THINGS AND STUFF AND NYAAAARGH
You’ll forgive me — for the past two weeks I’ve been in San Diego, sampling beaches and zoos and the fart-scented, soul-flensing flesh tornado that is SAN DIEGO COMICCON, which was an awesome, energizing, tiring, maddening, and overall fun experience. I met Wiliam Gibson! I marveled at Margaret Atwood at a distance! (Both have comics out, you know: Atwood’s Angel Catbird, and Gibson’s Archangel.) I hung with grand homies like Kevin Hearne, Victoria Schwab, Adam Christopher, Richard Kadrey, Jason Hough, and more. I got to finally meet Cecil Castilucci! It was good. It was tiring. I am dead now, especially since on the last day of travel our nice tidy five-hour flight was diverted at the last moment to Richmond, because some sinister monsoon had nested over Philadelphia like an angry thunderbird. There we waited in the plane for hours before finally getting to Philadelphia — where they had a gate for us but not a jetway. Another half-hour on the tarmac. Then because of all the flights landing, Philly was a traffic-locked mess and we couldn’t get a parking shuttle and then came little delay after little delay until we finally got home just after 2AM. Blergh. And all this with a five-year-old. (A five-year-old who did marvelously well — he was more patient than I was.)
Again: good trip. Bad ending. Am dead.
In the interim, things have happened.
No, no, nothing cataclysmic.
Good stuff!
Newsy stuff!
And so I am here to give you the quick lowdown.
1) Life Debt landed at #9 on the New York Times Bestseller list. AHHHH.
2) We’re just about three weeks out from when Invasive drops. And Booklist gives it a positive review, saying: “The eerie crawling sensation that comes with Wendig’s newest thriller will delight horror fans. Hannah Stander, a futurist consultant, is an expert in predicting how technology might be used for terrorists’ attacks. FBI agent Hollis Cooper, last seen in Zer0es (2015), calls Hannah in to examine a cabin containing thousands of dead bodies. Bodies consisting of one human stripped of his skin and a multitude of particularly aggressive and venomous ants that may have been genetically engineered. Hannah’s investigation leads to an altruistic billionaire known for innovative ideas and a remote island facility whose employees resent her presence and the implication their research has been used to commit murder. The isolated location, limited access to outside communication, and lack of trust make for a perilous situation when someone deliberately puts them all in mortal danger. Clever graphics placed throughout the text enhance the growing sense of terror in this tale of technology taken to a deadly extreme. This roller-coaster survival tale with copious amounts of creepy insects will appeal to fans of Michael Crichton.”
3) I’m doing a launch week event for Invasive at the mighty Doylestown Bookshop. August 17th. You going? You should go! It’ll be rad! I’ll give you some free stuff! I’ll yammer at your face! You can yammer at my face! It’ll be great! Exclamation!
5) So is The Force Awakens #2!
6) So is How To Bombproof Your Horse! Okay, I didn’t write that one. Just checking to see if you’re still listening.
7) Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to go start the writing of the fifth and penultimate Miriam Black book: The Raptor & The Wren. Hold still — this will only hurt a little…
Katharine Ashe says:
Congratulations on all, Chuck!!
July 27, 2016 — 11:43 AM
terribleminds says:
Thank you!
July 27, 2016 — 11:47 AM
Tom Armbruster says:
Now wondering how many views “How to Bomb Proof Your Horse” will get. At least one, because I clicked it just to see if it was a real thing.
July 27, 2016 — 11:44 AM
terribleminds says:
I hope it becomes a bestseller.
July 27, 2016 — 11:47 AM
PST (@pstaylor) says:
Chuck, do you ever worry that you’ll either a) oversaturate the market, or b) burn out? You have been publishing multiple books a year for years – does it feel sustainable? I mean, it’s great for us readers, I’m just wondering about you.
July 27, 2016 — 12:08 PM
terribleminds says:
I intend to slow my roll somewhat in the coming year — but this is how it is to be a writer and pay the mortgage. Mostly I think it generates a nice, near-constant energy for me, but I dunno how sustainable that is or isn’t. It’s not really stressful for me or anything; I like writing and I like being productive and it’s a pleasant job where I get to live my dream more than a little.
July 27, 2016 — 12:20 PM
PST (@pstaylor) says:
Good to hear! I’m liking aftermath, btw.
July 29, 2016 — 12:44 PM
james orion says:
congrats and welcome back!!
July 27, 2016 — 12:14 PM
annwjwhite says:
I dream of having your fortune
July 27, 2016 — 12:56 PM
Rebecca says:
SO nice to finally meet you at SDCC! – I’ve been a follower for years, and finally meeting you was super rad.
Highlight of my con experience 2016, well… that and Leonard Maltin giving me a side hug and telling me he remembered me from my brother’s Feature Wrap party about 6 years ago; where I had to much to drink… anyways…
Thanks again for the signing; and proving to my friends that when I read your blog and laugh it’s actually written by a human being and not by a robot.
Best wishes, can’t wait to read Invasive.
July 27, 2016 — 12:58 PM
terribleminds says:
Thanks, Rebecca! I’m glad you came by. Please to enjoy INVASIVE. 🙂
July 27, 2016 — 2:04 PM
nadinerpg says:
And here I thought how to bombproof your horse was something with real bombs… I’m sad now. Though there is a coating around somewhere, if you put that on your horse it might actually… though it’s probably poisonous… damn…
Also, your Comiccon is so much more fun than ours! I’m jealous, but I’m sure Germany is working on it 🙂
And, of course, my congratulations! That’s great news!
July 27, 2016 — 1:01 PM
anonymous says:
I’ve been meaning to pick up Gibson’s comic. But last I saw it wasn’t on Kindle. 🙁 How was meeting him? Did you two talk about collaborating on a Cyberpunk novel? 🙂
July 27, 2016 — 1:07 PM
terribleminds says:
He was incredibly kind and funny and mostly I just didn’t want to take up a ton of his time. But we chatted for a few and he is gracious and, obviously, brilliant.
July 27, 2016 — 2:03 PM
Tamra Hart says:
I’ve seen Life Debt in several places, including Costco. Nice coverage. Meanwhile I’m reading my “uncorrected proof” copy of Invasive very slowly…every time I pick it up I start scratching my arms and thinking there’s something in my hair. Your description of Hannah’s mailbox event was a little too much when combined with the cover; it’s awesome writing (and I really love the cover), but I just can’t handle more than a few minutes a day!
July 27, 2016 — 1:47 PM
Andrew F. Butters says:
I can’t get enough of Miriam Black. So good. I often revisit my autographed copies and review how I’m going to die.
July 27, 2016 — 3:12 PM
Lee Whiteside says:
Tamara, I felt the same way. Began looking for some benadryl to take since I didn’t have an epi-pen around.
July 27, 2016 — 11:40 PM