Give Me Liberty…

Three Years in the Making

… Con. Give me LibertyCon. It’s been too long since there has been one. I’m not going to bother explaining why there hasn’t been an in-person LibertyCon for a few years. If you’re an alien without the context of the past couple of years, you’ll need to reach out to me directly for an explanation. For the rest of you, you KNOW.

This has become my favorite convention. The sheer number of literary professionals in attendance is a big draw, but so is the fact that its the only place where I get to share a long weekend with literally dozens of my best friends, sharing a common experience.

This year will be a little different for me. Not just because it’s been so long, but because I’m finally published (in a small way) and have started really putting my head down to understand tradecraft. This will be the first time I’m seeking that sort of knowledge in such a deep pool of knowledge. I want to learn from the best and there’s not many places to do so better than LibertyCon.

While during the day I’ll be attending panels, soaking up information like a sponge, in the evenings I’ll be enjoying fine cocktails and conversation at the room parties. One of which I’ll be hosting. The Completely Random Cocktail Hour.

It’s not random because of the drinks served, it’s random because of the hours of operation. I don’t want to be tied to my room all night, so if I feel like I need to wander off… I’ll do so and temporarily shut the doors. It’s something I’ve been doing at cons for close to two decades and its part of what I enjoy. Other people seem to like it too.

What’s New

Making slow progress on my science fiction novel WIP. During my #fridaynightwrites session last night, I think I know what I want the title to be. If you’re reading this, you’re in a select club of people who know.

CONSEQUENCES

I’m interested what your thoughts are on the working title. What would you expect from a science fiction novel with that title. Let me know! If you’d like to be a part of my early reader team… Let me know! If you have any other questions for me… Let me know! (There’s a theme here…)

Beyond that, I’m waiting patiently to find out if I’m a finalist in the Baen Fantasy Adventure Contest. Nineteen days until they announce. If my name isn’t in the list I get to add one more story to the “learn from this and make it better” pile.

What’s Next

After LibertyCon I’ll be knuckling down to improve my weekly word count on Consequences and sometime in the next couple of months, I’ll be reworking some short stories in the Fellblade universe for submission to next year’s FantaSci anthology and potentially working on some additional shorts in anthologies that, if they spin up, I’ve been invited to write for.

It’s all very exciting.

WHAT I’M READING

It’s been a while since I last posted, so I’ve had an opportunity to read a lot. I know that I don’t have enough fans to complain that I’m reading instead of writing, I can honestly say that I am reading for research into what makes a good story as well as reading for enjoyment.

Legacy of Heorot and Beowulf’s Children are classic science fiction from the literal masters of the craft. Good books, solid reads, and written in a style that I don’t know that I want to replicate, even if I could. It’s what’s needed for the tale of man vs. untamed planet though. I really recommend these.

Salvage System is another of Kevin Steverson’s books that sells really well. He’s found an audience in space opera and it’s worth reading for the story and for how he’s done it.

Bill Webb write military fiction. A lot of it. There’s ways to describe battles that I need for what I’m writing. I definitely get that from Shadows. It’s also a story that takes place in Chuck Gannon’s Caine Riordan universe, which I’m heavily invested in as a reader. You should be too.

Talons and Talismans is another short story anthology by New Mythology Press, the publisher of Fellblade in Keen Edge of Valor. The story that I submitted for this anthology (and that got rejected) is one that I plan on reworking for next year’s FantaSci anthology. The talent in that anthology was off the hook and I needed to see how I could learn from them.

Finally, Abbott in Darkness. I really like DJ Butler’s stuff and this is a wonderful story – the kind about a protagonist that isn’t much different from you or I. He’s a good person who risks everything to do the right things the right way and the story is about the consequences for doing so.

May Happenings

What am I doing?

