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Tuesday, September 5, 2023
August IWSG and A Narvan Cover Reveal
Thursday, August 3, 2023
August IWSG and more chickens!
I'm a day late and several dollars short, but things have been hectic both on an off the writer front. Work has been crazy, sending me out of town twice last month for a couple days at a time and book signings fill my weekends. Lots of deep breaths have been taken.
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| New chicks were also purchased and Henifer is doing her usual good momma chicken duty. Yay for cute little chicks! |
Edits for Tears of the Tyrant from both editors showed up in my inbox this week. I've been busy reading those over, finding what comments they had a in common and where things differ. One has read the whole series, one only the first couple books. I do like my companion novels to be able to stand alone (ish) so having insight from someone who is out of the loop on a large part of the story is helpful in knowing what hints and gaps I need to touch on.
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| We did our annual panel at Kogan con last month. This year we discussed the differences in worldbuilding between gaming, graphic novels, and novels. |
While I'm busy pondering how to fix things the editors have pointed out, I'm also busy reading. Because Jacqueline Carey's Cassiel's Servant fell into my hands on release day when I went to the book signing. I know. Weird, right? LOL. I'd met Jaqueline Carey at a signing she did for one of the earlier series books in 2009, wherein she patiently offered advice to those of us aspiring writers who lingered afterward. Inspired by her advice, my first short story was published in 2010 and then I was off and running. In as much as we author types are off or running. Writing a lot and waiting for responses is more like it, but I digress.
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| Authors have author heroes too. |
Have I made progress on Frayed since last month? Other than a few edits on the later chapters, no. Will I by next month? With edits on Tears of the Tyrant on my schedule, probably not. I'll get there eventually though.
In talking to my daughter about her writing/graphic novel journey, we ended up in a discussion about ideas that pop up when your supposed to be focusing on a current project. I mentioned writing the idea down, maybe doing a synopsis or outline. That lead to me trying to remember where I'd saved (and what I'd called) the two stories I'd done exactly that with that I plan/hope to write this November for NaNoWriMo. And then I had to read what I'd written for both. And get excited about them. And force myself to put them away again for a few months. Is revisiting the synopsis for your project distraction, also a distraction? Yes. Yes, it is.
While we're on distractions, where can you find me this month?
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August 18-20 - Wild Blueberry Festival - Paradise, MI
August 25 & 26 - Michiana Renaissance Festival - South Bend, IN
I don't have anything exciting to share on the question of the month this time around. I've shared that answer before in a couple different posts so I'll keep this month's post short. Do go check out what everyone else has to say though by clicking that link right over there --->
Thursday, June 29, 2023
June is already July and IWSG
Sooo...June flew by so fast that I forgot my monthly post. To be fair, I had nine back to back weekends of events. Everything was a blur. In fact, it's still a blurry. My schedule doesn't slow down until October.
June in summary: It was good. It was busy. Many books were sold. Chickens did a lot of traveling.
A few highlights of that whirlwind:
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| Lakeshore Art Festival - Muskegon, MI |
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| Cherry Capital Comic Con - Traverse City, MI |
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| Royal Stagg Renaissance Festival - Marshal, MI |
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| Magical Realm Fantasy Faire - Charlotte, MI |
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| Niles Renaissance Faire - Niles, MI |
Tears of the Tyrant is currently under other editing eyes. I have NaNoWriMo projects lined up for November. Writing things are happening. Slowly.
Where can you find me in July?
June 30 - July 2 Capital City Comic Con in Lansing, MI
July 23 Kogan Con in Grand Haven, MI
July 29 Island Art Fair in Grand Ledge, MI
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If you stopped writing, what would you replace it with?
I'd probably dive back into gaming. Back when I was a young person without children, I spent a lot of time in world building games (sim-anything and tycoon-anything) as well as games like Fable and Bard's Tale. Every now and then I get a little itch to sink back into that, but I just don't have time for it along with writing (and all 'writing' entails at this point in my writing career).
Or get more fully back into art. I had to pick my one thing to spend time on in addition to kids. Writing won. Now that my kids are grown and my non-work time is no longer eaten up with kid activities and parent volunteer obligations, I've had the opportunity to dip my feet back into a few artistic endeavors with painting and drawing. And sewing. And beadwork. And cross stich. Arts and crafts, oh my.
Or maybe I shouldn't stop writing.
And July's question is: Where do your story ideas come from?
