Tag Archives: Writing

Happy INDIEgiving!

Yay! It’s INDIEgiving week!

I have so much to be THANKFUL for this year. My dad recently had a massive heart attack and a quadruple bypass – so scary, especially considering that we don’t have a history of heart attacks in our family and never expected it to happen.

He’s doing great now! He’s at a rehab facility and will get to come home in time for Thanksgiving. Like I told Nikki Jefford, it’s the stuff Lifetime Holiday Movies are made of. :)

Despite what happened to my dad, this year has been pretty great. One of the best things about 2012 and being an indie author in general, is that I get to meet and become friends with so many awesome writers.

I was going to compile a big list of writers who you should be reading, but I don’t want to leave anyone out accidentally. So, here’s the deal: In the comments tell me about a writer that you are thankful for and why I should read them. I’ll randomly pick three winners from the comments when INDIEgiving is over and gift them any indie e-book of their choice from Amazon, BN, or Smashwords.

Happy holidays!

For more INDIEgiving posts, click here.

 

Rise of a Rector Tour

 

The final novel in Heather McCorkle’s channeler series, Rise of a Rector, has released! To celebrate, and in the spirit of October, Caitlin from the channeler series is here to tell us about a scary moment in her life. Take it away Caitlin!

Caitlin: I was with my Society, half asleep in the back of some stranger’s Land Rover on our way to see a man in Costa Rica when I heard my best friend Eren suck in a breath, the kind that make you sit up and pay attention. Her aura went all dark and foreboding. She was looking out the window. We were rolling slowly through the dirt streets of a decrepit village that looked like it was right out of one of those commercials that try to get you to donate to starving children. There were bodies lying on the sidewalks, in the openings of doors, even a few in the streets. It was as though everyone in the entire village had just dropped dead.

Check out Heather’s blog for a new tour stop each day until November 2nd. To thank her fans, and future fans, Heather’s historical fantasy novel (a standalone novel that ties into the channeler series) will be free Friday November 2nd and Saturday November 3rd on Amazon. And if Heather gets over 1000 downloads of To Ride A Puca in those two days she’ll give away a $10 Amazon or B&N gift card! So spread the word, get ready to download To Ride A Puca, tell all your friends to download it, and drop by Heather’s blog now to enter to win the gift certificate.

You can find all three novels in the channeler series (The Secret of Spruce Knoll, Channeler’s Choice, and Rise of a Rector) on Amazon and B&N, as well as other retail sites. The channeler novella~and prequel to The Secret of Spruce Knoll~Born of Fire is currently free on Amazon and B&N and you can find a short story about Fane from the series in the FREE anthology, In His eyes. You can add Rise of a Rector to your Goodreads lists at this link.

Way to post, like, once a month dude.

It’s still summer here for another month. My kids don’t start school until mid-late September and it’s actually hot here, so we’re wringing all we can out of the season while we have the chance.

Of course, other things have been going on – the hubs and I had our 10 year wedding anniversary and we took a little trip to the San Juan islands. While we were there, we met authors Keary Taylor and Nikki Jefford. So much fun! And I’ll be meeting Amanda Hocking in person for the first time next week. I’ve been friends with all of these lovely ladies online for a long time – it’s great to finally meet face-to-face!

The kids have been in swimming lessons and track camp and they start sports camp this week, followed by karate and dance at the end of the month. My mom taxi is in full effect!

I also started a camp of my own, sort of, Crossfit! It’s really hard, but rewarding in that way where you’re using muscles you didn’t know you had. Right now I’m working out four days a week and will be moving to five next week. Wish me luck!!

There are birthday celebrations coming up, more weekend trips, the Pac NW YA bbq, a Gotye concert and back-to-school shopping! My August calendar has so much stuff on it, I can barely make out what I’m supposed to do from one day to the next!

So, what have I been working on? Found is coming along nicely, if not at a snail’s pace. The covers for the entire Penny Black trilogy should be ready soon – I’ll post them everywhere ASAP! The Awesome Robin Ludwig has done it again!! I finished listening to the audiobook of Glimpse last night – look for that to be available by the end of the month.

