Sci-Fi Romance Quarterly #4 celebrates cyborg romance with a guest column by GAMES OF COMMAND author Linnea Sinclair, an interview with author Eve Langlais (Cyborgs: More Than Machines series), and articles about cyborg romances by Charlee Allden (Smart Girls Love SciFi & Paranormal Romance) and Heather Massey (The Galaxy Express--that's me!).
You'll also discover SFR release coverage from June to September, a review by Ian Sales of Pamela Sargent's WOMEN OF WONDER, sci-fi romance reviews, and much more!
Click here to download your free copy. Enjoy!
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Saturday, September 27, 2014
Thursday, September 25, 2014
SFRB Recommends #24: Lunar Exposure by Shona Husk #sfr #scifi
Lunar Exposure by Shona Husk
Bounty hunter Callen wants to capture Noga—a terrorist—both for the money and for revenge. But catching a criminal on the sensual resort of Decadent Moon without giving in to all the destination’s sexual pleasures is harder than it seems.Haliday is the darling of the media, a socialite known as much for her casual relationships as she is for her charitable donations. No one knows she hunts down criminals.
Lust and ambition clash, and Callen and Haliday will have to find a way to work together, despite the distraction of their passionate bond. To succeed they must trust each other, something neither Callen nor Haliday is willing to do.
73pg Erotic Sci-Fi Rom.
Overall, I really enjoyed this read. Would definitely recommend. However there were some issues. For one, I found a bit too much telling and not showing going on. Also didn’t like the italicized time element. Distracting every single time. A bigger issue was in her hot and steamy scenes. The word repetition made me want to pull my hair out a few times. I’d love to run this through autocrit to see how many times clit and slit show up. Still, having said that, those scenes worked for me. Loved the heat level!
Well done.
This recommendation is made by Sabine Priestley.
Author site: Shona Husk - Romance Author
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
World Building with K.G. Stutts
When I set out to write the first book
in my sweet sci-fi series, Mirror Image, originally I didn’t
have to do a lot of world building. The story is set modern day, here
on Earth, in Charleston, South Carolina. There weren’t space ports
or aliens interacting. Just Madison Mackenzie Rhodes, finding out
she’s a clone. The first half of the book is all character
building. I knew this story would be very character driven and if my
reader didn’t connect with Maddie, then there was no point to it.
One of my best friends is also a writer
who spends hours world building. She actually spends more time on
world building than she has writing some of her stories. To her,
that’s the fun. I never quite understood until I reached the second
half of writing Mirror Image.
As a sci-fi fan, the possibility of
other planets, cultures, and species has always fascinated me. So
when it came time for Maddie to leave Earth, my mind reeled in
wonder. I wanted something different than what we have seen on sci-fi
programs. I wanted to make the reader feel like they were no longer
on Earth.
Inspiration for the Aurora planet,
which is a neutral world in the galaxy, came from watching the sunset
at the beach. The colors were so vivid. I could still close my eyes
and see the sky. That’s what I wanted for Maddie for the first time
she left Earth. She needed to ease into it. So the planet was locked
in a permanent aurora borealis affect. But if there wasn’t full
sun, what would the rest of the planet look like? Small vegetation
with rough, brown grass. No birds in the sky. No natural water
spring. It all made sense to me.
I’m currently writing the third book
in the Mirror series. I always try to top myself whenever it
comes to creating a different planet or species. I’ve encountered
tall, ogre-like beings, trolls, aliens whose arms move like rubber
bands, beings with wings, and so much more. It’s a lot of fun to
let the imagination run rapid.
Some writers don’t like world
building or think it’s hard. Some, like myself, love it. My advice
is to not skip out when planning your story or you might miss
something important.
Here is an excerpt from Mirror
Reformed:
Jackson
and Mack climbed into a flyer toward the alpha site to meet with the
contingent of representatives in the ISC organization. Races from
across the galaxy joined to meet with them. There were dozens that
couldn’t meet due to the distance in the short amount of time
Jackson gave them, so they were being representative by a hologram.
“This
looks like the Jedi counsel,” Mack murmured. Jackson nodded.
Over
sixty representatives sat on red cushioned rounded chairs in a
circle. Mack and Jackson stood at the center with a universal
translator droid. They took a moment for everyone to get settled
before speaking.
“My
friends, thank you for meeting with us on such short notice,”
Jackson began.
“What is this about?” A tiny voice squeaked
the question.
Mack looked over at the hologram image of Rachel
from the Agonahan home world. “Earth is being threatened.”
A
garbled voice from a yellow skinned Senub race grabbed their
attention. It took a moment before the universal language droid
translated. “By whom?”
“A race known as the Synth,”
Jackson explained.
The
gathered crowd began to speak all at once at the mere mention of the
name. It took several minutes to calm everyone down.
“Surely
you must be mistaken,” a representative from Bespe spoke up.
“If
only we were,” Mack said.
“The Synth died out thousands of
years ago,” the Bespian argued.
“Always been a mystery, the
Synth are,” said a Solarian said. “Much we don’t know.”
“If
they have resurfaced, this could only spell doom for the galaxy,”
Rachel squeaked.
“Bed time stories,” a Zomhun roughly said.
“The Synth isn’t real.”
“No, they are very real,”
Jackson replied. “If you don’t believe me, check your own sensors
in quadrant seven. You’ll see their ship.”
Several
of the contingents muttered, pulling out their comms to speak with
their ship. Mack and Jackson waited with baited breath as the
responses began to filter in. Each ship reported just as Jackson had
said.
“Seems
the human speaks the truth,” the Bespian reluctantly
admitted.
“Hu-man need help from Argafforn?” the cousin of the
Fabrega asked.
“We’re asking for anyone’s help who can give
it,” Jackson said.
A Syareblayn named Murokk snorted. “Help?
To evacuate your planet?”
“To fight them,” Mack
replied.
“You can’t fight them. You can’t reason with
them.”
“So what do you suggest then, Murokk?” Mack asked.
“For us to give up?”