Everywhere. Conversations with people, dreams, random thoughts, watching tv, or reading an article or book. Sometimes a character name pops into my head and I start building a character around it and oh hey, then I need a conflict and a plot. Ideas are everywhere. If only the same could be said for motivation and time.
Tuesday, May 2, 2023
May Writing Updates and ISWG
Let's see what has happened since my last post? So many things. To sum up:
Kay-Kay The Littlest Chicken celebrated its release day! Link on the side bar or buy signed copies in the buy tab up top.
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| The first in-person sale of Kay-Kay! |
I met a lot of readers at the Grand Rapids Comic Con Spring Fling.
And then at the Tulip City Comic Con.
Kay-Kay and I attended Whitestown Viking Festival this past weekend. What a crazy weather weekend that was! It was sunny, cold, rainy, moderately warm, windy, and then there was a thunderstorm on Saturday that made us close for a about an hour and half. We thought we were good after that, but Sunday said, "Hold my mead." The day started out lovely, then it rained. Then it was sunny. And then there was hailstorm! That fiasco made us close two hours early, but we survived with only a few water damaged books and had a good weekend despite it all. Only four vendor tents were lost this year. Last year it was five. None of them were mine. Viking Fest is always an adventure.
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| Most of the time it was between 40 - 50F so lots of layers kept us warm. I didn't quite need my cloak yet, but there are five layers at this sunny moment. |
Next up, I'll be at:
May 6 - Bluestocking Bookshop in Holland
May 13-14 Royal Stagg Ren Faire
May 20-21 Niles Ren Faire
May 26-27 Cherry Capital Comic Con
June 3-4 Magical Realms Fantasy Faire
Writing?
With all these events, am I writing? Honestly, no, not really. I'm taking a little break and delving into some of my many TBR piles. So far, I've managed to read 9 books this year. We'll see how long I can keep the reading train rolling before I dive back into writing - which is currently finishing Frayed. And yes, I have the ending written in my head. I just need to compel my fingers to convey those words through the keyboard.
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Which brings us to this month's Insecure Writer's Support Group question: When you're working on a story, what inspires you?
Short answer: Deadlines. I tend to make a writing plan for the year in December/January and then I align that plan with whatever story idea(s) I have and fine tune what I need to do to make those drafts or publication dates happen. Being self-employed for roughly 20 years has made me pretty good at time management and holding myself to deadlines.
More fun answer: I'm most inspired to write when I'm kicked back in my comfy chair with no one bothering me, a blanket on my lap, probably a candle burning, an adult beverage beside me, something chocolate within reach, and the lights turned down low. That's my ideal writing zone both mentally and physically—which means the highest probability of making words that don't suck happen.
Wednesday, April 5, 2023
Upcoming release and ISWG
It might be spring? Maybe? It's supposed to be, but the weather hasn't taken the time to fully read the memo. While I deal with snow alternating with rain and the occasional showing of sunshine, here's what's going on in the busy life of this author.
April brings the upcoming release of Kay-Kay The Littlest Chicken! Release date will be announced shortly, but look for this picture book at the end of the month. A children's picture book? Yep. And now for something completely different. :)
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| The early version of the cover. |
So much painting. Now that the book is finally complete, I can put my paints away for a little while and clean off my desk. While all the painting was fun, I'm looking forward to a break.
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And that brings us to this month's Insecure Writer's Support Group question.
Tuesday, February 28, 2023
Marching into Chaos
February has come and gone in another flurry of productivity. It's also my monthly Insecure Writer's Group post so we're gonna talk about book stuff.
Everyone Dies was released and I can't keep enough copies on hand. Click the link right over there on the left if you'd like to check it out. The ebook is only $1.99. Go on, you know you want to.
The Lansing Women's Expo was a blast! I spent the weekend with 11 other Michigan Authors and chatted with lots of new and returning readers. There were author antics, slap-happy conversations, and we made some great book-business connections with each other. In fact we were so busy, I didn't get a chance to get the T-rex suit out.
I worked on some more behind the scenes Amazon stuff. Never one of my favorite tasks, but crossing more things off of my 2023 to-do list.
I finished a quick edit job for an author friend on her newest novella, Zombaes. Who can resist a zombie rom-com?
While away at an author friends house for the Lansing Expo (sans internet on my laptop) I actually made progress on Frayed! Hallelujah. It's not done, but at least the ball is rolling again.