And, honestly, I’ve been reading a lot. Seaweed, Tangled Tides, Crave, and Envy in the past two weeks. I get to a point a couple of times a year where I just want to do nothing besides read. I always give into it. :)

I hope everything is going well with you all and that your summer has been a blast! I’m sure I’ll be around more often when it starts to rain. :)

#ROW80 update (composed during shaved ice sugar high)

Update!

I’ve written every day since Sunday, except for today as I have barely been home. There’s still time! I’ve worked on a different project each day and have put in between 200-500 words. Not a lot, but it’s better than the zero I get when I stress about not having enough time to hit 1K a day.

I was good about not checking my stats until yesterday, when I was ordering a cookbook and saw in my history on Amazon that the Day of Sacrifice Omnibus had received its first review.

Which was 1 star…because the reader ”was disturbed” that it was targeted at young adults.

Ahem.

The second line of the book description is as follows: The Day of Sacrifice Omnibus is intended for adult readers due to language and sexual situations.

The Day of Sacrifice stories are by S.W. Benefiel. See over there on the right sidebar of this blog? Under the Books for Adults – that’s where all the Day of Sacrifice titles appear.

I’m not sure what else I can do to let people know that, yes I write YA, but I also write NA, stuff for adults and stuff for ADULTS.

Anyway, that set me off on a stats binge. I not only checked my sales on every platform, but I checked the reviews on all of my books. 

I’ll do better. Now that I’ve publicly vented (note that I did not engage the reviewer even though I really, really wanted to) I can let it go.

So, last round I started this tumblr called Be Awesome, Beautiful Dreamer and I was going to add essays to it for a new Toilet Business-esque book of essays. But, then I never had any time to actually write all the new essays because I was worrying about getting DoS done and I have all of these starts that I haven’t finished yet. Forcing essays doesn’t work the same way you can force yourself to sit down and write a scene. It takes me longer to think out my opinion and what I remember about certain events and what to cut…

I digress.

Instead, I changed the name of the blog to FAT WRITER. I’m putting my whole family on the Paleo Diet starting next Monday and I thought it would be useful/funny/entertaining/informational to blog about it. There are two posts up now and I’m about to add another after I make dinner. Check it out. There’s a huge picture of me riding a giant brass tortoise at the Oregon Coast Aquarium on it.

I know, how can you resist?

Happy writing, friends! I’m off to make brats.

 

Midsummer Retelling Stand Alone #ROW80 Dream

Last night I had a dream that I was at an indie author convention and all of my writer friends were there. (I would die if this were ever really a thing. I have so many writer friends that I would love to meet in person!) After some hilarious antics involving a bee in my iced coffee cup and not being able to find the correct elevator that led me to my personal slot machine room, we all settled into a ballroom for the awards ceremony.

Lots of friends won awards and I was a little bummed. I knew I hadn’t won anything because I hadn’t put out a new novel since 2011 and no one was reading my short stories.

Then Vicki Keire suggested that I write a stand alone retelling of a Shakespearean play.

That’s when I woke up.

And realized that I have notes for a stand alone novel that’s a modern retelling of a classic.

Was the dream a sign? Is THIS what I should be working on?

Or, am I just freaking out?

I’m just freaking out, even in my sleep, apparently. I’ve got an overwhelming number of projects that I need to finish. Not that any of them have a deadline – apart from the one that I’ve made for myself that consists of GET MORE WORK OUT FASTER.

I’ve tried prioritizing works by projected release dates. I’ve tried daily and weekly word count, timing myself, writing for two hours a day, one hour a day, four thirty-minute intervals.

Blah, none of it works for me.

I need for writing to be fun again. That’s what works.

Therefore, my goals for this ROWnd are:

1. Write something every day. On any of the WIP’s, however much I get done, I get done. Eventually, one of them will be finished.

2. Stop reading reviews (I’m really close to doing this already.)

3. Check sales numbers once a week on Sunday morning. (The withdrawal is going to be a bitch. Ha!)

4. Always check-in on Sunday and try to check in on Wednesday.

That’s it!