“Surrender will save millions of your
kind.”
“No.” Jackson shook his head.
A
long and loud shriek from a Boshol made everyone cover their ears.
After a moment, the droid translated.
“Your
people will perish. Do not ask for mine to do the same.”
“Arrogant,”
a Eaygrn huffed. “You Terrans are too arrogant for your kind.”
“We
should help,” a Qeete named Murrsee stated.
“I agree,” a
Setol said. “The Synth will not stop with the Terrans.”
“Do
you at least have a plan other than asking us to risk our lives?”
Murokk asked.
“We have a few,” Mack stated.
“We
understand this is our fight,” Jackson said. “We do have
strategies in place for this upcoming battle. We’re not asking for
you to do anything we wouldn’t do for you in this situation.”
The
room fell silent. The droid translated for several of the alien
races. A murmur began in the crowd, growing among the gathered
representatives.
“The
Intergalactic Security Commission was created for this purpose,”
Murrsee spoke up. “What kind of allies are we if we expect you to
come to us, but we turn you away in your time of need?”
Mack let out a sigh of relief. “Thank you.”
Mack let out a sigh of relief. “Thank you.”
Bio:
Growing
up in Texas and later South Carolina as the youngest in a house full
of science-fiction fans, K.G. Stutts had her natural curiosity and
imagination nurtured since birth by family movie nights where they
would watch Star Wars, Indiana Jones and even timeless Disney
favorites.
A
prolific writer of sci-fi, romance and mystery, K.G. draws much of
her inspiration from those amazing works that gave her an
appreciation for telling rich, compelling, character-driven stories
for all audiences.
She
is a sci-fi series writer with Distinguished Press and also has
several romance novels available. She is also a contributor to
http://iwassociation.com
and http://thewritingnetwork.com.
She lives in North Carolina with her husband, Brad and works for a customer service call center full time. She's a lover of Star Wars, Star Trek (original, TNG, and Voyager), Stargate SG-1 and Atlantis, Muppets, Garfield, Disney, Indiana Jones and is a big football, wrestling, and hockey fan.
She lives in North Carolina with her husband, Brad and works for a customer service call center full time. She's a lover of Star Wars, Star Trek (original, TNG, and Voyager), Stargate SG-1 and Atlantis, Muppets, Garfield, Disney, Indiana Jones and is a big football, wrestling, and hockey fan.
Social
Media:
Twitter: @KGStutts
Facebook.com/KGStutts
KGStutts.com
Kgstutts.blogspot.com
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Modern Marketing for the Indy Writer Part II
Part One: Evaluate, Strategize, Execute, Re-Evaluate
In Part One of this series, my short-term goal was simple: I wanted you to take a serious look at your current marketing efforts and truly evaluate how your book, your cover, your website everything you're doing stacks up to the competition.
But my longterm goal for this series remains the same: I want to change your mindset. I want you to walk away from this knowing that you can and should be selling more books.
But how many? How many books should you be selling?
That's what we're going to look at today.
What are your goals? Do you have goals? How many books do you realistically expect to sell? What is the book-moving capacity for your chosen target market? These are the the very same questions I've asked every marketing client I've ever worked for, and these are the questions you should be asking yourself—and they're definitely questions your publisher should have very specific answers for (more on publishers at a later date).
Don't worry about answering yet. Just think on it for a moment. First let me map out why it's so important we address these questions, and why I think you need a sales target.
Setting Sales Targets
The biggest mistake I see so many indy-artists make is that they don't set sales targets when they publish. They either don't have a specific target in mind, or if they do, they've set their sights way, way too low. Yes, low. Setting an achievable and realistic sales target is the first step you need to take to build a solid foundation for your marketing platform.
So why are goals so important?
A sales target is the foundation of any business plan, and yes, publishing and writing is a business.
First, we can't plan a marketing strategy unless we know exactly what we want to achieve. For instance, selling 100,000 units will require a vastly different strategy (and resources) than selling 10,000 units. Second, if you don't set a goal for yourself then it's absolutely impossible to gauge the success or failure of your (or your publisher's) marketing efforts.
If you've ever worked in sales (selling cars, clothes, real-estate, whatever), then you know that every sales person is given a quota. This is done for two reasons: one, it's a great kick-in-the-ass motivator, and two, it's the only way to gauge how well that sales person is doing. Are they exceeding their quotas or falling behind? Should they get a bonus or get fired?
Publishing our books should be no different. We need to know if our marketing efforts are working and helping us reach our projected sales targets?
So how many books can we expect to sell? What should our goal be?
Sales goals aren't about what you want to sell. It's not about wishful thinking. It's about what you should expect to sell (assuming you've researched your market, worked your butt off and done all your homework). I'd love to sell a million books, but I know that's not realistic as a goal—not right now, and not for a while.
So what is a realistic number? Fifty books a month? Five Hundred? How about five thousand?
The answer depends on what market your targeting, and the only way to answer this question is to thoroughly research your target market. We must know what the potential for our market is. We must have a firm grasp of what kind of sales other independent authors are doing in our chosen market of SFR.
Market Research
Before I published, before I wrote my first chapter, I spent months studying what the best-selling indy-authors were doing (in my very specific target-market of science-fiction adventure featuring ass-kicking cyber-women in a dystopian corporate-run future). I looked at how many books they were selling (you can find all sorts of sales data online), who was publishing them, who was editing them, who designed their covers, how often they released titles and what efforts they took to market themselves.
If you haven't already done this, then this should be your very first marketing research assignment. And it's important that you focus on what the best-selling indie-published authors are up to. Don't bother comparing yourself to the trads. Traditionally-published* authors are working with the kind of marketing-muscle we don't have, and their strategy will be very different from what we're capable of.
While doing your market research it's doubly important that you (again!) be brutally honest about how your book stacks up to the competition, both in terms of the writing and presentation (covers, book pages, websites, etc.). Take some time and read some of these books, too. Find out how your book compares, how it looks, how it reads. Examine how their marketing efforts differ from yours. Chances are you'll end up with some great ideas.
