The Ongoing Angst of Successful Writers 5 – Trudi Canavan

Time for the next in my series of “Ongoing Angst” guest posts. Last week we heard from Kaaron Warren, Jo Anderton and Angela Slatter. Yesterday it was Lisa L Hannett and today is Trudi Canavan. Margo Lanagan will be the last of the guest posts tomorrow. So what’s it all about?

Well, it’s award season at the moment and lots of very deserving people are having their wonderful work recognised with nominations and wins of some of Australia’s (and the world’s) most prestigious prizes. But something I’ve noticed a lot is that no matter how successful a writer may be (in terms of publications, awards or anything else), they always worry that they’re not good enough, or that there are career heights they’ve yet to scale. It’s been said many times that the day you stop worrying about whether or not you’re good enough is the day you’ve lost your passion. So I thought to myself, there are some amazingly talented, successful and well-rewarded writers in Australia who probably feel this way too. And if you’re a writer of any level, be it newly emerging or well-established, it’s always good to hear that stuff. It’s good to be reminded that you’re not alone in your insecurities. I certainly like to know that it’s not just me who lies awake at night, terrified that tomorrow everyone will realise I’m a hack!

So I’ve asked these wonderful and tremendously successful writers (who are also people I’m lucky enough to call my friends) to answer three simple questions. The links above are to the previous kind respondents, below you’ll find Trudi’s and tomorrow I’ll post from Margo. Seriously, between them these writers have nominations or wins in just about every genre writing award you can think of, not to mention heaps of amazing publications, all of which you should check out if you haven’t already.

CanavanTrudiToday, it’s Trudi Canavan’s turn. Trudi was born in Kew, Melbourne and grew up in Ferntree Gully, a suburb at the foothills of the Dandenongs. In 1999 she won the Aurealis Award for Best Fantasy Short Story with “Whispers of the Mist Children”. In the same year she was granted a writers residency at Varuna Writers’ Centre in Katoomba, New South Wales. In November 2001, The Magicians’ Guild was first published in Australia. The second book of the trilogy, The Novice, was published in June 2002 and was nominated for the Aurealis Award for Best Fantasy Novel. The third book, The High Lord, was released in January 2003 and was nominated for the Best Novel Ditmar category. All three books entered Australian top ten SF bestseller lists. The Black Magician Trilogy reached the international market in 2004, published by HarperCollins’ EOS imprint in North America and Orbit Books in the UK. The trilogy is now rated by Nielsen BookScan as the most successful debut fantasy series of the last 10 years.

Trudi’s second trilogy, Age of the Five, has also enjoyed bestselling success. Priestess of the White reached No.3 in the Sunday Times hardback fiction bestseller list, staying in the top ten for six weeks.

In early 2006 Trudi signed a seven-figure contract with Orbit to write the prequel and sequel to the Black Magician Trilogy. The prequel, The Magician’s Apprentice was released in 2009 and won the Best Fantasy Novel category of the Aurealis Awards. The sequel trilogy has enjoyed great success on the bestseller lists and The Rogue reached no. 11 in the Fantasy category of the Goodreads Best Books of 2011 Awards.

1. What do you still fear as a writer, when it comes to putting your work out there? What fills you with doubt and angst?

I reckon fear is too strong a word. I worry more than I fear. It’s not that I don’t have that feeling, sometimes, that one day I’ll discover that every person who liked and bought my books was just being polite, but I can laugh it off. I guess I had low expectations at the beginning, so it’s a bonus when they do buy and like them. From the moment I started to write I educated myself on the pros and cons of the industry. If I didn’t enjoy writing I would have chosen a career with a more stable income. That I do make a good living from writing is, again, a bonus. While not as full of ups and downs as, say, a musician’s career, a writer’s career can go from bestseller to contractless and back again. I’ve always kept this in mind, tried to enjoy the good times and not take the bad to heart.

I think what I fear most is that my sense of identity has become so wrapped up this that if I couldn’t write any more, whether because of my health or upheavals in publishing or whatever else might come along, I’d feel lost and without purpose. But even then I know I’d find something else to do – most likely go back to art as a source of creative challenge and satisfaction.

ambassador-cover-small2. What career markers do you still strive for? What heights are you determined to scale?