Now I’m off to see what I can do with my new time travel short story, since I worked on Found several times this past week.

Happy writing!

 

Happy INDIEpendence Day!

This INDIEpendence Day I’d like to celebrate the awesome V.J. Chambers!

V.J. and I have been friends for a couple of years. She reviewed Glimpse on her website and I got a Google Alert about it. That’s how we met!

I thought since she did me a solid, I should probably read Breathless (Book One of the Jason and Azazel Trilogy) to see if I was into her books. Well, let me tell you, I felt like lightning struck my brain. I quickly devoured Trembling and Tortured, the other two books in the trilogy. (For a complete list of her books, click here.)

V.J.’s books are everything I love about reading indie. They’re deliciously weird and dark and sexy and funny. Her characters act like real people, even when they have supernatural abilities. She doesn’t go easy on religion or sexuality. A lot of her characters screw up big time and the process of watching them try to redeem themselves is the readers reward.

After reading the Jason and Azazel Trilogy, I basically told V.J. I’d beta read her grocery list if she wanted. Good thing she writes hella fast, because she had more books to shoot my way instead.

Like the Jason and Azazel Apocalypse Trilogy Omnibus (same characters, a whole new trilogy!) and my current personal favorite, The Toil and Trouble Trilogy.


Loyalty. Family. Trust.

Olivia Calabrese has valued nothing more strongly since her mob boss father was arrested and her mother was killed in the cross fire. Even though her family sells illegal magical charms that have the nasty side effect of turning some wearers into berserkers—rage-filled monsters—she sees betrayal as a far worse offense than harming people. To prove her loyalty, she dreams of succeeding her father as head of the mob family.

When her uncle, the current boss, is shot by a rival gang, she just might get her chance.

But her cousin, her only competition, whispers something to her that throws her off track. He says her mother ratted the family out to the police. He says that her mother’s death wasn’t an accident, but a hit ordered by her father.

Her entire worldview called into question, Olivia sets about hunting down the truth about her parents. And to complicate matters, she seems to be falling for a boy who’s turning into a berserker—from her own family’s charms.

As her set of values shatters around her, Olivia must choose between staying loyal to her family or fighting against them.


Olivia Calabrese struggles to deal with the fact that her boyfriend Brice turns into a berserker—rage-filled monster—every night at midnight, and that if she ever has sex with him, she’ll turn into one too. When she’s not busy looking for a cure (that everyone claims doesn’t exist) for the berserker virus, she’s trying to deal with the threats her mob boss father Lucio levels against her newly formed jettatori “family.”

If that weren’t enough, it’s becoming clear that Tommy, her mentor and friend, is a double-agent for Lucio, feeding information to Lucio so that he can try to kill her with armies of berserkers.

And to make matters even worse, her right-hand man Josh seems to be developing a crush on her, something that Brice is not particularly happy about.

I just love these books! They. Are. Fabulous.

That’s why I’m giving three sets away! (Entry form at the bottom of the post.)

But first, check out this great guest post V.J. wrote about antiheroes.

If you asked me to choose between having Han Solo or Luke Skywalker back me up in a fight, I’d pick Luke. If you asked me which one I thought would make a better husband and father, I’d pick Luke. If you asked me which one I would rather play in a game of cards, I’d pick Luke.

On the other hand, if you asked me to watch Star Wars without the character of Han Solo, I’d walk out from sheer boredom.

I’m not sure when my obsession with antiheroes began, but I would guess that watching Han Solo was right there at the beginning. Han was a little shady. You were never sure, especially at the beginning, whether he was really on the side of the good guys or if he was just around to make money. When he started hitting on Leia, he was all kinds of cocky, in the way where he might get a sexual-harassment lawsuit if he was doing it now and not in a galaxy far, far away. And he was extremely rude. To, like, everyone.

However, Han was the heart and soul of the movies. (The lack of a Han Solo character in the prequels is one of the many ways they went wrong, but that’s a subject for an entirely different essay.) Take Han away, and all you’ve got is good versus evil in space with laser swords. Don’t get me wrong, that’s still pretty cool. But a character like Han Solo… well, that makes things really interesting.

