Showing posts with label indie author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indie author. Show all posts

Monday, 10 November 2014

Book review and interview: Defiance by Lucas Bale


Earlier in the year I reviewed the debut novel of science fiction writer Lucas Bale. The Heretic plunged the reader into a frightening and chaotic universe. In my original review I wrote:
“The author paints an uncomfortable and frequently bleak vision of a future in which humanity has spread beyond the ruins of an Earth destroyed by climate change and conflict.”
Lucas Bale has been busy and has already made the second instalment in the series available for pre-order on Amazon. I was fortunate enough to be invited to read a pre-release version.

You can pre-order Defiance here: Amazon.com or Amazon UK.

The world of Beyond the Wall comes of age

While The Heretic was an excellent introduction to the fictional universe of Lucas Bale, Defiance goes deeper. The first volume felt like a prelude to a series of grand scope and in the second we see that series flower and unfold. The pervading sense of danger and chaos is communicated very well and the tone is unrelentingly dark, gritty, and realistic.

This is not an optimistic science fiction future in which all of our problems are solved — if anything, humanity faces more and bigger problems than at any other point in history, with a deeply stratified society causing misery and poverty for millions. There’s a notion that the elite have a conscious plan of allowing the worst of humanity to die out in the name of civilisation. Attempts to terraform planets are sometimes abandoned halfway through, leaving unstable climates and settlements exposed to the ravages of space. Interstellar travel is an arcane art and only vaguely understood.

This sense of realism and detail permeates every page, and the descriptive writing is really rather excellent. The overall result is majestic.

New characters

The story of Defiance is told from the viewpoints of three new characters. All are complex and driven by a potent cocktail of fears, hopes and neuroses. I found the story arc of Natasha particularly intriguing. A tunnel navigator, she is one of the misunderstood few who can use their senses to feel their way through hyperspace. It’s a novel take on interstallar travel and tunnel navigators are shunned by those around them. Weaver, another primary character, is a Caestor investigating a murder.

Both end up at the dilapidated colony of Jieshou — a forlorn but vividly depicted location. Events later move to an abandoned spaceship and this is the best section of the book, utterly chilling and almost unbearably tense.

Defiance is an excellent book. It’s classic science fiction, written with skill and panache. Good as it is, I think that Lucas Bale is only just getting into his stride, and that the best of this series is still to come.

Interview with Lucas Bale

I got in touch with the author to ask him about his work, and he has kindly provided these fascinating insights into his writing.

In The Heretic we catch a glimpse of the world you’re creating in Beyond the Wall, but in Defiance that world unfolds and we see a cruel universe of majestic scale. How do you approach your world-building?

I have always preferred ‘hard science-fiction’. My natural inspiration seems to derive from stories which appear to me to be theoretically possible – they are more compelling to me. Perhaps the simple fact I can relate it to something real makes it more chilling, more believable. The crux of hard science-fiction is the relationship between the accuracy, and amount, of the scientific detail in the story and the rest of the narrative. In 1993, Gary Westfahl suggested that one requirement for hard science-fiction is that a story “should try to be accurate, logical, credible and rigorous in its use of current scientific and technical knowledge about which technology, phenomena, scenarios and situations that are practically and/or theoretically possible.” So, I look to our own world and ask how things might develop if the events which I know have taken place, or are taking place, in the Beyond the Wall series had actually occurred.

When actually world-building, I use two intertwined approaches – macro and micro. When planning the setting for Beyond the Wall, I began with macro. I had an idea for a setting – a time and place, and themes and atmospheres, I wanted to explore. I created a chronology and history, which led to mapping, planet names, ideology, cultural influences, dramatis personae, technology, crime and law enforcement and so on – but these all came from that starting point. I brainstormed from that vision and asked questions – if a given event occurred, what would it lead to? If a character sought a particular outcome, how would they achieve it and what would they need to sacrifice in order to bring about that outcome? How would others react? What is humanity like in my setting? What is important to them, as compared to the issues the world faces now?

Curiously, that meant I moved quite swiftly to micro. I had characters growing in my head and began to ask questions about those characters and how they fit into the general theme of my setting. That process informed me about what the setting required in order to make it sing. Using that new information, I moved back to macro. Political ideology among the characters I was creating, and how that fit into the wider scheme of my setting. Desires and wants and needs – that staple of any character sketching process – has a macro application as much as it does a micro.

