My LibertyCon Schedule

LibertOne of my favorite cons of the year is right around the corner.  Chattanooga’s LibertyCon is this coming weekend.  Historically, LC is a great con for writers (which usually means a great con for readers, too) with a great little con suite (did someone say beer?) and a welcoming atmosphere. This year they have me booked pretty tight.  I think that’s a good thing.  We’ll see.  If you’re looking, here’s where and when you’ll find me.

Friday

  • 3pm – The Flutter-by Effect: Time Travel in Literature – We talk paradoxes and explore what other compelling elements time travel has to offer.  I’m moderating this one! [Gallery A]
  • 5pm – Opening Ceremonies – Meet the guests and professionals.  I guess that includes me. [Centennial Theater]
  • 7pm – Autograph Session – Come on by; I’ll sign anything! I prefer to sign my book, of course.  I’ll happily sell you one. [Dealers’ Room]
  • 10pm – Messiest Ways to Kill a Zombie – This one is always a lot of fun.  There’s a rason it’s this late, folks; leave the kiddies at home if they have sensitive ears.  In other words, kiddies should probably leave the grown-ups at home. [Centennial Theater]

Saturday

  • 11am – Urban Fantasies – I’m sure this will be “What are they? What’s new? What’s next?” and all that.  So if you’re interested in urban fantasy, come on by. [Gallery A]
  • 1pm – What’s New in Horror and Dark Fantasy? (Roundtable) – Should be self-explanatory. Lots of people on this one. [Centennial Theater]
  • 8pm – Reading: Scott W. Baker (a.k.a. me) & Mark Wandrey – I’m not sure what I’ll read.  I guess I should probably pick something I wrote… [American Room Train Car]

Sunday

  • 10am – Meet the Locals (Roundtable) – I reckon there are a bunch of us Tennessee-livin’ authors at the con.  With John Ringo moderating us, there’s no telling where the discussion will go. [Centennial Theater]
  • 1pm – Autograph Session – Last chance to come chat and get my autograph.  You can sell it on ebay for…okay, you probably can’t sell it on ebay.  Yet. [Dealers’ Room]

 

Life Update

It’s been quite a while since I posted anything here.  I didn’t even do a ChattaCon report.  I meant to, but life has been…complicated.  I’ve been able to do no blogging and next to no writing since then.  I’m sure the whole experience will make me a better writer in the future by filling the emotion tanks with fodder, but wow it’s tough to fill them.

I filed for divorce last month.  It will be almost summer before it’s legally finalized, but that’s just semantics.  I am closing on a house for me and my daughter (split time between parents) and that has taken a lot of my focus.  It’s a sad and hopeful and exciting and scary time for me.

In other news, OmniCon is this weekend in Cookeville.  I didn’t see any advertisements for it until about 3 weeks ago, so I’m expecting a very small affair.  Could be fun, though.  It was last year.

That’s all for now, though I do need to post soon about my recent Doctor Who obsession.  I was quite late to the party and I’m only in season 3, but wow is it fun.  But later…

All It Was Cracked Up to Be

Back from LibertyCon.  It was a great weekend.  Had a few firsts, made a few friends, and generally had fun.

Lets start with the egg-speriment in marketing.  I ended up putting tiny card stock coupons inside gold plastic Easter eggs.  The little paper had the cover pic; QR codes for Smashwords, Kindle, and my blog; web addresses for Kindle and Smashwords; and a coupon code.  The eggs seemed to be a hit.  77 of them were distributed, mostly from the freebie table where you usually find bookmarks, postcards, and black-on-florescent paper flyers.  I think the eggs were just more interesting looking and people grabbed more of them than they did bookmarks.

There a downside to the egg-speriment: so far, I’ve only sold one ebook out of an egg.  Yep, one.  I have a number of folks who have promised they will buy one, and they have a month before the coupon expires, so all is not lost.  We’ll see.

Sunday morning was my first opportunity to do a reading at a con.  I got the 10am time slot, a time hen many folks were bringing luggage to their cars.  I thought it would be the kiss of death.  It wasn’t.  I had an audience of at least a dozen (dare I hope it was a baker’s dozen?).  On top of that, all of them seemed to enjoy themselves.

I started by reading “Faerie Belches”, a middle-grades urban fantasy I originally sold back in 2008.  The crowd response was great.  I had forgotten what a sweet little tale it was, and it worked even better out loud.  The reading convinced me to send the story to PodCastle, an audio podcast market for fantasy.  I sent it today, so we’ll see…

The other story I read was “Call Me Z”, a previously unpublished zombie-culture story.  It was a story I always had faith in but never found a market for.  Again, the crowd seemed to like it.  So I was two for two.  (It helped that I bribed them with donuts — tiny, gas-station-bought donuts.)