I’d like to do better in the US market. Mostly because the big difference between sales there and everywhere else seems odd. Are there readers there who would enjoy my work but aren’t hearing about it? Or is there a cultural difference that means US tastes aren’t as compatible? A movie deal would be nice, so would awards, but they’re not things I’m striving toward. If they happen… bonus!

3. Whose career do you envy? Why?

Envy is is pointless. I can’t think of anyone I envy. I’ve always been excited when someone has succeeded at doing something I want to do, as that proves it’s possible. Even more so the few times I didn’t think their work was that good! Maybe I’ll never achieve the same thing they did, but so long as I have fun trying then I don’t mind. Also, I can think of plenty of people I admire for being able to do things I could never do. No, wait, that’s most people! I want to surround myself with amazing people and watch them make the world a more interesting place. And they can be a great source of inspiration, advice and support in return.

Find Trudi online at http://www.trudicanavan.com/ or on Twitter @TrudiCanavan

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The Ongoing Angst of Successful Writers 4 – Lisa L Hannett

It’s time to continue this series of “Ongoing Angst” guest posts. Last week we heard from Kaaron Warren, Jo Anderton and Angela Slatter. This week we’ll hear from Lisa L Hannett, Trudi Canavan and Margo Lanagan. So what’s it all about?

Well, it’s award season at the moment and lots of very deserving people are having their wonderful work recognised with nominations and wins of some of Australia’s (and the world’s) most prestigious prizes. But something I’ve noticed a lot is that no matter how successful a writer may be (in terms of publications, awards or anything else), they always worry that they’re not good enough, or that there are career heights they’ve yet to scale. It’s been said many times that the day you stop worrying about whether or not you’re good enough is the day you’ve lost your passion. So I thought to myself, there are some amazingly talented, successful and well-rewarded writers in Australia who probably feel this way too. And if you’re a writer of any level, be it newly emerging or well-established, it’s always good to hear that stuff. It’s good to be reminded that you’re not alone in your insecurities. I certainly like to know that it’s not just me who lies awake at night, terrified that tomorrow everyone will realise I’m a hack!

So I’ve asked these wonderful and tremendously successful writers (who are also people I’m lucky enough to call my friends) to answer three simple questions. The links above are to last week’s kind respondents, below you’ll find Lisa’s and tomorrow and Wednesday I’ll post from Trudi and Margo. Seriously, between them these writers have nominations or wins in just about every genre writing award you can think of, not to mention heaps of amazing publications, all of which you should check out if you haven’t already.

lisa-l-hannettToday, It’s Lisa L Hannett’s turn. Lisa hails from Ottawa, Canada but now lives in Adelaide, South Australia – city of churches, bizarre murders and pie floaters. She has published or sold 50 short stories to venues such as Clarkesworld Magazine, Fantasy, Weird Tales, ChiZine, Shimmer, the Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror (2010 & 2011), and Imaginarium 2012: Best Canadian Speculative Writing. Lisa has won three Aurealis Awards, including Best Collection 2011 for her first book, Bluegrass Symphony, which was also nominated for a World Fantasy Award. Midnight and Moonshine, co-authored with Angela Slatter, was published in 2012, and is also up for a slew of awards this year.

1. What do you still fear as a writer, when it comes to putting your work out there? What fills you with doubt and angst?

I’m pretty sure it was Keats who, before dying, requested a tombstone with this engraved on it: “Here lies one whose name was writ in water…” Although it’s a bit dramatic, a bit emo, I’ve often thought about this line whenever I’m feeling a bit angsty about my writing. It’s a combination of not wanting what you’ve written to evaporate into the ether soon after it’s published — not necessarily because it’s terrible, but because there’s just so much ether and so much literary condensation… It’s also the fear of being as bland as water. Writing stories that aren’t bad, per se; they just don’t rise above the level of fine. This worry — looking at your work and thinking it’s only fine — is what I think Keats’ epitaph is really about. It’s that niggling doubt that you’re not necessarily crap, but that what you’re writing isn’t adding anything exciting to the mix. That it’s just mediocre. That it’s not just forgotten, but forgettable. Now that’s scary.