The setting for Beyond the Wall is a dystopia centuries into the future and on other worlds as yet unexplored by man in 2014 – but why is it a dystopia? What makes it a dystopia? What makes living in the setting so unpleasant? Why would any system of government allow a dystopia to exist, given the risks of revolution and the cost in maintaining, usually by force, such a system? How, historically, have equivalent political systems operated? What have been their successes and failures, and how have those manifested (and why)?

What does daily life consist of? How do people exist from day to day? Technology, currency, utilities, crime and punishment, transport, a working life — all are issues to be resolved before a setting has muscles over the skeleton. It might be referred to as the infrastructure of the setting. Then you need the flesh and skin – the fine details which make things ultra-real. The way the characters interact with the setting, the changes the setting experiences as the events the characters are players in unfold – all add texture and colour to your creation. Micro and Macro intertwine.

History teaches us about humanity and the way it evolves and history can be a tremendous source of inspiration. For many story reasons, Beyond the Wall mirrors certain elements of the Roman Empire. I have drawn a great deal of inspiration from that period, but so have the characters in Beyond the Wall itself. For reasons which the books will explain, a great deal of my setting draws on historical fact. Twisting it, shaping it differently and interpreting is all part of the challenge of creating an epic setting. But it has to feel ‘real’.

Your viewpoint characters are complex and dark, particularly the navigator Natasha. How did you choose these characters for the story you wanted to tell — or did they choose the story?

A mixture of both. Stories are more compelling if we believe the person telling us that story, and we will only believe them if they are real to us. That means they must be as complex as we are. I have a story I want to tell, but how I tell that story comes from the characters who tell it for me. What they learn (their character arcs) shapes the way in which my themes come across. Also, the story almost always changes as they grow as characters. Lots of authors talk about characters who tell the story for them and are surprised when events in their story change before their eyes because the characters take over. In an epic story, that’s very difficult to permit, but weak characters who act irrationally cannot exist in a good story, so I am forced to listen to them as my story unfolds. Usually, what I thought was a good story arc is far better when the characters tell me where I should be going.

Jordi began life as an intriguing point of view to tell an epic story through, a naive fourteen-year-old from a rural backwater, but who he was going to become was largely a function of me living the story as it unfolded. Natasha came to me as I was walking in Pimlico and saw someone who looked vaguely similar to the way she looks in Defiance; I thought “she’d be fantastic on Jieshou.” With Weaver, I wanted an old, jaded cop, but someone who had voices in the back of his head which inferred a level of entrenched thinking – almost brainwashing – through years of having carte blanche to wield power with impunity. I asked myself, “how would such a man react to given situations?” and also, I wanted him to change his perceptions and attitudes as the story progressed, hence his disillusionment with the Magistratus. Also, I don’t want superhero characters. I want flawed, human characters who have to struggle internally and externally. An epic story is far more compelling if we can identify with the characters as they learn and change. Also, the main theme of Beyond the Wall – what is humanity and what are we permitted to do to protect it – can only come through via “ordinary” people. Of course, in a thrilling space opera, I need to have some reasonably powerful people fighting in these conflicts, but they don’t need to be super-soldiers. Internal conflicts are just as powerful as external ones.

Do you believe that humanity can break free from the shackles of Earth and head for the stars?