Another first for me was being interviewed for a “YouTube show”, effectively a video podcast.  My new pal John Hartness hosts a show called Literate Liquors on which authors describe their works and recommend something to drink while reading them.  It was fun.  I’ll be sure to link to the episode when I find it.  (For what it’s worth, I got to watch guest of honor Brandon Sanderson record an episode even though he doesn’t drink.)

I made quite a few friends — too many to list in fear of missing one — and even better, I think I picked up a few new fans.  Now I need to go write more stuff for those fans to read.  A great weekend that has inspired me to get back to work.

Oh, and one more thing.  There was a general consensus at the con that $2.99 is to cheap for Baker’s Dozen.  So what do I do about it?  I’ll raise the price, but not yet.  No matter what happens, the $1 egg-coupon is good through August 22nd.  But if you’re planning to buy Baker’s Dozen, you might want to act soon!

The Shell Game

With LibertyCon just around the corner, I’ve been looking for a good way to market Baker’s Dozen.  I’ve committed to an idea.  Is it good?  Maybe.  Is it great?  I doubt it.

Eggs.

I guess I may be over-committed to my cover art, but I just ordered 100 gold(-ish) Easter eggs.  I plan to fill the eggs with ads/coupons for Baker’s Dozen.  The coupon will be good for Smashwords, but links to both SW and the Kindle Store will be in there.  And maybe cheap candy…I haven’t decided.  I figured a little something to separate mine from the dozens of pieces of paper might translate into a sale or three.  Yes, this means I’ll be carrying around a bag of eggs like a delinquent on Halloween.  If you see me, ask for an egg,

I’ll also do a little trolling for reviewers at LibertyCon.  I want to get a couple people to read and review Baker’s Dozen.  I’m not chasing Locus or anything, just some bloggers with little web traffic and a track record of reviewing stuff that would be willing to share the review on Amazon and Smashwords.  If that describes you and you’d be interested in writing a brief, fair review of my collection, zip me an email.  Reviewers will of course get their digital copy for free from Smashwords.

[Be warned: I will be screening my reviewers prior to dealing out free copies.  Not that I’m looking for favors or bias, but I don’t want to risk exposing myself to illiterate reviews from readers that don’t understand the genre and just wanted something free.  If I can’t find a track record of reviews, I won’t be likely to shell out a free copy.  But asking can’t hut, I guess.]

My LibertyCon Schedule

It’s about a month to LibertyCon (July 20-22).  Last time I checked the schedule, I didn’t have any panels scheduled.  I was a late-added guest so it wasn’t a big surprise.  When guests drop out, someone has to fill their spots.

I checked the schedule today and found the issue resolved.  I’m sure that things are still subject to change, but right now my schedule includes:

  • Messiest Ways to Kill a Zombie
  • Historical & Science Fiction Research
  • Self Promotion: Increasing Discoverability Through Marketing and Technology
  • Reading – Scott Baker

Yup, I have a reading.  On Sunday morning.  I’m certain it will be well attended.  :-/  I’ve never done a reading before other than reading flash fic to my classes when they beg.  It’ll be good practice.  So I guess I should start picking a piece to read.

Having no novels out or forthcoming, I guess I’ll be reading short fiction.  The obvious thing to do is read something from Baker’s Dozen.  Plenty of good candidates in there.  Not “Leech Run” or “Chasers” since both are Escape Pod stories and have/will have audio presentations that trump whatever I can muster, but I could read “Poison Inside the Walls” if I want something pro-published.  Right now I’m leaning more toward “Call Me Z”, my zombie culture piece; it’s fun but poignant.  Also in the running are “Glow Baby” (urban fantasy; think of Tribbles) and “Secondhand Rush” (dystopian, slight cyberpunk overtones).  Then there’s the option of reading something unpublished, particularly if I finish it between now and then, but I don’t really see the marketing value in that approach.  It may boil down to whichever story I feel like reading to an empty room.

As for the panels, that first one is made of awesome.  To top it off, John Ringo is on that panel with me.  That one may get a touch out of control…I hope.  The research panel is a bit out of my league since I’m not a research nut.  Plus I seem to be on the panel with sciencey-types.   But I research and I’ll have a pearl or three to share, I suppose.  As for the self-promotion panel, I’ve been doing some of that with Baker’s Dozen but not as much as perhaps I should.  I’ll be listening as much as talking there.

All in all, I’ve really come to enjoy Chattanooga cons and I don’t expect this one to be too different.  Still a month away, though.

I hate waiting.

