The second book of the Travelers’ Club series is scheduled to come out in early September. It is in the final editing process now. Here is the bookcover:
Category Archives: Writing
Time to Do Edits on My Third Book – Sigh
There are two things that a novelist hates the most. First, the editing process. Second, and the worst, is a negative review of your book, which I have not faced yet, thank God. Since the first of May, I have had my hip and part of my leg replaced due to an adverse drug reaction, then rehab, physical therapy, and so forth. After that, I developed an infection and fluid in my lungs which has left me breathless for over five weeks because they can’t give me what they used to, because it caused the bone death. All of this has set me back from my original planned release date of The Travelers’ Club – Flame and Ash (Book 2 of 5 in the Travelers’ Club series). It is written, and has been for awhile, but now I face the editing…sigh.
The book as it stands is about 430 pages long in 6″ x 9″ trade paperback format. I have four sets of edits, which means basically rewriting the around 1,700 pages. I pay a professional editor, Jacob Shaver to provide edits. I find from him, that like some coffee is decaffeinated, apparently my writing is de-hyphenated. I have to add around 100 missing hyphens. Along with that, he speaks four languages and corrects my poor French and Spanish. (I get the conjugations and gender messed up as I speak only English and German). He points out my use of collective language that I need to squelch, those times I leave out setting during action or dialogue, and many other things. He is nice enough to put little exclamation marks on the parts that are good, which keeps me going through all the mark-ups.
The second editor is my wife. She owns half of everything, including being a 50% partner in my S-Corporation through which my book sales flow. She was once my “silent partner” but now that I am semi-retired and a full time novelist, she is a very vocal partner. She tells me all my spelling mistakes and areas where characters are “out of character.”
The third editor(s) is my weekly fellow authors at the Central Phoenix Writer’s Workshop. I must credit them with teaching me 90% of what I know about writing. I thought I knew writing until my first piece was critiqued. I’ve learned a lot. About half of my chapters have been reviewed by this august body of boon companions. They give me not only writer hints, but also reader hints. The most helpful to me is if there is any scene where they do not know what is happening. I write in a visual style, and I don’t want the reader to ever be confused or skip over parts.
The fourth editor is the toughest – me. I can’t help but go back while making the first three edits and find myself adding and altering. Perhaps the first three edits are symbiotic in my creative portion of my mind and form new ways to express the story. Or, maybe you can always change things in your book, every time you edit it. My first book, I was a rookie, and had my editors and edits finish in three days. As a result, the first edition had errors. I put out a second edition with a better cover after going back and re-editing it again. This time, as with the second book which was an anthology with lots of help, I will be thorough in the edits.
My health improved, events and book signings scheduled, there is nothing for it but to slog through and get it done. My fourth book is due out in December, the fifth next Spring, and this baby needs to be put to bed.
Filed under Writing
IronQuill Review of The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship
The folks at IronQuill have posted a review of The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship. The League of the IronQuill can be found at http://www.ironquill.net.
Here is their review post:
http://www.ironquill.net/ghost-ship-sets-sail-with-steampunk-adventure/
Filed under Writing
Tips for Writers from Great Writers
Reposted from the Chive:
http://thechive.com/2012/08/16/a-few-writing-pointers-from-famous-authors/
Each is a short photo and quote, but very helpful.
Filed under Writing
Photos Taken for “Blood Bank” Due Out in December!
I want to thank Cara Nicole and Alfred T-Virus Trujillo for shooting photos for my fourth book, due out this December, entitled “Blood Bank.” It is a post apocalyptic vampire run Earth that examines what it means to be human, and that monsters should be careful what they ask for. And no, there are no “sparkly” angst ridden vampires in it. After the photos are processed and approved, we will be sharing some teasers, leading up to the release date.
Cara played a vampire on the cover of Twisted History, my second publication, which includes stories from several local up and coming authors. This time Cara will be playing a human, named Shawna, upon whose head the fate of humanity rests. This is the first in a three part trilogy, but each book will also stand alone.
Here is Cara on Twisted History:
Filed under Writing
Kurt Vonnegut’s Tips for Writing Fiction
Kurt Vonnegut’s Tips for Writing Fiction
Digging into NaNoWriMo? Working on something much shorter? Either way, Kurt Vonnegut has a few tips for your characters, your sentences, and how you treat your readers. It’s and oldie but goodie, shared by reader Zan.
In his book Bagombo Snuff Box: Uncollected Short Fiction, Vonnegut listed eight rules for writing a short story:
- Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted.
- Give the reader at least one character he or she can root for.
- Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water.
- Every sentence must do one of two things-reveal character or advance the action.
- Start as close to the end as possible.
- Be a Sadist. No matter how sweet and innocent your leading characters, make awful things happen to them-in order that the reader may see what they are made of.
- Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia.
- Give your readers as much information as possible as soon as possible. To hell with suspense. Readers should have such complete understanding of what is going on, where and why, that they could finish the story themselves, should cockroaches eat the last few pages.
Vonnegut qualifies the list by adding that Flannery O’Connor broke all these rules except the first, and that great writers tend to do that.
reposted.
Nikola Tesla – The Smartest Man Ever
Nikola Tesla, who suffered from obsessive compulsive disorder and anxiety before those conditions were understood, is in my opinion, the smartest man ever. He was recommended to Thomas Edison by a colleague as a young Serbian scientist. Asked by Edison to fix his theory of direct current so it would be more useful, Tesla did so, being promised $50,000. Thomas Edison paid him $8 instead, saying welcome to America and our sense of humor.
To get even, Tesla created alternating current, which powers nearly everything in the world now. Tesla said that Edison would try 1,000 different things when simple math would have eliminated them in minutes. Edison actually despised formal education and the scientific method, but he hired a team of scientists as the Wizards of Menlo Park, and took credit for all their inventions.
Tesla was able to see new inventions in his head, then draw them in great detail as a sketch. Most people then could not even comprehend his ideas, even when shown the diagrams. As he aged, the battle between his backers – Westinghouse, and the Edison Company, backed by JP Morgan became brutal, and were publicly known as the current wars. Thomas Edison electrocuted an elephant in public to show Tesla’s AC power was too dangerous.
Tesla buckled under the strain and became reclusive. He had to have three napkins at a table and walk around the table three times to eat. However, he went on to invent things that even now are revolutionary. He built a large Tesla coil that powered a town of 30,000 people, with no wires, for free. He had plans for death rays. He even said he had developed a Tesla tower that could provide power for free to the entire world, as well as video and radio, but if set to the Earth’s frequency, it could destroy the planet.
The mad genius had accomplished so much magic, that upon his death, the US Government confiscated his paperwork and ideas, and to this day, no kidding, they are still locked in Top Secret vaults. Many feared that Tesla truly had discovered a way to destroy the planet. He invented radio years before Marconi, but never got the credit. Oddly enough, his one true friend was Samuel Clemens, better known as Mark Twain.
The following is a YouTube video that goes through some of his inventions, but far from all of them:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q83LL3FsiGo
As a tribute, Nikola Tesla will play a key role in The Travelers’ Club series, in Book 2, 3 and 4, of the five book series.
Filed under Humor and Observations, Writing
ConNotations Newszine Volume 23, Issue 2 Is Out!
I have five things in there. The staff and the Editor Patti Hulstrand were kind enough to first add me as a staff writer, now as a columnist. I have a non-fiction piece on theories of astro-physicists on the beginning of the universe, two book reviews, a movie to book comparison, and a mention of my upcoming book signing at The Book Rack on September 8, 2012 from 11 am to 2 pm. The Book Rack is located on Signal Butte Road off I-60 in East Mesa, Arizona.
You can check out this edition by going here:
http://www.casfs.org/ConNotations/index.php
Then you can scroll to the bottom, and click enlarge to open the document in Adobe Reader.
It is a great publication that not only has interesting stories, but the advertisements tell you about all sorts of cool conventions coming up and places that sell unique products that us science fiction fans love. Thanks to Patti Hulstrand and the Central Arizona Speculative Fiction Society for such a great publication and letting me be a part of it for each of the last dozen or so issues.
Filed under Uncategorized, Writing
Amazing Art from Books!
As a writer, I want my stories to leap out at the reader, but even I cannot write a book that will leap out quite as well as these do. They are simply amazing! Thanks to The Chive for gathering so many cool pictures, including these. If you do not follow The Chive, they have interesting things, as well as PG-13 to R rated women pictures, so be prepared. I named one of the pictures below “Andrew” as an homage to my friend Andrew Terech who writes amazing horror stories.
Filed under Humor and Observations, Uncategorized, Writing
Thank You to the Steampunk Book Club
The Steampunk Book Club met on Wednesday night at Lux and invited me as their speaker/guest. They also selected my book, The Travelers’s Club and the Ghost Ship for their book of the month. Thanks to all you wonderful fellow Steampunk fans! I hope you love the book.
Filed under Writing






