Having said that, the thought of actually living with this sort of uncertainty for long is too depressing to contemplate — not to mention totally unproductive! — so I deal with it in several ways. Write, write, write. Take a break if I need one. Shut that internal editor up however I can. Then, keep writing. Try new things — in terms of style, structure, characterisation, subject matter, perspective — whatever I need to break out of the rut. Get a second (or third or fourth), trusted opinion on my work — having a fresh set of eyes on the story is so helpful! And, most importantly, always write the ideas I love. That’s what keeps me going: really loving it, even when it’s hard.

bluegrass2. What career markers do you still strive for? What heights are you determined to scale?

I’m striving to have a shelf — or several shelves — in my study, full of novels and collections I’ve written, in an assortment of genres, published in various editions, and translated into many languages. I’ll never abandon short stories, and I’ll always aim for the most excellent markets for each one I write, but I’m really keen to have my longer works out there. This includes finishing my next book, Lament for the Afterlife, then working on a Most Exciting Novel that draws on my PhD research in medieval Icelandic literature (and which I cannot wait to get stuck into!) and also redrafting The Familiar, my novel about witches and lunatics, which is the first book in the Walpurgis Cycle.

3. Whose career do you envy? Why?

It’s only natural to have a pang of oh-I-wish-that-was-me! when a new writer skyrockets to stardom apparently out of nowhere — but it’s not actual envy. I wish I could already live off my writing, but I don’t begrudge people who do so even though I haven’t quite made it to that stage yet. I respect and admire a lot of authors — and I’d like to emulate their careers, I suppose, but I don’t envy them. Authors like Margaret Atwood, for instance, who has been publishing for decades and whose novels and stories are still so brilliant — as are her essays, reviews, and poems… Or Haruki Murakami, who isn’t massively prolific (compared to writers like Sean Williams, for instance, who is also a superstar) and whose works are definitely not writ in water… Or Ray Bradbury, who just kept writing and writing and writing… If anything, I envy authors of the past like Virginia Woolf (apart from the whole rocks-in-pockets episode in the river) and J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis who, in my Romantic and idealised versions of them, got to smoke pipes and wear lovely tweed suits and sit around in Bloomsbury and Oxford all day, waxing poetic about writing and history and art, publishing lovely editions in small print runs, somehow paying the bills with their Genius.

You can find Lisa online at http://lisahannett.com and on Twitter @LisaLHannett

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The Ongoing Angst of Successful Writers 3 – Angela Slatter

Here’s the third of this very exciting series of guests posts. It’s award season at the moment and lots of very deserving people are having their wonderful work recognised with nominations and wins of some of Australia’s (and the world’s) most prestigious prizes. But something I’ve noticed a lot is that no matter how successful a writer may be (in terms of publications, awards or anything else), they always worry that they’re not good enough, or that there are career heights they’ve yet to scale. It’s been said many times that the day you stop worrying about whether or not you’re good enough is the day you’ve lost your passion. So I thought to myself, there are some amazingly talented, successful and well-rewarded writers in Australia who probably feel this way too. And if you’re a writer of any level, be it newly emerging or well-established, it’s always good to hear that stuff. It’s good to be reminded that you’re not alone in your insecurities. I certainly like to know that it’s not just me who lies awake at night, terrified that tomorrow everyone will realise I’m a hack!

So I’ve asked six of Australia’s most successful writers (and people I’m lucky enough to call my friends) to answer three simple questions. I’ll be posting up their responses over the next week or so. The incredibly generous respondents are Kaaron Warren (who has already responded here), Jo Anderton (whose post is here), Lisa L Hannett, Angela Slatter, Trudi Canavan and Margo Lanagan. Seriously, between them these writers have nominations or wins in just about every genre writing award you can think of, not to mention heaps of amazing publications, all of which you should check out if you haven’t already.

angela-slatterToday, it’s Angela Slatter’s turn. Angela writes dark fantasy and horror. She is the author of the Aurealis Award-winning The Girl with No Hands and Other Tales, the WFA-shortlisted Sourdough and Other Stories, and the new collection/mosaic novel (with Lisa L Hannett), Midnight and Moonshine (which is up for a heap of awards this year). She has a British Fantasy Award for “The Coffin-Maker’s Daughter” (A Book of Horrors, Stephen Jones ed.). Angela also has a PhD in Creative Writing and is one of the nicest and most generous writers I know.