 

Emerging from the void

Well, it’s been two months since I posted.  Personal stuff, we won’t go into it.  But summer is here — always good news for a teacher — so maybe I can be  writer again for a few months.  And we’ll start by writing a blog post.

For starters, I have a story out in a new themed anthology from the Sparkito imprint of Dark Quest books.  The anthology is called Galactic Creatures.  The theme?  Animal satellites.  Yeah, I’ll let that sink in a moment…animal satellites.  When I heard it, I wasn’t sure whether to work with satellites that looked like animals, behaved like animals, contained animals, animals that behaved like satellites…heck, there are probably a dozen ways to interpret the theme.  I suspect that will lend to the variety of the stories within.  No, I haven’t read it yet because I was out of town when my copy arrived.  But we’re getting ahead of ourselves.

My story is called “The Scrapper and the Saint Bernard”.  My interpretation fell somewhere between a satellite that looks like and acts like a Saint Bernard dog.  It uses an almost epistolary style, a first for me.  I think it all worked pretty well (he said without prejudice).  Pick up a copy and see for yourself.

In other news, I just got back from my third trip to ConCarolinas in Charlotte.  No, I wasn’t a guest or a panelist; I’m not big enough yet.  (Soon, though.  Soon…  But I digress.)  Con time was split with some time bonding with high school buds, so it wasn’t the immersive con experience I have had other times, but it was definitely a fun trip, as were the last two years there.

The best part was probably spending time with the Magical Words crew again.  Good people, good writers.  They are a big part of why I go every year.  Faith Hunter, A. J. Hartley, David B. Coe/D. B. Jackson, Misty Massey, Carrie Ryan, Kalayna Price, Edmund Schubert, Stuart Jaffe…not all of them are involved with MW anymore, and some are part-timers there, but I have enjoyed their fellowship and wisdom.

I also enjoyed other aspects of CC: the Dr. Horrible sing-along (always a favorite), sci-fi Whose Line Is It Anyway, the costumes, browsing the wares in the dealer room, yadda yadda yadda.  It’s a mid-size con.  It’s fun.  I only hope I’ll get there next year now that my buddy in Charlotte (whose apartment was a few minutes from the con hotel) is moving to Florida.  Note to self: look up cons in Tampa.

That’s it until next time (which won’t be quite so long).

OmniCon Report

OmniCon was a lot of fun.  It started slow, only a few people attending the opening ceremonies and the first couple rounds of panels, but it picked up.  It wasn’t a huge con, under 300 people, but it was fun.

I enjoyed spending time with the writers there: Chris Berman, Bennie Grezlik, Gregg Overman, and Marina Sergeyeva.  I did panels with all of them.  Good folks with a lot of knowledge, all of them.  We had some fantastic discussions with crowds of varying sizes.  None were huge, but most were of comfortable size.  I heard more than one of them mention a desire to return next year.  I am inclined to share the desire.

The most popular panel of the weekend (which I was not a part of) was the “My Little Pony” panel.  I don’t get it.  A whole bunch of people were really into it, though.  Bronies?  Really?  To each their own, I guess.

The costume contest had a good number of participants with some good quality.  The vendors had some nice stuff — particularly the art — but nothing really for me.  Gaming?  Not in years and no one plays Rifts anymore anyway.  But this was a very nice homecoming for me.

I intend to help out with OmniCon 2013.  There was a lot to like about this year’s con, but I think it could be better and bigger next year, and I’m hoping I can contribute to that.

Resources for Beginning Writers

I am doing a panel at OmniCon for beginning writers.  I still feel like one myself sometimes.  Early in my career, I made use of a lot of different books and other resources.  Here’s a list of some that I still find incredibly valuable.

The Books

  1. How to Write Science Fiction & Fantasy (Card): It’s actually about time for me to reread this one.  I like to do so sometimes to remind myself just what the genre expects of me (and vice versa).  Orson Scott Card is a master in the field and does a great job communicating the ins and outs of sci-fi and fantasy.  A must read for all aspiring speculative fiction writers.
  2. The Elements of Style (Strunk and White): Okay, I confess; I’ve never read it.  Not once.  That doesn’t change the fact that it’s the armchair book of choice for basic grammatical technique.  If not EoS, then have something: The Chicago Manual of Style, Harbrace College Handbook, a recent grammar text.  I don’t care how good you are, you’ll need to look stuff up.  (If you never need to, you’re not varying your prose enough.)
  3. Elements of Writing Fiction Series (Card, Kress, Noble, Bickham, and others): I cheated a bit here.  I had trouble selecting one book from this series, so I put the whole thing.  I found Character and Viewpoint very useful early on while Beginnings, Middles, and Ends was a bit more advanced and Plot fell pretty well in the middle.  Each book in the series was good, though Description was a little to poetic for my taste.
  4. Creating Short Fiction (Knight): If you want to write (and sell) short fiction, this book is a must read.  Damon Knight was a master at short stories and taught a lot of people who also went on the be masterful.  Short stories aren’t book chapters or under-developed novels; they have their own tempos, their own expectations.  This book demonstrates the ins and outs of a widely overlooked medium.
  5. Writing the Breakout Novel (Maass):  This is a book by a literary agent about what literary agents need to see in novels.  Yes, this is a how-to book for writing novels.  No, it is not a step-by-step, paint-by-numbers method.  Maass helps you pick which idea in your head to develop (because, face it, you have dozens) and walks you through the necessities to have a novel that doesn’t just pop but erupts.
  6. The First Five Pages (Lukeman): Ever pick up a book in a bookstore and read a few pages to see if it’s worth anything?  You aren’t alone.If you want an editor/agent/reader to reach page six of your novel/story, you first need to get the job done on the first five pages.  (See what I did there?)  This book really helps get the all important beginning right so the rest of the work gets a chance.

