Saturday
Oct202012

Fill the Shelves

As many of you know, I am currently rewritting my first novel, Hunters Unlucky. You can read it for free as I work on it, along with my commontary.

The funny thing about Hunters is that it has secrets, even from me. I know where all the elements in my later books came from, but there are things in Hunters dredged from my early childhood, which I have forgotten.

I've recently been on assignment at a hospital in Arizona. About a month ago, I saw the Grand Canyon for the first time, as well as other fantastic canyons and rock formations in this part of the country.

Something about them seemed familiar. The red rock, sculpted sandstone, boulders, and caves... I'd never seen it before, but it reminded me of my mental images of Lidian. Finally, I recalled a book from my school library that I read when I was maybe 7 or 8 called Brighty of the Grand Canyon (about a burrow living in the canyon). And I remembered! That's where the red cliffs of Lidian came from. The whole idea of moving to and from and over these towering cliffs in a seasonal pattern...it came from that book...even though I grew up in Florida, and I'd never seen country like that before.

I had forgotten until I actually saw the Grand Canyon. It's interesting - the way certain images and ideas seed our imaginations and then bloom years or decades later.

I thought of this when I read about a project called Fill the Shelves. The site hooks readers up with the Amazon Wish Lists of school libraries around the country. These libraries have appaulingly empty shelves and no budgets to fill them. You can go to the school's Amazon Wishlist, pick out a book for them, and it gets shipped direclty to the school. It's a pretty awesome project, and I bought them a few books. I hope the next generation finds books in their libraries to seed their imaginations and conjur their own other worlds.

Sunday
Jul292012

My Little Pony and the Trickster

 

Every storyteller starts somewhere, and I started with My Little Ponies. My earliest characters, plots, and themes were hammered out in elaborate games with these delightful Hasbro toys, which debuted in 1981. My Little Pony launched officially in 1983, when I was 6 years old, and my best friend and I got on board immediately. Our parents couldn’t afford to buy us all the Ponies we craved, so we contented ourselves with cutting out the pictures from the backs of the Pony boxes and playing with these as though they were additional plastic toys. In this way, just two or three Ponies became a herd. Some Ponies acquired personalities and even reputations before they were ever made “flesh”…er…plastic…in our collections.

There was a TV show, even back then, but I don’t remember much about it. I invented personalities for most of the Ponies, which endured across the various games and scenarios we created for them.

My first Pony was Cherries Jubilee, but she never suggested a really strong personality to me. The first one that truly caught my imagination was Baby Firefly. I remember the exact moment when I opened her box. I was 8. By some extraordinary stroke of good fortune, I got both Baby Firefly and Baby Surprise at the same. I almost never got two Ponies at once outside of Christmas. I think they were on sale.

I looked at Firefly with her lightning bolt and unruly blue hair, and then at Surprise with her snow white coat and sweet, little balloon, and I knew at once that these two had to be rivals. Surprise was clearly the good one, and Firefly was clearly the naughty one.

And Firefly was clearly more interesting.

In that moment, Firefly became my first well-defined trickster. She was not strong, nor particularly brave, but she was exceedingly clever, full of mischief, occasionally cruel, and always a smart-ass. She was a trickster in the grand old tradition going all the way back to Loki and Coyote and forward to El-ahrairah, Ferris Bueller, and Jack Sparrow. In their purest, archetypical forms, these characters are amoral agents of chaos. However, when given a true personality, they generally have understandable goals, loves, fears, and desires. They just accomplish their goals by wit and guile, rather than force or argument.

This kind of character appears again and again in my fiction. Storm from Hunters Unlucky, Fenrah and Sham (with Sham playing the role of the smart-ass) from Prophet, Sirapous from Walk Upon High (this book has not yet been released). Silveo from Cowry Catchers is certainly the most complex trickster I’ve written to date and probably the most true-to-form.

Of course, I didn’t know any of that when I picked up Firefly. I was 8.

Over the course of the next four years, I acquired a technicolor herd of plastic Ponies. There were Sea Ponies, and So-soft Ponies, Flutter Ponies, Big Brother Ponies, Ponies with carousel designs, Ponies with butterfly wings, Ponies with shaggy feet, and Ponies with absurdly long, tinsel mains.

I rarely played with these toys alone. What would be the point of telling a story with no audience? My most frequent companion was my little brother (who is still often my First Reader). My Ponies sometimes went to war with his Transformers. There were assassins and ninjas involved. On one memorable occasion, the transformers laid siege outside the closet, while my friend and I carried on life inside the castle (closet). We got so involved that we completely forgot about the siege and my poor brother, waiting patiently outside for the war to begin.

In addition to Transformers, my Ponies had frequent dealings with plastic dinosaurs, Hot Wheels, Micro Machines, stuffed animals, and various miniatures (but no dolls…because I disliked dolls). Is it any wonder there are so many species in my stories? About the time I stopped playing with toys, I started giving my brother stories to read. One day, the Ponies were put away for the last time.