1. What do you still fear as a writer, when it comes to putting your work out there? What fills you with doubt and angst?

It’s always the worry that something’s not good enough. That you’ve lavished all your love, attention and care on it, that you’ve flensed and polished it until it looks like a slightly evil supermodel, but that when it’s out in the public gaze someone will find a fault you didn’t see. And I don’t mean ‘matter of differing taste’ kind of fault, I mean a massive ‘plot hole you could drive a truck through’ kind of fault.

And there’s that moment when you’ve been writing something you’re enjoying, the words are flowing, you think it’s a great idea … then you start to over-think it … and suddenly there’s a blemish on your story, just a little one … then you ponder a bit more, darkly this time, and the blemish becomes a gigantic stain that creeps across the entire canvas … before you know it your lovely idea, your glorious writing is the picture of Dorian Gray with a hangover. The only answer is to write on through it, finish the damned thing, then put it in the bottom drawer for a week or so to let it rest and settle. Do other projects so your mind isn’t picking at the perceived flaws of this thing you are now convinced is the ugliest baby on the planet – come back to it when your mind is calm (and sane).

Then there’s the stuff you only have so much control over. You can proofread and edit your stuff until the cows come home; you can turn in a near-perfect piece, but if your editor misses the only spelling mistake you left there or – worse still – inserts some new ones for you in the final typesetting, there’s not much you can do about it. I’ve found spelling mistakes in books that I corrected three times on proofs. It’s the sort of stuff that is out of your hands. But is extremely frustrating.

sourdough2. What career markers do you still strive for? What heights are you determined to scale?

I guess I’ve always kept track by the quality of markets my work’s being published in – you shift from the ‘for attention’ to the twenty dollar markets, up to the higher paying, higher visibility/broader readership markets. When I started to get invited to do high profile anthologies I breathed a sigh of relief because it showed that what I was writing wasn’t just disappearing into the Great Black Hole of Indifference that we all sometimes think we’re throwing work into.

Awards are nice – but I don’t judge my success by whether I get any or not. I’ve blogged about this a few times and it basically comes down to the fact that an award is something you cannot control because it’s based on other people’s opinions and tastes. Awards are nice things to round out your marketing, but i I win or do not win an award, that doesn’t tell me I’m a better or a worse writer. If you write in the hope of validation by award, then you should stop right now! Getting on a shortlist is always a nice surprise, too, but it should never be an expectation – no more than winning should be an expectation. You see all these writers, some Very Important Writers, at awards ceremonies with pinched faces and mouths like they’ve sucked on lemons, all because they haven’t won an award – really??!! Be gracious, be optimistic but not expectant, and be gracious when someone else wins! It’s awards season again and I’m hearing a lot of crazy crap that makes me roll my eyes.

I guess the next markers for me are finishing and publishing my first novel Hallowmass, getting the Bitterwood Bible collection published, then starting on new novels, getting some of my work translated into other forms (films, etc). My main marker of success is producing quality work, not just flooding the market with mediocre crap just to keep my name out there – because if the work isn’t good then readers won’t associate me with quality stories they want to read. The better the quality and the more attention you pay to your writing, the better the markets you get accepted into – and eventually invited into.

3. Whose career do you envy? Why?

midnight-and-moonshineI don’t envy anyone – what good would that do me? Envy is a wasteful emotion based in insecurity – yes, that’s a life lesson, not just a writing lesson. Comparing yourself to other people is destructive and a waste of time. When you look at successful writers, you need to remember that they had to do the hard yards before they were successful – there are no easy rides in this business. Everyone suffered rejections of novels they’d lavished attention on; everyone has had to do jobs they’ve hated just to make ends meet; but every successful writer has kept on writing. That’s the secret: keep writing, keep learning, keep improving.

By all means look at successful writers and learn from them – that’s what they’re there for, to act as models of ‘here’s one we prepared earlier’, rather than ‘oh, I wish I was [insert name here], I’ll never be as good as her/him, wah-wah-wah!’

Never stop learning – at no point in your career should you think ‘I know it all – no one can tell me anything!’ There’s always something new to learn or something to re-learn that you’ve started taking for granted and kind of forgotten.

So, envy no one, learn from everyone.