The Links

  1. SFWA:  The Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America is the professional organization for speculative fiction writers.  No, you can’t join right out of the starting blocks.  You need to make 3 qualifying professional short fiction sales or one qualifying professional novel sale  to become a full member.  But its the resource link you should be familiar with, like Writer Beware.  Several of the other links here are SFWA pages.
  2. Workshops: From Critters to Clarion, there’s a workshop to benefit every writer at every level.  This links to my website’s workshop page with a lot of resources.  (Email me if you find any links outdated or broken.)
  3. Turkey City Lexicon: Funny name, invaluable terminology.  Infodump, squid on the mantelpiece, smeerps…whatever’s wrong (or right) with your story, it might already have a name.  Naming a thing makes it easier to identify.
  4. Standard Manuscript Format: You must know this.  You must use this.  To do otherwise is to mark yourself an amateur.
  5. Heinlein’s Rules of Writing: This is Beginning Writing 101.  I don’t follow all of these rules perfectly, but I know them.  You should, too.
  6. Duotrope: Okay, I wrote a story.  Where do I send it?  I use Duotrope to target markets, track submissions, and predict response times.
  7. I Should Be Writing: This podcast helps writers maintain sanity as they write and experience things like doubt, writer’s block, deadlines, etc.

That’s a Baker’s dozen to keep you busy.  But don’t forget to do some writing, too.  That’s what this is all about anyway, right?

 

A few flash fiction markets

I am doing a Flash Fiction panel at OmniCon, so I thought I should post some flash market links.  This list is by no means complete and does focus on genre fiction.  For a more thorough search, try duotrope.com.

Daily Science Fiction: (SF & F) They run flash (loosely defined) Monday through Thursday and a longer story on Friday o get you through the weekend.  And they pay 8 cents a word, good money for fiction, but it’s free to get the stories emailed to you and/or read them online.

Analog: (hard SF) Their “Probability Zero” section is flash fiction.

Beneath Ceaseless Skies: (F) A very well respected fantasy zine that buys flash.

Every Day Fiction: (SF/F/H) This is run by a friend of mine and has bought a few stories from me.  Low pay but a lot of readers.  Read it online for free.

Flash Fiction Online: (SF/F/H) All flash, all the time.

10Flash: (check issue themes) 10 themed flash stories per quarter.

Abyss & Apex: (SF & F) A well respected semi-pro zine that buys flash.

Untied Shoelaces of the Mind: (SF/F/H) Buys stories 2000-words or less.  They bought my Pied Piper/zombie story “Not Rats” for their anthology, so I wanted to include them.

There are lots more out there, and new ones seem to pop up regularly.

 

My OmniCon Schedule

Here’s the list of panels I’ll be on at OmniCon.  All panels last one hour, except “Meet the Authors” which is slated for an hour and a half because there are quite a few of us.

Sat Mar 17, 2012

  • 11am   Flash Fiction w/ Bennie Grezlik
    • Programming 1
  • 12pm  Lunch at Spankies (not a panel, but a must!)
  • 2pm   History of Zombies w/ Marina Sergeyeva
    • Programming 1
  • 3pm   Colonizing Space w/ Marina Sergeyeva, Chris Berman, & Gregg Overman
    • Programming 1
  • 5pm   Meet the Authors w/ all the author guests
    • Main Programming

Sun Mar 18, 2012

  • 12pm   Women Warriors w/ Chris Berman
    •  Programming 1
  • 3pm   Beginning Writers w/ Bennie Grezlik
    • Programming 1
  • 5pm   Science in Science Fiction w/ Gregg R. Overman & Bennie Grezlik
    • Programming 1