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Alex Segura: Having the Ingredients Ready to Cook Your Book

Today, a guest post from friend, author, editor, and general ne’er-do-well gadfly, Alex Segura, who wants to talk to you about how your brain is cooking? Which I think is a drug metaphor from the 1980s? Whatever. Point is, Alex isn’t cooking his books with drugs, he’s cooking his books with cool influences, so here he is to talk about that. Don’t forget to check out Miami Midnight, out today!

Let’s talk about the ingredients that bury themselves in your brain to cook your book, okay?

As we all know, books are a lot of work. It is HARD to write a novel. Literal months, maybe more, spent clacking away at your keyboard trying to make this amorphous pile of words into something resembling a story. Then reading and tweaking and rewriting to make that story decent. Then good. Then hopefully the best thing you can write.

But the work itself isn’t all that goes into making a book, y’all. As writers, we’re always absorbing things – whether intentionally or not. I wanted to clue you in a bit on my own process – which I call “obsessive research.” Basically, I end up writing about things that I’m obsessing over…genres, themes, or topics that I’m gobbling up because I can’t get enough of it. Whether it’s cults, pre-Castro Cuba, serial killers – they all end up in my novels to varying degrees. The same thing happened with Miami Midnight, my new novel (out today!). The added wrinkle, though, was that this would be my last Pete Fernandez Miami Mystery – I not only had to write a new adventure for my tarnished knight PI, but I had to close out everything that had come before. It was daunting, and kind or whacked out my usual process.

Now, I always knew Pete’s story had an ending. I just didn’t know when. I still don’t know, but this is the closest thing to an ending-ending I’ve ever written. But getting to typing “The End” was hard – harder than anything I’d done before as a writer.

This book almost didn’t happen, honestly. When I finished up work on the previous novel in the series, Blackout, I figured there’d be one more. I mean, I couldn’t leave Pete dead . . . could I? Maybe, I thought. I go through this to some degree with every book—is this the one where I finally kill the guy? But this time it felt a bit different, because there wasn’t anything to immediately replace that thought. There was no new obsession pulling me back into Pete-mode.

And, as the days became weeks and the weeks became months, my mind started to seriously flirt with the idea. Maybe this was it. Maybe it was the ending Pete deserved? Most writers, especially those that write series, can relate to this nihilistic feeling. That desire to just chuck the whole thing and move on. It usually fades, replaced by an idea for another book.

I mean, there were certainly desires. Things I wanted to say. Topics I wanted to hit. When preparing to write a novel, I usually immerse myself in research. I call it research, which sounds very formal and professional, but, as I noted, it’s really just me reading whatever I’m obsessing over at a given moment. Obsessions and passions make for good art, I’ve found. In the wake of Blackout, I found myself reading a lot about jazz, the mob, Cuba, and—most importantly—about loss.

So, the pieces were floating around. I knew I wanted Pete to investigate the murder of a fallen jazz musician. I knew I wanted it to deal with Pete’s relationship with his dead father, as all the books do to varying degrees, and I knew I wanted it to leave Pete somewhere, well, conclusive.

And there was the speed bump. This was the end. Or “the end for now.” I’d seen Pete through so much—death, relapse, recovery, romance, careers, exploding houses, and more—that I knew it was time to take a break, if not let him ride off toward Miami Beach for good. I’d never envisioned Pete as an evergreen type. There are many authors who do those kind of characters well, but I’m not one of them. I want each book to serve as a step in my protagonist’s evolution, and I want them to feel different by the end of the book. To have experienced something.

From Silent City through Miami Midnight, I’ve tried my best to have the stories work on two levels—one being the big picture plot, the other more personal. What happens to Pete? Often, the two threads will cross. Ideally, they blend into one. I didn’t have that yet. I didn’t even have a title. I needed the heart of the story. The reason it was a Pete Fernandez Mystery, and not just something that happened to Pete. And it had to count, because it was going to be the last Pete book for a while.

That’s where my head was at around March of last year, when I was a guest at the excellent Virginia Festival of the Book. If you’re ever in the area, make a point of visiting. It’s a spectacular event and heaven for readers (and authors). I was sitting in a giant ballroom, after one of those “speed dating”-style events where you meet a number of readers and pitch your books. These things can either be a lot of fun or painfully awkward, but I remember this one being pretty pleasant, and by the end of it, I got to sit back and listen to Attica Locke speak—something I’d been looking forward to.

