Tag Archives: michael bradley

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.

 

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I Have a New Dream Vehicle

I have been blessed to drive lots of cars in my life that were a lot of fun.  When I got married and had kids, I had to drive boring cars that had back seats.  As soon as both kids could drive, I went back to my two seat roadsters.  I have some pictures here of my some of my vehicles, followed by my new dream vehicles…

At 16, this was my first “official car” in my name. An Italian 124 SuperSport Fiat Spyder with dual overhead cams. Burnt rubber in all five gears. Mine was bright yellow.

Rearview of my first car, interior same, but bright yellow paint. I put an icemaker in the glove compartment and a champagne bottle in the console with glasses for dates. It was called The Italian Stallion.

Side view of first car. Everything was in Italian, Benzino, Olio, and Kilometers per hour. It had a pull choke and accelerator and buttons that made me feel like James Bond. Unfortunately, it was very hard to keep running.

As soon as the kids could drive themselves, I got this diamond blue, champagne interior Mercedes 450 SL convertible with both hard and soft tops.

My interior was light tan, but I had all handcrafted wood. My daughter called it the hungry beast because it was too fast for her and scared her. I could hit 160 mph in it and it felt like 70. Ahh, those trips to Vegas…

Nothing like driving with the top down by the ocean. It became very expensive to maintain, so my wife and I donated it to a needy family.

The car I drive now. 0-60 in 5 seconds. They no longer make the Honda S2000 limited production racing car. It redlines at 9000 rpm. Sounds like motorcycle engine.

All are the same, except my model had the extra capacity engine seen in Fast and Furious and its sequels like Tokyo Drift. I love bright yellow convertibles with cloth tops.

Again, nothing like driving up the Pacific Coast highway with the top down and my wife next to me. No room to buy things, so you just cruise and hang out.

Steampunk version of the Shelby Cobra, the fastest production car ever made. All I can say is WOW!

I would have to test drive this to make sure the third real wheel doesn’t make it to unstable. But if it drives nice, just look at that puppy. Engine and a seat is all you need.

Steampunk interior, sweet.

A bit large for me, but built by Captain Nemo and driven by Tom Sawyer (League of Extraordinary Gentlemen) I could get past the length.

Formerly used by Jabba the Hutt, it has some miles on it and damaged interior from Luke Skywalker, but I hear it is great for the desert, and I live in Arizona…

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My 90 minute interview on Radio

Here is the link, feel free to make fun of my young person voice.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/kwodradio/2012/06/07/talking-steampunk-stories-with-michael-bradley

You don’t have to listen to all 90 minutes if you don’t like it, but it has a lot of background on me.

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I am now a Goodreads Author

I just joined Goodreads.com as an author and posted two of my books to it.  If you are a member, and you have read either or both of my books, please feel free to rate them.  I must say I had a very pleasant experience with the Goodreads staff.  I sent them an email that I was unsure how to load my books and sent them the ISBN numbers and they did it all for me in a few hours.  Then I told them thank you and I would be joining as an author.  Ten minutes later, they had done that for me too.  I have never seen such good service before.  Thanks to the people at Goodreads and for all of you who take the time to comment on my book(s).

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Important Things To Know as a Writer

I have been a full time novelist for just over 13 months.  In that time I have had around twenty short stories published and two books, with a third novel coming out this summer, and a fourth planned for around Christmas.  On the scale of great writers, I am not even on the scale.  I learn through constant research, other authors, critique groups, magazines, reading a lifetime of books and trial and error.  I suspect this is how all writers learn their trade.  I say this because I am no expert yet, nor may I ever be.  However, as I learn things, I plan to put these very basic and obvious lessons on paper, in hopes they may save a fellow writer a bit of their own agony along the way.  Feel free to disagree with me, as with all things, I may be totally wrong.