Kay-Kay the Littlest Chicken is also in the works. I'm just over the halfway point on the illustrations and the story is complete. So much painting, but fun to dabble with watercolors again after thirty years off.
Tears of the Tyrant is back on my editing plate. Mostly because my brain needed a break from painting and Frayed is hard. I'm really loving this book so it's currently my happy place. Ironically, is a super sad story, but hey, no one ever said I was right in the head. The plan is to wrap up this edit and send it off to Stella to work her editing magic so it's off limits to toy with for a while. Which likely means I'll have to resort to toying with cover art to further procrastinate on Frayed. Oh, the crazy author games we play.
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For once, I'm skipping the optional ISWG question of the month and going right into the chaos that I created on two fronts.
Part #1: Anticipating a spring release for Everyone Dies, I scheduled March heavy for book events. It's usually slow for day job work so I figured that was safe. This means my event schedule looks like this (in case your in MI or IN and looking for something fun to do):
March 4-5 Hall of Heroes Comic Con in Indiana
March 11 Muskecon in Michigan (close to home)
March 17-19 Grand Rapids Women's Expo in Michigan (close to home)
March 25-26 Alma Con in Michigan (mid-state so staying overnight)
Part #2 One of our new big customers at the day job offered us two big jobs that require travel. They pay really well so we don't say no. Which means besides having all my weekends tied up:
Feb 26-March 2 we'll be in Minnesota
March 7-9 we'll be be in Mid-Michigan
And I just quoted three more jobs for the this customer that may also be packed into March.
The result: Chaos (but my bills will be paid. So yay?) The usual part of the day job continues to pile up if we're not here to do the work so not only will I not be able to catch up on work over the weekend, I won't have the option of taking an actual day off during the week to make up for book working on the weekends.
So if you see me at an event this month and I can't make words go in our conversation or I'm zoning out, this is why. Donations of chocolate or Diet Coke to the exhausted author are always welcome. ;)
Sunday, February 5, 2023
New Release: Everyone Dies - A Collection of Dark Tales
It's release day for Everyone Dies: A Collection of Dark Tales!
Twelve short stories, some newly written, some pulled from the story vault, all tied together with one common thread. Everyone Dies.
Death lurks in the choices we make.
Alex is awarded the best birthday present ever, a full
exclusive weekend pass to the Spindle, a space station high above the Earth.
There, everyone is healthy, the food is real, and there are even living trees.
Being one of the chosen will set him and his family up for life, but in winning
he may lose everything.
Fray Farm is up for sale but the current occupants are very
particular about who the new owner will be. They have no intentions of leaving.
Long-term ownership only, no kids, cats are optional.
Fate landed Ashleigh in a thankless job. At thirty, she’s
nowhere close to what she’d envisioned. She never saw herself in a dungeon-like
basement at any age, but no one ever said fate was good at do-overs.
Otherworldly creatures, the not-so-dearly departed, fellow man, and creations of our own demise patiently wait while we bumble through life, thinking we are in control.
The end is always near.
Click the link off on the left for Amazon, Barnes & Noble, get your signed copy shipped from me to you (US only) from the tab at the top, or find me at any of my upcoming events over there on the right. More online shopping availability is still being populated. Ebook links should be live soon as well.
Tuesday, January 31, 2023
2023 and GO!
January was a productive month! Hooray! Each year I try to get the behind the scenes stuff done that I don't necessarily enjoy doing but must be done. Kind of like cleaning the toilets first thing in the morning so you can enjoy the rest of your day with the dirty work out of the way. Does anyone else do that or just me?
Things I accomplished in January:
Updated my blog, joined IBPA, bought Publisher Rocket, explored a lot of publishing resources, watched several publishing related webinars, created new book display racks and book labels, reorganized all my event gear, and developed new promotional items
On my existing books: updated book descriptions and online formatting of them, tweaked cover artwork on existing books, updated book content on all platforms to the most up to date versions, changed Amazon keywords for e-books and print books, took inventory and ordered books for upcoming shows and sat down and updated my schedule with everything I currently have booked/confirmed. (You can find that over to the right -->)
Awards: Both Not Another Bard's Tale and Spindelkin were announced as "Recommended Reads" by the 2023 Author Shout Reader Ready Awards.
And on a new book note: Everyone Dies will be released in just a few days! Which means I've been busy creating the cover, doing the formatting and drawing the interior illustrations. I also planned out the artwork for Kay-Kay and sent the story through my critique group.