I’m a big fan of Attica’s work, and a big fan of her as a person—she’s genuine and thoughtful and an amazing writer. I wish I could sum up what she said, because it was a lovely speech—but my mind went into overdrive when she said a few words. She was talking about the protagonist of her latest novel, the superb Bluebird, Bluebird, and his dynamic with his mother. An alcoholic.

His mother. My mind flipped over to my own work. It was like I’d found a note I’d left for myself years before.

See, when I wrote the first Pete novel, Silent City, I had no idea it’d be a series. I had no idea it’d be published, if we’re being honest. But by the end of it, I hoped I’d at least find the time to write one more. There’s a lot of stuff about Pete’s past in that first book—his dad, his ex, his job—but I purposely danced around any mention of his mom. My gut told me there was a story there. My brain told me I wasn’t ready to tell it. Not yet.

Over time, as the series progressed, I’d hint at Pete’s mother—she’s mentioned briefly in Dangerous Ends, the third novel in the series, for example, but never given a name. As far as Pete knew, his mother had died in childbirth. End of story.

But hearing Attica talk about her own character’s alcoholic mother brought it home to me. Of course Pete’s mom didn’t die in childbirth. She was murdered. And she was an alcoholic—just like him.

That was it. The heart of the book. Everything else, at least in terms of theme and big beats, seemed to appear. As I sped out of that ballroom, my brain buzzing and fingers aching to type, I even got a title, two words that I felt perfectly captured the noir feeling I wanted this book to evoke: Miami Midnight.

What case could be more important to Pete than the murder of his mother?

For some, addiction springs out of the ether—you just get hooked and it goes bad. For many, it’s genetic, a family curse. Your parents drink, so you drink. I figured Pete was part of the latter group. The idea of having him solve the murder of his own, long-lost mother, and—on the way—realize she’d been in the same predicament he’d barely survived proved too good to ignore. So we were off.

So the final piece fell into place – but I’d thankfully been gathering the ingredients to make the meal long before I heard Attica speak. Now, I tend to wear my heart on my sleeve as a person and as a writer. I don’t hide my influences and I am happy to scream from the mountaintops when I like a book or writer. Especially when I like a book and it helps me write my own. When I told Attica the story of her speech and how it influenced me, she said that she felt “all books are in conversation with each other.” I think that’s very beautifully said, and I tend to agree. So, as promised, here are some of the books I was talking to before and during the writing of Miami Midnight, which I hope you’ll consider picking up today.

T.J. English’s cinematic and crisp The Corporation was invaluable to me, as it explored—deeply—Miami’s crime-riddled 1980s, specifically the bolita craze spearheaded by Juan Miguel Battle. I was amazed I hadn’t known his story until reading English’s book, and I became fixated on the idea of an alternate world where Battle lived on into the present day, trying desperately to stay relevant while competing gangs nipped at his heels.

Dead Girls, a masterful essay collection by Alice Bolin, was the perfect prelude to writing about, arguably, the most formative person in Pete’s life. So much of crime fiction is rife with young, virginal, beautiful women beaten and brutalized (often sexually) in the hopes of furthering a given book’s plot, to showcase just how grim and gritty an author’s work can be. I won’t say I wasn’t mindful of this before, but Bolin’s book was the jolt I needed to be extra mindful of it, and to make sure that if this book was going to hinge on the murder of a woman, I’d better damn well bring the readers in and let them know this woman as a fully-formed person, not a statistic. It’d be presumptuous to say I was trying to invert this trope—which has infected TV, movies and any kind of “crime”-themed entertainment—but I sure as hell wanted to sidestep it and be true to the story I wanted to tell. The story of Pete and his mother sending smoke signals to each other through time. To do that, I needed to make people care, instead of grimace from shock or disgust. Breezy and bursting with a modern, fresh sensibility, Dead Girls helped me figure out how I wanted to flip that script.

I spent a lot of time reading memoirs, usually those that involved the author’s searching for connection with a lost parent or friend. I wanted to better understand the emptiness someone feels with such a massive, gutting loss, but I also just found the books compelling and hard to put down. Leah Carroll’s Down City rests atop this list, and does a great job of recounting her youth and her parents’ own misadventures and tragedies. It’s honest, direct and immediate. I felt an instant connection to her from reading the book and I’m lucky to call her a friend. I read it long before I even knew where I wanted to take Miami Midnight, but once I did, I found myself thinking about it often. A few other notable memoirs that were important to me during this period: Piper Weiss’s haunting and jarring You All Grow Up and Leave Me; Carolyn Murnick’s The Hot One; Leslie Jamison’s addiction memoir The Recovering; plus rereads of Domenica Ruta’s underrated With or Without You; Joan Didion’s unforgettable Miami; and James Ellroy’s disturbing, manic, and electric My Dark Places.

