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Monday 28 May 2012

DARTH SINISTER PAINTS IT BLACK.

Automated blog posts are running while I ponder a follow-up to my World Trade Centre story. In an attempt to provide Kacey Vanderkarr with a morale-booster after bludgeoning her on the ice, I gatecrashed her communal blog over at The Stranger Diaries. My accomplice (Missy Biozarre) had admin rights, and sneaked the following piece of nonsense under the wire…



Wicked self-publisher Darth Sinister has returned to his repainted DEATH STAR, in preparation for the release of yet another Twisted Lifestyle Guide.
Throwing the rulebook out and deciding there can be as many Darths as space allows, Darth Sinister confers with his equally Darthtastic e-pubbing colleagues. First to arrive at a decidedly chilly pre-planetary-devastation cocktail party is nefarious self-publisher Darth Woodward…



DARTH SINISTER: You have done well, Darth Woodward. Now I sense you wish to continue your quest, to e-publish the rest of your trilogy.

DARTH WOODWARD: There’ll be nothing to stop us, this time.

DARTH SINISTER: Send your stories to the far side of Amazon. There you will encounter the fleet of indie readers.

DARTH WOODWARD: They will come to me?

DARTH SINISTER: I have foreseen it. Everything is proceeding as planned.

DARTH WOODWARD: Leaving time in which to make some popcorn, then. Goody. Ah, I mean. With pleasure.

DARTH SINISTER: You have been well-trained, my Young Apprentice™. The critics will be no match for you.

DARTH WOODWARD: Gosh.

DARTH SINISTER: Rise, Darth Woodward. Deep-fried Ewok? I will MAKE it legal.

DARTH WOODWARD: What of the critics massing against the prospect of all that deep-fried Ewok?

DARTH SINISTER: There aren’t any.

DARTH WOODWARD: I sensed…at least six.

DARTH SINISTER: Diehard fans of Ewok movies. Which, incidentally, I have never seen. Wipe them out…some of them.

MOFF LARKIN: My Lord, Darth Biozarre’s shuttle has crash-landed in bay 1138. The Wookiee pilot is being brought here for questioning.

DARTH WOODWARD: Aren’t you that moody poet, from Hull?

MOFF LARKIN: From Coventry, originally. No one is from Hull. All poets are moody. Except Pam Ayres. She fakes moodiness. Google her.

DARTH WOODWARD: I’ll be over here, making popcorn. With my lightsa…too much information.

MOFF LARKIN: Darth Biozarre and Wookiee companion, my Lord.

DARTH SINISTER: Leave us.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Dude, I know we’re evil. But, did you have to respray the DEATH STAR black? Really…

NOISES OFF: (Bzhwwzumm, zhwum, bzzz jzh-zjzh pop pop pop pop pop!)

PISSED-OFF WOOKIEE: Where the £&%! are MY subtitles? I’m walking off this gig. Jabba the £&%! gets subtitles. The £&%!*$ doesn’t even pay tax. Off-planet accounts on Cloud City, my arse.

DARTH SINISTER: What is it?

DARTH BIOZARRE: Young Vanderkarr has been sighted eyeing-up the scattered asteroid fields of the paper publishing belt.

DARTH SINISTER: That’s a bold move for her. Young Adult fiction hasn’t quite seen the same crashing slump in paper sales as in other sectors – though that will change with time. She could annoy us.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Darth Sinister, she’s just a girl. Old Fogey can no longer help her. If Young Vanderkarr could be turned to the Dark Side of Publishing™, she would be a powerful ally.

DARTH SINISTER: Yes. Young Vanderkarr would, indeed, be a great asset to e-pubbing. Though I must not ask if it can be done. Should it be done? There is a danger in those joining us bitching and moaning about their lot…

PISSED-OFF WOOKIEE: What the £&%! was that about?! You won’t give me subtitles but you’ll £&%!+”@ bleep me?! I’m not Artoo £&%!+”@ Detour.

DARTH WOODWARD: Are you setting up a lame pun based on a detour?

PISSED-OFF WOOKIEE: Not for what they’re paying me. I’m going back to porn.

DARTH WOODWARD: Consuming, or starring in?

PISSED-OFF WOOKIEE: I’ll be staring in. And starring in.

DARTH WOODWARD: Don’t think I’ve ever seen Wookiee porn…I’ve heard of Wookey Hole. Is that…

PISSED-OFF WOOKIEE: One of my bestsellers? No, it’s a geological formation in the Mendip System.

DARTH SINISTER: Having trouble with your Wookiee?

DARTH BIOZARRE: Ah, he brought some droid. It’s a poor excuse for setting up a lame pun involving a detour. There’s a sponsored message. A few public service announcements. And a travelogue. I slept through the Wookiee porn.

DARTH WOODWARD: Consuming, or starring in? Too much information.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Here’s the droid. The pun is beneath me.

ARTOO DETOUR: BEEPS AT LENGTH, LEADING TO LOSS OF POORLY-ARRANGED PUN.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Did you have to say that?

ARTOO DETOUR: PRETTY MUCH. THE BLEEPING BUDGET WAS ALLOCATED TO THE WOOKIEE. HERE’S THE NUMBER TO CALL. UNACCOUNTABLY, IT STARTS 555. EVEN THOUGH I KNOW WE’RE NOT IN A MOVIE…

DARTH SINISTER: It’s ringing.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Is this the self-publishing self-help line?

DARTH SINISTER: Take your literary place at my side. It is your e-pubbing Destiny.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Er, I think I’ve swallowed some publishing blocks and…overdosed. But I fear the cure is worse than the disease! My stories are – gulp – unpublishable.

DARTH SINISTER: I will send my Apprentice™, Darth Biozarre. She will fix your broken stories.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Young Vanderkarr will come to understand the true nature of the Dark Side™. This involves painting everything black, apparently.

DARTH SINISTER: Darth Biozarre, be mindful. Only together can we hope to turn Young Vanderkarr to the Dark Side of Publishing™.

DARTH BIOZARRE: As you wish.

DARTH SINISTER: I hadn’t expressed a request.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Dude, I’m in the middle of unfollowing an entire army of Twitterbots.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: This is all turning quite scary. And a bit Darth-heavy, if you don’t mind my saying.

DARTH SINISTER: What publishing blocks have you swallowed, Young Vanderkarr?

YOUNG VANDERKARR: I believe that my stories aren’t good enough to be published unless an agent tells me that they are good enough. Consequently, there are consequences. I could improve that last sentence. If only I had the confidence…

DARTH SINISTER: Is it also true to suppose that your stories aren’t really bad unless people tell you that they are bad?

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Uh? Wha? I, er. They are bad, because they aren’t any good. Or so I haven’t been told. Er…

DARTH BIOZARRE: Calm down. We’re not telling you that a paper publishing deal is a bad thing.

DARTH SINISTER: I wonder if your feelings are CLEAR on this matter, Darth Biozarre…

DARTH BIOZARRE: There is no conflict. Well, some conflict. That’s inevitable.