I think it’s inevitable. Too many scientific discoveries are being made, or close to being made, currently (LHC, Warp Travel and the Alcubierre Drive, Hypersonic and Scramjet propulsion, and so on); too much enthusiasm exists for space and what lies out there. We are naturally an exploratory species – our history shows us that – I think we’ll eventually realise that we are actually all the same, just a little different in our outlooks and skin colour. The vastness of space may well one day make our international conflicts seem rather petty. Alternatively, we might be forced into heading for the stars if we don’t do something about the problems our own planet faces. It’s a bit of a speculative fiction trope now, but it may well have some basis in reality for our future.

~~~

You can pre-order Defiance here: Amazon.com or Amazon UK.

Postscript: What it Means to Survive


Lucas Bale has just released a short story, also science fiction — and it’s another cracker. Here’s the blurb.

“McArthur’s World is a frozen planet which has been bled dry by mineral mining corporations for three decades. When there is nothing left but ice and snow, the last freighter lifts off carrying away every remaining human being. When it crashes in a wilderness no one has ever returned from, there are only two survivors: a miner who wants to get back to the children he has not seen for two years, and the woman who forced him to come to McArthur’s World in the first place.

“They think they’re alone, until the shrieks in the darkness come.”

Amazon links:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Find out more

Check out the author’s website here. You can follow him on Twitter @balespen.

Sunday, 23 March 2014

Breaking the ice on a new novel - the pilot chapter method


Actually getting started on a new novel can be a difficult step. Every writer is different: some of us leap headfirst into a new project, eager to get going, while others linger over characterisation and plot plans.

I tend to fall into the latter category. I have failed on novels before due to poor planning, so nowadays I like to be sure everything is ready before I write a line of the story. I spend weeks (or sometimes even months) conducting research, writing notes, drawing up detailed character files. I write complex historical novels so it would be foolish to jump into the deep end before I'm ready.

However, sometimes it pays to set aside the research and just get stuck in — even if it's only to test the waters.

The Pilot Chapter

What do I mean by a 'pilot chapter'? Put simply, it's a test run. It lets you explore characters, themes, and plot elements without committing to anything. Think of it as a sketchbook.

I'm currently at the point in planning Alpine Dawn II (boring working title The Solomon Gordon Papers) where most of the prewriting has been done and I'm itching to get into the meat of the story — however, I'm well aware that I'm not quite ready yet. I still need to outline the overall plot and answer some important questions before I begin.

I'm introducing some new main characters in this volume, including the journalist and showman Albert Smith. The pilot chapter I'm currently working on is set in Paris on the 23rd of June, 1848 — a date when revolutionary battles broke out between the desperate workers of the eastern quarters and the government forces of the west. This won't necessarily be the actual first chapter of the finished book, but by putting Smith in a stressful situation I can learn about how he acts and reacts as a character. The chapter is also answering lingering questions about various subplots.

As you might expect, I began by creating a first line. Here's mine:
A brick crashed through Smith's hotel room window.
Will it end up as the first line of the book? Probably not, but for now it's serving its purpose.

As a Springboard

Sometimes the pilot chapter can be something more: it can be the seed for the first draft. If the story really takes off and you find yourself three chapters in and still going strong, you're probably onto something good and should just keep going!

This is more or less what happened when I was working on The Only Genuine Jones. After two false starts — one of which got to over 20,000 words in length — I eventually decided just to start writing, no pressure, and see what happened. That pilot chapter worked well and, with a few modifications, became the final version of Chapter 1 as it exists today.

Ultimately we're all different. The pilot chapter method will be completely unsuitable for some writers; after all, some novelists don't plan their books at all, and thrive on jumping straight in. However, for those of us who like to plan for every eventuality before committing words to the page, the pilot chapter method can be a great way of breaking the ice on a new book.

Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Every author needs a support team


They say writing is a lonely business. The meat of the work is conducted at your desk, alone: an introverted process of extracting ideas from the recesses of your mind and hammering them into some form others can understand and enjoy.

The reality, of course, is very different. Writing can feel lonely, but it is never a solitary effort. Every author needs a support team!

Your characters

I don't really believe that the author is responsible for creating his or her stories. When I write, it often feels as if I have remarkably little input - at least, when the story is flowing and I'm writing well. I always plan my books but the plan usually changes several times during the execution. Why do my stories change? The answer is simple: I'm not the one in charge!