That’s a good question. I’m miles away from being a full-time author, so the day job continues to consume much of my time. But, I have done some writer things. Since the last update, I have:

  • Attended a Convention at the last minute
  • Finished a short story for a contest submission
  • Gotten “active” in social media for the first time in a few years
  • Learned more about how I most effectively edit

Penguicon – the Convention:

A Convention Like No Other

Penguicon is a local convention that I had started attending the first year it started. It’s a different kind of convention than most – a mix of fandoms and creative types – with an emphasis on “makers.” It’s kind of cool. Even before the <redacted> shut down the world for two years, I had slowed my involvement, often just buying a pass and showing up to see friends on a Saturday evening. But, between being a new author and Penguicon super short on room nights and attendance to keep the con going, I dedicated a whole weekend. End result – saw friends, helped save a convention (a little bit), and sold a few books at the Writer’s Block. It was worth the time, but it did eat into my writing time.

The Writer’s Block was interesting. Instead of having individual author tables, they grabbed programming space and set up a table where any author who had registered with the con could put the books that they wrote (focus on makers, remember) up for sale. A single merchant account with a Square register had everyone’s books and the prices that the authors wanted to charge loaded into it. In exchange for a few shifts staffing the Block, an author’s books were on display and able to be sold without the author being present. There was no charge and no table fee to do this. The folks with the merchant account deducted the processing fee, collected sales tax, and should be sending the net sales out along with the collected sales tax out this week.

The Short Story:

Baen Fantasy Adventure Award Contest

I’m afraid that I can’t talk about the story itself much because there’s a small, but not negligible possibility that one of judges for the Baen Fantasy Adventure Award may read this. I don’t want to disqualify them from judging my story or sabotage my chances. I’ll have to keep quiet for the next couple of months, but I really like this one.

One of the things that I’ve been learning in this journey of mine is how important community is. My friend and author, Monalisa Foster, was one of several individuals who gave my story a read ahead of time. She took the extra time to point out some things that, when fixed, made for a much more polished submission. I am not relying on this sort of deep review from her, or anyone going forward, but it’s a great example of why you need to maintain and grow your network. Pay it forward, pay it back… be kind and build up others.

Gotten “Active” on Social Media:

Social Media is too much like work….

Following advice from the books on writing and getting published that I’ve been reading, I’ve dipped my toes back into Social Media. What does this mean? I’ve started posting again on Facebook and created an Author account there. It can be a tremendous time sink and I’m carefully managing my time and efforts there, with a focus on keeping engagement with my friends and potential readers. I’ve also recreated a Twitter account. And, unlike my first account, I have actually started engaging people. I have followed and am being followed to a much greater extent than before. My last account consisted of a single tweet over several years of the account being active.

“I have more Twitter followers than Julius Caesar, Alexander the Great, and Ghengis Khan combined.”

There’s a balance here, staying active and engaged without it taking time from the more important things in life. Like writing more stuff for you to read.

Editing is NOT Writing

I may have mentioned before… if not here, then definitely in other forums… that I need to get out of the house to be really effective at creative writing. Too many distractions at home and I spend 8-10 hours a day, every weekday, working from home. I need the physical disconnect, different space, etc. in order to be creative.

That’s exactly the opposite of what I need to effectively edit. I spent four hours doing what I thought was a final editing pass at my Friday Night Writes hangout.

Fortunately, I took some time Saturday afternoon to do a “last minute” pass before submission when I was at home. My time the night before was largely wasted and it took me just as much time to re-edit everything as I had spent the night before. Lesson: Creative space is not the space I need for editing.

What Else is Going On?

Well, I never stop reading for one.

As predicted, Larry and Steve’s Servants of War was amazing. I’m still going through the third book in the Author Fundamentals series by Chris Kennedy Publishing. Kevin Steverson’s Salvage Fleet book (book 2 in the series) was a fun ride.

Talons and Talismans is a bittersweet read for me. I apparently just missed the cut with a story submission for the two book anthology (tons of great stories in there). Even without my contribution, it’s a great read.

Up next for me is one of my favorite authors, Joel Shepherd, with the eighth book in the Spiral Wars series, Ceephay Queen. I can’t wait to dive into it. The first book in this series, that I can’t recommend highly enough, is called Renegade. Start there!

As far as writing goes, I’ll be getting back to my science fiction novel WIP this week.

And now, I leave you with a picture of a kitten, guarding my books. Peanut is more likely to run from you than to attack, but he at least pretends to be fierce.

This is not the Cave to the Underworld