DARTH WOODWARD: Paper publishing companies aren’t evil in and of themselves. Er, going back to popcorn now.

NOISES OFF: (Bzh-t-t-t-t-t-t-t pop pop pop pop…)

YOUNG VANDERKARR: I just don’t think I’m ready to ever be ready for any kind of publishing deal. Ever. Certainly not a deal that involves electronic publishing and becoming, gasp, Darth Vanderkarr. What’s a girl to do? Let’s crank this up a bit, so I can appear as a hologram…

DARTH WOODWARD: Just CONTROL + ALT + DELETE your droid, and press the red button marked 10. Obscure sci-fi ref. Whoops.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Hi there.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Wearing a fair bit of black today, for someone who feels too goody-goody to stray on over to e-publishing.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: This is just an old robe…not like it’s a cowl or a cape or anything.

DARTH WOODWARD: No capes, dahling! Er, I’ll just be over here.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Black nail-varnish, Young Vanderkarr. Methinks the Darth doth protest too much.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Casual fashion-statement. Don’t read too much into that. I was spoi…stuck…for choice.

DARTH SINISTER: Perhaps better to say, don’t p-read too much. E-read, you know it is your Destiny.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: That’s too much tech for the lowly scribbler in me. I feel more comfortable with…

DARTH SINISTER: Ah yes. The Typesabre. Weapon of an author. Much like your father’s.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: I’m tilting toward the ergonomic keyboard…

DARTH BIOZARRE: Just for the record, I’m not your dad. Not even in some twisted time travel sex-change artificial insemination weird shit second sex-change weird shit more time travel kinda way.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Thanks for that. And if there’s an unknown twin brother out there, one I accidentally kissed a few times at a wild party, no need to call in. I’m happy living without that trauma in the background.

DARTH BIOZARRE: It’s legal in those Southern star systems.

DARTH WOODWARD: Deep-fried Ewok, anyone? I haven’t fried any. Just…taking orders. Would prefer not to. We could stick with…popcorn. It’s…Mild Mint Bubblegum.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: You seem awfully nice, for a Darth.

DARTH WOODWARD: I’m a Canadian Darth. We’re…polite as all hell when slicing you up with swords made from buzzy light.

DARTH SINISTER: Join us, Young Vanderkarr. Embrace e-publishing. Listen to Darth Biozarre…

DARTH BIOZARRE: By now you must know that the Old Order kept authors in subjugation.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: No! It’s not true! Well, with a limited time-window and a “shed” load of product to shift, the business-model employed by publishers of romantic fiction tended to generate galley-slaves all pulling at the oars to get the next torrid volume to readers…but…

DARTH BIOZARRE: Join me, and I will complete your training. It is folly to resist.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: I’ll never join you. Nice use of folly, BTW.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Obi-Wan Old Fogey never told you what happened to your father.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: My dad never fought in the Print Wars.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Again, I’m not your dad.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Pending the DNA Test. Potential freaky sex-change time traveller.

DARTH BIOZARRE: That’s sex-change, sex-change back. If you will not join me, then you will face your Destiny!

YOUNG VANDERKARR: But if I do join you, won’t I face my Destiny anyway? In the wider sense…

DARTH BIOZARRE: Well, in the narrow sense, you’d face a different Destiny. Though that would still be a Destiny, of sorts.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: But you could seek out a paper publisher yourself.

DARTH BIOZARRE: It’s too late for me. Darth Sinister once thought as you do. That was in the Old Republic. When paper publishing was the only game in town, and all forms of self-publishing were mocked as though akin to sexually-transmitted diseases. The oogly ones. With green stuff…

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Yes, yes. Too much information. But…just because publishing changed. That doesn’t mean. We have to turn our backs on the old ways. I still cling to the need to hold a paper book in my hands, for crying out loud!

DARTH SINISTER: Oh, I’m afraid the Kindle reader will be QUITE OPERATIONAL by the time your paperback books ARRIVE.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Join us. Together we will rule the publishing world. From our repainted DEATH STAR.

DARTH WOODWARD: Ooh, we could paint it RED. Who would mess with a scarlet DEATH STAR? Hmm, I feel a song coming on…perhaps not.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Too many Darths in this kitchen. Though I would look stylish in black, with a red lightsab, aherm, koff koff, is that the time? I should be going.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Don’t underestimate the POWER of underestimation.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: Okay.

DARTH BIOZARRE: You just did.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: I knew that. Darn. Well I’m just a hologram, so, I’ll be going.

DARTH SINISTER: Think it over.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: I’m afraid to think it over.

DARTH SINISTER: Turn your fear to your advantage. Fear is a powerful ally. You must come to fear NOT publishing, rather than publishing.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: No! Help! Where’s the off-switch…

DARTH BIOZARRE: There is NO off-switch. Search your feelings. You know it to be true. The fear of NOT publishing is more powerful, more seductive, than fear of publishing could ever be. Mark well Darth Sinister’s words.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: It can’t be true.

DARTH BIOZARRE: Still not your dad.

DARTH SINISTER: The most important thing about advice is that you aren’t required to like it. Format your work for Kindle, Kacey. Become your own publisher. Kill any fear you have. Rein in emotional responses and think hard about your plans. Do what I did, and what I continue to do. Self-publish.
And don’t just self-promote – help other writers. That’s what I’m doing right now. When will your work be ready? When it is finished. Publish. Right. I’ve done my bit, trying to help other writers. If anything I’ve written here seems to be a hindrance to you, ignore it. Just don’t ignore the previous sentence.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: There’s something awfully familiar about that speech…you weren’t RLL before you turned into Darth Sinister…

DARTH BIOZARRE: Oh, you are so busted. I knew painting the DEATH STAR black was a bad idea. Total giveaway.

DARTH SINISTER: The only way out is to wake up and realise this was all a symbolic dream.

DARTH WOODWARD: Goodbye, Kacey. Don’t eat the Ewoks. That wasn’t a Wookiee porn reference.

YOUNG VANDERKARR: And then I woke up. With new plans…

NEXT BLOG: LAMENT.

Monday 21 May 2012

MY PERSONAL COLD WAR/THE DIAL.