A novel is written by its characters. A strong character has a mind of its own and has the power to influence and interact with other characters, direct the action, and even persuade the author to change his or her mind. If a character does none of these things, and you find yourself having to operate them like a puppet, the character probably isn't a strong one and needs work.

My job is to write down the images and scenes acted out by my characters - at most to gently guide the action.

Strong characters are a great source of comfort. They whisper to you, direct your hand, and can boost flagging confidence during the difficult central portion of a book. Most importantly, they bring your imagination to life.

Your mentor

Every author needs a mentor: a more experienced, wiser writer who has been through the little triumphs and tragedies inherent to our profession. Not everyone is lucky enough to find a suitable mentor, but make friends with other writers (it's easy to do this online nowadays) and it will fall into place.

I'm very fortunate to have made friends with Susan Fletcher several years ago when we worked together at the Clachaig Inn, Glen Coe, and her support and advice have worked wonders ever since! It makes a real difference to know there is someone on your side who has been through it all before.

A writing support group

Related to the above, it helps to have a larger network of writers with whom you can discuss aspects of the craft. Online writing support groups have existed for as long as the Web has been around, and today there are many forums to choose from. I am a member of the UK Kindle Users Forum (mostly inhabited by authors), and although I don't post there as often as I used to, it's a great community.

Beta readers

It's impossible to read your own work with a critical eye. First draft material is usually pretty ropey, but the author is so immersed in the work they are unable to see the truth. You need a team of beta readers.

These people must be reliable, impartial, objective, and analytical. At this stage you don't want people to shower you with praise and encouragement at the expense of more useful advice; you want people who will read your work and say what they really think. With rare exceptions, family members make imperfect beta readers (although their opinions can be useful at various stages of the process).

Look after your beta readers. They are one of your most precious resources and can make the difference between a good book and a bad one.

Your editor

Perhaps the most important figure in the pre-publication support team is your editor. Writers who think they can publish without professional editing are almost certainly deluding themselves. Yes, it's expensive, but look at it as an investment; without professional analysis and correction, your work will be riddled with errors and will not survive in today's competitive market.

It's easy to assume that you'll be able to edit your own work, but trust me, unless you are trained as a copyeditor you won't have a hope of finding more than maybe 50% of the problems with your manuscript. Even experienced authors can rarely produce publishable prose by themselves. We all need a skilled editorial team.

My editor is Clare Danek, and I've worked with her on all three of my projects to date. I'd recommend her to any author looking for an attentive, professional editor whose charges are reasonable and whose work is of high quality.

Your illustrator

If your creative gifts happen to include the visual arts in addition to the written word, then you're truly blessed. Unfortunately most of us aren't so gifted and, if we want pictures in our books, we will need to employ someone to do the work for us.

My illustrator is Catherine Speakman, and her work fits my themes and subject matter very well. I recently blogged about the artwork she has produced for The Atholl Expedition.

Your evangelists

When you publish your first book, you are starting from a blank slate. You (probably) have no fans yet, no loyal readers. If your work is good and you have found your audience, this group will grow over time.

Loyal fans will do a lot of marketing work for you. They will help to build enthusiasm about new releases, share your blog posts and social media utterances, and help to spread the word. In my opinion a corps of loyal fans is the single most precious resource in the arsenal of any modern writer, for without evangelists your fanbase cannot grow and the success you crave will always be out of reach.

Look after these people. Ask your most loyal fans if they would like to be beta readers; they will appreciate the chance to help you out, and may feel privileged to be given early and exclusive access to your new work. If they are also bloggers or have their own social media platform, do what you can to help promote them in turn. Build good relationships with your loyal fans, and they will help to look after you in turn.


I'd like to take this opportunity to thank every single person who has helped me over the last year and a bit since the publication of The Only Genuine Jones. As I work towards a new release I am very conscious of the fact that I couldn't have done this alone, and I'm very much in your debt.

Authors: who do you rely on during the writing process?

I maintain a mailing list exclusively for new releases and special offers, and subscribers to this list get early access to my new releases - and at a lower price than the standard published rate. For the opportunity to get The Atholl Expedition before it goes on general sale, please subscribe to my mailing list.

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

New short fiction competition hosted by Michael Brookes