Once you read the book, you’ll notice Miami Midnight spends a lot of time in the worlds of jazz and the mob. I’ve always had an obsession with the Mafia, and the book I often go back to is Selwyn Raab’s The Five Families, which tracks the mob’s rise, fall, and inevitable resurgence. I read it during the writing of the previous Pete novel, Blackout, and into the planning stages of this book, so its influence can be felt over the two novels. It’s as comprehensive a tome as you could want, and spotlights all of the Mafia’s key players up until the end of the last century. Equally helpful was Misha Glenny’s exhaustive look at the global criminal underworld in the wake of the fall of the Soviet Union, McMafia. Now more than a decade old, the book still holds some vital information on how the global underworld capitalized on the world getting a bit smaller.

The jazz thread came more organically—a by-product of my own musical tastes changing. By immersing myself in the music, though, I began to meet these really interesting characters, and a few stood out—pianists Bill Evans and Lennie Tristano, in particular. Evans was a superlative talent felled by his addictions while Tristano faded into obscurity and lived the latter part of his career as a hermit of sorts. I merged elements of both men to create the idea of Javi Mujica, and I wouldn’t have gotten there without the work of Ted Gioia, whose The History of Jazz managed to smartly cover decades of information while still interjecting thoughtful analysis and stylistic insight. It’s a long book, but well worth it. Gioia’s How to Listen to Jazz also proved essential, adding a deeper layer to the musical experience and giving me a stronger sense of how these musical pieces fit together to create the myriad forms of jazz. Also worth noting: David Hajdu’s magnificent Billy Strayhorn biography, Lush Life; Jazz by the incomparable Gary Giddins; and pretty much anything by Nat Hentoff—Jazz Is in particular.

The most important crime fiction influences on Miami Midnight were Philip Kerr’s much-beloved Bernie Gunther novels—of which I devoured the first three, often known as “The Berlin Trilogy.” Gunther is probably the most direct successor to Marlowe since Lew Archer, and, combined with Kerr’s deft scene-setting and crackling characters, make for mesmerizing works of crime fiction. I regret never getting the chance to shake Kerr’s hand to thank him for his amazing work.

The Gunther books, along with the aforementioned Bluebird, Bluebird, proved important guides on the journey to crafting Miami Midnight, but they’re not alone. I wanted Pete’s final (for now, for now) adventure to be coated in a sense of dread—a looming doom, a growling noir. To accomplish that, I found myself pulled toward books like Walter Mosley’s first Easy Rawlins novel, Devil in a Blue Dress, which I’d read years ago but which seemed to land more clearly this time around. A classic in every sense of the word, and the kind of book all P.I. writers dream of writing.

And, well – there you have it. Not only the books and stuff that inspired my novel, but the moment that allowed those elements to really simmer together and help me make a (hopefully) compelling read. It all goes back to the basic idea – writers have to read. A lot. Keep your mind open. Listen to people talking. Absorb as much as you can. Be ready for the inspiration, because it only knocks once.

* * *

Alex Segura is the author of the acclaimed Pete Fernandez Miami Mystery series, which has been twice-nominated for the Anthony Award. The latest – and last – in the series, Miami Midnight, is out today. You can find him at www.alexsegura.com, or on Twitter @alex_segura.

Writing From A Place Of Fear Versus From A Place Of Love

There is an old story that says, there is a fight going on inside every writer. A battle between two wolves. Or maybe they’re foxes? Whatever. One is named Steve, and Steve is the manifestation of fear, and the other is named Jerry, and Jerry is love and light, and Steve and Jerry are fighting over a

*checks ink-smudged notes, squints*

a bag of Hot Cheetos? Wait that can’t be right.

Never mind that story.

(Sidenote, before anyone jumps in and says something about this being a Cherokee story and I’m a jerk for mocking it, please be advised, it ain’t. Billy Graham made it up.)

So. I meet a lot of writers. I met them on book tour. I meet them at conferences and conventions. I meet them in dank basements where we trade story ideas trapped in jars like little fireflies. I MEET THEM IN DREAMS

And when I meet the writers, I often recognize something instantaneously, and that thing that I recognize is fear. Now, I don’t mean a kind of general fear; anybody with two molecules of common sense waltzing around their brain can look at the news and recognize this is a peculiarly fucked up era, and so fear about *gestures broadly* all of that is fine and sensible and trust me when I say I get it, and my writing is fueled in part by that. Putting your anxieties on the page where they can be managed and fought like summoned demons is *chef’s kiss.*

Rather, I’m speaking about a specific kind of fear, which is, fear as the first step of writing. Fear about market. Fear about audience. Fear about how no one will read your stuff. Fear about how you’re never going to be as good as [insert other author name here]. Fear about voice, fear about genre, fear about ideas. You set out on the journey of being a writer and already you have a choice about what direction you choose, right? You get this instinctual pull, as if all your intestinal flora are trying to move you in concert toward something weird, something wonderful, something uniquely your own, but — that way lies grave uncertainty. The other direction, well, that’s more sensible, isn’t it? Other writers have trod those paths. What’s popular right now is [insert trend here, like “YA medical horror featuring canine protagonists” or “grimdark geriatric erotic fantasties”]. Your voice surely isn’t as good as other voices.

So, your foot wavers. And instead of pointing yourself in the unknown direction, into the dark forest, into the layers of fog — you set forth onto the well-lit, well-marked path. The worn path. The trod path. And it’s fear that put you there. It’s fear that’s walking you forward.

Now, a caveat here that nothing I say here is particularly true, or universal — you can, of course, choose the well-trod path as a matter of fuck yeah I wanna do that, but the concern here is a lot of authors take that path less as a true choice and more as a desire for safety.

But what I want you to know is, that way isn’t safe.

It seems safe.

But it is not.

Listen, a writing career is stupid as fuck. I don’t mean choosing to be a writer is stupid — I do mean that the career itself is a hot cup of batshit. It doesn’t make a lick of goddamn sense. It is Non-Euclidian in its proportions: a blueprint made of incomprehensible angles and imaginary numbers. A writing career is a procedurally-generated labyrinth, and trying to walk it with a pre-conceived map in hand is foolishness on par with letting a toddler drive a car on the Autobahn. It’s like using cheat codes for the wrong game. You start furiously tapping UP UP DOWN DOWN LEFT RIGHT LEFT RIGHT and your little 8-Bit avatar leaps into a pit of acid and dies.

There are writers, other writers, many writers.

And there is the writer that you are.

We grow deeply concerned as storytellers that the story we’re telling isn’t original, and truly, it isn’t. No story is truly original, but there are two places where originality shines through: the first is the arrangement of unoriginal elements. It’s like how in a song, all the notes are the notes. Or how in a painting, the colors are colors. You can’t make up new notes. You can’t make up new colors. But what you do with those sounds and those hues is where the art is made, and so too it is with story.

The second original thing has to do with the first.

The second truly original thing about any story is the teller of that story.

(Psst. That’s you.)

The problem is, if you choose to ignore the latter — and, say, try to follow the writing path of other writers, or of the market, or some other fear-based trajectory — you will also miss the former. Because that unique arrangement of elements comes from who you you are. It comes from the things you love, the ideas you have, the mad stuff that comprises your mind and your heart. You’re a product of an unholy host of elements: your parents, your friends, your upbringing, your genetics, your experiences, the books you’ve read, the stories you’ve loved and also the stories you’ve hated. You are a fingerprint. That curious combination cannot be replicated.

What that means is:

Use it.

When the time comes to write something, don’t move forward with fear in your step. Move forward with love. With eagerness and excitement. Love the story you’re telling, tell the story that only you can tell. Rest in peace and power, Toni Morrison, who said: “If there’s a book you want to read but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.” This career is already fraught. It’s already weird and uncertain. The safe path is a lie — and a boring one, at that. The books that work, the books that matter, are the ones that didn’t try to do what was done before. They were a unique formulation from the author. They came from a place of excitement and interest, from love and ideas. They put aside fear and safety and ran into the dark.

That is what you, too, must do.

You must run into the dark, chasing what you love.

Tell that story. That’s the one we all want to read.

* * *

WANDERERS: A Novel, out now.

A decadent rock star. A deeply religious radio host. A disgraced scientist. And a teenage girl who may be the world’s last hope. An astonishing tapestry of humanity that Harlan Coben calls “a suspenseful, twisty, satisfying, surprising, thought-provoking epic.”

A sleepwalking phenomenon awakens terror and violence in America. The real danger may not be the epidemic, but the fear of it. With society collapsing—and an ultraviolent militia threatening to exterminate them—the fate of the sleepwalkers and the shepherds who guide them depends on unraveling the mystery behind the epidemic. The terrifying secret will either tear the nation apart—or bring the survivors together to remake a shattered world.

PrintIndiebound | Let’s Play Books (signed) | The Signed Page | B&N | BAM | Amazon

eBookAmazon | Apple Books | B&N | Kobo | Google Play | BAM

AudioAudible | Libro.FM

David Wellington: Five Things I Learned Writing The Last Astronaut

A huge alien object has entered the solar system and is now poised above the Earth. It has made no attempt to communicate.

Out of time and options, NASA turns to its last living astronaut – Commander Sally Jansen, who must lead a team of raw recruits on a mission to make First Contact. 

But as the object reveals its secrets, Jansen and her crew find themselves in a desperate struggle for survival – against the cold vacuum of space, and something far, far worse . . . 

The view of Earth from space is better than cable.

“Dave should talk to some female astronauts,” the publicist said, in a sales meeting. This was well after I’d started writing the book, long after I thought I was done with research. I had a long list of things that seemed more pressing, like finding the third act or remembering to connect on an emotional level with my wife every evening as she shoved my dinner under the locked and bolted door of my office. Interviewing actual astronauts sounded like homework. But I did it. Grumbling and cursing a lot, but I did it.

Once I was done with the interviews, I took a moment. I nodded thoughtfully to myself, cracked open another diet soda, and waited for my hands to stop shaking. Because I knew what having access to all this new information meant. It meant I was going to have to rewrite the book, almost from page one. Originally it had been packed with heavily-researched data, lots of acronyms and numbers, details about how much thrust you can get out of a Delta-IV rocket engine and what partial percentage of oxygen will make you start to hallucinate. What I got from the astronauts was something different.

I got what it meant to be human in space. To actually live there. It made the book immeasurably better. I learned things like…

A bunless hot dog might be the best thing you ever eat.

Everybody gets space sickness, to a greater or lesser extent. Your first couple of days in space are going to be miserable no matter how tough or experienced an astronaut you might be. One of the astronauts I spoke with told me about the glorious moment, three days into her mission, when she realized that she could hold down solid food again. She ate a hot dog and realized she was going to be okay. She could get back to work. Which was good, because—

They keep astronauts so busy they’re barely aware of being in space.

A lot of the questions I asked turned out to be useless, because I kept getting the same answer. “I don’t really remember, there was so much going on…” Whether I was asking about what re-entry was like, or the hours sitting on the launch pad waiting for liftoff, for instance. Such events, though they must rank as among the most memorable a human being can experience, were lost in the general business of astronaut life. NASA keeps its astronauts on a ridiculous schedule. Almost every moment of their day is spent running through safety checklists, exercising to prevent bone loss, doing media events or just the common chores required to keep people alive inside a trailer in space. There’s almost no downtime at all, very little time to sit staring out the windows (which was, hands down, the favorite leisure time activity of every astronaut I spoke to).

A lot of the checklists and rundowns and equipment inventories sounded like busywork. Like maybe NASA was just inventing things for them to do so that the taxpayers would feel like they were getting their money’s worth. The astronauts I spoke to weren’t so sure. For one thing, space is pretty deadly—there’s a whole lot of different ways to die up there, and staying alive often means double- and triple-checking every blinking light and green indicator panel. The other reason to keep the astronauts so busy was to keep them from thinking too much. Those long hours on the launch pad are a perfect time to meditate on the fact that you’re sitting on top of a ballistic missile full of highly explosive fuel. Working out endlessly on the exercise treadmill is a good way to keep your mind off the fact that you’re about an inch of metal away from the cold vacuum of space. The constant work is also good for keeping people from getting on each others’ nerves as much, which is super important because—

Everyone in space is ugly and ready for a fight.

Human bodies were never meant to exist in weightless conditions. All the fluid being pumped around your body right now needs gravity to get it to the right place. Think about hanging upside down from a jungle gym, the blood rushing to your head. How long do you think you could handle living like that? How many days in a row?

In microgravity, all of your internal organs climb up into your chest cavity, because the mass of the Earth isn’t holding them down anymore. This makes it a little hard to breathe. Farts collect inside your intestine until the pressure suddenly forces them out when you least want them to. Fluid builds up in places it shouldn’t, and there’s no good way to pump it back out of your tissues. The most dramatic—and obvious—way this effects you is that your face gets super puffy, distorting your features. And that’s when you learn just how much of living with other people is processing their facial expressions. Since everyone in space looks like they have the mumps, people start to get irritable. Innocent comments get misconstrued, and tempers flare. I spoke with one astronaut who joked that in the future one big career option is going to be “space lawyer”. Because of all the fistfights that are sure to break out during long missions to Mars. Of course, bouncing off other people all the time and getting in their way is inevitable given the close quarters. It might be better than the alternative, though…

You definitely don’t want to be alone up there.

Alone time is something I treasure. As much as I love the people in my life, if I can’t get a little solitude every day, I get irascible. Downright cranky. Speaking to the astronauts about life in space, my immediate thought was that it would be tough when you couldn’t get away from your crewmates, even just to take a minute to yourself.

Oh, no, they told me. Oh, no, you don’t want to be alone. Now, I happened to be writing a novel that was part science fiction and part horror. The horror writer half of me perked up his ears at the sound of that.

Space is noisy, or rather spaceships and space stations are noisy, because there’s always a fan blowing somewhere and a computer beeping for no good reason. There’s always something moving, and maybe as elements of your ship heat or cool they creak and ping. But those are noises you can get used to. Those are noises you can tune out. And that’s when the real silence, the silence of the void, hits you. That’s when you curl up in your sleepsac and wonder just how far you are from home, and what your chances would be if something went wrong (not very good). Inside a space suit it’s much, much worse. The only thing you can hear is your own breathing. And then you stop hearing that, and you hear your heart beating, instead. You fight to keep it from beating too fast…

Having other people around you is crucial. Human beings need social interaction just as much as they need gravity and oxygen. In my research I found a great story about that. Back in the ‘80s, the Soviets launch a space station called Mir where two cosmonauts would spend up to five hundred days in space, simulating how long it would take to get to Mars and back. Two people living for more than a year in a space the size of, say, three minivans duct-taped together. You might think these two cosmonauts would get sick of each other in a matter of days. Instead, they made a pact with each other. If you were working in one of the minivans while your partner was in one of the other ones, you had to keep at least one foot visible in the junction between modules. No matter how much stretching and contorting it took, some piece of a human body had to be there for the other person to see, every second of the day. The cosmonauts laughed when they talked about what happened when the system broke down, and, just for a minute or so, they were all alone. The brain is a fantastic machine, very good at imagining all kinds of scenarios. It has no problem imaging what it would be like to suddenly be all alone in a very quiet, very fragile tin can, a hundred miles up. The cosmonauts laughed about the things they imagined, the little terror fantasies their minds dredged up. They laughed about these things… once they were back safely home on solid ground.

For all that, space is still super cool.

Well, it’s hard to write a science fiction novel if you don’t feel that way. But yeah, the research I did for The Last Astronaut, while it often terrified me, still made me want to be out there just so bad. To get to see other worlds, to feel what it’s like to be without gravity, even for a moment. And at the end of the day to look back and see what I’m missing, to get what they call the “Longview” effect. Astronauts talk about it in hushed, reverent tones. The sense you get, looking down on Earth from above, just how precious it is. How fragile, and how beautiful.

I wrote a book about horror and screaming panic out in space, a story of death and fear up there, but even in the midst of the scariest bits I knew one thing. Offered a chance to go up there, even for just a day, for an hour—I would give anything to make it happen.

* * *

David Wellington is the author of twenty-one novels, from his first, the zombie tale Monster Island, to this year’s The Last Astronaut. He got his start in 2003 serializing his work online and has made a living at writing ever since. He’s also worked in comic books and video games. He lives and works in New York City.

David Wellington: Website | Twitter

The Last Astronaut: Print | eBook

Elsa Sjunneson-Henry: Truths On A Page For All The World To Read

Everyone has opinions about the fiction they read, the tv and movies they watch, the art they consume, about the subjects they study.  Everyone has those opinions, and they’re entitled to them.

But there’s a category of people who take their opinions and turn them into art, or who take a deep dive on knowledge that turns into a story.

Those people are nonfiction writers.

They are able to take a personal experience, an opinion on media, a historical moment, and make it come alive. They are able to make an opinion a visceral experience, something you feel, not just something you read.

I’m one of those people.

But what I almost enjoy more than writing nonfiction, is editing it.

Joy, for me, comes from reading a piece from a nonfiction author, and being able to feel the steady beat of their heart in the cadence of a sentence. Being able to guide them towards a more impactful thesis statement, one that would cause anyone to understand them and their story.

There’s a beauty to nonfiction, both writing and editing it, because nonfiction is wildly important to the ecosystem of a writing community.

Nonfiction keeps us honest. It keeps us accountable. Nonfiction is the genre of writing that tells us in no uncertain terms where we’re going wrong – and where we’re on a steady course. It is like the algae that keeps the waters clear of pollutants.

It is in nonfiction editing where I find myself at my most empathetic, too. I find myself immersed in another person’s perspective, and my job isn’t to tell them what they think but to show the writer where I don’t understand – and how I think they can make me understand them better.

