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Writing Update – January 29, 2024

January 29, 2024 By Lou

We’re already a month into the new year? Madness. I don’t understand how these writing updates continue to sneak up on me. It’s been a crazy opening month behind the writing desk. Let’s get to the writing update!

Writing Update

The Missing

I opened the year by reviewing the next release in the DSA series. The first proof was gorgeous, except for one glaring error. The cover read Season ONE, not Season Two…

How I never noticed that when I was showing it off six months ago is astounding, but it’s all fixed now. Thank goodness I went ahead with the early proof.

Other than the occasional tweak, this one was pretty rock-solid from the final edit. I love introducing new elements to the world of the DSA, and the new character of Lizzy Doyle was a lot of fun to write.

The Missing arrives March 13th, and the pre-order is now up on Amazon if you want to snag your digital copy for only $0.99.

This one deviates from the path a little bit. I hope people enjoy the story, since it has some strong Ben-Morgan scenes, but I am worried about backlash akin to The Bridge in Season One. (Must be a curse of the Book 3’s…)

Cracked Chrysalis

I typically wait until closer to release to do my final checks on a book. Something about Cracked Chrysalis was hanging over me lately, though. The past two weeks I’ve been working to clean up the narrative and expand certain sections.

This book is so important to the overall arc of the series. I really need it to shine. I’m not saying every book isn’t key, they all carry their moments, but this one really ramps up the danger for the team. Multiple threats from the past collide and it pays off threads that date all the way back to The Clearing in big ways.

Suffice it to say, I’m incredibly pleased with how the pass went. The book is going to knock your socks off. And where things go from here?

Oh, boy. The future is looking dicey for the DSA…

 

Army in the Obelisk

More review for the month. Are you sensing a pattern?

I did a final pass on this standalone Greystone adventure so I could finally format the paperback edition. I love this story. There are so many touchstones to the main series, yet it is a thoroughly fun read from start to finish.

Again, I made some minor tweaks. A few of the action scenes needed to be beefed up, but overall this was really fulfilling to put together. The twelve-part structure offered a nice challenge from a storytelling perspective which is always something I enjoy tackling.

I’m closing in on how this book is going to come your way. Answers will be arriving by the end of February. (I hope…)

Errant Knight

Greystone 7 is DONE! The final edit (for now) is complete. Usually by this point in the process I am screaming at the screen, wanting nothing more than to be done with the book. I typically hate everything on the page by the final edit. Nothing feels right and I question every decision made throughout the entire process.

For some reason, Alpha and Omega and Errant Knight haven’t gone in that direction. I absolutely love both books. They might be my strongest ever, in fact. I’m as shocked as everyone else. Positivity after months of ripping entire scenes apart and praying for narrative cohesiveness is a rarity for me. (I’m taking it as my growing maturity with the process, but we all know that’s not true.)

Hopefully the rest of the series goes as smoothly.

Phew. That was a busy month for the writing update. I should take some time off… HA!

What’s next?

Lots of scripting coming my way over the next few months. The end of Greystone. DSA Season Three. Who knows what else…

Scripting should allow me more time for in-person events as well as figuring things out on the digital front. We’ll see.

Thanks for reading!

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Filed Under: Writing

New Year, New Goals

January 15, 2024 By Lou

Last year was a great new beginning for me in the writing business. New releases coupled with a revival of the old blog and newsletter really helped me get back to where I was before the world imploded. For 2024, I wanted to push forward and build bigger on a number of fronts, so I have some new goals with this brand-new year.

New Goals

2023 was a year of frustration on the writing front for me. The number of distractions continued to grow to the point where I kept pushing back deadlines and reconsidering my next release rather than digging in with the zeal I typically enjoy.

I took that into account when planning out my schedule for 2024. As of this writing, my releases are set through the end of 2025. Instead of pushing ahead and getting aggravated at life forcing itself in at every turn, I’m easing into what comes next.

There is plenty to keep me busy:

  • Greystone scripts for Book 9 and Book 10.
  • DSA Season Three scripts.

That’s the start. By the end of the year, more drafts will be set (Greystone Book 8 and DSA 3.1, specifically), but rather than fight against the hurricane (the two-year-old is currently screaming at me through the baby monitor to illustrate this point nicely), one of my main new goals is to find different ways to grow my readership.

New Tactics

The marketplace for books continues to evolve with each passing year. If you had asked me five years ago if ads were a necessity to put eyes on your book, I would have said… probably, but not totally necessary. There were still categories and keywords to play with to promote awareness of your title online.

Not anymore.