If this sounds like a lot of work, it is. But this kind of market research will reap huge rewards. I promise.
Once you start spending some time online getting to know the books and authors you’ll be in competition with you'll also start to develop a more complete picture of how Amazon works, and how to manipulate Amazon it in your favor. I know when I did this a huge dime dropped for me. I knew then that there was a huge potential to sell a lot of books. And I was right.
Numbers! Numbers! How many, already!
After doing my research I came to the determination that it was possible for me to sell 10,000 books. That number became my goal. I gave myself three years to hit that mark. And because of that research I thought that number was doable, even conservative, though I had no idea if I'd actually achieve it.
Again, this estimation was calculated based on what I saw other indy writers selling, how many titles they had vs. the single book title I was releasing at the time, how many units they sold per month, how I thought my book stacked up against theirs, in terms of quality of writing (story, characters, narrative, etc.), and of course the look of the book (packaging and branding).
Whether or not I would hit this number didn't matter, though I'm extremely happy to say that I did. And it took a lot less time then I thought. But what really mattered was that I had a realistic target in my sights. It was realistic because I'd done my research. I knew what kind of sales were possible. I had a firm goal in mind and I was determined to reach it—and because of that research I had a pretty good idea as to how to go about it.
Best of all, doing this research got me excited enough to actually sit down and finally write my first novel. Something I'd wanted to do for decades. It was the exact motivation I needed.
Depending on your perspective, selling 10,000 books either sounds like a lot or a little. For me, it was a mix of both. I’ve been around the block enough to know that 10,000 books is a drop in the bucket in the publishing world, but I also knew that selling 10K would be like totally freaking awesome for me as a first-time indy-writer-publisher. And it was.
Now that I'm getting set to publish the third book in my series, my new goal is to sell 100k by 2018. I've raised that number up from 10k, because I know that books sell books, and the more you have the more you can sell. Again, this number has not been pulled out of thin air. It's based on what I see similar titles doing. It's not just wishful thinking. It's based on the research I've done into my target market. I also know that if I don't reach this goal I'll have no one to blame but myself. Right now I'm falling way, way behind in my writing milestones and it's putting a serious damper on that 100k goal. But this is my fault. Not Amazon's. Not my lack of publishing support. It's my fault.
Your own sales goal will have to be based on your own research. It's all about how your book stacks up to the competition, how well it stands out from the crowd, and what your target market will bear.
Which brings us to the next section.
HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT #2: MARKET RESEARCH
This is what I did before I published, and if you haven't already done it, now's the time.
It's a lot of work, but take heart in the fact that this assignment serves a number significant purposes. I know when I did it I learned a f*deleted-by-editorial-staff-ton about Amazon and how it worked. By the time I published I felt I had a pretty good handle on things. I felt confident that I was launching my book properly, and that it would slot in well into my target market. Within a few weeks, that list at the bottom of my Amazon book page (where it says "People who bought this book also bought these books…") featured all of the very same books that I had researched. Their readers had become my readers. I felt like I'd nailed my target market.
Next Week: THE MARKETPLACE, YOUR PRODUCT & YOU
Part Two: Sales Targets & Solid Foundations
Part Three: The Marketplace, Your Product & You
Part II
Sales Targets & Solid Foundations
Part II
*SIDE NOTE: By 'traditionally-published' I mean published by one of the big, well-established publishing houses—the kind of house that's willing to unleash an entire marketing team behind your book series, the kind that's going to get you in magazines, on all the big web sites, on TV, youtube, and put you on extensive book tours. So, for the sake of this series, I'll be counting all the small ePress publishers as independents.
- Pick your target market (smallest, most focused sub-genre on Amazon). Mine was Sci-Fi/Genetic Engineering.
- Find four best-selling books by four different best selling indy-authors within that target category. These should be books that you think your readers will also enjoy.
- Study these authors. See what they're doing to market themselves—this includes their online presence, who they picked to edit them, who designed their covers, and in some cases who published them if they went with a third-party publisher.
- Lastly, research how many books they sell, by month, by year and by total sales. There's a few ways to do this. The easiest is to look them up on a sales tracking site. You can also estimate their sales by their Amazon ranking. If they're ranked between 2k and 3k, then they're selling around 1000 books a month. If they're in the top 1000, then they could be selling a few hundred copies a day. Top 100 ranking means they're selling thousands of copies a day! Use this data to determine your sales target and time-frame to reach that goal.
Next Week: THE MARKETPLACE, YOUR PRODUCT & YOU
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Love and Sex in the Dark Future by Angelia Sparrow
Romance is all about transformation
though the power of love. But what happens when love bumps its nose
against control, against a whole world designed to keep everyone in
their place and everything moving smoothly?
Sex in dystopias tends to fall into one of three categories: highly restricted and regulated, used by the government as a constant distraction for the citizens, or slotted into pure routine. Love is discouraged in all forms of totalitarian futures, because love inspires people to irrational acts of individuality and throws society out of kilter.
In 1984, sex is regulated and love is only directed at children or Big Brother. Spouses “do their duty to the Party.” Our hero has or had a wife. He's as fuzzy about that bit of history as he is the year. He doesn't remember what became of her. There is even an Anti-Sex League, dedicated to abolishing the orgasm, and complete propagation by artificial insemination. When Winston and Julia do fall in love, they are crushed under the state's heel, and tortured until they betray each other and despise each other. Their love is not powerful enough to bring down the state.
In The Giver, the Anti-Sex League won. All emotions, all memories, all connection have been abolished. Family units are together for the convenience of the State. And sex is eradicated by a pill. No romances break out to disrupt the steady rounds of society.
On the flip side is Brave New World. Love is meaningless. Early childhood conditioning renders sex a pleasant habit, emotional connection impossible and monogamy an aberration to be stomped out. Families have been eradicated, and freemartins are 70% of the female population. (the term comes from cattle, and indicates a sterile female, twinborn with a male calf) The society shunts its individualists and thinkers off to an island, but there will never be a revolution out of love or romance. The words have no connection to the people.