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I hope you lot are enjoying this series as much as I am. My heartfelt thanks to Kaaron Warren, Jo Anderton and Angela Slatter. Next week I’ll post the remaining three generous contributors, Lisa L Hannett, Trudi Canavan and Margo Lanagan.

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Write the Fight Right Workshop is coming to Adelaide

Hey Adelaideians! Is that what you call the good folk of Adelaide? I’m bringing my Write the Fight Right workshop to Adelaide in May, so if you’re in that area, check out the details here.

This workshop started as a thing I did at a couple of SF cons, then it grew into something bigger, and even caused me to write a short ebook on the subject. What’s that subject? It’s all about how to write exciting, convincing and realistic fight scenes in your fiction. As a career martial artist and a writer, I’ve got a fairly unique perspective on this stuff and I hopefully manage to share some of that in my workshops.

The workshop is from 10am til 4pm on Sunday May 12th at the SA Writers’ Centre, 2nd Floor, 187 Rundle Street, Adelaide. It’s $150.00 for non-members or $90 for members. Please let anyone know who lives near Adelaide and might be interested.

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The Ongoing Angst of Successful Writers 2 – Jo Anderton

Here’s the second of this very exciting series of guests posts. It’s award season at the moment and lots of very deserving people are having their wonderful work recognised with nominations and wins of some of Australia’s (and the world’s) most prestigious prizes. But something I’ve noticed a lot is that no matter how successful a writer may be (in terms of publications, awards or anything else), they always worry that they’re not good enough, or that there are career heights they’ve yet to scale. It’s been said many times that the day you stop worrying about whether or not you’re good enough is the day you’ve lost your passion. So I thought to myself, there are some amazingly talented, successful and well-rewarded writers in Australia who probably feel this way too. And if you’re a writer of any level, be it newly emerging or well-established, it’s always good to hear that stuff. It’s good to be reminded that you’re not alone in your insecurities. I certainly like to know that it’s not just me who lies awake at night, terrified that tomorrow everyone will realise I’m a hack!

So I’ve asked six of Australia’s most successful writers (and people I’m lucky enough to call my friends) to answer three simple questions. I’ll be posting up their responses over the next week or so. The incredibly generous respondents are Kaaron Warren (who has already responded here), Jo Anderton, Lisa L Hannett, Angela Slatter, Trudi Canavan and Margo Lanagan. Seriously, between them these writers have nominations or wins in just about every genre writing award you can think of, not to mention heaps of amazing publications, all of which you should check out if you haven’t already.

Jo Anderton photoToday, it’s Jo Anderton’s turn. Jo is a writer of speculative fiction that tends to range between fantasy, horror and the just plain weird. She’s been a finalist for a few Aurealis Awards – best YA short story (for Dragon Bones), best SF short story (for Flowers in the Shadow of the Garden), and Best Fantasy Novel (for Debris). She’s currently a finalist for numerous Aurealis and Ditmar Awards this year (with one story, Sanaa’s Army, being nominated in both the Fantasy and Horror short story category of the Aurealis Awards!) Her second novel, Suited, the sequel to Debris, is up for the best novel in both the Aurealis and Ditmar Awards this year. She won the 2012 Ditmar for Best New Talent. (Talk about an over-achiever!)

1. What do you still fear as a writer, when it comes to putting your work out there? What fills you with doubt and angst?

I fear being ignored, but I fear attention too. Silence is disheartening, but when people do sit up and take notice I’m terrified they’ll hate the story, tell everyone they know, and then laugh at me. Loudly. Doesn’t seem to matter whether I’m sending a draft to a beta-reader or releasing a book into the wild, I get the same fear.

I know, somewhere in my head, that it’s stupid and counter-productive. And the best feeling in the world is when someone does read a story of mine, and they enjoy it so much they even tell me so! Can’t have one without the other, can you? So I’ve learned the best way to deal with this — so it doesn’t turn into story-stalling all out panic attacks — is to dive into something new. Focus on it, obsess about it, because when I’m inside a story then all’s right with the world.

suited-144dpi2. What career markers do you still strive for? What heights are you determined to scale?

I would love to earn enough through writing so I could work less hours at the day job, and write more! That’s the big one. I want to write many different things for many different markets in many different genres. Also (and these might seem a little silly) I’d love to see my work adapted into a manga, and/or a video game. But mostly, I just want to keep improving. Always.