Michael Brookes, author of The Cult of Me, is hosting a new short fiction competition on his blog. The competition is running throughout June and the challenge is simple: compose a short story of up to 500 words inspired by the image above!

Michael is offering a range of generous prizes (1st prize being a £50 Amazon gift card) and winning stories will be promoted far and wide in indie book circles.

Thursday, 11 April 2013

Amazon deleting reviews - the plot thickens

Amazon is deleting book reviews: this is a well-documented fact. Up until now it was understood that Amazon's bots have been stealthily erasing any reviews that they think* fit the following criteria:

  1. Sock puppetry (ie. fake reviews written by the author using a second account);
  2. Biased reviews written by friends and family;
  3. Reviews written by other authors.

The first category is fair enough. Nobody benefits from sock puppetry in the long run; it's just cheating the system, and Amazon is quite right to stamp out. It's also true that gushing 5* reviews from family members are not always helpful and can skew results. However, deleting reviews from other authors is going too far: writers are readers too, and it's good to have a support network of authors who help each other out by reading each other's books and posting honest, constructive reviews.

* How they determine which reviews to delete is highly mysterious and a little creepy.

Demanding exclusivity

Today I discovered that my number of total reviews for The Only Genuine Jones has dropped from 18 down to 17. I soon discovered that the review which had been deleted was a particularly fine 5* rating, including the rather magnificent phrase "one of the most anticipated books in mountaineering circles in recent years."

I have no personal connection with the reviewer and, as far as I am aware, he or she is not an author. "MLC" is simply a reader who loved my book and took the time to post an excellent and heartfelt recommendation. Such readers are the lifeblood of every author's career, particularly in the crucial first few months.

Why was it deleted? Because I quoted the review on my website.

Until recently, this review took pride of place in the "From fans" section on my front page, and is also quoted on the OGJ page on this site. It has been pointed out that Amazon's guidelines state that "reviews that are not your own original work or have been previously published elsewhere" count as "inappropriate content"

What does this mean? Amazon wants exclusivity; they want to make sure that reviews posted on their site are not quoted elsewhere. I don't think I'm alone in saying that this is unjustified.

What are reviews for?

When readers search for a book, they expect to see a range of honest reviews, and these opinions will help them make the crucial choice of whether or not to purchase it. Bad reviews will reveal a bad book for what it truly is, and likewise, a large number of good reviews will boost a good book. Readers also expect to see reviews quoted on an author's website. It helps to build up an aura of respectability and authority for the author, something particularly important if you aren't well known or established. As authors, we need to be able to take quotes from good reviews and post them on our websites.

Fortunately Goodreads provides a vibrant, independent community where people can look for reviews without meddling from Amazon! Oh wait, Amazon just bought them. So we can't consider Goodreads reviews to be safe for much longer. Shelfari is also owned by Amazon.

The road ahead

I think it's got to the point where we need to figure out how to protect ourselves from Amazon's interference. The company is starting to become a little too zealous in their mission to stamp out sock puppetry. Perhaps the acquisition of Goodreads indicates that Amazon is trying to learn and become more balanced and fair in how it deals with reviews, but I worry that it is simply another move to assert dominance and control over the entire book industry. It's a little ironic that Amazon has provided thousands of authors with a way of reaching audiences they could not have reached before, and yet now it is starting to clamp down on our new-found freedom.

I still think that Amazon are, on balance, a force for good ... but we need to remember that they are a voracious business first and foremost, driven by numbers and profit margins, not a love for books. The indie publishing world is changing day by day and we have to be agile enough to adapt. Unfortunately at this point I don't have an answer; the only thing I can say for certain is that I will be very cautious before quoting a review on my site from now on.

Authors: any ideas on how we should react?

UPDATE 12th of April

Amazon have now restored the review in question without comment.

Sunday, 31 March 2013

Social media for the indie author

Twitter for the indie author

"The purpose of social media is not to sell to your followers;
it is to look after your fans and add some value to their lives."

Update, August 2014: a new, expanded version of this article has been published on the Pinnacle Editorial Blog. The old version has been left here for posterity.

In this article I would like to share what I have learned about social media and how authors can best put it to use. If you've just published your first book you will hear a lot of conflicting opinions about this; some will tell you that you HAVE to be on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, Goodreads, Google+, MySpace etc. otherwise you WILL NEVER SELL A SINGLE BOOK. This is absurdly untrue, and comes from the false (but common) idea that your sole purpose on social media is to sell books.

