Saturday 23 June 2012

Interview with Dan O'Brien


After my novella The Red Queen was published on BooksToGoNow, I came across another author on the BooksToGoNow Facebook page, a hub for the publisher's staff, writers and their fans.  Dan O'Brien is a psychology grad student, radio show host, magazine editor and author from California (he has a lot of proverbial hats), who like myself writes on a wide and eclectic variety of subjects.  Unlike myself, he trains extensively in martial arts, but I do have a cane so I think it could be a close contest.
I put some questions to him, author to author, to get his perspective on the writing process and the industry as it stands today:

Saturday 9 June 2012

The Red Queen - Books To Go Now

A little while ago I mentioned I had landed a contract for publishing a story, but I could not go into serious detail.  Now my novella The Red Queen is available for Kindle and other e-readers courtesy of Books To Go Now.  The indulged princess Amelia finds responsibility for her kingdom thrust upon her when her ambitious brother ascends to the throne and proves himself a dangerous tyrant.  She struggles with the realisation that she can no longer hide in her bedroom with a revolving door of companions.  Will she be able to find a political solution that allows her to return to her life of sweet wines, sex and rising at sunset; or, as her confessor Cardinal Garnet suggests, will she have to take the reins of her kingdom force?

Friday 1 June 2012

Coming Soon To Smashwords

I have had some very positive results with Smashwords recently.  My goal has always been 'professional' publication, something I have achieved on occasion and that I continue to pursue, but as the writing world becomes ever more saturated and publishers fly ever higher in their ivory towers, simply getting somebody to look at one's writing is like climbing Ben Nevis, with landing a publishing contract being at the summit of Mount Everest.  You might have a brace of short stories under your belt and be looking for markets to send them to, but each market requires that you read screeds explaining their submission requirements and that you spend an hour formatting your manuscript to their exacting, pedantic specifications.  Then to add insult to irritation, they will often demand that you don't dare submit the story simultaneously anywhere else, but wait three months for them to get back to you.  If you follow the rules, it might take you a year to shop one story to three or four publications.  Darwin help you if you're looking for an agent for your novel and don't spend hours writing the perfect pitch for each and every agent who might read the opening line of your book and decide it doesn't 'grab them'.

I actually did land a publishing contract recently, so perhaps I shouldn't be throwing stones while standing in this pretty glass house, but there will be more details on that later.  And of course there are plenty of agents out there who are not immediately dismissive, and publications that don't have such anal submission requirements.  That's actually becoming more popular as writers seem to flock to email submissions, which at least cuts down on some of the bureaucracy.

For now, I have a handful of stories on Smashwords: some for free and some for cheap, as well as an anthology of them all for a bargain price.  And people are reading them, and even buying them.  All I had to do was read the Smashwords Style Guide to make sure my manuscripts were correctly formatted (and at least I only had to deal with one particular format, even if the meatgrinder software is a bit of a pedant itself).  Then I uploaded them, detailed what they were and who they might be for, and the market came to me.  I obviously took my time in writing them and aimed for the same quality I would for a submission piece, but with my other submission pieces still out there in the ether of editors' inboxes, I figured "why wait?".  The stories are out there in front of an audience of millions, without taking all year to be accepted or rejected by one particular reader.  After having been conditioned by the industry to avoid and deride vanity publishers, it can be easy to feel like going to a service like Smashwords is admitting defeat, but really it is circumventing it.  My stories rise and fall on their own merit and a dash of luck with getting the right audience to find them - they don't have to wait for an increasingly busy, distracted individual to decide whether they happen to be what they are looking for.

So after this modest early success, I have another story up my sleeve, and I'm curious what readers would think about it appearing on Smashwords, piece by piece.  It's an episodic adventure story, a lovechild of the TV series 24 and NCIS, if that lovechild were somehow booted into a steampunk fantasy universe.  The first episode should drop sometime next week, and will be free, and I would naturally love some feedback on that and all the stories currently up on Smashwords.  Keep an eye out here for more info on something else that's about to be published.  Now, here's your moment of zen: