Chuck Wendig: Terribleminds

Apple-Obsessed Author Fella

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Uh-Oh

Here’s a thing that’s happening at Der Wendighaus:

I will soon be the sole provider for our family.

*hold for applause and/or laughter*

My wife has been in a year-long extraction from her job — transitioning from full-time to part-time (for the last year) to, come next month, no-time. She’s doing this to spend more time with our son and to allow me more time for my writing career (and further, the costs of daycare are so high it practically eats away the value of having a job in the first place).

This is, of course, terrifying.

Don’t get me wrong — while I wouldn’t call being a writer the most, erm, stable job one would find, I think I’d made a pretty good go of it. Our finances are in good order. I do well as a writer. Not go buy a boat money, but definitely support my family money.

The scary part comes in that we are losing our health insurance.

And it’s pretty good health insurance we’re losing.

Thus I solicit you, THE HIVEMIND, on the subject of independent health care. We’re in the market — we’ve got an agent who is suggesting Aetna and United to us, and we may lean that way, but not before I explore any and all options. Do you have independent health care? Are you willing to talk about it — problems, pluses, costs, benefits and concerns? Can you confidently speak to me about just what the hell Obamacare is going to mean for us?

HALP PLEASE OKAY THANK YOU

*hyperventilates*

Any advice or information you have: I’m listening. Thanks!

Got A Book Coming Out? Ten Questions All For You.

Casual reminder:

Every Thursday, I run ten questions with an author regarding that author’s book.

I tend to run one or two per day. I don’t think I’ll do more than two.

How you get a slot: email me at terribleminds at gmail dot com.

Use the subject header: [Author] [Book Title] [Release Date] [10 Questions]

(Meaning, fill in those bracketed topics with relevant data, please.)

You can solicit me as early as you like, up to a month before your release date.

I will favor traditionally-published books. I know, this isn’t very nice or very fair but if I don’t say that, then I assure you, speaking from past experience, I will get a whole lot of Very Bad Self-Published Fiction Interview Requests.

I will not do 10-Qs for books that are already out. I prefer to keep them in and around the weeks surrounding the actual release. So: new upcoming releases only, please.

I do accept pitches for graphic novels or other forms of storytelling. Books, games, video games, comics, graphic novels, films, television, novellas — as long as it’s professionally produced, I’m happy to hear the pitch and consider the idea (though, again, no guarantees).

If you email me, I will try very hard to email you back.

Once I say yes, I will want your answers two weeks before your interview posts.

I like those answers in a separate file — .doc, .rtf, HTML, something that makes it easy for me to copy into WordPress without wonky formatting. Pulling it from the body of an email can be a Sisphyean task, and I’m totally lazy, so don’t make me do that.

In that file I also want:

Any and all relevant links to your book.

That means: your website, your Twitter, and any Buy Links you want included.

Please also give me or (preferably) link me to a full-sized graphic image of your cover.

Final request:

I get a copy of the book. Preferably physical (and I’ll give you my mailing address if that works). If that fails, a digital copy will do just fine. I prefer to have it before the interview posts.

(I don’t really do guest posts from people by request. Those are only from me soliciting authors who I consider friends or compadres of the website in some way.)

The questions are:

TELL US ABOUT YOURSELF: WHO THE HELL ARE YOU?

GIVE US THE 140-CHARACTER STORY PITCH:

WHERE DOES THIS STORY COME FROM?

HOW IS THIS A STORY ONLY YOU COULD’VE WRITTEN?

WHAT WAS THE HARDEST THING ABOUT WRITING [story name]?

WHAT DID YOU LEARN WRITING [story name]?

WHAT DO YOU LOVE ABOUT [story name]?

WHAT WOULD YOU DO DIFFERENTLY NEXT TIME?

GIVE US YOUR FAVORITE PARAGRAPH FROM THE STORY:

WHAT’S NEXT FOR YOU AS A STORYTELLER?

Flash Fiction Challenge: WTF Is This Thing?

Last week’s challenge: “Choose Your Setting.”

See this article?

I love it. Totally bizarre. Utterly unexplained.

Probably something boring, but that’s not our area of expertise.

We are writers and storytellers. It is our job to explain. And more importantly, to make stuff totally awesome. So, your job is: write a ~1000 short story of any genre including and explaining this weird little web-towers. You’ve got till next week to get it done, due by Friday the 13th at noon EST. Write the story at your online space, link back here so we all can read it.

Include it. Explain it (to whatever degree you are comfortable). What is it? What made it? Where does it come from? What is its purpose? What madness is this?

Go forth and write.

See you on the other side.

School Library Journal Reviews “Under The Empyrean Sky”

School Library Journal Reviews Heartland, Book #1! (Note, mild spoilers within.)

In the Heartland, the corn has been genetically modified until it can be left to its own devices, leaving those who work the fields with few tasks but harvesting the crop that funds the flotillas, which hover high above the land and house the elite ruling class, the Empyrean. Cael and the others in the Heartland toil endlessly to keep the corn and the mysterious illnesses that accompany its growth from their lives. When Cael’s sister sneaks onto the flotilla, the consequences for her and her family on the ground are severe. And after Cael’s first love’s family wins the lottery to be relocated to the flotillas, he knows he has to go after her. Through all these trials, Cael realizes that the only way to save the Heartlanders is to challenge the idea that corn must be king. Wendig convincingly illustrates the kind of culture and environment that might be the result of today’s agricultural practices and genetically modified industrial crops. The dystopia that arises from this projection is believable and chilling, but it never overpowers the stories of the characters that live in this world.

SLJ reviews, Sept 2013 (reviewed by Anna Berger)

Under the Empyrean Sky is on sale now ($3.99 Kindle, $10.79 hardback, available in audio formats, too. B&N and Indiebound buy links below. Thanks!)

UNDER THE EMPYREAN SKY

Preorder: Amazon / B&N / Indiebound

Ten Questions About Heart of Briar / Soul of Fire, by Laura Anne Gilman

I love Laura Anne Gilman not merely because she is an excellent writer but because she also delivers unto writers excellent writing advice — advice that is practical and wise and comes from a place of actual experience, not just, you know, from the peaks of Made-Shit-Up Mountain. Here she talks about her next two books:

Tell Us About Yourself: Who The Hell Are You?

Former book editor for various NY Publishers, who fled the 8-6 life nearly ten years ago (ten years this November!) for the relatively low-paying but blessedly meeting-less freelance life.  Which takes care of the resume portion of WTHAY.  Otherwise, I’m a Jersey Girl-turned-New Yorker who left half her heart in Seattle, a cat owner who loves dogs, an urban sophisticate who loves camping and hiking, a clotheshorse who spends most of her days in jeans and bare feet.  Hot temper but a blessedly long fuse, liberal but not a Democrat (politics, pheh), foodie and oenophile, and generally still having fucks to give but far more reserved about where and to whom I give them.

Also known for the past twenty years as “meerkat.”

Give Us The 140-Character Story Pitch:

I’m retelling the Tam Lin legend in post-Internet world. With geeks, elves, snark, an asthmatic heroine, and a classic Gilman-style ending.

Where Does This Story Come From?

The same place all my stories do: a very dark, slightly terrifying back room in my brain, where all the bits and bobs I magpie out of the daily world get shoved.  They sit there for years, rubbing shoulders with each other, talking in low voices, wondering when, if ever, they’ll see light of day again, getting paranoid and occasionally hallucinating, until a group of them achieve critical mass and explode out of my ear and onto the page.

I was thinking about my next project, trying to find a different ‘jumping off’ point from the mystery-built UF I’d been writing before, and thinking that it would be fun to write a straight-on save-the-world fantasy adventure, something very traditional, and then give it a technological twist.  And – as per my editor’s request – keeping love/romance as a prime mover in the plot.

*boom*  An epic somantic legend, some PTSD, a bit of scientific thingamajiggery, and a non-traditional ending that will piss some people off…

Along the way, I picked up the challenge to write a duology, where the story continues, and yet is not a “second half” or a sequel, but the next logical act in an ongoing play.  So that’s how “retell Tam Lin” became HEART OF BRIAR/SOUL OF FIRE.

How Is This A Story Only You Could’ve Written?

Individually, anyone else might have come up with the specifics – the legend to be rewritten, the idea of the protag as a woman who has trained herself to avoid conflict and physical activity, the snarky-and-unsexy werewolf advisor, the science behind the magic… it’s the putting them all together and giving them voices that was uniquely me.  Because that’s what proper storytelling is – the combination of elements anyone could think of, in a way that nobody’s thought of yet.  So the more you develop individual thinking and ways of seeing, the more likely you are to write something someone else says “dude, I did not see that coming.”  Or, as one of my beta readers signed, “only you, Gilman….”

What Was The Hardest Thing About Writing HEART OF BRIAR/SOUL OF FIRE?

Not letting the secondary characters take over.  Jan started out as a strong, full-throated chatacter, but barely a chapter in, and it was a little like watching the Wizard of Oz – you know that Dorothy is the quest-character, but everyone else is chewing the scenery so wonderfully, you want to spend more time with them, too.

Much to my surprise, Tyler – who was a bit of an intentional cypher to begin with, as the wayward boyfriend, really developed away from where I’d thought he would go.  The more page-time he got, the more he changed the story away from the original outline.  Thankfully my editor understood and approved the change, because trying to shove him back in the box would have been impossible, and (IMO) would have made for a less-satisfying story.

What Did You Learn Writing HEART OF BRIAR/SOUL OF FIRE?

Other than the fact that duologies are possibly even harder than trilogies?  The fine art of writing engaging “internal” scenes.  My previous novels were either caper-plots (very few pauses), or more traditional quest-plots, where each scene tends to favor physical movement over internal.  But this book often had scenes that needed to be more static, even when they were physically in motion, to focus on the emotional and mental changes occurring.  It requires a very different approach from the writer, to keep the voice consistent and not lose forward motion even while you’re pulling your reader inside rather than pushing them forward….