Gave myself some breathing-space in the wake of the World Trade Centre post. This blog was written weeks ago. Posts are currently automated. I will do a follow-up comment soon. Meanwhile…



Without question, my digital office door remains open. Saying so feels as though I am, in reality, saying goodbye. I can’t believe how torn I am, over this private Cold War I’ve been fighting behind the scenes. No one sees it…that’s the point.
   On one side. Democracy. Radio Free Europe. Freedom of speech and expression. A grand experiment in social networking, authorly contact, and the support network of fellow penny scribblers. All welcome. No category barred.
   And on the other side of the wall? The monolithic state. Siberian exile. One voice, indivisible. The author, and the blank page. None welcome. All categories barred.
   Here I stand, on the reconstituted Glienicke Bridge. The link from East to West. Where the spy prisoner exchanges were made. Our man for their man. Yet I can’t quite see, standing in the middle of the bridge, which side I should head for. In this case, there’s only one prisoner – me.
   I was in THE COLD. Didn’t know any different. Certainly never expected any different. Until I crossed over, on a spying mission. There is the temptation to defect. Not knowing where that will lead. The uncertainty led me through so many unexpected twists and turns that I grew dizzy from the journey. A journey of few steps.
   Felt like clearing my head. Found myself writing thousands of words to fellow authors. Good writing exercises. Learned more than I taught – for I taught nothing. The exchange of ideas felt sound. Solid. But I couldn’t shake the feeling of stumbling over shifting sand dunes.
   Breaking with tradition. With the order of things. The core. These immovable items aren’t meant to blow away on the wind of a new outlook. Surely, that being the case, I would welcome the new. But I have struggled to welcome the new.
   So I must go and struggle some more. Have a think. Walk around. Consider options. From the moment I accepted that I had to blog, I kept a plan in reserve – kill the blog. It’s not easy to kill the blog, and it’s not easy to prolong its life. MY PERSONAL COLD WAR.
   Advice? From those on the warm side of the wall? Really? Is anyone on that side of the divide going to tell me to quit the experiment? Hell no. So there’s little point in their outlining that advice. I feel cold. And long for it to be colder. The way things were. You flip a coin in the air, and the chances are that it will not land on its edge. But I’m on edge.
   Blogging just to flog books is not my thing. Questions, questions, questions. Without answers, answers, answers. On deciding to self-publish, I never considered blogging. What would I have to discuss with an audience?
   The tired old tale of a writer, writing on writing. Oh come on, audience. That was old even when it was young. A blog in which I constantly asked unanswered questions wouldn’t go down too well. Of even less interest? Setting out my writerly stall with notes carved in primal rock. I’m not here to tell you how to do things. Even when I’m telling, I’m asking.
   I never considered being interviewed, until the offer was made. A non-interview. In which I was determined to say little of myself. My ruthless editing of Karen Woodward’s prompt set the tone. Please tell me a bit about yourself and your book. That had to go. Please tell me a bit about your book. That was permitted. Painting myself into a narcissistic corner was just not on.
   Doubleplusungood.
   Karen’s version went into the furnace. This is how I repaid the woman responsible for my blogging career? By refusing to list the question I was refusing to answer. What difference does it make to the audience, in knowing more about the scribbler? Yes. Sometimes it matters. I’ve written those pointless questions. Where do you get your ideas? What are your sources of inspiration?
   Old songs, those.
   I stumble across the grey chipped landscape. Looking for a rendezvous with no one in particular. Spy games. Setting up a network of unlikeminded individuals. I’m dragged in for questioning by Special Agent Woodward. She lets the first question slip, and I think I’ve made it past the checkpoint.
   Just as I near the corner, Officer Biozarre and Officer Vanderkarr detain me. They play bad cops to my world-weary traveller persona. There’s a lot of fear in the air. I give up my unbloggable story. Again, I think I’ve made it past the checkpoint.
   Officer Biozarre calls me back for questioning. I get the light in the face. Days in the cells. Nights in the bare room with the light. Officer Vanderkarr weaves in and out, playing good cop from a script. I wonder how things will be, when I’m released from the cells.
   That’s the dangerous time. When I’m tailed through the crowds of readers who start asking even more awkward questions. With the light in my face and Officer Biozarre making witty asides, I skip ahead to the questions the readers must ask.
   I prepare my cover-story for the day on which I’m asked THAT question. Maybe that day won’t come. There’s always the plan. Kill the blog. I can’t bring myself to do that. The network took gold to construct.
   Should have used iron. It rusts as though corrosion is going out of fashion.
   I’ve invested heavily in letting go of detail, through my words. Some of the material I cast into the light was trivial, as viewed through the eyes of readers. But it’s never that way for the figure under the spotlight. Every trivial syllable is platinum-priced.
   Of course that day will come. I’ll be pinned to a wall by barely-leashed dogs, and the interrogation will start with the first thing on the opposition’s list and the last thing on my secret list that is at least three lists beyond anything I expect the interrogators to know about.
   They want a report. From a fugitive.
   So they ask questions designed to uncover answers when those questions go unanswered. There is one question that goes unasked by colleagues. Doesn’t mean the readers want to know, or don’t want to know. I think the worst. In my mind’s eye, I see others forming the words. Inevitably, I am asked THAT question.
   How did you become a writer?
   I can answer in a sentence. Cryptic. Startling. The answer means nothing. Gives little away. May be interpreted literally or figuratively. Is more likely to be interpreted figuratively. Far easier to imagine a dial…
   Instead of giving anything away, I invent the dial. It’s my way of answering unanswerable questions. Misdirection. Deflection. Obstinate refusal to talk. I hide behind songs playing in someone else’s head, on the off-chance that telepaths are tuning in to my own private radio show.
   The dial runs from 0 to 10. (Not 11 – no Spinal Tap references here.) There is nothing wrong in setting the strength to a low number. And you shouldn’t think badly of anyone who sets the dial to a high one. Ask the question. How did you become a writer? Set the dial, in answer.
   At 0 on the dial are people who do not become writers.
   We love these people – they are readers.
   Clicking to 1 on the dial we have someone who thinks…I read a book, and felt I could string a few paragraphs together. How hard was that? The next thing I knew, I’d written stories…
   And if that’s all it takes to get you there, the number 1 on the dial is as valid as the number 10.
   At 10 on the dial, the answer goes like this…our family fled Nazi Germany to start a new life. We moved to the Netherlands. When war broke out and our new home was occupied, we hid in the attic behind a secret door. I kept a diary. My name is Anne Frank.
   Clicking 2 on the dial…I was a bookworm, and wanted to write.
   At 9 on the dial, we hear this. My skanky mother was murdered when I was ten years old. To make it up to me, my Hollywoodised dad intro’ed me to true crime rags. I became a peeper and a creeper. Did dipshit jail-time. Joined and left the army, avoiding Vietnam. Caddied, sold golf balls, and wrote books. I am the Demon Dawg of US literature, and the undisputed King of Crime Fiction. My name is James Ellroy, woof woof. Down, Barko. Go hump some other hepcat’s brothel-creepers.
   And so the list goes. Add bonus points for inspirational figures in the background. More, if those are famous authors. Dial higher, adding detail like that. It’s not a competition. That’s a good thing. There are no bonus prizes for high scores. Any value over 0 is a winning value for every writer.
   All you are looking to find, in dialling a number, is a sense of scale. This is a game you can play at home inside your mind. So, writers reading this, add it all up and pick a number. Answer in silence – uttering the digit mentally. How did you become a writer? Be as honest with yourself as you can. No one need ever know. A simple number, avoiding the need for interminable explanation.
   Some people feel the need to talk about the literary journey. Talking about it only goes so far. The basics. You never get the whole story. I suppose that’s why I came up with the image of the dial. A lone sentence, cryptic, startling, says as much or as little as the number I have in mind. In my case, we know the value is above 0.

