Writers On Editing: Don’t Do It All Yourself

I was recently asked to participate in a poll on Goodreads.com about editing, specifically how authors get it done for their work. Responses to the question “Do you use an editor?” included did it all myself, had a friend or relative do it, hired a cheap or expensive editor, used a free website for authors to help one another, used a volunteer, or used software. Sadly, the most common answer that had floated to the top of the poll was, “No, I just did it all myself.”

Here’s the best advice I can ever offer a writer: DON’T do it all yourself. Find yourself a “no” person, someone both willing to read your work critically and that you’re willing to listen to no matter what they say or how bad it may seem to them (advisers are invaluable, see The Evil Overlord list for details on correct usage). Heck, get a team of volunteer readers. They may be grammar Nazis or just people who like to read, but they will see things you’ll miss no matter how many times you read it yourself. Sometimes it won’t be grammatical or a missing word but just not explaining things as simply or as thoroughly as needed. A paid professional is wonderful if you trust them and can afford it, but always, always, ALWAYS have another set of eyes go over your work any way you can get it done.

Also, if you can compile your work into a PDF (OpenOffice can do this for you), here’s a really cool trick: let Adobe Reader read it to you out loud (it’s a built in feature of the free version) and just listen. This will reveal a lot of mistakes you and all of your editors may have glossed over for a final edit.

New Cover: The Terminal People

Some of you already know the name of the second book in “The Spooky Chronicles” is called “The Terminal People.” The first chapter of that book is now also included at the end of the first book.

I’ve had more than a few people say, “I don’t like ebooks. Please kill a tree since it’s a renewable resource.” Done! Lulu.com is now the official print-on-demand supplier for The Spooky Chronicles and is available now. It’s $10.00 for the print version as opposed to $4.00 for the ebook, but it really looks nice. It’s available now at Lulu (click “Purchase” on the right side bar) and should appear on Amazon.com by the end of September (and officially on Kindle!)

I have also finished work on the cover for the second book. I previously previewed this on Facebook, but I’m putting it here as well. Enjoy! The second book will be out later this fall, hopefully before Spooky Empire the second week of October in Orlando, Florida.

Why eBooks (and Readers) Aren’t a Bad Thing

I just read a lament from Gris Grimly concerning the loss of his favorite things, “books” by way of example. His concerns were over electronic media and the gatekeepers who could use it to keep from us only what they wish for the citizenry to see. A fine point, but not the only point of view.

While I understand the text of this rant in principle, it needs to be framed in context. When the spoken word of storytellers was written down and people started learning to read, there were many who likely thought “Those accursed books! If people can read for themselves, why would they listen to me? And the story… it never changes! It cannot be embellished in print! There’s no emotion or flare on a piece of paper! The very idea is inhuman!” Of course, those storytellers have found other mediums because of change.

The Kindle (mention specifically) is no exception; while the makers and supporters CAN limit our experience, people who had no chance of ever being known due to the gatekeepers (editors, publishing houses, censors) can now be read in the way MP3s allowed unsigned bands to be heard (and in both cases, possibly successful). If Kindle won’t allow people to get what they want in the way they want it, people will move on to something else that can (iPads can load PDFs into iBooks as can many other readers such as the Nook). None of us want anything we love to change from the way we remember loving it (people included), but, unfortunately, everything does. You can ignore it or embrace it, but you can’t stop it. Just trust that people will do what they must.

New Cover for “The Spooky Chronicles: The Crooked Man”

The first book of “The Spooky Chroncicles” called “The Crooked Man” is available now for $3.99 at Smashwords.com for whatever eBook reader you have (Kindle, iBooks, Nook, Kobo, Sony, PDF) or even just on your computer.

Here’s the new cover replacing the original. I like to call it “Beneath the Hoodie” or “Spooky in the Stacks.” I love the front of the book shop with the hooded kid (it will continue to be on the Spooky Chronicles website), but happy, creepy, little dead boy inside the bookshop pretty much says everything I wanted to about introducing this character. If you’d like to see the full-size version, click the image or click here to go to the book page on Smashwords.

If you haven’t seen it yet, click and watch the series ebook trailer.

Also check out SpookyChronicles.com for all things Spooky.

MovieCrypt.com Relaunch – Recent Movie Reviews, Reaper Rants

I got a bit tired of single-handedly doing all the website maintenance (especially when it came to my old host’s limited databases and bandwidth) and it was slowing down my ability to post new content as quickly as I wanted to. So, I instead went with a proven winner: WordPress.com. My most recent site builds were already using their open source software anyway, so it was a simple matter to export everything over to them (their integrated socially networked comments and sharing tools don’t suck, either). Enjoy!

A horror lover’s reviews of all genres of movies. Hosted by Grim D. Reaper. Click the banner below.

MovieCrypt.com

Anti-Bullying Campaigns Are Useless

I was born in September. My parents divorced when I was in the third grade. I had hay fever as a child. I started wearing glasses in junior high.

Oh, and I was bullied, too.

When I started kindergarten, I was only four years old. Since I was judged intellectually competent to start school early, I didn’t have to wait until I turned five a year later. Had I waited, I would have been physically ahead of my classmates in the same grade, but it didn’t work out that way. This, too, wouldn’t have been an issue by itself since I started school with everyone at the same time, but there’s more.

My parents got a divorce when I was in the third grade. My mother won custody and moved us to a new town without a dad. At some point, the local county school system decided that I needed “special disciplinary instruction” because I might have somehow been traumatized by the divorce. My new third grade teacher was “certified” (I found out later she was “certifiable”) to help in these areas, and so I was placed in her class. As an outgoing and encouraged child, I performed as I always had done and did things the way we did them in my old school. Yet now the teacher publicly called me out on every mistake (which I can only assume was to alter my behavior through peer pressure) and on things I didn’t even know were wrong, even yelling at me sometimes in front of all the students who had just met me. It didn’t take the bullies long to figure out the teacher had decided I was a problemed youth (even though she had created the situation), and as a result, I socially withdrew to stay out of trouble. Like sharks that turn on one of their own when they noticed it’s wounded, the mob mentality is you’re either with us or with them (and no one wants to be “them”), so the feeding frenzy began.

Next slide, please.

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