Sunday, August 26, 2012

Bitten 2: Land of the Rising Dead Cover Reveal!



Coming Soon (Summer 2013)

In related news, I am currently working on a second zombie short story which ties into the first novel, BITTEN: A Resurrection Thriller. The first short, BITTEN: AFTER DARK has already sold over 240 copies!

Here's the cover reveal for BITTEN: AFTER DARK 2!






Saturday, August 18, 2012

New Zombie Short!



My new zombie short story is available on Amazon.com!

ABOUT:
I intended this to be a chapter of BITTEN, but it got trimmed due to pacing issues and length. Those who have read BITTEN will be pleasantly surprised to find the events fit right into the events of the first book, while those who want a suspenseful, scary, horror story can still read and enjoy this short story without having previously read BITTEN.

The reason I chose to cut this from the original story was because it's ten pages of the main character roaming the halls of her son's abandoned school. It's great suspense, but it was rather long as happened in-between two intense action sequences in the original story and, feeling it threw off the pacing and flow of the book, I left it out.

Now I have come back and refined it, edited it, and published it so you can read it, either as a companion piece, or as a stand-alone. This special short is only $0.99 on Amazon.com!




Monday, July 9, 2012

The Hiccups of Being a Hybrid Writer


I am looking for places to send my book for a review, but so many places have too narrow of guidelines which restrict you to labels and genres. Are you a horror writer? Is your book a horror novel? If not, then we can't accept your submission.

Other review sites say things like, we accept all genres accept horror.

Well, that's easy enough. But what about a writer, like me, who mixes genres? For example, the excellent Indie Book Review website accepts Horror books for review but not Science Fiction. How does one then classify a mixed genre like my book? Or the movie Alien for that matter. Is it horror or sci-fi? Well, in the case of Alien, it's equal parts of both.

Which makes me wonder, who gets to decide on which genre you are? The reader? The publisher? You?

I mix genres because I can use that as a tool to make the story more compelling. My new zombie novel combines equal parts horror, science fiction, and erotica. People have no idea how to classify it. Lot's simply state they don't read erotica--sex grosses them out. But they absolutely adore psychopaths, killers, and monster gore fests, vampires, etc. Just not sex. I think these people probably have mental issues.

But it's limitations like this that make sending my work to reviewers who have strict guidelines which limit their genres or demographics rather difficult. In my opinion, this is just the traditional publishing world slipping behind the digital era. People are clinging to the old rules, because, well, they worked. For classic books released under publishing houses. But now we're talking books released directly to Kindle. We're talking bypassing all that stuff, and getting straight into the meaty of a good, or not so good, story. But the reviewers are part of the old guard, they haven't made the change over to the new.

With recent technology making it possible for anybody, and I do mean anybody, to write and publish a book themselves (heck, I should know, I'm one of them) there is a lot of pressure on reviewers. Creating strict review guidelines is one way they can weed out the stuff they just don't care for and cut out the never ending submissions from every single person who can hit the 'publish now' button when making their book for sale on Amazon.com. Hey, I get it. I do. But at the same time I am thinking there must be some new paradigm out there that we simply haven't discovered yet. Partially because this digital self-publishing has changed the way we perceive books, but also because so many people just have no desire to get with the times. As the old adage goes, if it ain't broke, then don't fix it.

The old model works. It just doesn't work for me. At least not as well as I'd like. Well, who am I to complain? It just seems rather unfair. People who can stick to a genre and write, say, a Young Lit. paranormal romance novel will be the first to get picked up by a review sight (it's the trendy genre at the moment). Whereas writers who are going out on a limp to try something new, and perhaps mix it up a bit, well, we get limited to sending our stories to people who accept anything an everything.

That's not a bad thing, per se. These avid readers love all books, and all titles no matter their genre or content. I think, more power to them! But these voracious readers usually have a full reading schedule and my book, which doesn't fit neatly in any genre and doesn't play nice with people's sensibilities, will get backlogged. What if I need a review to help with promotion and advertising? Truthfully, forget about it.

Even as I am restricted to who will read my book, let alone consider it for review, I am not completely with out options. There are pay for review websites like Kirkus Indie Review. Great if you can afford it. But who am I kidding. I work full time and have a family to support. When it comes to spending that extra money and time, I have a choice: I can spend it on trying to promote my book or spend it on supporting my family. For some reason, people frown on you when your kid wears a paper back to school and socks they got out of the dumpster because dad blew all his money on his bad habit. Needless to say, my family takes precedent over my hobby of writing. My day job takes precedent over my hobby too. But I keep writing anyway. Who knows? Maybe one day I my hobby might become my day job. That's the dream anyway.

So that leaves me playing the slow game. As an Indie writer, I simply have come to terms with the fact that I don't have the advertising muscle of a classic publishing house. Heck, I don't even have an agent. I am just some independent author who enjoys writing books and playing with various genres because, let's face it, I love writing. It's like breathing, if I couldn't do it, I'd slowly suffocate until my brain just turned off one day and that would be the end of it.




Monday, July 2, 2012

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Bad English

I recently discovered an essayist and blogger, Baldur Bjarnason, who I find I am in continual agreement with when it comes to the subject of English and writing. He wrote a recent piece on bad English and bad writing, and I found myself thinking, wow, this guy gets it. Here's a snippet from his post that hit home for me:

"I’ve made a statement several times to several different people that what we call bad writing isn’t necessarily so. If we evaluate the writing based on its effects – its success at delivering an emotional message – then I find it hard to label a lot of it as bad. Not to my taste, of course, but bad? Hard to argue with it if it works.... cultural elites use the label of bad English and bad writing to exclude the voices of minorities and other classes... A legitimate regional dialect gets demonised as bad language and native speakers get labeled as dumb, their access to education limited, etc..

"Most of you see by now where I’m going with this. What we have defined, traditionally, as good English has almost always been driven more by ideology and politics than by an analytical effort to describe actual effective use of the language. Less ‘what problem is that language solving?’, and more ‘who are those people using that language and do we like them?’.

"Those are two mutually exclusive philosophies. You can’t think of language as an adaptive problem-solving system and as an objective, concrete, thing with built in ideals that shouldn’t be deviated from. It’s one or the other. Never both." --Baldur Bjarnason



I couldn't have put it better myself.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

BITTEN sold on AMAZON.com



Bitten is now available from Amazon.com for both Kindle touch and the Kindle FIRE.

The price is an affordable $4.99 USD. Reviews are always welcome!


Check it out by following this link directly:

http://www.amazon.com/Bitten-ebook/dp/B0085N4REE/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1337829570&sr=1-1

Additionally, Bitten: A Resurrection Thriller is now registered with Goodreads, so please look for it, rate it, and write a review if you so desire.

Also, if you like the book, please tell a friend!




Bitten Available Through Smashwords.com!



Bitten is now available in eBook format through Smashwords.com for $4.99 USD.

Check it out by following this link directly:

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/164645

If you want to search for Bitten or the author, remember to turn OFF the adult filter. Smashwords filters out all adult content which makes it harder to promote and sell.

Also, if you like the book, please tell a friend!