I like characters like Han Solo. I like characters that struggle to do the right thing. I like characters who aren’t even sure what the right thing is. I like characters who make it just a teensy bit hard for me to care about them. I like characters with flaws. Big flaws. Nasty flaws. Flaws that make me uncomfortable. I like Lestat. I like Tony Soprano. I like essentially everybody in The Walking Dead.

Don’t get me wrong. It’s not that I like bad guys. I don’t have any intention of rooting for people who like to hurt other people, my enjoyment of slasher movies notwithstanding. What I like are people that you care about, people who you want to win, but people who do their best to win, even if it means they aren’t very Pollyanna about it. I think those kind of people are more real. And while I’m not a stickler for extreme realism in my fiction, a realistic character — emotional realism, I suppose — is a definite plus.

So if those are the kind of people that I like to read about, obviously, those are the kind of characters I’m going to write about. My characters don’t always do the right thing. Sometimes they do things that shock and disgust me. They inhabit a gray world. They aren’t the bad guys. That’s for sure. But sometimes they don’t particularly act like good guys either. Still, I think their struggles are somewhat more poignant for the fact that they aren’t stalwart heroes in the traditional sense. Instead, they’re a little broken. They aren’t sure which way to go.

If antiheroes intrigue you too, then you might like my books. Just remember that like Han Solo, my characters might shoot first.

                                                                                                                                                            

V. J. Chambers is fond of snakes, cheesecake, her boyfriend Aaron, Stephen King books, Buffy, and corduroy pants (although not exactly in that order).

She is the author of the two Jason and Azazel trilogies and many other stories for teens and adults.

She lives in Shepherdstown, WV.

Website, Facebook, Twitter

 

 
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Want to read more INDIEpendence Day posts?

 

So, how did I do? A very special #ROW80 post

Here were my goals for this round:

1. Write for two hours every day in 25 minute increments with 5 minute breaks in between. Use my Focus Booster timer to do this. Do more if I have more free time! (It happens once in a while.)

I did this for a few weeks. I suck. I suck at following any kind of schedule or program. No matter my best intentions, I skip days, I forget to time myself, I work on what I want to instead of what I need to.

I strive to improve this aspect of my writing, but I also don’t care that much when I end up meeting my goals. :)

2. Finish DoS #6 – which, let’s face it, is called Unfavorable because that’s the best title I’ve come up with. It has to be done by May. Then, publish it, publish it with stories #4 and #5, publish all six stories together, and create the paperback of the Day of Sacrifice Omnibus. DoS takes first priority.

I did all of this, except for putting stories 4,5, and 6 together. I decided that there were already too many ways to read the DoS stories and it was better to have the individuals and the Omnibus and to get rid of the Vol.1-3 and 4-6. No one’s complained, so yay. I also met this goal just a little bit late – during May instead of by May. That’s fine with me and akin to setting your alarm 10 minutes early so you have leeway with getting up in the morning.

3. Begin working on the first Society School novel. It has to be done by August.

I have begun work on Found. It will not be done by August. I was sooooo being overly ambitious with this one.

4. Work on the second Back in Time story when Society School makes me crazy.

Haven’t started this yet, but it will remain a goal next round.

5. Spend one weekend (after Unfavorable is done) finishing the pen name short story I started ages ago.

I wasn’t working on that story because I hated it. I scrapped it and have since started on a collection of stories instead. I’m enjoying writing them. I now have one free story and another, longer story that is doing well paid under my pen name belt, so a collection that I can price at $3.99 seems like a good next move.

6. Work on the book with Vicki when I get a chance.

We didn’t get a chance. Vicki is maybe the second busiest writer I know after Kait. Our book idea is fabulous, so we’ll get to it one of these days!

I feel like this has been a pretty decent round for me. No regrets. I hope you all don’t have any either. See ya on July 2nd!

#ROW80 update from the trenches (a.k.a. my office before a garage sale)

We’re having a garage sale, therefore my office/seasonal clothes storage room/playroom annex/place where my husband keeps old desks that I hate and family china/ room where everyone dumps everything they can’t find a place for in the rest of the house, looks like several other peoples’ garage sales barfed all over it.