That’s the magic of nonfiction. It has the ability to change your perspective. I’ve seen it happen. I’ve seen people reassess their own personal opinions – often about beloved fiction – based on the essays of those whom the fiction has harmed. A few examples from Uncanny’s nonfiction section include RF Kuang’s “How to Talk to Ghosts” which spoke so deeply to my understanding of my own past, but also brought me closer to Kuang’s much lauded The Poppy War, which shares DNA with a history I do not know well.

In another essay Marieke Nijkamp searingly described what it feels like to be left out of the future in “The Future is (not) Disabled.” Editing this piece was a joy, because Marieke fiercely articulated feelings I share with them, frustrations with a genre that often go unspoken.

And in my own work for Uncanny, I wrote “How to Make a Paper Crane” which straddled the line of short fiction and essay so well, people still think it was a short story. A piece which I get e-mail for, telling me that others feel the same rage that I do.

I have seen the genre itself shift and change based on response to the work of those who are willing to put their own truths out onto the page, for all the world to read.

But why is that healthy for a writing community?

Because we can’t rely on the tropes that constantly harm people. We have to grow and change – it’s healthy. It is healthy to change and learn, and the stories that we tell only get better the more that we learn from one another.

There is no greater honor for me than to be editing nonfiction for a genre that I love, for a community that I want to support. There is no greater love from me than an essay that helps you to see the things I do, and to understand the world I live in better.

Nonfiction is one of the greatest chances we have to understand one another.

I hope you’ll consider supporting Uncanny Magazine on Kickstarter this summer, so that I can not only bring you incredible nonfiction in 2020, but so that we can raise the rates to pay our essayists a better wage. Essayists we’ve already gathered for Year Six include: Ada Palmer, Meg Elison, G. Willow Wilson, Malka Older, Fran Wilde, Brandon O’Brien, Hillary Monahan and Ebony Elizabeth Thomas.

Join me in reading the truths they’ll bring to us. Difficult, extraordinary, thoughtful truths which will change us. Which will change our genre. Which will change the world.

I Have Returned From The Wanderin’ Wendig Wanderers Tour

I HAVE RETURNED. Where is my parade? Where is my palanquin? Where are the bleating trumpets and booming drums? AM I NOT YOUR KING?

*receives note*

Oh. Oh. I am not your king. Well. This is awkward.

Anyway! Hey! Hi! Hello! For the past two weeks I have been wandering the country (get it?) in support of my new 800-page narrative leviathan, Wanderers — leviathan describing its size, not its quality, to be clear — and I never know exactly how much to recap for you, because are my travels and trevails exciting? I don’t know that they are.

Still, I feel like I should recap some bits, so —

• We had such great turnout for events! Holy shit, was that rewarding. I always said that I could reliably pull about 20-30 people to an event, but that has since changed. At each bookstore stop we had somewhere between 50-90 people, which is honestly really huge for me — the one exception being Mysterious Galaxy, and that I think was because we did an event riiiiiight after SDCC, when every nerdly reader in that city was likely fatted on too much pop culture.

• I met a ton of wonderful readers, and it was additionally gratifying to see that an audience is earned not in one great gulping go, but rather, like layers of geological sediment — I had people who got on the Wendig Train (not a real thing) at various divergent stops. Some were Twitter followers only, or some had read Blackbirds, some had jumped on with Star Wars, others still were fans all the way back to my RPG-wranglin’ days. Which is ideally how it should be, and I hope that sends a message both to writers and publishers that a career takes time — and you have to give it that time and that opportunity to build. Not everything needs to be a slam-bang-holy-shit-hit out of the gate.

• At every bookstore event, someone asked about the foxes. Which is so great.

• In Austin, I met Alex Wild, whose photography I’ve long admired — and he took me to the entomology lab at UT Austin, and look:

(those butterflies were fucking delicious, by the way — Austin really does have good food)

• A few bookstores noted that they’d seen a dip in author appearances recently — and I feel like I must be a proselyte for you WRITER TYPES to try to get out there and do events, whenever possible, with independent stores. Even just your local! A good indie store operates at such a high level in terms of sharing book-love, while also operating at often very low profit margins, and yet they’re on the frontlines of the book ecosystem. They’re fostering good relationships between us, the writers, and the audience — both existing and potential audience. So definitely throw them some love, and they will throw you some love in return. (At least, the good stores will. Admittedly, some indie stores are not so good, especially those who turn away from genre entirely.) So, shout-outs to the stores I visited on this trip: Eagle Eye, Bookpeople, Murder by the Book, Powell’s, Elliott Bay, Mysterious Galaxy, Tattered Cover, and of course my locals, Doylestown Bookshop and Let’s Play Books.