Suddenly, my habit of reading mainstream literary fiction came in handy! (both in knowing what I wanted, and what I didn’t want it to look like)

What Do You Love About HEART OF BRIAR/SOUL OF FIRE?

The characters, and the culture they come from.  I had so much fun discovering them, watching them develop under duress… especially, as I said, the secondary characters, and even the tertiary ones, who only appear in a scene or two – they all grew themselves out of their situations so wonderfully, I was tempted to go down some story-alleys and see what their journey might be…  (sadly: deadlines did not allow for story-alleys).

What Would You Do Differently Next Time?

I think I would start out with it being Tyler AND Jan’s story, rather than it being set up as Jan’s story alone.  I might have done them both a disservice – but I didn’t realize that until halfway through SOUL OF FIRE. The relationship between Jan and Tyler starts the action, and for Reasons we can’t see his take on things until later… but I’d like to – given the chance – find some way to bring him forward more, earlier, and give his side of the story more play.  Because in the end, he saves her as much as she saves him, even more than [character redacted for spoilers] does.  It’s just more subtle, and I think that will get overlooked, as I wrote it.But at the same time, every book you write, you write to the best of your ability at that time.  And every book written would be totally different, even a year later…

Give Us Your Favorite Paragraph From The Story:

Seriously?  Seriously?  One paragraph….

Okay, fine:

“We’re fucked, aren’t we?”

AJ laughed, the low chuckle still as disturbing a sound as the first time she’d heard it. “We’ve been fucked since day one,” he said.

(from SOUL OF FIRE)

What’s Next For You As A Storyteller?

Something completely different.  I’m working on a story set in the early 1800’s, a road trip adventure where the supernatural/magical elements are so integrated into the world they’re almost unnoticeable (nearly but not quite magical realism).  The narrative voice is closer to much of my short fiction than my UF novels – more lyrical and considered, rather than the terser, “modern” style I use here.   Maintaining that for nearly a hundred thousand words is keeping me on my toes…

Also, writing a teenager primary character.  God, the pathos!  The stress!  The whinging!  And that’s just from the adults who have to deal with her!  (I joke.  Mostly.)

Laura Anne Gilman: Website / Twitter

Heart of Briar: Amazon / B&N

Soul of Fire: Amazon / B&N

The Worldcon Youth Problem

I don’t have any great thoughts here, but I wanted to introduce the discussion:

At Worldcon / LoneStarCon, the age felt… older. Youthful vigor was not on display like it seems to be every year at DragonCon. That’s worrisome because as a community, you don’t want to cleave so completely to an older generation because you can age out your genre work and your audience — right? I mean, one could argue that it serves as counterprogramming to DragonCon and PAX, but is that really the way you want to counterprogram? By hewing more (only?) to an older generation of fans and authors, though, I have to wonder if that’s healthy in terms of overall genre and industry. Don’t get me wrong, I had a blast at Worldcon, but for me it served as more of a professional connection and less so a fan connection, which is not necessarily ideal in terms of the monetary output I have to spend to get there. (Which is another issue: Worldcon ain’t cheap. DragonCon is cheaper. Younger fans have smaller income, so, there you go.)

Plus: YA Lit isn’t supported by the Hugos.

Which is sad and a little screwy.

Some of the best and bravest storytelling in the genre space is happening right now under our feet in Young Adult fiction. And it’s huge in terms of sales and audience. I met a great many writers at Worldcon who were YA writers or who were moving into that space. I met a lot of YA readers, too. And librarians. And booksellers. And our YA panel was packed. And yet, no YA on the Hugos. The argument against it is of course that YAs are not excluded from the Hugos and some YAs have won, so you don’t need a separate category, but for my mileage, the older audience of Worldcon will likely keep most YA held away from the competition for the most part. I say the Hugos already have a few curious redundancies and bringing YA to the table will open the accolades up to more books which means more book sales which means including younger fans. How can that be a bad thing? Is there something I’m missing?

(Gwenda Bond pointed out on Twitter that “Sexism’s in the mix, too — ‘not serious’ because it often contains romance, written/read by lots of women/girls.”)

Don’t get me wrong — some of this is very much selfishly driven. My fans seem to skew younger. Some of my books are YA. But from a community standpoint it also pains me that there is a larger swath of fans — younger readers who have that great vigor and enthusiasm I’m talking about — who maybe aren’t being invited to the table. Or, at least, are being kept away from it with higher costs and a lack of recognition for what they love.

Worldcon is in London next year, which I’d love to attend to but I’m honestly not sure I can afford that kind of trip. As such, with DragonCon now disentangled from that heinous pedophile, I think I may have to try that, instead.

Happy to hear more thoughts on all this crazy stuff.

Did you go to Worldcon? Did you see the same things or am I just not looking hard enough? Did you dig on DragonCon (or PAX?) this year, instead?