The kids climbed on one of my bookshelves and broke the bottom shelf, causing books to spill all over the floor. I stacked up the books and left the shelf. The kids stood on top of the books to get to the art supplies I keep on another shelf and ripped some of the covers off of the books. RIGHT NOW as I’m writing this, my daughter has just upset a box containing old baby toys and a license plate I stole off of a car when I lived in England the summer of 1990.

When I say this place is a disastrous mess, I’m not bullshitting you.

And I write books in the middle of this hoarders refuge, which can’t be good for my productivity because I spend a lot of time wishing I could just back a Dumpster up to this room, toss the lot and start from scratch.

So, I’m cleaning. I going to clean until it’s organized and the playroom is organized and the garage is organized. I’ll be working my ass off until the linen closet isn’t full of old printers and fax machines and scanners, but the bed linens that are stacked up in a laundry basket in the laundry room.

I’ve worked a little bit more on Found and it’s easy. I love writing it. I just can’t do it in the middle of all this mess anymore!!

Writing resumes on Monday.

…if you’re anywhere near Beaverton, OR in two weeks time, I’ll be selling my possessions out on the lawn.  Awesome deals on broken bookshelves and vintage foreign license plates.

To Ride A Puca Blog Tour

 

Hi Stacey and friends, thanks for having me over. For those who have followed my tour so far, it’s fabulous to see you again, for those of you who are new, welcome and thank you for celebrating with me! Today I’m dropping by to celebrate the release of my young adult historical fantasy about the last of the druids in ancient Ireland, To Ride A Puca. Though parts of it were heartbreaking to write, this one was a labor of love that will always hold a special place in my heart. Before I get to the goodies I brought, here is a bit about the book:

Invaders are coming to take what isn’t theirs, again.

Neala wants to stand and fight for her homeland, but as one of the last druids, she may be standing alone.

Persecuted, hunted down, forced to live in obscurity, the druids have all but given up. Can the determination of a girl who has barely come into her power bring them together? Or, just when she finally finds her place among her kind, will they end up losing a homeland their very magic is tied to?

Disclaimer: This novel contains some violence and difficult subject matter. It is recommended for mature YA and up.


Available in eBook and hardback at B&NAmazon, The Book Depository and other retail sites.

I’ll be giving away great prizes, a new one, every week for the next two weeks. This week I’m giving away a signed hardback of LACRIMOSA by Christine Fonseca. This book is unique among angel stories and once you read it, you will never look at angels and demons the same again. It is one of my favorite books, trust me you’ll love it! The contest will be open until June 10th, the winner to be announced on the 11th. Stop by my blog to enter.

Some thangs and #ROW80

I have a list of things I keep meaning to tell you all!

If you have a blog: Sign up for the Indelibles INDIEpendence Day celebration!

If you like to read interesting posts and win stuff: Visit the Mid Summer Dream Fair! My post is called The Stage and it’s coming up at the end of the month.

If you want to win a paperback copy of the Day of Sacrifice Omnibus: Sign up on Goodreads or…sign up on that big sign up widget thingy over in the sidebar there.

If you want to get two monthly newsletters about new releases from the Indelibles and the Pacific Northwest YA Authors: Click the link for the Indelibles and for the PacNWYAAuthors to sign up.

Row80 update: I’m making decent progress on the pen name stories and I purchased an e-book cover, so that’s a done deal. I thought of yet another funny story for the BABD blog…and someday I might actually write it and the other 17 stories I have to put on there. I haven’t worked anymore on Found. 

With the kids out of school and my husband only working away from home three days a week, I just can’t get anyone to leave me alone. If I didn’t have to pay for a new roof in July, I’d seriously consider renting office space and putting the kids in day care for a few hours every day!

Whenever people interview me they always ask how I manage to write books and stay at home with the kids. It’s a friggin’ MIRACLE that’s how. I have no idea. It just gets done and never in as timely a manner as I want. ;)