When reading a SF romance, we tend to expect that if it's a dystopia setting, the lovers will escape it, like Logan and Jessica of Logan's Run, or destroy the system. Indeed, for a happy ending to occur, one or the other must happen. I was collected in Circlet's Like an Iron Fist, which was dystopian erotica. I caught up with CTan, the editor, later and mentioned I was the only one who had an unhappy ending to my story. She thought and agreed it was odd.
While the sex in erotica may transform the couple, it seldom transforms the world. The question becomes whether love in a romance is enough to change the world.
Tell me about your favorite dystopias, and how love can change them, or how your lovers escape.
“Nice car,” Nick said, still staring at the driver’s hair. If this man could get around the appearance laws, he could get around anything. Long hair was a three-year offense on a man, just as short hair on a woman was a five-year. “Bullet-proof, deep tint. Got a high-powered engine, it sounds like.”
The only response was a conspiratorial smile.
“Fuel-cell, biodiesel or just ethanol?” He had a feeling he already knew the answer.
“Fuel-cell.”
Nick gave a low whistle. The C.S. did not have fuel-cell technology. The United States refused to trade it with them. This foreign-made car just clinched what he already knew about his benefactor. “I’ll bet you got some big fortress of a place, way out in the country, too. All the rich folks are shaking the city dust off their shoes and setting up their own little plantations these days.”
“I live in the city.” He settled back into the seat as the driver cruised the late night streets of Revenant territory, Poplar and Central, Pauline and Danny Thomas. Past the projects, fallen yet again into disrepair, and the concrete canyons and one-way streets of downtown, darkened for lack of nightlife. In the distance, the Beale Forbidden Zone glowed, contraband generators and alcohol lamps casting lurid shapes in the night.
Nick’s eyebrows went up. “That ain’t safe for a man with money,” he said after a long pause.
“You won’t be seeing my home for some time.”
The smile turned into a far less pleasant smirk, making Nick wonder again what that mouth would feel like on him, what it would taste like against his. Vlad had been the first after two years of celibacy and now he couldn’t seem to stop the desire.
The car rolled into an underground garage, somewhere in downtown. Nick had gotten distracted looking at his benefactor and it was hard to read signs through the deeply tinted windows. It stopped and a big black man wearing a gun opened the passenger side door. Another anomaly. Ten years ago, weapons had been forbidden by law to the Sons of Ham.
Nick hesitated, staring, and the guard pulled him out of the car and onto his feet. He stumbled a little and regained his balance just in time to meet a shove between his shoulder blades.
“I’m going!” he snapped, which earned him another shove toward the bank of elevators on the far wall. He walked as fast as his off-balance position allowed, which wasn’t fast enough for the guard, who shoved him most of the way.
Ligatos followed, taking his time. Nick heard him talking to the men behind him, catching only the words, “Excellent reflexes” and “Good balance” in voices that were not Ligatos’.
“I wasn’t wrong about this one,” came Ligatos’ voice. Nick waited in the elevator until Ligatos joined him.
Dystopia is a popular form of SF, and
much of it recently has written for the YA market. (I was deeply
disappointed that the Divergent series is written in present
tense. I'll just wait for the films) The teens, when everything seems
the bleakest, is a prime time for dystopia. I read 1984 and
Brave New World, as well as Nourse's The Blade Runner
(about an illegal doctor) in my teens. Since then, Ira Levin's This
Perfect Day and other books have been added. I've even written a
few. My husband likes dystopias. They're almost the only fiction he
reads.
Sex in dystopias tends to fall into one of three categories: highly restricted and regulated, used by the government as a constant distraction for the citizens, or slotted into pure routine. Love is discouraged in all forms of totalitarian futures, because love inspires people to irrational acts of individuality and throws society out of kilter.
In 1984, sex is regulated and love is only directed at children or Big Brother. Spouses “do their duty to the Party.” Our hero has or had a wife. He's as fuzzy about that bit of history as he is the year. He doesn't remember what became of her. There is even an Anti-Sex League, dedicated to abolishing the orgasm, and complete propagation by artificial insemination. When Winston and Julia do fall in love, they are crushed under the state's heel, and tortured until they betray each other and despise each other. Their love is not powerful enough to bring down the state.
In The Giver, the Anti-Sex League won. All emotions, all memories, all connection have been abolished. Family units are together for the convenience of the State. And sex is eradicated by a pill. No romances break out to disrupt the steady rounds of society.
On the flip side is Brave New World. Love is meaningless. Early childhood conditioning renders sex a pleasant habit, emotional connection impossible and monogamy an aberration to be stomped out. Families have been eradicated, and freemartins are 70% of the female population. (the term comes from cattle, and indicates a sterile female, twinborn with a male calf) The society shunts its individualists and thinkers off to an island, but there will never be a revolution out of love or romance. The words have no connection to the people.
This Perfect Day, The
Sentinel Stars and other futures make sex as dull as possible,
part of human routine, like eating or going to the bathroom. This
dulls the people and makes them not reach for more than gray little
lives.
When reading a SF romance, we tend to expect that if it's a dystopia setting, the lovers will escape it, like Logan and Jessica of Logan's Run, or destroy the system. Indeed, for a happy ending to occur, one or the other must happen. I was collected in Circlet's Like an Iron Fist, which was dystopian erotica. I caught up with CTan, the editor, later and mentioned I was the only one who had an unhappy ending to my story. She thought and agreed it was odd.
While the sex in erotica may transform the couple, it seldom transforms the world. The question becomes whether love in a romance is enough to change the world.
Tell me about your favorite dystopias, and how love can change them, or how your lovers escape.