NEXT BLOG: DARTH SINISTER PAINTS IT BLACK.

Monday 14 May 2012

HEY NOW. AN INTERESTING TURN OF EVENTS. FROM FRIDAY FEBRUARY 3rd, 2012.


In response to my Vanderkarr Memorandum, Kacey blogged her heart out. I am still considering a follow-up to the unbloggable post. This entry gives me space in which to breathe...

Friday, February 3, 2012.

I woke up to this bleary morning expecting none other than another ordinary day, me without a voice, my son, hyperactive and ready to go, a bazillion orders to fill and no ambition to do anything. Alas, I have had a revelation. It has come from a fairy god (father...mother? I’m not sure) all the way from Scotland (me = excited). I’ve decided to blog about said revelation while it is still fresh in my mind and unbiased by further internet searching and the thoughts of the world.
   Initial response? I am impressed. Perhaps I should back up a minute and tell you all WHAT actually happened.
   After I stumbled into the kitchen (picture a zombie strut mixed with Lady Gaga’s thrashing, for that was me this morning) and sat down at my computer, I was surprised to find an email from a stranger. And not just any email, I mean an EMAIL that had nearly 5,000 words. It was from a random person I followed on Twitter (as I have been growing my platform with the intent of reaching all these people with my writing prowess!). This person, as I still don’t know if it’s a he or she and I don’t want to offend, literally sat me down and gave me the biggest lecture of my life. Sadly, I must say I deserved this lecture.
   I am a writer stuck in the past. I long for the days of agents and ink and paper. It is my feeling that I can digitize my own books and have them on my computer, why would I want to do that as a form of publishing? Well, duh, here’s the answer folks, SO THAT PEOPLE WILL READ THEM!!!
   Seeing that I work in a hospital full of sick people, I am faced daily with the fact that death is all around us, accidents happen, life will end...blah blah blah. Shouldn’t I fear never getting published? What if I kicked the bucket tomorrow? So why the heck am I not out there publishing my work? Fear? Laziness? Idiocy? Most likely it’s a combination of all three. Maybe I want to follow the good old agent path, too. BUT I have 4 books that I’ve written, a series that I keep saying I’m going to get back to eventually. So, revelation in short, I think I will e-pub these books and be done with them. They are a series of characters that I LOVE. I think other people will love them too. And if I still choose to publish another book the traditional way, there’s still that option. If I get a good response (hell, I’d probably be uber excited for a mediocre response, it doesn’t take much to get me excited) maybe I will e-pub everything.
   RLL, my mysterious email writer, has implied that I write my manuscripts with a committee over my shoulder. This may not be an exact description, but apt nonetheless. I do seek approval for my writing, I need that justification before I believe it’s good enough to even think about publishing. But, what do I care? I know I can write. So committees be gone!
   Now, don’t get ahead of yourselves. My life is a crazy game right now and I have no intention of having a book ready to e-pub tomorrow. But maybe in a couple of months, maybe after winterguard season is over and I actually have five minutes to my name. There will be a schedule. There will be plans.
   So RLL, thank you. I appreciate the time you took to send this little wayward writer on her way. On a side note, can I say that the fact that you wrote a sentence in a Scottish accent had me very excited indeed. (Like I said, doesn’t take much). I’m also glad you took the time to watch my winterguard videos. Long have I wanted to write a book about guard, but the storyline has escaped me. It will be perfection when it does come, I’m sure.
   As you will see, I have changed from the off-putting white lettering to black. I can’t say I’m very fond of this layout, but it will do until I have the time to adjust and tweak it to my heart’s content.
   Would you like to meet the mystery author of the wonderful life-changing email? ME TOO!! Here is RLL. Clickity click click!!

All the best,
Kacey.


Hey kiddo. It’s a cold wet day in Scotland as I type. That’s a description I’d run two days out of every three, and not have to alter. Winterguard sounded like a place in Narnia. I had to check out the video to see if centaurs appeared.
   Anyway, let’s get down to it. I thought you’d bite my head off for saying what I did. A spike in blog traffic from the USA told me that you must have been directing people to me. So something positive must have happened.
   When authors follow me on Twitter, I’ll check out their blogs. Some need no comment or interaction. Certain writers have a style that doesn’t appeal to me, or write in an area that’s far-removed from mine. Still, these people might have plenty of use to say on the business side of things…
   So I rake over the coals of blogs and business sites, to see why they followed me on Twitter. Usually it’s no more than placing author in my Twitter handle that does the trick. It’s certainly nothing to do with anything I say on Twitter. I’m more of a Gritter – a person who uses Twitter through gritted teeth.
   Once or twice I’ve found nothing of interest to me on a blog – but someone else has chipped in and made a comment. And I’ve gone off at a tangent to help a writer with a technical problem. Being a writer of e-books means writing e-books. It also means helping authors. There are no rivals here.
   When I read your blog, I sensed that you operated in areas which called for a lack of fear. You are not permitted to show fear to these Winterguard kids you inspire. And giving ultrasound scans (sonogram sounds MORE AMERICAN THAN YOU WILL EVER KNOW) means having to deal with bad news as well as good. So the fear in your life was displaced, and resided in your writing.
   I kept picking up these comments, indicating that you looked for approval from others in your writing. The only test for a commercial writer lies in selling. There’s no emotion. No ego. Just a sales figure. No prizes, awards, kudos, glory, none of that. Did you sell any? No. Write more. Keep getting better at it. Did you sell any? Yes. Write more. Keep getting better at it.
   Having said that, I did have a sense of satisfaction in realising that I inspired someone. It’s an unexpected side-effect, a by-product, of being forced to use Twitter. Truthfully, it’s the most positive thing that’s come out of Twitter – not plugging my books, but chipping in and helping people in the same line of work.
   I’m not very far down the path of e-publishing, and still need to build the platform – as the modern cliché goes. But I’m getting there. And I’m helping other people to get there. Usually in a small way. Bit of technical advice here. Spot of legalese there.
   It’s about learning. With a bit of sharing thrown in. Don’t produce a blog in white type. That should be written into the web. By a spider using black threads. Against a plain background. Taking that advice shows that you are prepared to kill your fear of completing manuscripts. This time next year, you’ll be published. Looking back, this time last year…I wasn’t. This time next month, I’ll be putting out a third book. Which I must go and check for glitches. If you think you hate editing, you’ll really hate formatting. And now, for a final, inspirational message. You’ll LOVE formatting. Sliced bread. Best thing since.

Ah’ll awa’ noo, an’ see tae ma buik.