Amazon is pretty much ad central now. Facebook, Bookbub, and so many more are firmly on the ad bandwagon, squeezing out people like me with limited to no ad budget. It’s a sad state of affairs, but it doesn’t have to be the only avenue of success.

In-person events

In-person events are a huge part in building an audience. I attended close to a dozen shows last year. This time around, I’m hoping to be a regular presence in a few local marketplaces while also expanding my reach to some new venues as the year goes on. I dread these events from a social anxiety standpoint but love them for the chance to share the books with new and interesting people.

Amazon Ads for DSA

Beyond in-person events, I am going to enter the ad machine on Amazon. I know, I know. Then they win! However, I think it has its place when trying to cultivate a readership. So, there will be some fun re-learning how to do all that business.

Newsletter Building

Building the newsletter is priority number one. Having people getting my regular updates is absolutely critical to any long-term success in this business. That’s where my focus will be for 2024, with a constant stream of releases throughout the year to help garner attention.

Exclusive Content

To build it and make the newsletter sustainable, I am working to create a subscription model for new releases and exclusive content. You’ll be hearing more about this in the coming months, including where to find it since Substack is no longer an option, in my opinion. I hope you find the prospect as intriguing as I do. A new Greystone adventure will premiere through this model, as will Coventry by the end of 2024, if I plan things right.

Excited? Terrified? Join the club. Either way, 2024 is going to be a year to remember.

Happy reading.

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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: 2024 writing, new goals, writing goals

Year End Wrap-Up!

December 14, 2023 By Lou

This has been a crazy year. After almost three years of keeping my head down and simply plugging away on the writing side of things, I decided it was time to get back to publishing. I knew it would be challenging with a two-year-old at home, but pushing back my release schedule felt more like fear than anything else.

A round of thanks.

That’s right. None of this matters without you here to read the books, so a very deep and heartfelt thank you for your continued support. There have been a number of emails and messages sent my way about what the books have meant to you, and it always makes my day to hear that. Sometimes I am literally banging my head against the wall, trying to coax the words out of me, when I will receive a missive from a reader that changes my whole mindset.

It’s a tough gig, living in these worlds alone for so long, banging out pages in solitude. Any time someone sends me a note of encouragement or their own thanks for something I’ve written, it does make the sacrifices worth it.

So again, thank you. For reading. For writing. For being with me on this insane journey. Thank you.

My convention friends.

Not everything is done in solitude, and I can’t tell you what it has meant to be back at conventions this year. I’m not the most open person in the world, so there are a lot of nerves involved in preparing to sell myself directly to potential readers.

I appreciate everyone who came up to my table and chatted with me about the books. It was a pleasure to meet with you, to hear what you’ve been enjoying at the different cons, and to hopefully start a connection that will last for many years to come.

Next year, I’m hoping to hit up a few new venues, while maintaining a presence at my favorite cons. Be sure to say hello!

DSA Season Two and beyond.

I came into 2023 with a plan to get DSA back on track. I hated the gap between seasons, though I realize it was completely out of my control with the world imploding.

Getting The Wellspring and Foundations released was a huge undertaking but so satisfying in the end. The launches have been fantastic (nerves and all) and the feedback truly gratifying.

The rest of the season is heading your way in 2024.

What comes after that has been bouncing around a bit over the course of this year. Despite the help I’ve received on the homefront, my writing time has been more limited than I’d like. I’m hoping to change how I put books together, tweak my process in certain ways, to ramp up production on a few fronts. There are some cool new projects on the horizon, including a new format that I’m really excited to explore.

Will there be more Greystone after DSA Season Two? Absolutely. Whether or not I keep plugging away to the end of the story is a question that still needs to be answered, though.

To many happy returns.

Here’s to a happy holiday season for you and your loved ones.

2023 was a great way to get back into the swing of things. I’m hopeful for an even better 2024.

Take care and talk soon.

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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: conventions, DSA, Greystone, year-end wrap up

Writing Update – November 27, 2023

November 27, 2023 By Lou

How are we already at the end of November? It’s not possible to consider 2024 is this close to a reality. Thanks for joining me on another writing update where I didn’t finish half of what I was hoping to.

Here we go.

Writing Update

Greystone 7

The draft for Errant Knight is DONE. I finished at the start of the month, hoping to jump right into the edit. Then life crashed hard. No-school November is a terrible month for me work-wise. I love my kids to death, but holy hell do they need to have a full week of school!

Anyway, the draft is fantastic. Right up there with some of my favorite Soriya/Loren adventures of the past. I’m going to read through it this week and start the cleanup process. Hoping to close out the book by the end of the year, which would be the perfect present to wrap up 2023.

