Writing

Good news, everyone: I have found a skilled cover designer to do the text that I am obviously not qualified to go anywhere near. The designer and a pack of sharp-eyed folks in an online art forum found all the places I’ve messed up, and pointed them out. It’s called a critique, and it’s a…

Read More Singer cover, round three

I had an interesting criticism leveled at me over the holidays: someone told me I was representing myself as some sort of professional or expert at this mishmash of stuff I love. Coming from this particular person, it was not a compliment. After I stopped laughing (not the expected response, I’m sure) I had to…

Read More Professional or expert?

Singer in Rhunshan is now in its more or less final form, hovering around 16,000 words/75 pages. Too big for a short story now, but respectable for a novelette. It is a romantic fantasy action/adventure with discreet hints of a male/male/female love triangle (but no actual sex in this part of the story), and a…

Read More ‘Singer in Rhunshan’ novelette inches closer to publication

I just looked (for the first time in years) at the backlog of letters I sent to my then-literary agent back in the mists of antiquity – roughly two decades ago. Our association began when one of the founding agents heard me reading a contest-winning fantasy short story* at a big international SFF convention. It…

Read More Yes, I was that clueless

Among my brain’s many flaws is the complete inability to write a decent first draft. I write and revise at the same time. I’m doing it right now, since there have already been three versions of the first sentence. A dozen, if I count that I am writing on a tablet today. Otgerwise, all ny…

Read More The Revision Curse

Over on AbsoluteWrite.com, author Richard Garfinkle had some great things to say about worldbuilding – from a reader’s point of view. “One of the things I often say at writer’s workshops is that readers who get into the story will often push the edges of what is written. They’ll wonder about the lives of the…

Read More More about worldbuilding

This is a re-blog of a great interview I just found, courtesy of Publishers Weekly: Steven Zacharius of Kensington Publishing Corp. talks frankly about changes in print and digital publishing, the harsh reality of low sales for the majority of self-published authors, and what lies ahead for one of the last big domestically-owned publishers duking…

Read More Kensington Publishing Corp.