1)  Know how long your story is going to be?  You don’t need an exact wordcount or number of pages mind you, but some idea.  Is it tweet fiction, flash fiction, a short short story, a long short story, a novella, a novel, first in a series?  The reason this is critical, is that the number of themes, characters and story and development arcs vary widely based on the length.  I wrote some tweet fiction that got published.  It has to be entire stories that fit in one tweet, like 140 characters or so, not words, characters.  There is very little in the way of development, conflict, suspense building, intrigue and character arcs in 140 characters.  Throw those rules out, trust me.  In a short story, you make your point, you take a slice of the pizza, wanting the reader to eat the rest, but they only bought one slice.  In a novel, which I find is my most comfortable length personally, you have lots of time for nuance, discovery, character arcs and adventure.  So, I always wonder how someone as a fellow author says, I am not sure how long this will be.   I don’t know how you can write it without some idea.

2)  What is the Story?  I am not big on outlines and planning out the entire blueprints ahead of time because it takes some of the fun of creation away from me.  But I have read portions of books that were very strange to me.  It starts with an interesting character, then an interesting place, then a hint of murder or mystery, then a historical event, then something, then something else.  I ask, what about this guy at the beginning?  Oh, he’s not that important.  What about that cool town?  Oh, I don’t come back to that.  Sometimes stories can be about too many things.  Sometimes one story could be eight great books instead of one really long confusing one.  I would suggest that even if you aren’t sure where things are going, knowing the main characters, setting, and kind of an idea of the ending helps.

3)  What is the Perspective?  Is it all seen through the eyes of one person as they do it?  Is it remembered?  Is it revealed through a series of events or letters?  Is it third person omniscient?  Is there a narrator, what is the narrator’s voice?  Do we get to see inside anyone’s thoughts?  I find myself challenged a lot in my writing on this one.  It is easy to have your narrator start sounding like your main character, opinions and all.  It is distracting when some side character reveals their deepest thoughts out of the blue and never again.  Perspective is probably the most important decision in a book in my opinion.  Maybe that is because I am so limited in my mastery of it.  I wish I could write first person as it happens.  Those authors dazzle me, what power!  If you are confused by the topic of perspective, you should probably read up on it, or buy a beer for a starving author and pick his or her brain.

4)  What is the Genre?  People glare at me when I ask this.  Sometimes it is followed by a general defensive argument about why genres don’t matter.  But they really do matter in my opinion.  I like to read science fiction, history, fantasy, heroic fantasy, adventure, military history, and science.  I like to sample other genres, but if I know something is romance, religious, memoirs, or slice of life, I’m not going to buy it.  My wife is the exact opposite.  She rarely reads anything I am interested in, and I rarely wish to read her stories of three Chinese sisters who grow up in messed up times, suffer, then come to America and smile while washing the dishes.  The thing is, all genres have their audiences, and those audiences are drawn to them for certain types of reasons.  Cross genres, mixes, whatever is fine by me.  But if you as the author do not know what genre(s) you are writing for, it will be hard to know what the reader wants.  Heck, it will be hard to tell the bookstore which shelf to put it on.

5)  What is the Point of Your Book?  Why Would You as a Reader Tell People to Read it?  Again, there are no right or wrong answers, but there should be an answer.  Do you have this idea burning inside you that has to get out?  Are you trying to jump on the YA vampire band wagon?  Do you want people to laugh, to cry, to learn?  Are you making a political or social statement?  Is it just so good of writing that each pages glows and the wise will use it to discourage future MFA students with its sheer unatainable brilliance?  Again, I know many authors, many quite good, who stumble over this answer.

I will answer this question for you from my own reasoning.  When I was young, I had a terrible childhood.  I learned to read at a young age and was able to explore the world, ancient cities, conquer evil wizards, and live hundreds of lives and go to places which took my mind off my own horrible existence.  The point of my books are to provide that same experience to others.  My books are to be fun and enjoyable to read.  I want a reader to smile when they are done and say to themselves, “I really enjoyed reading that.”  It takes the pressure off too, because I never have to try to be an awesome literary star, dazzling with my prose and perhaps never being good enough.  But having read thousands of adventure fantasy books, I know what I enjoyed about them, and I try to bring that same sense of fun and adventure to others.