That’s what I did. I went to see to my book. Kacey’s post and my response don’t add up to this blog’s minimum 1,500 posting limit. I must waffle about her thoughts. My blog traffic increased, with Kacey’s blog listed as the referring site. I knew she’d written about me. Positively? Crunch time.
   First impression. The white text was gone. She’d followed that part of my chat, at least. I was horrified to read that I’d sat her down and given her the biggest lecture of her life. Well, it was the biggest lecture I’d ever given anyone in my life. So we stacked up the firsts.
   I was guilty of judging someone on no evidence. Not Kacey. Her writing partner, Missy Biozarre. I left Missy alone, thinking she’d be another baby seal I had to bludgeon. Was Missy overwhelmed by Kacey’s fear? I judged, hastily.
   After Kacey posted her blog about me, Missy shouted hello. I was editing, and ignored her for the better part of a week. Then I read Missy’s material and realised I had judged hastily, harshly, and wrongly. Missy was the figure who provided contrast.
   Kacey and Missy made me confront my fear in talking about the destruction of the World Trade Centre. How could I give Kacey advice on fear in writing, with that cold sensation hanging over me? It took an almighty effort to free myself from the fear. I hope to blog a follow-up message on that subject soon.

NEXT BLOG: MY PERSONAL COLD WAR/THE DIAL.

Monday 7 May 2012

BLUDGEONING A BABY SEAL FOR ITS OWN GOOD.

Once again, the blog takes a turn into other areas as I consider writing a follow-up to the unbloggable.



Here’s a rule to live by. Never interfere in another person’s life. Don’t give well-meaning advice on major subjects. I didn’t give advice to anyone on anything. Gradually, in turning self-publisher, I made comments to other writers. I still didn’t give life-changing advice.
   Until I was followed on Twitter by Kacey Vanderkarr. That random act led me to a fear-filled blog on writing. For the first time in my life, I encountered FEAR in a writer. An otherwise inspirational person. This woman could write. She inspired people outwith fiction. Yet she couldn’t or wouldn’t face the fear in her own work.
   I took the night off. No more editing for me. Instead, I wrote The Vanderkarr Memorandum. This evil act was sure to reap a whirlwind on my own head. What would I think, if a writer did this to me? I’d think it time I faced reality.
   This does not make for good reading, if you are a fear-filled writer. Background. Kacey had written books. She didn’t believe they were good enough for publication. Ever. I felt like a government official, dragging a baby seal onto the ice for bludgeoning. Those big wet eyes of hers, asking me WHY?! Kacey’s blog comments are italicised here. Excerpt from work in progress, and so on. I’ve added a few comments in light of further developments. Those are bracketed.



Hey there, kiddo. For some unfathomable reason, you followed me on Twitter. I hiked over to your blog, and had a look at what you had to say. Didn’t have time to check everything out, but I picked up the basics. I’ll make some observations that you may find useful. Whether you like them or not is your business.
   Okay. Blog design. In the name of optical health, and for the love of the retina, ditch the white text. I’ve deliberately broken some excellent design rules myself – but I haven’t crossed the line into white text madness. The major internet crime committed by bloggers is to aim for white text on a black background. According to the young persons, this is considered cool.
   Unless you have to wade through more than a thousand words. In which case, it is in a place that is very far from cool. You’ve compounded the crime by going for that subdued lava tone in the background. Fear not. You are a long way from being the worst offender. Lime green on black, anyone? Er, no.
   Your emotional response is probably along the lines of…but I LIKE it. Readers will hate the notion that you don’t care about their optical health. Your writing style is easy to read. The physical act of reading white text is not. Is it a blog entry, or a sadistic eye-test?

(Kacey ditched the white text.)

Excerpt from work in progress. Didn’t have much to say about this. Character is established quickly. Plenty of information without laying it on thick. At 1,300 words, or roughly four pages of manuscript, it sets the story up. I expect the alien landing, knock at the door, or gas-explosion occurs in the next few pages.

(And I wasn’t far wrong.)

From the section on the rutabaga. I remember using this in a story, back in the days when the dinosaurs ruled the earth. Just one story. I liked the sound of the word. When I read your Damien Rice comment, I slapped Rootless Tree on and thought…why would anyone have this as a soundtrack to kicking the crap out of someone? Then it hit me. I hadn’t listened to the album in a good while. Saw him late one night on Glastonbury footage – 2003 – and went looking all over the town for his first album next day.

(I think the rutabaga featured in a story by Keith Laumer, and I liked the sound of the word. Still amuses me today, the rutabaga.)

Is there anyone on the internet who DOESN’T have an interest in the Zombie Apocalypse?

(Ah, my target audience is huge.)

All dead rock legends live again. Can’t fault your choice. I’d queue to witness Bonham Senior killing the drums. And our ears. Bonham Junior turned out okay. As for Kurt…load up all guns. Bring your friends. We all know she’s overboard.

(These pleasantries over, I realise I have now disrespected Queen Courtney in public. Well, I had my raisins.)

Right, back to writing.
   July 2011, and the demise of Borders. Back then, I was gearing up for all the learning I’d have to do, to take my manuscript from MS Word document to Kindle product. My plan. Become self-published before year’s end. Publish a second book six weeks after the first. And publish a third book six weeks after the second. I had a lot to cram in. There was only one way to learn. It wasn’t the easy way.
   You lament the demise of a physical store selling paper books, and ask what will happen to agents. They are fast turning into writers/publishers. You spend a fair bit of that post dealing with emotional responses to physical books.
   Yes, you are firmly in the book-sniffing camp. If you’ve seen Buffy, you’ll know that librarian Rupert Giles laments the fact that the internet has no smell. Libraries will still exist. They’ll just be more digital. Books will still exist. They’ll just be more digital.
   I say these things as a writer of e-books. As a reader, I am a purchaser of hardback books. I was a stone’s throw from the Stevenson house in Monterey, just over a decade ago, agreeing with the woman on the till that THEY would never replace books.
   Books are handy for holding doors open. Or sitting cups on. Paper page-turning is an old information storage and retrieval system that still works. It isn’t broken. No need to fix it. But…the digital world has transformed publishing for good. Not for ill. For good.
   I gave up receiving rejection letters, and published according to plan. Then, six weeks later, I published again. According to plan. In five weeks, I’ll do it again. No agent. And no publishing company. Complete control over content. Building an audience takes time. I’d be doing publicity with a publishing company’s involvement in any event.

(My third book was published right on time. I avoided being hit by a white van a short while later.)

This isn’t the future. It’s the past of 2011. I’m sitting reading various blog posts of yours which ask for advice. The most important thing about advice is that you aren’t required to like it. Format your work for Kindle, Kacey. Become your own publisher. Kill any fear you have. Rein in emotional responses and think hard about your plans. Do what I did, and what I continue to do. Self-publish.
   And don’t just self-promote – help other writers. That’s what I’m doing right now. I’ll give you a singular lesson in time. The record for a response from a publisher was 54 weeks. Rejection. I’d forgotten writing to that publisher.
   In self-publishing, I put my first book out and turned to the construction of a short story collection. Almost six weeks later, I was nearly ready to submit the work. To an audience, not an agent, or a publisher for further consideration and a printed version a year after that. No.
   I wrote two sequels to a short story over the weekend, edited the hell out of them, and checked everything on the Sunday night. By Monday afternoon, the book was on sale. Time is precious, above rubies. I’m about to throw out a third book in March.
   It is inconceivable to even hint that a paper publisher would put out three of my books across a twelve-week period. I did it. Yes, admittedly, I didn’t just walk in off the street one day and decide HEY, MAYBE I’VE GOT A BOOK IN ME.