And while you're at it, pick up a free
copy of Nikolai, a fairly unconventional SF love story, (I call it a
dark future, kinky, gay Pygmalion) at
http://brooksandsparrow.com/NikolaiRevenant.pdf
Or email me at angeliasparrow @ gmail
for a .mobi or .epub
Nikolai Revenant Excerpt:
Ligatos followed him in and said a word to the driver, a big man with long dark hair. The prissy blond—the lawyer, Nick presumed—slid into the front beside the driver. Nick just looked around himself as the limo pulled out of the garage beneath 201 Poplar. It rose smooth and whisper-quiet to the street levels and cut through the minimal traffic, a shark among the lesser fish.
Ligatos followed him in and said a word to the driver, a big man with long dark hair. The prissy blond—the lawyer, Nick presumed—slid into the front beside the driver. Nick just looked around himself as the limo pulled out of the garage beneath 201 Poplar. It rose smooth and whisper-quiet to the street levels and cut through the minimal traffic, a shark among the lesser fish.
“Nice car,” Nick said, still staring at the driver’s hair. If this man could get around the appearance laws, he could get around anything. Long hair was a three-year offense on a man, just as short hair on a woman was a five-year. “Bullet-proof, deep tint. Got a high-powered engine, it sounds like.”
The only response was a conspiratorial smile.
“Fuel-cell, biodiesel or just ethanol?” He had a feeling he already knew the answer.
“Fuel-cell.”
Nick gave a low whistle. The C.S. did not have fuel-cell technology. The United States refused to trade it with them. This foreign-made car just clinched what he already knew about his benefactor. “I’ll bet you got some big fortress of a place, way out in the country, too. All the rich folks are shaking the city dust off their shoes and setting up their own little plantations these days.”
“I live in the city.” He settled back into the seat as the driver cruised the late night streets of Revenant territory, Poplar and Central, Pauline and Danny Thomas. Past the projects, fallen yet again into disrepair, and the concrete canyons and one-way streets of downtown, darkened for lack of nightlife. In the distance, the Beale Forbidden Zone glowed, contraband generators and alcohol lamps casting lurid shapes in the night.
Nick’s eyebrows went up. “That ain’t safe for a man with money,” he said after a long pause.
“You won’t be seeing my home for some time.”
Nick shrugged as much as he could
manage. “Whatever you say. I’m the one sitting here in cuffs.”
He tried not to think about how cold and numb his hands were. He
squirmed a little and got them into the small of his back.
The smile turned into a far less pleasant smirk, making Nick wonder again what that mouth would feel like on him, what it would taste like against his. Vlad had been the first after two years of celibacy and now he couldn’t seem to stop the desire.
The car rolled into an underground garage, somewhere in downtown. Nick had gotten distracted looking at his benefactor and it was hard to read signs through the deeply tinted windows. It stopped and a big black man wearing a gun opened the passenger side door. Another anomaly. Ten years ago, weapons had been forbidden by law to the Sons of Ham.
Nick hesitated, staring, and the guard pulled him out of the car and onto his feet. He stumbled a little and regained his balance just in time to meet a shove between his shoulder blades.
“I’m going!” he snapped, which earned him another shove toward the bank of elevators on the far wall. He walked as fast as his off-balance position allowed, which wasn’t fast enough for the guard, who shoved him most of the way.
Ligatos followed, taking his time. Nick heard him talking to the men behind him, catching only the words, “Excellent reflexes” and “Good balance” in voices that were not Ligatos’.
“I wasn’t wrong about this one,” came Ligatos’ voice. Nick waited in the elevator until Ligatos joined him.
About the author:
Angelia Sparrow is the author of 17
novels (12 published and 5 in various edits) and nearly 90 short
stories. She lives quietly in the MidSouth, crocheting and knitting
when saving or destroying the world becomes too much. She runs
Inkstained Succubus Press with Gabriel Belthir. Her next release is
unknown, but will be showcased at http://brooksandsparrow.com
She blogs at angelsparrow.blogspot.com and as valarltd on
Livejournal, Pinterest, Tumblr and FetLife. She can be found on
Facebook as Author Angelia Sparrow, or under her own name.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Think Like A Reader by Lynn B. Davidson
I think one of the most important
things to remember when using social media is to try to place
yourself in the reader’s position. With only one book out and one
book being released soon, I still feel more like a reader than a
writer most of the time. One of the things that still makes me
scratch my head is some author’s social media strategies on
Facebook. When I see authors posting ads in groups that don’t
allow promo, or posting political opinions or trashing other authors
I wonder if they have thought about their actions from a reader’s
perspective?
There are many kinds of Facebook
groups. Some allow promo, some don’t and some are hybrids. When
you join a Facebook group, take a look around the group and read the
rules before posting an ad for your book. The last thing you want to
do is turn off potential readers by the appearance that you can’t
or won’t follow rules or directions.
For Facebook groups that allow ads,
look at the last fifty posts. Are they all ads for books with few or
no comments? Chances are, those groups are not attracting many
readers. If the group is not one where you would find a new
read, it probably isn’t where your potential readers are looking
for new books. I’m not saying it doesn’t have value or you
shouldn’t post there, but it may not translate to sales.
For Facebook groups that don’t allow
ads, don’t try to circumvent the rules. People are perceptive and
will see through your attempts to try to subversively advertise for
your book. Remember authors are readers too, and you don’t want to
irritate authors in your social media strategy.
Refrain from posting about your
political views. People with differing political views read all
genres of books. If there is any chance that what you are sharing is
going to offend someone with the opposite political view, you may
have just turned off a faithful or potential reader. This also
applies to posting your religious views.
Don’t trash other authors or books.
They only thing that some people hold as dearly as their political
beliefs is their love of their favorite books. Faithful fans will
not appreciate your distain of the characters they love. They also
may decide that if you hate something they love, that they wouldn’t
like your work.
Facebook can be a wonderful and useful
tool for writers, especially if you are aware of the pitfalls. If
your goal on Facebook is to attract new readers, keep faithful
readers and interact with other writers, keep in mind how what you
post may be perceived.
Sincerely,
Lynn B. Davidson
Golden Perspective:
Evie and Tyler were captured as slaves
and forced into intimacy by the captors. As time went by, they found
solace and love together, but when they miraculously escape, Tyler
must finally tell Evie the truth. He is a prince on his planet, and
marriage with an Earth woman is unacceptable. He loves her, but he
has to put the needs of his people first. Heartbroken, she
understands.
