our teacher and my story was deemed "not really a story" (which was correct, it was a mess) and hers was deemed "ready to sell." Octavia Butler knew a few things about writing and selling stories.

Once we graduated the program, Linda was one of the first to land a novel contract, and she's been writing the Grim Hill novels ever since. They've been in and out of development as an animated series, and I do hope that project gets a greenlight someday soon. Meanwhile, I've gone and bought this book. You should too! Here is the link:

Friday, October 25, 2013

This is how cool George RR Martin is

I know, I know, it's been forever since I've blogged here. Life has been crazy - as usual.

My cousin was recently diagnosed with cancer and has been enduring treatment. To lift her spirits, the rest of us Mah cousins bought little plastic red dragons and took pictures of them various places. The original idea was to get one dragon and pass it around, but since we live all over the continental US, multiple dragons made more sense. We just all got the same one, and we used a dragon because my cousin was born in the year of the dragon (anyone who knows Chinese might wonder why we didn't use a horse, given our last name is Mah :-)

Well our dragon had some fun adventures and came with me to an author event in Denton, Texas where it met Colleen Hoover. Then it disappeared, and we couldn't find it in our house, until one day when my husband turned on our stove and the dragon, which had been stashed in the broiler by two very small people who know who they are, melted to sludge. I had intended to have George and some of my other author friends take pictures with the dragon. My cousin is a Game of Thrones fan.

So, when I was up in Colorado, visiting my sister, I got her dragon - which had it's face half chewed off by their dog, but never mind. It was in much better condition than my dragon. I got this dragon back home without incident and emailed George to ask if he'd have his picture taken with it.

He agreed. He even let me stop by his house, and we took this picture:


Wasn't that cool of George? The final CD of dragon images will go to my cousin in time for her party to celebrate the end of her treatment. I think I win the prize for the picture most appreciated by geeks.

Win a SIGNED copy of Rewind, by Terry England

You have to be a little bit in the know to recognize this title. Terry England was a fellow member of our writer's group, Critical Mass, so like me he workshopped with George RR Martin, SM Stirling, Walter Jon Williams, Melinda Snodgrass, and other well known authors, and Rewind was originally an entry for a writing contest. One of the judges liked it so much that he had his publisher buy it.

Terry's also got a more recent release, The Tyranny of Heroes, and at least one other novel I've had the privilege of reading. Fellow New Mexicans may also recognize his name from The New Mexican newspaper, where he was a reporter for many, many years.


In the early years of the third millennium, an alien ship lands in the New Mexico desert. Its occupants are a mysterious, yet peaceful, life form known as the Holn. After a six-year stay, during which thousands of curious humans flock from all over the world to visit the spacecraft- turned- museum, the Holn depart suddenly, leaving behind 17 teens who had, until that morning when they entered the alien craft, been adults. Now, with complete memories of their former adult lives, they struggle to come to terms with this unasked-for "gift".

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