3. Whose career do you envy? Why?

There are writers who I greatly admire, and whose careers I’d very much like to follow. Writers like Margo Lanagan and Kaaron Warren, Marianne de Pierres, Pamela Freeman — these women are prolific, (ridiculously) talented, engaged with their audiences, and seem to still be in love with what they do. This is what I strive for.

But I wouldn’t call it envy. I get flashes of envy, when a new writer appears with a bang and is showered in praise, there’s always a moment when I wish that was me. But it’s only a moment. Because envy leads to the dark side and all that, and really I’d rather spend all my energy on imaginary people and places, thanks very much.

Find Jo online at http://www.joanneanderton.com or on Twitter @joanneanderton

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The Ongoing Angst of Successful Writers 1 – Kaaron Warren

I’ve got a very exciting series of guests posts coming up over the next week or so. It’s award season at the moment and lots of very deserving people are having their wonderful work recognised with nominations and wins of some of Australia’s (and the world’s) most prestigious prizes. But something I’ve noticed a lot is that no matter how successful a writer may be (in terms of publications, awards or anything else), they always worry that they’re not good enough, or that there are career heights they’ve yet to scale. It’s been said many times that the day you stop worrying about whether or not you’re good enough is the day you’ve lost your passion. So I thought to myself, there are some amazingly talented, successful and well-rewarded writers in Australia who probably feel this way too. And if you’re a writer of any level, be it newly emerging or well-established, it’s always good to hear that stuff. It’s good to be reminded that you’re not alone in your insecurities. I certainly like to know that it’s not just me who lies awake at night, terrified that tomorrow everyone will realise I’m a hack!

So I’ve asked five of Australia’s most successful writers (and people I’m lucky enough to call my friends) to answer three simple questions. I’ll be posting up their responses over the next week or so. The incredibly generous respondents are Kaaron Warren, Jo Anderton, Lisa L Hannett, Angela Slatter and Margo Lanagan. Seriously, between them these writers have nominations or wins in just about every genre writing award you can think of, not to mention heaps of amazing publications, all of which you should check out if you haven’t already.

kaaron-warrenFirst up, it’s Kaaron Warren. Kaaron started sending stories out when she was about 23, and sold her first one, “White Bed””, in 1993. Since then she’s sold about 70 short stories, three short story collections and three novels.

On top of that amazing publication record, Kaaron has won numerous awards and is currently sitting on ten nominations across the Aurealis, Ditmar and Australian Shadows Awards for this year, a personal record number of nominations in a single year.

1. What do you still fear as a writer, when it comes to putting your work out there? What fills you with doubt and angst?

I’m still sure that one day someone will say, “You do realise it’s all been an elaborate joke we’ve played on you? You’re a crap writer and no one has ever liked anything you’ve ever written.” Imposter syndrome, writ large. Every new story or novel brings the same fear; that people will hate it, misunderstand it, use it to judge me on all I’ve written in the past.

Even so, I keep going, because I love to write. That’s often the only thing that keeps me going. My response to negative feelings is to write the crap out of the story, produce words I want to read back.

Even if everybody else hates them.

2. What career markers do you still strive for? What heights are you determined to scale?

There are plenty. I’d love to sell a story to the New Yorker. I’d love to be read by a broader audience. I’d love to be part of the Writers Festival world, because I enjoy the festivals and being amongst it. Best seller list would be nice, and selling a heap of my short stories to Hollywood would be nice as well.

3. Whose career do you envy? Why?

splinteredwallsI admire Margo [Lanagan] greatly, because to me she has managed her career so very well. She garners huge respect and adoration, yet remains so approachable and fun to be around.

I envy those who write the work they want to write and find a market and a large audience for it.

I admire Margaret Atwood and Elizabeth Jolley, for remaining passionate about their work and writing insightful, harsh, good work, rather than sinking into decline.

I envy those who seem to effortlessly hit the best seller lists and are interviewed in the Guardian and sound intelligent, creative and amusing.

I envy those who are really good on Twitter.