 

Image by pullip_junk, Creative Commons License

Years later, I came home from college and heard about this amazing new thing called eBay. I discovered that people were selling Ponies online for a lot more than I had ever paid for one. So I cracked open the big box of Ponies and started going through it. I knew all their names, so I could list them correctly, allowing collectors to find them. I spent an enjoyable few summers curling their hair and taking pictures of them before shipping them off to new owners.

I sold maybe two-thirds of my collection. I also bought a few other people’s collections, dolled them up, took attractive photos, and sold those.

I didn’t sell them all, though. I couldn’t ever sell Firefly. That would be like selling my childhood. And there were others. Baby North Star, Baby Pockets and her Kangaroo, Kingsley the Lion… Most of the ones that I couldn’t part with were the tricksters—the ones who had such strong personalities that, even a decade later, I remembered them vividly. I still have a box of Ponies in my closet—some of them damaged from too much play, some too cute or unusual to sell, and some who were tricksters—the prototypes of my later characters.

Recently, I was babysitting a friend’s 8 year-old-daughter for an afternoon. She read for a while on my Kindle and then grew restless. I asked if there was anything she’d like to watch on Netflix. She said, almost sheepishly, “Have you ever heard of My Little Ponies?”

“Yeah, kid, I might have heard of them.”

We proceeded to have My Little Pony viewing marathon. The Generation-4’s look a little different from the Generatoin-1 Ponies that I grew up with, but they’re still a candy-colored Hasbro product. I’m glad to know that kids still get to fall in love with My Little Ponies, tell stories with them, and maybe even create a few tricksters.

Sunday
Jul012012

Cowry Catchers 4 - Illustrated - It's here!

A forbidden book. A pirate prince. An idea whose time has come.

Gerard and Silveo have made peace with their pasts…or so they think. They’ve joined the pirates they once hunted and are prepared to leave Wefrivain in quest for a new life. However, an unexpected cry for help brings them unwillingly back into home waters.

The fauns of Maijha Minor are in trouble, and helping them seems like the right thing to do. To succeed, they must circulate Gwain’s forbidden book, which tells the truth about the wyvern gods. Gwain himself has already given up the task as hopeless, but Silveo has other ideas. Together, they will get into more trouble than anyone thought possible.

Out of the Ashes is the fourth illustrated book in the Guild of the Cowry Catchers series. This 64,000-word book is DRM-free and carefully formatted. It includes 11 character portraits, 19 full-page illustrations, and 2 versions of the map (one optimized for color and one for black and white). Cowry Catchers looks beautiful on a black-and-white viewer, but you can also open this eBook on a color screen to view the illustrations at their best.

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Smashwords (all formats)

Cowry Catchers is an illustrated series for adults, set in the world of Panamindorah. It has beauitful artwork, but it's not for the prudish or the young. If you have not read the other Cowry Catchers books, you'll want to start at the beginning. First book is free. ;)

Thursday
Jun072012

Short Stories

Hi, readers!

Over the last few months, I've been putting up some digital short stories. I've commissioned really beautiful artwork to go with some of them. Others had lovely covers already commissioned by other people, and I got permission to use them. All of these stories haven been released somewhere before, so you may have seen them. Or you may have missed one or two.

Appeared previously in audio on The Dunesteef Audio Fiction Magazine. Currently enrolled in Kindle Selects program until July 10, so only available on Amazon. 1000 words, artwork by Lisa Wilde.

 

Appeared previously on Cast of Wonders. Free wherever I'm allowed to make it free, $0.99 elsewhere. Artwork by Alex Dawson.

Also appears in Crossroads: Short Stories from Panamindorah. $0.99 Artwork by Ashton Hardeman.

Here's a closer look at the incredible detail of the artwork. Click for bigger.

 

Also appears in Crossroads: Short Stories from Panamindorah and In Flux. $0.99 Artwork by Lyra Benassi.

I cropped this one a bit to make the cover. The original deserves display, so here it is. Click for bigger.

 

Also appears in Crossroads: Short Stories from Panamindorah. $0.99 Artwork by Lyra Benassi.


Sunday
Feb122012

Email Alerts for New Books

Whenever I release something new, I send out an alert on twitter and facebook. I'll eventually talk about it on the podcast, and I usually make an announcement here as well. However, I know that sometimes, people who'd like to hear about my stories don't see those announcements. They fly by on a busy day, drop off people's walls or twitter streams, and people just don't notice.

So, I'm compiling a mailing list. I've been resistant to this idea in the past, because direct email seems spammy to me. However, I personally subscribe to email updates for a number of my favorite authors, and I never feel spammed when they tell me about a new book, so I guess it can be a good thing.

The only time I'll use this list is when I release something new. Whether the new content is text or audio, free or paid, adult, young adult, or children’s stories, you’ll get an email about it if you stay subscribed. I doubt you'll get more than a few emails per year, and it's easy to unsubscribe.

The subscription sign up is on the right. Thanks so much for supporting my work!