Let me know what you think.  Am I all wrong?  If you think this is genius, make sure to comment, as writers have fragile egos which always appreciate stroking…

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Twisted History – The New Anthology is NOW out on Amazon Kindle!

Here is a link to an awesome anthology of alternative history – Twisted History.  I have several stories in it as well as many rising literary stars here in Arizona, Christopher Wilke, Andrew Terech, Cameron Milkins, David Nicol and Vincent Alascia.   Best of all – it is only 99 cents!  The print version will be out later this week.  Here is a link:

http://www.amazon.com/Twisted-History-ebook/dp/B007QEZ71A/ref=sr_1_17?ie=UTF8&qid=1333301511&sr=8-17

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Appearing At LepreCon 38!

Michael Bradley will be appearing as an author and panelist at the 38th LepreCon Convention on:

April 6-8, 2012 at Tempe Mission Palms – Tempe, AZ

This is the premier Arizona event for Science Fiction fans.  You can get more details at their website at:

http://www.leprecon.org/lep38/

Michael had the following schedule:

Friday

LIT-Good, Bad & Ugly of Genre Fiction 1-2pm               Palm E

SCI – Laboratory went Boom 6-7pm                                  Joshua Tree

Saturday

SOC-Here comes the Apocalypse           2-3pm                 Xavier

Autograph session in dealer’s room       3-4pm

SCI-The Stem Cell Hamburger Drive-Thru 4-5pm           Xavier

LIT – Independent Publishing Update 5:00-6:30pm                   Palm F

LIT/MED – Why is Steampunk picking up steam                              7-8 pm                        Palm E

Sunday

Michael Bradley Reading                        11-11:30am        Boardroom

SCI/LIT – Science research for book writing 3-4pm                   Xavier

Please stop by and catch a panel or get a book signed!

A special thanks to Patti Hulstrand, the Program Director for adding me to the program.  As you can see under the STORE page on this website, I have been a frequent writer recently for the ConNotations Newszine which Patti also publishes.  In addition, Patti writes her own novels and markets and publishes for many other authors.  I don’t know how she finds the time to do it all, but I appreciate her.

Michael

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Facebook Ad

Just started a Facebook advertisement for The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship  that will run until the end of March.  Let me know here if you see it pop up on the right of your Facebook page!  Wish me luck.

http://www.amazon.com/Travelers-Club-Ghost-Ship-ebook/dp/B0060QYM2K/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1330040223&sr=8-1

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Cara Nicole aka AZ Power Girl to Appear on Alternative History Anthology Cover

We completed a photo shoot with the ever so nice and friendly Cara Nicole yesterday.  For a person with such fame and a busy schedule, I was very impressed with her down to Earth nice personality and her commitment to local charities and the local arts community.  She will be appearing as a vampire on the cover of the anthology as one of the characters in the short story compilation.  Expect the book out in early March.  We also hope to be able to promote this and other works of the local community of writers in the upcoming conventions and in bookstores near you.  Please give a warm thanks to Cara Nicole for her awesome support to our local author’s community!  Thanks!

We are still finalizing the book name so if you have any ideas, post them here as a comment.  This book is being published by Michael Bradley and has a wide variety of local authors participating.  It will be available both in Kindle format and in print version.

For those few who don’t know about Cara Nicole already, here is a picture of her at Phoenix Comic Con in her AZ Power Girl outfit.

You will have to wait for the cover until the book comes out.  Sorry everyone, it’s still in the edit phase.

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Nerdvana Story on the East Valley Tribune

Thank you so much Bob Leeper for mentioning me in your article about local digital publishers.  Here is a link to the story:

http://blogs.evtrib.com/nerdvana/books/are-printed-books-histor-e-local-authors-embrace-digital-publishing/65468/

Many of you may know Bob Leeper as the owner of Evermore Nevermore or the organizer of Second Friday’s in Mesa.  He is a great guy and was nice enough to include me and some of my fellow authors in the story.  Thanks Bob!

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