Books have sold, and sold well, without any social media presence from the author whatsoever. This article starts from the assumption that you have decided to explore social media in the hope it will be of some benefit. I think it can have a very positive impact on a writer's career if used constructively.

How not to use social media

If you set up a Facebook and Twitter account simply to sell, people will not follow you or listen to what you say. The general public is numbed to advertising because we are bombarded with it constantly. Here is an example of a blatant promotional tweet:
JUST OUT new  on  "One of the most   books in recent years" 5* "
Perhaps nobody really uses #hashtags to such a #ridiculous #extent, but the point still stands. If you search for #Kindle on Twitter you will drown in an ocean of promo tweets, a hundred thousand voices all frantically bleating for attention, trying to convince the reader that their book (ON #FREE #PROMOTION FOR #TODAY ONLY!!) is the one they should download and read.

On the other hand, nobody will buy your book if they don't know it exists. It's a chicken-or-egg dilemma that is very difficult to solve.

Adding value

Instead of being a promo-tweeting machine, constantly talking about yourself and your books in the hope that somebody listens, consider your readers. Turn the situation on its head. Instead of using social media to sell your book, use it to gather and nurture a community of people.

How can you do this? I believe that the key to social media success is to add some value to the lives of your followers. You have a blog, right? Instead of only using it to post announcements about your books and showcase your best reviews, you should start thinking about your blog as a destination for your readers. Figure out who your readers are, first of all, and then write articles of use and interest for them.

For example, the majority of my readers are outdoor enthusiasts who enjoy walking and mountaineering. Consequently the majority (~70%) of my blog posts are on these topics. I write trip reports, opinion pieces, mountain portraits, gear reviews. I also write book reviews because, of course, my readers also like books (but I only review books that fall loosely into my genre).

If you want to increase your influence and hence your exposure, you need to encourage retweets, comments, likes etc--and that means saying something of value.

Some 'added value' blog posts which have proven very popular with my readers:


Have an overall strategy

However deep you decide to go into social media, plan it out beforehand and have an overall strategy. What do you hope to gain? Hopefully you want to connect with your readers and increase your influence and exposure, but how will you do this?

To illustrate, I will outline my strategy.
  1. This website sits at the centre of it all. It has static pages for my books and a blog which is updated several times a week.
  2. New blog posts are announced on Facebook, Twitter and Google+ automatically. I sometimes post my articles on the UKClimbing forum if relevant.
  3. My Twitter account is updated most often and is my primary social media outlet. I use it for connecting with readers, talking to people, sharing links of interest, and generally being as active and helpful as I can. It has seen steady growth over the last few months and currently has 572 followers. Note that virtually none of my tweets are even vaguely self-promotional, and yet I have seen direct evidence of dozens of sales thanks to my activity on Twitter.
  4. My Facebook author page is rather more modest (138 followers). It is updated far less frequently and is mostly used for important announcements and blog post notifications.
  5. Goodreads is a vital way of connecting authors with readers, but the various forums and groups are impenetrably complicated and I haven't had time to fully explore it yet. Nevertheless, I maintain an author profile and my books are kept up to date. I recently ran a Goodreads giveaway which was moderately successful.
  6. Google+ is more modest still and is generally neglected as I find I get more success elsewhere. It's only used for posting new blog articles.
  7. My Pinterest account is a different beast altogether and is used for collecting a scrapbook of interesting pictures related to certain topics (mostly mountaineering and 19th century history). It has 78 followers and is definitely 'small beer' compared to the others, but is nevertheless useful as it provides a very visual insight into my work.

The general idea is to build up a web of influence and presence, all of which points back to your website and (ultimately) your book--but in an oblique way. There is no right or wrong approach, in my opinion: every author has a slightly different target audience which will respond to a different strategy. It is of key importance to get to know your readers and tailor your social media strategy to suit them.

Don't try to do everything

However, it's just as important to realise that you can't be everywhere and do everything, otherwise you will never find time to write! If you don't like a particular social network, don't use it; I doubt your sales will be crippled if you don't happen to have a Facebook account, for example.

Put the work in and don't give up

Social media takes a long time to nurture and grow. It certainly won't yield results overnight, and generally speaking an author will have to apply effort for a sustained period of time before he or she starts to reap the benefits of increased influence, exposure, and ultimately sales. Whatever strategy you decide to use, post often but not too often, look after your fans, don't relentlessly self-promote, and concentrate on producing quality content that will be of use and interest to your readers.

Authors: what strategy do you employ? Do you think social media increases sales?