(At the time of writing, I was still to achieve the goal of publishing three books across the twelve weeks. But nothing was going to stop that third book from going out on time, as events were to prove not long after. I was in a single-minded mood, writing to Kacey. Forgetting that I’d taken the night off editing an unpublished book three to talk to her…)

For a long time, a LONG time, I didn’t write those two sequels. I knew they’d be around 5,000 words each. But I didn’t have a marketplace for the short story collection. Well, now I have. It’s called the mighty Amazon.
   This was MONUMENTAL unfinished business for me. I’d set the roots of the sequels down in the original story when I first wrote it. But the market wasn’t there. I couldn’t crack the publishing world. A world based on the short-term sale of paper. Over on the digital bookshelves, my material isn’t forced into storage to make way for other authors. The market exists.
   Suddenly, I had an outlet for my work. And I resolved to gather my short stories in one place and publish them – with the unwritten stories thrown in. Imagine vowing to do that. And then doing it, the weekend before publication. This is the digital world writers now operate in.

(You’ll have to excuse the brevity of the last three paragraphs. To get into the ins and outs of the tales and their history, I’d need to break this blog. Not break the blog post into chunks. Physically break the blog.)

Let’s continue this in End of Manuscript Anxiety. Critique readers were bugging you for the rest of the story, just as you bogged down. How you write your books is your business, but I don’t do it with a committee looking over my shoulder. Distractions are, by their nature, distracting. It’s worth pointing out the bloody obvious.
   In six days, you wrote a page-and-a-half. Let’s call that 450 words. And we’ll pretend your typing speed is 40 wpm. Twelve minutes of output, over six days. Representing a hundred and twenty seconds of typing over a twenty-four-hour period. I’ve written shopping lists longer than that.
   Do I suffer from some form of fear at completing a manuscript? No. I fear that I’ll be hit by a bus with so many fictional worlds as-yet-unwritten. You must develop the same fear I have. I encourage you to. Think of a great writer. Someone who has written wonderful books. Imagine that writer dropping dead before completing possibly the best book of his career. Readers are robbed. Do you want to be that writer? I’d love to be that writer, and have his output to my name. But I wouldn’t want to rob readers by falling over dead.

(Yes, I’m clubbing a baby seal. For her own good. It’s not meant to be nice. However, I do encourage Kacey to develop a different sort of fear. All writers should fear NOT being published.)

Just over a decade ago, standing in the shadow of the Stevenson house, I hadn’t read Weir of Hermiston. The book has an awesome reputation. From the man who gave us Treasure Island, came this – his greatest novel. He dropped dead after writing chapter nine.
   How can that be his greatest book? It’s unfinished. Hell, with nine chapters – it’s barely started. I refused to read it until recently. When I did, I had to agree with the view that it was his most accomplished work. I was saddened that he didn’t live to write the best jail-break scene in literature. All in the name of character, and in the service of the story.

(I was digging deep, looking for an example Kacey could relate to…whether she’d read the chosen book or not. In that case, I had a fear of reading the book. A fear I overcame. One I’m glad I overcame. I hoped that inspired Kacey to ditch her own worries, or examine them in a new light at the very least.)

So stop flapping your arms and develop a different kind of fear. Not fear of completing a manuscript – fear of NOT completing a manuscript. Be afraid, be very afraid. Just be afraid of something that will prompt you into producing more work. Stevenson died of a brain haemorrhage. He was just getting started, if Weir of Hermiston is anything to judge him by.
   You say you have a future, and wonder if you have the ambition. It’s the other way around. You don’t know if you have a future. Someone’s alcohol-intake, coupled with a stint behind the wheel of a vehicle, could destroy your career faster than any critic. Know that you have the ambition.
   Plans. From August, 2011. You talk about four books. Do they all use the word plethora in the text? Just an observation. Item #3 on your list involves editing Stepping Stones. You wonder if you are getting too much advice. I don’t write my books with a committee looking over my shoulder. Maybe I should mention that again later.
   You have a fear of losing the story in the editing. Why? The story doesn’t change in the editing. In the editing, you are looking for typographical errors, obvious blunders in description, and inconsistencies. You aren’t…gasp…rewriting the story? (Koff koff, ack, splutter!) Say it ain’t so.
   That fear of completing a story – you admitted you knew how the story would end. Well, if you know how it ends…you needn’t procrastinate in getting to the end. Above and beyond that, you needn’t change the story once it is done. If you are going to rewrite a story, it’s a new story. Give it a new title, and new characters, with a new plot.
   I don’t rewrite stories. But I do edit the hell out of them. I catch the typos the spellchecker ignores. And I fix format glitches. I may kill a repeated phrase that dashes across a single page like the Ebola virus on a mission. But. I. Don’t. Rewrite. Stories.

(Plot never changes in the editing. Characters never change in the editing. Setting never changes in the editing. If you are having trouble with this concept, your big wet baby seal eyes are about to take a battering. Write your story. Edit your story. Publish your story.)

Did I mention that I don’t have a committee giving me advice on a work in progress? I know how it ends, and wouldn’t change the end based on someone’s opinion of the first third of the book in any event.
   “Print all four books and put them on my bookshelf. Pretend they’ve been published.”
   What you should have done was self-publish all four books, and put them on your digital bookshelf. In the digital world, a series sells better than a lone tome. There are promotional offers that can be used to flog a book at a low price as a way of interesting readers in the books that will pay your bills.
   Moving Forward. A post that contained a few things worth commenting on. October 9th, 2011. I was three weeks away from starting my blog. As soon as the official blog posts began, I’d run six weekly blogs and publish my book. Then I’d run six more blogs and publish my second book. And now, at the start of February 2012, there are five blog posts to go before book three hits the mighty Amazon.

(Even taking time to bludgeon Kacey on the ice, I managed to publish according to plan. My blogs are written in bulk and published weekly. I generally automate the publication.)

But back to October. You were pleased that you’d advanced as a writer. Editing the manuscript half a dozen times. Getting close to having the work ready for agents. Yes, writing is a learning process. Somewhere in my notes on writing, I made three very important statements.
   One. We all have our own ways of writing stories and what works for me may not work for you. Two. Always know how it ends. (But see point one.) Three. Always know when it’s finished. (Regardless of point one or two.)

(In bludgeoning this baby seal, I was trying to do so tenderly. That somehow comes across as sicker than just thumping the hell out of her defenceless frame. What works for me may not work for you. I was telling her to ignore me if she felt like ignoring me.)

If you know how it ends, and you reach the end, the book is done. All you are doing after that is looking for blunders. The book is done. Let it fly, or fall. But do let it go. Because it is finished. I sense that you have trouble finishing books, and trouble finishing with books. These are major difficulties you must overcome. I’ve never suffered from this sort of trouble. So to see it in you, or any writer, is baffling. From my perspective. Next…

(Okay, so I lied to her. Fortunately, she will never read this part. Her eyes will magically skip a few lines. Look Kacey, magic beans. That should do the trick. In the early days, I had trouble constructing books. But telling her that would have been counterproductive. In the recent past, I finished writing books with ease. Lying to a baby seal as you bludgeon the baby seal isn’t going to make you seem any more dastardly. Not really. Sue me. Kacey’s trouble was believing a story would NEVER be ready. And I didn’t suffer from that extreme complaint.)

Is it so Hard to be Helpful? You seek help for your writing, but that doesn’t give people the right to criticise what they haven’t even read. How could any of us know your stuff isn’t ready for an agent. Have we read it? Last time you checked, we hadn’t.
   Oh dear. Here’s an awful lesson from the digital world. People seize rights. There is an act, committed by some authors, against the work of other authors. These idiots review digital books on Amazon, without ever having read them. Yes, handing out one-star reviews. To perceived rivals. Or to writers who criticised the petulant author on a forum or in a blog comment. Average age – well, I’m guessing four going on five with a petted lip tripping the toes.
   Worse than that. There are people who feel the need to hate Amazon, hate Kindle, hate self-publishing. And they routinely give one-star reviews to self-published Kindle books they see. There was an argument that women could not ride on early steam trains, as the speed would make their bosoms explode. No one brought up the possibility of exploding testicles. How strange.
   You are American. Freedom of Speech grants the right to shout fire in a crowded theatre – if there is a fire. Everything else is up for grabs. People will criticise you without having read your work. Deep in my notes on writing, I’ve made the comment that I don’t care what people think of my work. Praise does nothing for sales. Damnation shouldn’t. All I care about is three meals a day and a roof over my head. If enough people buy my work to make that possible, I am a successful writer. The end. Opinions are unimportant.
   As I discovered when I overcame the stumbling block relating to reading Weir of Hermiston. I had to ignore opinions, and find out for myself. At the end of chapter nine, there was a brief entry about Stevenson’s plans for what came next. I was in awe, just as I was saddened in the same thought. Knowing it was never meant to be.
   If you put your work out there, it is out there to be shouted at, clawed, stabbed, pierced, roasted, slimed, irradiated, chopped, filleted, skinned, disembowelled, and pissed on from a great height. Let them piss from a great height – the piss will miss. Precisely BECAUSE they don’t know you.

(Do you know any fear-filled writers? Quote that last paragraph at them.)

Never. Can’t. Don’t. Is it possible to provide positive constructive criticism by using those words? Yes – I’m a writer, and construct sentences. It’s my job. Here’s positive constructive criticism of your work. I’ve read these blog entries, and the snippet of your one-armed Ginger story.
   Don’t set up a blog using white ink. Think of the children! Okay, there isn’t actually any ink.
   Never rely on an emotional response as a basis for a spurious argument against fact. Book-sniffers will always be around, but the business has changed. For the good. Good for the writer. Lament the closing bookshops. Stories continue to be told. Tell stories.
   If you can’t finish a manuscript out of fear of completion, fear getting hit by that bus.
   Is your work ready for agents? No. Agents are dying out. Your work is ready the moment editing is finished. Publish. When I planned to set up my blog on Hallowe’en, I had nothing on there. Over the weekend leading up to that rainy Monday, I rattled out a story.
   Started on Saturday night. Spent Sunday writing the bulk of it. I edited the tale on Sunday night. There was a final edit early on Monday morning. In torrential rain, with guisers flitting through the streets, I made my way to the library. And I posted my story on the blog. Just for readers to check out, on an otherwise empty blog.
   Guisers are those who go in disguise on Hallowe’en, so the de’il cannae get them. For a long time, the spooky night was far more popular in Scotland than in England. That’s gradually changing, with an American influence creeping into England.
   My story, The Chalice in the Snow, is still on my blog. REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE. (THOUGHTS ON PUBLISHING FROM AN AUTHOR ON THE RUN.) It was written at speed. And edited rapidly. It’s just shy of 15,000 words. I conjured it out of thin air. To a deadline. One day, I’ll include it in a collection of short stories. With that in mind, I went back at the distance of a few months, and edited it for commercial publication. What did I change? Hardly a thing. Minor stylistic points.
   I knew how it would end. And I knew, when it was finished, that I was done with it. On Monday night, I published. Was it ready? Yes. You’d be hard-pressed to spot the differences between the blog version and the official version.

(On writing that, I returned to the blog and read my story. There, I spotted a typo. Thanks to Kacey.)

Is your work ready for agents? Listen, kiddo. You have to look ahead of that game. Is it ready for readers? Say yes. Publish. Kindle fiction isn’t set in stone. If you have to correct errors after publication, you can simply update the text.
   So stop worrying about things like that. Worry about writing your stories by committee. Did I mention that I don’t write that way? Are you sensing that this is important? Worry about dying before you are published. Fear the blank page remaining blank. Worry about that bus.
   So. Is a manuscript ready for an agent a week after it’s finished? Trick question. If it’s finished, it is ready for readers. Publish. Fact – one day after I finished editing my collection of short stories, my book was ready for the public. Not a year down the line. A year you don’t get to live twice over.
   Okay, I was a bit sneaky there. As it turned out, I had to re-publish the next day. An asterisk in my product description was rejected by Amazon. I had no way of spotting that until the book went on sale. The remedy was to dive in and use another asterisk that was accepted. I hit the button again, and the product description went up a few hours later. But that’s the beauty of glitches – they can be fixed.
   NaNoWriMo. A character in Return of the Jedi, as I recall. You remind yourself that you wrote a book running 110,000 words in four weeks. See. No fear of completing a manuscript. I once wrote an 80,000 word book over seven days of typing. With the specific intention of doing it that way. I had a 10,000 word story that I could use as a flashback in the middle of the book…
   So I spent three days on three chapters leading to the flashback. Then a fourth day going over the short story, making sure the first three chapters were consistent with the story. Another three days for the last three chapters. Knew how it was going to end, knew when it was done. Didn’t fear completion. Feared not completing. Oh, and I wrote it without anyone looking over my shoulder. Repetition of themes in fiction is a powerful tool in a writer’s armoury.
   Writers are Depressed. Yes, by the thought of not completing a story before DEATH interrupts the career. When you are really into a story, you can pound out twenty pages a day. Around 6,000 words. Twice the length of this letter to you, as I type this paragraph. There is no telling what sort of mood you are in, from the work you do. If stories typed themselves, you’d be doing something else. Something grimmer than typing stories.
   Which brings me to the Hard Dose of Reality. There’s a message in there. That 2011 is probably the worst year of your life. Too soon to say, surely. A cousin survives a shooting in 2010. Your father-in-law is gone. Another cousin goes. Your mother has cancer. Loses her job.
   Perspective. Are you still scared of completing manuscripts by this stage? You are a runaway bus from death. Who will carry on your literary legacy? Be scared of failing to complete manuscripts. Here, you repeat the chant. You’ve done another manuscript, one that you feel might be ready to send to agents soon. Would that be after you take a lot of advice from a committee on how to rewrite the bits these people don’t care for?