Unplanned: after another editing pass on a yet untitled project I'd wrapped up... surprise it's another Narvan Novel...I decided to move forward with publishing it. I also gave it a title: Tears of the Tyrant. If all goes well with editing, that will be out later this year.
2023 is off to a good start!
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Covers are one of my favorite parts of putting a book together. So yes, you can gather that I put my own covers together. Trust is the only cover that was done by the small press that originally published the first books of the Narvan series.
Most of my covers are composites of artwork that I purchase from art sources, alter, and put together. Spindelkin is my own original art.
I'm fortunate that I do design work as part of my day job so I have the programs and resources readily available.
When I was with a small press, I did have input on the cover art, but with my first two books - A Broken Race and Trust, I really didn't have anything in particular in mind other than I wanted Trust to have a green tone. That left a lot of leeway to come up with something. Now that I've been doing this on my own for a while, coming up with ideas for cover art is much easier and integrated into my whole writing process.
Tuesday, January 3, 2023
Heading into 2023 with Goals and One Word
After a successful and fruitful 2022, I'm gearing up to continue the wordy ride in 2023. I've already got 25 book signing events lined up, one new book slated for a spring release, and lots of projects in the works.
Let's start with a glance at how I did with my 2022 goals: #1 - Publish Seeker and Spindelkin. Check and check! #2 - Cut back on my event schedule from 28 to 26. I ended the year with 27 so...sort of check. Sometimes opportunities pop up that I can't refuse.
2023 goals:
• Release Everyone Dies: A Collection of Dark Tales
• Finally finish Frayed, because OMG this has been a tough one to get from brain to page.
• Illustrate Kay-Kay: The Littlest Chicken (new)
• Write/finish one of the following projects: Godmother (new), I9 (new), or Interface (2016 WIP).
• Release one of those five projects.
• Don't keel over.
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As a matter of fact, I've had a one word resolution since 2012, so yes, I do! My 2022 one word was: Recover. I did a pretty good job of that. I wasn't near as burnt out at the end of the year as I was in 2021, so hey, I might have found a bit more balance for once. Hooray!
Previous words were: (2021) Better - the year HAD to be better than the previous one. (2020) Read - joined a book club so that helped me make time to read more. (2019) Sleep - still struggling with this one. (2018) Speak - started doing panel presentations at cons. (2017) Enjoy - indulging in quiet moments with candles, warm blankets, binge-watching, and non-mom-duty time. (2016) Relax - still haven't figured out what this is. (2015) Time - allowing myself to take the time to write. (2014) Write - making an effort to write more regularly. (2013) Me - remembering to make time for myself. (2012) Less - put an end to over-obligating myself for other people.
And the word for 2023? Embrace
The chaos. The moment. The whim. The idea. <— All of this.
Looking at my schedule and my goals, it's going to be a wild ride even before whatever life throws into the mix so I'm just going to embrace whatever it is and roll with it. We'll see how I come out at the end.
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Thank Goodness It's December!
I lived through another November! Whew! Deep cleansing breath.
Let's see what was on my list for the crazy times:
Yard work: Pond goldfish moved indoors, stuff put away, and chicken coop winterized. DONEDay job: Still going crazy, but hey, bills are getting paid. SURVIVED
Comic Con: It was a loooong three days, but I met so many new readers and had good turn outs at both of my panels. And people asked questions. We love when you ask questions! Can't wait to do it all again in 2023. SURVIVED
NaNoWriMo: I wrote several short stories for my collection, mostly wrapped up the personal project, wrote the rough draft for my children's chicken book, and made progress on Frayed. WON
In other winning news... Spindelkin is a Fantasy novel finalist in the 2022 American Writing Awards.
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What's on the agenda for December? Funny you should ask, since that's this month's Insecure Writer's Support Group question:
Are the holidays a time to catch up or fall behind on writer goals?
I think the trick there is setting workable goals fit your holiday schedule, but to answer the question...
Mid-December things start to slow down (typically, knocking on wood) at my day job so I have more time and energy to devote to editing or completing NaNo projects. I also only have one book event in December so that will leave some weekends free to enjoy my comfy writing chair. I suppose that means I will be "catching up". Which is good, because I need to work on getting books ready to publish for 2023.
Happy Holidays!
Tuesday, November 1, 2022
November: The Crazy Times
1. November is the busiest time of the year for all aspects of my day job so, yay...overtime.
2. It's NaNoWriMo - 50,000 words in 30 days
3. It's Comic Con month - meaning there are 4-5 days I will likely not have any time or energy to write and also work will be piling up at the day job while I'm off signing books at cons.