Evie begins a new life on this alien
planet where she meets the gorgeous and loyal Dylan. Dylan’s single
minded pursuit and devotion convinces her that they can overcome
their cultural differences, and love once again is possible. Tyler
sees Evie falling in love again, and realizes nothing is more
important than loving Evie.
Now he must win not one, but two
hearts. Can Evie overcome her fears and learn to love these two men,
and embrace the vibrant and sexual culture that would have all three
of them loving one another?
Available here: www.bookstrand.com/lynn-b-davidson
Monday, September 15, 2014
Meet the #Author Monday - Rachel Leigh Smith #giveaway #scifi #romance
Please tell us a bit about
yourself:
Well, I live in central Louisiana
with my family. I have a half-crazed calico named Zoe. Currently I’m catching
up on the TV show Arrow so I can jump in watching the third season and watch
The Flash spin-off. I’m the oldest of four, and a massive Dark-Hunter fan.
Tell us about My Name Is A’yen:
It’s the hero’s story, A’yen. And
he’s a humanoid alien. His life has been on hold for the last year, and he’s
mourning the death of his lover when he meets the heroine, Fae. She’s looking
for A’yen’s homeworld. That he doesn’t believe is real. Along the way he
discovers there’s more to her than meets the eye, and he comes to believe his
homeworld was real, and that they’ve found it. But of course it’s not that
easy. There’s a powerful group that doesn’t want this planet found, and they’ll
stop at nothing to make sure it remains a myth.
What inspired you to write this
particular story?:
A’yen walked into my head in a
dream on the night of May 16, 2012. I was spinning my wheels on the novel I was
working on at the time, and decided to dive into this strange world and see
what happened. Every day was an adventure, because I had no idea what was going
to happen next.
Please share a favourite snippet
from your book:
Pink
tinted her cheeks, she stared at her shoes, and her fingers stopped their
gentle massage. A’yen lifted her chin with his finger, to see her eyes. “We
weren’t that loud. Pete is very good at tall tales.” He ran the tip of his
thumb along the bottom of her lip. “The point is, the way I talk to people above me terrifies my mother. It’s a miracle my
mouth hasn’t gotten me killed.”
Pete giggle-snorted. “It almost did that
one time. Remember? I went down with you and Wayan to a festival on Centron.”
A’yen grinned at the memory. “Oh yeah. I
told the governor’s wife if she didn’t get her hands off my ass and out of my
pants I was going to break her fingers.”
Fae covered her mouth in a failed attempt
to stifle a laugh. “I bet you did.”
“In my defense, I had no idea who she was, but her bodyguard had me
on the ground in two seconds and almost broke my fingers. Then I had to
apologize to her and the governor before they’d let me leave. If the governor
hadn’t found it so funny, I’d be dead.”
Which comes first for you – a character's
looks, personality or name?:
For my heroes, they come to me
with all three. Looks, personality, and name. The heroine I usually have looks
and name right off, but finding her personality is often a challenge. With Fae,
A’yen’s heroine, it took two drafts and a class at a writer’s conference to
figure her out. Sometimes I still feel like I don’t know her as well as I
should.
Any tips for aspiring authors?:
Finish your first draft!
Questions for fun:
If you had the power of time
travel, is there anything you would go back and change? Why/why not?:
I wouldn’t change anything. I’ve
watched too much Doctor Who and Star Trek and learned my lessons about changing
the past. It never works out like you intend. There is one event in my own life
I wouldn’t mind erasing, but at the same time without that event I wouldn’t be
where I am. And I don’t want to lose where I am.
What super-power would you
choose?:
Flying! Then I could go see my
besties in Iowa and New York whenever I want.
If you could have three wishes,
what would they be?:
Hmm.... I really don’t know. All
I know is I would abide by Genie’s three rules from Aladdin: No wishing for
more wishes. No wishing for someone to fall in love with me. And no wishing to
raise the dead.
Coffee, tea or wine?:
None of the above. Coke and hot
chocolate are my weaknesses. And I’m in love with a drink at a local restaurant
chain called Sex in the City.
What is your favourite book?
(aside from one of your own!):
That’s like asking a mom to pick
a favorite child! Currently, I guess I’d have to pick Acheron by Sherrilyn
Kenyon. I have a MAJOR crush on Ash. As in before I started answering these
questions I downloaded a wallpaper of his god seal from Sherri’s website...
Favourite genre and why?:
Romance! It’s 98% of what I read.
I love everything about it. When I’m reading a book that’s not romance, or
doesn’t have a strong romance sub-plot, it can be a chore at times to make
progress on it. I’ve been working on A Storm of Swords for a month now.
Favourite colour?:
Purple. Most of my clothes are
purple, my computer is purple, my Nook cover is purple, my favorite eyeshadow
set is purple, the quilt on my bed is purple, my favorite hoodie is purple. I
kind of have a problem...
Upcoming news and plans for the
future?:
Books two and three of A’yen’s
Legacy will be out next year, and there are more to come! I have four and a
half written, and another two planned. And I’m sure there will be more after
that, I just haven’t met the characters yet. There’s also a prequel story I
hope to get up some time next year as a permanent freebie. I’m looking forward
to attending my first RWA conference next year too.
Thank you so much for taking the
time to talk to us!
Thank you for having me.
Bio: Rachel Leigh Smith writes romance for the hero lover. She lives in
central Louisiana with her family and a half-crazed calico. When not writing,
which isn’t often, she’s hanging with her family, doing counted cross-stitch,
or yakking about life, the universe, and everything with her besties. There may
also be Netflix binging . . .
She blogs sporadically at www.rachelleighsmith.com,
can be found on Twitter @rachelleighgeek, and hangs out on Facebook, www.facebook.com/rachelleighsmithauthor.
You can sign up for
her newsletter here.
Buy Links:
Blurb:
They've taken
everything from him. Except his name.