(I don’t write with a brass fucking band in my office. Windows Media Player, on occasion. But no committee activity. I know that critique group sounds VERY AMERICAN. If it sounds Scottish, it must sound Scottish with an East Coast accent. My sarcasm is unpardonable.)

If you write that book, and edit that book, it is done. Published. These critique people can read the published version. If they spot a typo, update the book. But you shouldn’t change the published story’s plot or characters at that point – pissing off all the customers just to please the tastes of family members, friends, and writing buddies is INSANE. Don’t. I don’t, can’t, won’t. Never.
   That’s constructive criticism of writing I haven’t read, written by someone I don’t know. Instead of editing my book this evening, I chose to write to you because I feel that you are in need of serious help here. It is clear to me that you have a writing style worth reading. Leaving aside differences in English, for I write in two forms of English that are alien to you.

Kacey, hi. I took a break to catch a documentary. Then read over, and edited, what I’ve written. I don’t know if you are reeling from what I’ve said to you, or nodding in agreement. Here’s the thing. I don’t care, one way or the other.

(I lied, obviously. This fear-filled writer uttered cries for help, and I turned up to see what I could do for her. I did care. It was clear to me that I could give advice that was ignored, shunned, or even vomited back at me. I’d never given advice before. Too late in the day to start giving advice? No. I was on a rescue mission. Even if I had to bludgeon that baby seal, just to save that baby seal.)

Lately, I’ve been trying to get away from plugging my work. Instead, I wanted to describe aspects of my work. How I tackled things. I wanted to engage with readers, rather than other writers. But when I encountered your blog today, I saw someone who was in trouble.
   Do this. Run a search on the phrase REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE. Visit my blog. Go back to the start, and work your way through my blog posts. Absorb whatever is useful to you. It doesn’t matter if my style of fiction isn’t your thing. Read The Chalice in the Snow. That’s a day’s work. Not a typical day’s work. Full-on, really getting into the story.
   Then think about my tale. Sunday night. Edited. Monday morning. Final edit. Caught an appalling error. Monday night. Published for the world to read. As a way of introducing my work. This will mean more to you as a writer, once you’ve read the tale.
   Here’s something else for you to do. It will cost you time, nothing more. Invest the time. Go to Amazon and download Kindle-reading software. Several Previewer downloads are available. There’s also Kindle for PC. I’m sure, if you don’t use a PC, that there are other versions for whatever clockwork monstrosity you use.
   Then, on March 5th or March 6th, go to Amazon Kindle store. Type RLL. On those days, my book, Neon Gods Brought Down by Swords, will be on sale as a freebie to promote the launch of my third e-book. Pick up my first e-book for nothing.
   Read it. Enjoy it. Detest it. I don’t care.

(In that case, I WASN’T lying. I genuinely don’t care if people like or dislike my work.)

Once you’ve read it, read ABOUT THIS BOOK. And pay particular attention to the entry on PAPERLESS PUBLICATIONS. This will give you my perspective of e-publishing as I was getting ready to publish on Deployment-Day. December the 12th.
   Do these things. Download free software. Then buy a free book on either sale day. Absorb what I say about electronic publishing. Consider going electronic. I say these things to you BECAUSE I don’t know you. BECAUSE I haven’t read those four manuscripts. You wanted advice. Advice was given.
   Was it negative? No. Will you change the blog design and use black lettering? For the sake of a stress-free ophthalmic experience, yes, yes, and yes again. It’s just plain wrong. If. But. Maybe. Banish those thoughts. It’s a big internet no-no for a reason.
   Eventually you’ll find your way to the book designer Joel Friedlander, if you haven’t already. He’d say the same, only more stridently. I know. As a writer, I should be giving you advice on WRITING. Not on blog presentation.
   Well, just so you know. I was mugged by an author who told me I had to blog. Out came the cosh, and I saw stars before my eyes. So I gritted my teeth and got down to it. Wasn’t so bad. I looked at other blogs, to see how people did things. They did things in black lettering. Not in white.
   Your turn to see stars before your eyes after the cosh comes out. Learn to format your files for Kindle. Allow six weeks between publications. And publish your backlist every six weeks. Blog about it. Use Twitter to announce your impending Deployment-Days.
   What’s holding you back? You. Fear. Paranoia. Uncertainty. Develop a plan. Adapt the plan as events unfold. Will you publish a book this year? National Novel Writing Month should be National Novel Publishing Month.
   If you have four books sitting there, then you could have four books published. Put one out on D-Day. After six weeks, there’s book two. Another six weeks. Book three. Week eighteen comes around in the cycle, and book four arrives.
   They don’t make money right away. But they don’t make any money sitting unpublished. When will your work be ready? When it is finished. Publish. Right. I’ve done my bit, trying to help other writers. If anything I’ve written here seems to be a hindrance to you, ignore it. Just don’t ignore the previous sentence.
   It’s after midnight, and I fear turning into a pumpkin. Though, strangely, not a rutabaga.

There, the Vanderkarr Memorandum ended. Kacey responded in her blog. That response appears here next week. How did things pan out? Eventually she said that I saw through her, and gave her tough love…
   I saw fear. Nothing wrong with fear. It may prove useful. Tough love? I have now been cast in the role of some brutal Scottish army Sergeant, barking at the raw recruit to pull herself together. This is Commando training. For writers. Welcome to Achnacarry.

SERGEANT JOCK MACBASTARD: Jist anither five mile (ten miles) up rat wee hill (mountain) in light mist (a torrential downpour), an’ ye’ll tak a rest. (Cardiac arrest.)

BABY SEAL: Sarge, I’m American. I never even signed up for the Scattish army.

SERGEANT JOCK MACBASTARD: It’s raw haggis fur rah winners.

BABY SEAL: What if I come last?

SERGEANT JOCK MACBASTARD: Ye’ll catch yer ain haggis, in rah wild. An’ gut it wi’ yerrr berrr haaands…

BABY SEAL: Oh jeepers.

SERGEANT JOCK MACBASTARD: Are ye no’ rah lassie frae yon Strangerrr Diarrries…wan o’ them, onywey…no’ rah pixie frae Middle Earth, rah ither wan…

BABY SEAL: Er. Stranger…yes. That’s me. In the black and white photo.

SERGEANT JOCK MACBASTARD: Aye. Ah took wan luik at yon photie, an’ asked masel’…

BABY SEAL: Yes?

SERGEANT JOCK MACBASTARD: Whit did they arrest ye fur…

BABY SEAL: Fur?!

SERGEANT JOCK MACBASTARD: Aye. Seal fur. Get up yon hill!

NEXT BLOG: AN INTERESTING TURN OF EVENTS.