You can find Kaaron on Twitter – @KaaronWarren – and learn more at her website – http://kaaronwarren.wordpress.com/

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Game of Thrones house sigil fun

House-BaxterThere’s this little bit of fun knocking around the intertubes at the moment where you can go to jointherealm.com and design your own Game of Thrones style house sigil, with your own motto and everything. So I thought I’d do one, because, you know, I should be writing, but procrastination is perfectly okay, anyway, who are you my mum, shut up!

Ahem. Basically, I took the two primary aspects of my life – kung fu and writing – and made the House Baxter sigil. I had to photoshop it a bit, because the website is a bit bloody puritanical and wouldn’t allow swearing. Not even “arse”. It wouldn’t even allow “sh!t” if you can believe that. So I ‘shopped it. Suck on that, fuckers!

It was also pointed out to me by a very knowledgeable medievalist friend (yes, I have a friend who’s a medievalist and that is very cool, actually) that I’ve broken heraldry rules by having a sun shape below a building. But I went back and tried switching the “Shaolin gate” and the book to the other way around and it looked a bit rubbish. So screw heraldry – House Baxter laughs at your rules and regulations! If you have a problem with that, come here and I’ll kick your arse. Then write a story about it.

So yeah, I really should be writing.

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Cover reveal and blurb for Dark Rite

Dark Rite 5I’m very excited about this. David Wood and myself have collaborated on a new novella (almost a novel, in fact) called Dark Rite. It’s coming out in a few weeks from Gryphonwood Press and look at that sweet cover. When my wife saw it, she said, “Ooooh… eesh…” which is *exactly* the reaction I like to hear! When I say it’s almost a novel, it’s actually about 42,000 words, so it’s right at the upper end of novella territory. A lot of the old pulp novels were around the 50-60k word mark. I’m very happy with what David and I have come up with, so I hope readers enjoy it too. Here’s the back cover blurb:

A small mountain town hides a dark secret…

When the death of his father brings Grant Shipman to the tiny Appalachian town of Wallen’s Gap, he believes his biggest problem will be dealing with the slow pace and odd townsfolk. But something sinister is at work. A dark power rises, an echo of the town’s bloody past. A book of blood magic offers an unspeakable horror a gateway into the world of the living, and only Grant stands in the way of their Dark Rite.

And we’ve got a couple of great reactions so far:

“Wood and Baxter have delivered a stunning tale that reminds of an early Stephen King’s talent for the macabre with a pinch of Graham Masterton’s flair for witchcraft and terror. A sinister tale of black magic and horror – not for the faint hearted.” Greig Beck, bestselling author of Beneath the Dark Ice and Black Mountain

“With mysterious rituals, macabre rites and superb supernatural action scenes, Wood and Baxter deliver a fast-paced horror thriller.” J.F. Penn, author of the bestselling ARKANE thriller series

I’ll post again when the book is available to buy. It’ll be available in print and ebook wherever books are sold, and hopefully an audiobook to follow eventually.

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Simple writing advice on hands

I love this idea. The Passive Voice blog shared this great idea from Shared Worlds. Shared Worlds asked some of speculative fiction’s finest artists, editors and writers to write advice on their own hands and send in a picture. Very simple and effective! One of them is this great picture from Neil Gaiman and I just had to have it for my blog:

GaimanNeil

I also have to share this one from Patrick Rothfuss:

RothfussPatrick

And this one from Lev Grossman:

GrossmanLev

Seriously, on three hands right there is pretty much all you need to remember. And you’ll notice there’s some overlap. After that, it’s all about polishing, getting it critiqued, taking that advice, rewriting and pushing on. But none of that happens unless you do what it says above.

Now go and read the advice on the hands of all the other awesome people they included. Because, honestly, it’s all brilliant stuff, and all very valuable after you’ve done those things above.

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Video trailers for RealmShift and MageSign

I’m very pleased with these. My publisher, Gryphonwood Press, has put together these two simple video trailers for my dark urban fantasy novels, RealmShift and MageSign. I’m very much of the opinion that a simple trailer for a book is the best option. If you have loads of money to spend on a really professional, slick video, then great. But if you do it on the cheap, it looks tacky and… well, cheap. And that does no favours for your book. But Gryphonwood Press commissioned top notch voice actor Jeffrey Kafer to voice these trailers and just used the book covers for the visuals. The result is simple and effective. At least, I think it is! What do you think?

Here’s RealmShift:

And here’s MageSign:

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