The Loks Mé have been slaves for so long, freedom is a
distant myth A'yen Mesu no longer believes. A year in holding, because of his
master's murder, has sucked the life from him. Archaeologist Farran Hart buys
him to protect her on an expedition to the Rim, the last unexplored quadrant.
Farran believes the Loks Mé once lived on the Rim and is
determined to prove it. And win A'yen's trust. But she's a breeder's daughter
and can't be trusted.
Hidden rooms, information caches and messages from a
long-dead king change A'yen's mind about her importance. When she's threatened
he offers himself in exchange, and lands on the Breeder's Association's radar.
The truth must be told. Even if it costs him his heart.
Thursday, September 11, 2014
SFRB Recommends #23: The First 50 Pages by Jeff Gerke #writing #craft
The First 50 Pages: Engage Agents, Editors and Readers, and Set Up Your Novel for Success by Jeff Gerke
Book Blurb
Whether you’re looking to get published or just hoping to hook your reader, first impressions are vital. Compelling opening scenes are the key to catching an agent or editor’s attention, and are crucial for keeping your reader engaged.As a writer, what you do in your opening pages, and how you do it, is a matter that cannot be left to chance. The First 50 Pages is here to help you craft a strong beginning right from the start. You’ll learn how to:
- introduce your main character
- establish your story world
- set up the plot’s conflict
- begin your hero’s inner journey
- write an amazing opening line and terrific first page
- and more
Recommendation
This is a great book and not just for the first fifty pages. Jeff spends the first part of the book giving us an inside view of what it’s like to be an acquisitions editor. He outlines the whole process and tells us what is guaranteed to kill your chances of getting a deal. The rest of the book is spent going over what every author needs to know about the first fifty pages and what they need to accomplish. He uses a lot of examples to show how and why things work (or not). I like this book because it touches on the entire novel experience, the three acts, and what you should know about your characters before you even start writing.This book recommendation is brought to you by Sabine Priestley.
Author site: Jeff Gerke
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Ingredients Of A Perfect Hero, part one: Compassion
My first post here on the Brigade blog was about my idea of a perfect hero. I included a list of what I have to have in a hero. Here it is.
What is compassion? Let's ask Merriam-Webster.
Compassion is a mindset, a way of looking at the world and truly seeing the people around you as people with problems, people who are hurting in some way. It may not be visible, but that doesn't mean the hurts aren't there. In writing we call these things character wounds. A compassionate hero is aware his heroine is hurt in some way, and he doesn't stop at wanting to help. He actually helps.
It's all the more meaningful an act when it requires the hero to step outside of his own pain to help the woman he's falling in love with. This is what I did in my debut novel, My Name Is A'yen. A'yen is a man trapped in his grief and having a very hard time dealing with it enough to let it go. It's not until he sees her pain that he realizes he's not the only hurting person. Her pain is different from his, but no less real.
A compassionate hero is also a sacrificial hero. He's willing to do whatever he must to alleviate the suffering of the one he loves, to the point of sacrificing what he most wants. This includes being willing to sacrifice his future, his dreams, and even his life.
In real life, people who step outside their pain to help other hurting people are the ones who actually recover from their hurts. The same is true in fiction. When a hero steps outside his pain, focuses on the heroine, and helps her deal with whatever has hurt her--physically or emotionally--it begins his own healing process. When A'yen helps Fae, by being willing to sacrifice one of the things he holds most dear, it enables him to heal, and it enables Fae to heal. Does it hurt him to do it? Absolutely. But he does it anyway, because compassion is so much a part of him he can't imagine not helping her.
It's also true in reverse. Compassion is a key ingredient for a perfect heroine. But compassion in a heroine doesn't make us swoon. When it comes from the hero, which is a place many readers don't expect it to come from, or have never experienced in their personal lives, it makes the hero memorable. And that's what we're all after, isn't it? A memorable book, with characters who never quite leave our readers alone.
For the last few years, with the rise of paranormal romance, the alpha male is EVERYWHERE. I'm not a big fan of the paranormal alpha male, to be honest. Recently, this alpha male has taken what I consider to be a bad turn, and become a bully who doesn't care about anything except his own satisfaction. That type of man is a not a hero, and it's a good way to make me wall-bang a book and never read that author again. Why? He has no compassion.
Don't be that author! A man of compassion is a key ingredient to keep readers coming back for more. It's why Dark-Hunter fans love Acheron so much. It's why Mel Gibson in The Patriot resonates with so many people, me included. It's why Captain America is so popular. It's part of why we love Groot.
Compassion is also an attitude. It doesn't mean the hero has no backbone, or is a sucker for lost causes. It means he cares about the people around him. And honestly? There's nothing more attractive to me than a man who cares and makes the effort to show it.
My perfect hero is a man of compassion. A man who never gives up, no matter how much life beats him down. He's a warrior with a strong sense of justice and loyalty. He's a protector of those weaker than him, male or female, animal or alien. Most importantly he's not afraid to lay down his life for the one he loves. And he's not afraid for her to know it.Today is the first in a three part series where I'm going to expand on this paragraph. After all, I write romance for the hero-lover. I love nothing more than a hero-centric romance. The second part will be about warrior qualities and post on October 14th. The third part will cover the hero as protector, and post on November 11th.
What is compassion? Let's ask Merriam-Webster.
Compassion: sympathetic consciousness of others' distress together with a desire to alleviate itThat's a big definition. One could call it high concept. We're going to look at it from a romance perspective. What does it mean to have a compassionate hero? The easy answer is he helps people. But the easy answer doesn't help a writer imbue a hero with compassion. A compassionate hero helps people, yes, but there's more to it.
Compassion is a mindset, a way of looking at the world and truly seeing the people around you as people with problems, people who are hurting in some way. It may not be visible, but that doesn't mean the hurts aren't there. In writing we call these things character wounds. A compassionate hero is aware his heroine is hurt in some way, and he doesn't stop at wanting to help. He actually helps.