4. It's prep for Winter month. In addition to everything above, I'll have to find time to winterize the pond, hopefully pull out the goldfish that have survived the ducks and set up a tank inside for them, get the plastic up on the chicken run, and put all the yard stuff away before snow starts to stick around.
Can she do it all? Tune in next month to find out.
You can find me this month at:
Nov 11-13 Grand Rapids Comic Con where I'll be doing two panels
Nov 19 - Fantasticon
Nov 26 - The Bluestocking Bookshop
Which leads neatly to this month's Insecure Writer's Support Group Question:
Have you ever participated in NaNoWriMo?
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I've won 15 times so far. The only year I didn't (2014), I was in the middle of building our current house, as in doing the general contracting, installing cabinets, helping with wiring, and doing a lot of tilework. I was kinda busy, but I did manage to get 25K in on a project I haven't touched since. Someday, I'll get back to it.
10 of those NaNo projects have gone on to be published.
Knowing this is crazy times, do I intend to win again this year? Yes, unless something major gets in the way.
What will I be working on? I'm spreading my 50,000 new words over several ongoing projects and one new one. Last year's half finished Urban Fantasy, a horror themed short story collection, the mysterious personal Narvan project, and a children's book centered around my tiny handicapped chicken.
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| This is Kaykay. She fits in one hand. |
Tips for NaNo success:
Write something everyday. On days you have more time, write 2K instead of 1,667.
Build a buffer in the first week while your ambition is high so when life gets in the way, you can squeak by with a few 500 word days and still be on track.
Know that you can pound out 10K (or more) a day if you really put your mind to it so if you fall behind, all is not lost.
Realize that the middle of the novel is often a slog for first drafts. Allow yourself to make notes in slow sections and jump ahead to where you're motivated to make words happen.
Don't have two or three consecutive hours a day to write? Write in 15 minute bursts scattered throughout the day. I often find this my most productive way of writing.
Do most of your writing NOT AT THE KEYBOARD. When you're washing dishes, taking a shower, are doing something mindless at work, in the bathroom, driving, or eating lunch, think about your next scene. Then, when you have a chance, sit down and write it. Get back up and go for walk, give the kids a bath, ride a bike, fold the laundry, and think of the next scene. Repeat = novel.
Get involved with your local region or, if you don't have one, connect with others doing NaNo and support/encourage each other. This is one of those times when peer pressure is a good thing.
Good luck to those participating this year! Go make words happen!
Tuesday, October 4, 2022
Falling Into New Projects
Things are finally slowing down this month. More of a catch my breath before November hits sort of quiet than anything, really. Only two single-day book signings this month and an actual vacation! It's been a few years since I've had a real vacation and here's the big one, my husband and I haven't had a vacation with just the two of us since before we were married. That was twenty-five years ago as of this Halloween. We figured we were due for an anniversary trip. Okay, overdue. Looong overdue. We'll be heading off to the Smoky Mountains later this month.
On another fun note, since I'm semi-prepping for NaNo, I'm considering an idea for a book that might require the need to dust off my long neglected painting skills. I've been spending the occasional evening doing watercolor lessons for a refresher.
If you are looking for books, I'll be at the Geeky Experience Comic Con in Holland this weekend but then I'll be off until November. Hooray!
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| I got to hang out with author Vera West in Kalamazoo last weekend. |
Projects on the agenda for NaNoWriMo this year include:
1. Actually, for really really sure this time, working on Frayed
2. A horror short story collection
3. A children's book
4. Being entirely unproductive publishing-wise but working on my personal project if all else fails.
November's book signing schedule:
Nov 11-13 Grand Rapids Comic Con
Nov 19 Fantasticon
Nov 26 Bluestocking Bookshop Indie Author Day
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And that brings us to this month's Insecure Writer's Support Group Question: What do you consider the best characteristics of your favorite genre?
Answering for Speculative Fiction because I'm kind of an umbrella term author, the best part is the freedom of imagination. Followed closely by being able to write whoever and whatever best serves the story without being tied to real world rules or expectations. Spec fic allows us to shine lights on all kinds of real world issues, but through a more distant lens that often makes those topics more palatable and easier to digest. Getting out of our world and into an entirely new one is also a great escape from daily life, a vacation in book pages.











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