• SDCC was, oddly, my relaxing time? Which is weird, because SDCC is a fucking meat grinder, but this year was pretty chill for me — did some panels, some signings, and mostly just got to hang out with people I consider friends and even family. I mean, Delilah S. Dawson, Erin Morgenstern, Mallory O’Meara, Paul Krueger, Sam Sykes, Pierce Brown, Adam Christopher, Rob Hart, Peter Clines, and plus I got to hang out with my exceptional editor, Tricia Narwani, and my equally amazing agent, Stacia Decker — like, it’s a fucking dreamcast of people to hang out with. We drank lots of fancy cocktails and shared many good-to-astonishing meals. And ice cream. Hell yeah, ice cream. Oh I ate oysters for the first time and they were fancy as fuck.

• I also met Julie Nathanson, VO and writer and awesome person extraordinaire —

• Oh I also met this guy? I dunno if you’ve heard of him —

So, I mean, that’s a thing that happened. We had breakfast! He’s as lovely as you imagine him to be, which honestly is kind of mind-blowing. Yay for awesome-seeming people who are actually awesome somehow? It was good just to hang out and chat.

• That was the trip. Travel was surprisingly good? I flew eight times and had no delays, which I’m pretty sure is either a miracle, or a weird near-death coma fantasy where actually on that first day my plane crashed and I’m in some kind of suspended utopian mindscape? It is weird traveling that often — I’d often be checking in for the next day’s flight as I was boarding that day’s flight, and people would ask me what city I came from and I’d be like, ha ha ha, I don’t remember? Even after coming home I’d wake up at night being totally uncertain as to where I was or what hotel or what city and how do I get to the bathroom again? I can’t imagine what a more protracted tour would do to my brain.

• Oh and I finished up a great book — Steel Crow Saga by Paul Krueger. It’s epic fantasy, but a standalone, and it’s glib and underselling it to say it’s Pokemon meets Airbender, but also, it’s that? And so much more? It’s fun and funny, but also exciting and heart-rending. Out in Sept/Oct.

And now, I’m home.

And now, we talk about Wanderers

So, Wanderers has done pretty dang well. It hit a number of lists — USA Today, LA Times, SIBA, MIBA, Vancouver Sun international, plus it popped around on B&N and Powell’s lists. Plus it was one of the best-reviewed books in July (according to Book Marks), and Paste listed it as a top book and Amazon called it one of the best mystery/thrillers of July.

Outside of, say, my Star Wars books, this is far and away the biggest book I’ve had (er, in size, obviously, but I’m speaking to sales). And it seems like it has really good word-of-mouth. I wake up every day to new emails and tweets and such from people telling me how much they loved it. Which is really, really gratifying. Obviously the big dream is that the word-of-mouth is so good that people keep telling other people about it and they do the same, and eventually the book becomes an unstoppable mind virus that takes over the country and — to bring this full circle — makes me your king. And I don’t think that’s at all unreasonable.

Ahem.

What I’m trying to say is, if you’ve read it and enjoyed it, you owe me nothing — but but but, the best thing you can do for the book, and any book really that you have read and enjoyed, is talk about it. Not with me! But with your friends, family, and cherished foes. And whenever possible, leave reviews at places like Goodreads and Amazon.

And, of course, if you haven’t checked out the book yet —

PrintIndiebound | Let’s Play Books (signed) | The Signed Page | B&N | BAM | Amazon

eBookAmazon | Apple Books | B&N | Kobo | Google Play | BAM

AudioAudible | Libro.FM

My SDCC Schedule

Hey, I guess I should post my San Diego Comic-Con schedule, huh? Well, here it shall be, for your perusal. Also don’t forget I’ll be at Mysterious Galaxy the following Monday with Adam Christopher. We’ll be signing books and engaging with various shenanigans.

Hope to see you there!

THURSDAY the 18th

Panel: D&D: All Bards, 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM

Horton Grand Theater

Post-Panel Signing, 4:30 PM – 5:30 PM

Autograph Area Row 9

FRIDAY the 19th

Penguin Random House Signing, 4:00 PM – 4:45 PM

Random House Booth #1515-B 

Panel: How Our Present Impacts Today’s Speculative Fiction, 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM

Grand 12 & 13, Marriott Marquis San Diego Marina

SATURDAY the 20th

Penguin Random House Signing, 3:00 PM – 3:45 PM

Random House Booth #1515-B

Panel: What’s New from Del Rey Books?, 6:30 PM – 7:30 PM

Room 5AB