It's all the more meaningful an act when it requires the hero to step outside of his own pain to help the woman he's falling in love with. This is what I did in my debut novel, My Name Is A'yen. A'yen is a man trapped in his grief and having a very hard time dealing with it enough to let it go. It's not until he sees her pain that he realizes he's not the only hurting person. Her pain is different from his, but no less real.
A compassionate hero is also a sacrificial hero. He's willing to do whatever he must to alleviate the suffering of the one he loves, to the point of sacrificing what he most wants. This includes being willing to sacrifice his future, his dreams, and even his life.
In real life, people who step outside their pain to help other hurting people are the ones who actually recover from their hurts. The same is true in fiction. When a hero steps outside his pain, focuses on the heroine, and helps her deal with whatever has hurt her--physically or emotionally--it begins his own healing process. When A'yen helps Fae, by being willing to sacrifice one of the things he holds most dear, it enables him to heal, and it enables Fae to heal. Does it hurt him to do it? Absolutely. But he does it anyway, because compassion is so much a part of him he can't imagine not helping her.
It's also true in reverse. Compassion is a key ingredient for a perfect heroine. But compassion in a heroine doesn't make us swoon. When it comes from the hero, which is a place many readers don't expect it to come from, or have never experienced in their personal lives, it makes the hero memorable. And that's what we're all after, isn't it? A memorable book, with characters who never quite leave our readers alone.
For the last few years, with the rise of paranormal romance, the alpha male is EVERYWHERE. I'm not a big fan of the paranormal alpha male, to be honest. Recently, this alpha male has taken what I consider to be a bad turn, and become a bully who doesn't care about anything except his own satisfaction. That type of man is a not a hero, and it's a good way to make me wall-bang a book and never read that author again. Why? He has no compassion.
Don't be that author! A man of compassion is a key ingredient to keep readers coming back for more. It's why Dark-Hunter fans love Acheron so much. It's why Mel Gibson in The Patriot resonates with so many people, me included. It's why Captain America is so popular. It's part of why we love Groot.
Compassion is also an attitude. It doesn't mean the hero has no backbone, or is a sucker for lost causes. It means he cares about the people around him. And honestly? There's nothing more attractive to me than a man who cares and makes the effort to show it.
Rachel Leigh Smith writes romance for the hero lover. She lives in central Louisiana with her family and a half-crazed calico. When not writing, which isn’t often, she’s hanging with her family, doing counted cross-stitch, or yakking about life, the universe, and everything with her besties. Her debut novel, My Name Is A'yen, releases September 12th.She blogs sporadically at www.rachelleighsmith.com, can be found on Twitter @rachelleighgeek, and hangs out on Facebook. You can sign up for her newsletter here.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
SFR Authors As SFR Readers: A Wrong Assumption?
While authors are also readers and play the separate roles
accordingly, there are times when their reader selves overlap with their author
personas. Plus, social media technology provides more opportunity than in the
past for readers to learn about authors and their interests. Therefore, if an
author publicly shares the titles of books she reads, sometimes the act is a
component of her marketing strategy, like a form of branding.
In general, I assume authors enjoy and actively read books
in the genre(s) they write, at least when it comes to SFR. I enjoy learning
about which SFR books authors like because a) it's interesting information that
can inform my experience of an author's stories and b) I occasionally learn
about new titles that way. I don't expect authors to be experts about SFR, but
I do expect them to be knowledgeable. Not just in terms of craft, but about things
like the genre's current market.
I also assume authors, for the most part, are interested in helping
to raise the visibility of SFR as a whole (because it in turn can help
individual authors). One way of accomplishing that goal is by routinely mentioning
SFR titles they've enjoyed. Doesn't even have to be a recommendation, just a
moment of sharing and paying it forward.
Lately, however, I've begun to wonder if my assumptions are
off base.
The reason being is that when I encounter authors being
asked about SFRs they enjoy or SFR characters they like in a public venue, the
answers are frequently and perplexingly meager. I've seen authors sidestep such
questions in interviews over the years. (Keep in mind that I read many, many
SFR-related interviews and posts so I tend to notice such patterns. YMMV.).
In interviews, I've seen answers take the following forms (which,
incidentally, have been by both mainstream print and digital-first authors):
* Authors don't read SFR when they're writing because of
concerns they'll unconsciously copy ideas/passages from other books.
* They can't find any SFRs to read.
* They can find SFR, but not any they like (which is
sometimes followed with a variation of "So I wrote my own" as an
example).
* They share favorites from other mediums more frequently,
like movies and television.
* They discuss non-romance SF books (or even fantasy).
* They only name title(s) by authors who share the same
publisher.
* They mention SFRs, but only those by the most highly known
authors (e.g., Linnea Sinclair and Catherine Asaro) and/or authors of classic
romantic SF (e.g., Lois McMaster Bujold)--even though many other estimable books
have been published since.
All of the above amounts to a collective signal boost when
one takes into account the numerous interviews and posts authors do. What
message is being sent? Why aren't more authors engaging in social media
conversations about the SFR books they read?
Maybe I'm completely underestimating how competitive authors
are. Perhaps they feel it's not in their best interest to mention any other
books except those by the most established, visible authors.
On the other hand, perhaps the idea of branding oneself as
an active SFR reader has been overlooked as a way of helping the genre grow.
To clarify, this isn't about establishing fan credibility.
Most authors are clearly speculative fiction fans to varying degrees. But when
an author writes SFR and her list of what she reads in the genre seems to be
practically nonexistent, what kind of message does that send?
It makes sense to give credit where credit is due. Authors
like Linnea Sinclair, Catherine Asaro, and Lois McMaster Bujold have worked
hard in both their writing and advocacy of romantic SF and SFR. Subsequently,
if they're truly the only authors worth mentioning over and over and over again,
the implication is that science fiction romance authors whose names aren't Sinclair, Bujold, or Asaro must tremendously
step up their games both creatively and marketing-wise if other gold standard
books are to break out.
I'll leave you with this
comment (via The Radish) as further food for thought.