Something New for the Writing Update?

Wait. You didn’t have time to jump into your edit, but you started work on a new series?

Yeah. My stupid brain disobeyed orders yet again. Finishing up Errant Knight somehow opened the floodgates in this wacky head of mine. I woke up out of a dead sleep with a fully developed series I’ve been calling Covenant for the moment. It’s urban fantasy fun and I’ve already scripted the first short story–a Christmas Adventure of all things–that I’m hoping to draft for next holiday season. It has a ton of potential, so I did take a few days to flesh out the world, including two great supporting characters and an origin story for our hero. It’s going to be a blast to build out this series when I can.

Where do we go from here?

Once Errant Knight is set, my publishing schedule is planned out through 2025, if you can believe that. I’ve been going back and forth with myself–because who else would put up with me at this point–about what to work on next. The smart move, and the initial plan, was to start Greystone 8 immediately so I can close out the series by the end of 2024.

Then I started reading the proofs for DSA Season Two and the next books started filtering through my thoughts. Ben and Morgan keep whispering in my ear for the next chunk of their tale to be told.

Of course, so are Nate and Aeris in my sci-fi space opera series, Red Epsilon. I went to Lil-Con in Lockport last weekend and brought Book One of that series. I wanted a refresher on the scripts I finished back in 2021, because I’m dying to live in that world for a little while.

The voices have been getting louder. Should I be worried?

The sky’s the limit for drafting next year to make as many of these books a reality. Whether that means simply drafting and editing later on, or jumping from one series to another, remains to be seen. I’m sure I’ll still be debating it come the first of the year. (Only a month away?! Crap!)

Reading List

All comics again for me lately. It helps me when it comes to dialogue, and the bite-size chunks are a nice escape when I’m drowning in work, or kids, or life in general.

This month has been B.P.R.D. central. Mike Mignola is an unparalleled talent. The level of world-building and the growth of the cast amidst the supernatural threats against them has been a treat to enjoy. I’m in the middle of the Hell on Earth saga and can’t wait to see where things go next. I’d be remiss in not mentioning John Arcudi on the writing side as well as Guy Davis, Tyler Crook, and so many other wonderful artists on the series.

That’s it for the updates in 2023!

Happy reading.

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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: Errant Knight, Greystone, writing update

Spectral Advocate Author Commentary 5

November 6, 2023 By Lou

The Spectral Advocate author commentary continues this week with a look at Megan Daniels, the sinister threat behind the Specter in the novel. Whoops. Guess I should have led with the SPOILER WARNING!

Building the threat of Megan Daniels

Figuring out the villain for a story is one of the pure joys of writing. There are few tasks more gratifying than developing someone multi-faceted, yet truly twisted at heart. With Spectral Advocate, I knew the physical threat would always be the Specter. Nothing would come close to that level of terror.

But I wanted to try anyway.

On a purely psychological level, I wanted Megan Daniels to be a totally sympathetic character who simply goes too far. We’ve all been pushed into a corner, but how often do we push back to the point of, oh, let’s say, murder? (Don’t answer that, you’ll only incriminate yourself!)

Megan has a legit beef with Abigail Winslow/Hunt. She abandoned Megan’s husband the night of his death. If she had been present, they both might be dead, sure, but there was always the chance of their survival as well.

The first interaction

It’s still a favorite scene of mine in the book. Okay, there are quite a few in this one (the comic book store, of course, as well as the battle in Ben’s bedroom, to name a couple) but introducing Megan Daniels was a challenge I enjoyed. She needed to exude innocence and did so by leaning on the widow aspect of her life. She yearns for her husband, but doesn’t come off as needy, simply lonely due to the tragedy of Steven’s death.

I was worried about this scene. The reason was simple: I didn’t have another one with a different potential killer. Everything fell on Megan Daniels, and I was worried people would see right through the chapter and know she was the killer.

Every draft brought with it more desire to layer in red herrings. A boss, a co-worker, a secret lover, yet everything felt like a distraction from the main plot. Her inability to let go of the past mirrored that of both Cal and Ben, which I felt was more crucial to explore than anything else in the novel.

After the usual back and forth with myself, I left it alone and hoped no one saw through to the end too quickly.

Megan Daniels revealed

I’ve listed a couple favorite scenes in the book already, but the end of Chapter Twenty-Three remains one of the best images in the entire season. I still close my eyes and see Megan’s dead eyes staring at Ben and Cal, while pointing toward the door with her husband’s ghost hovering overhead.

“Show our guests out, would you, dear?”

It still brings me chills.

Influences

I might have mentioned this in the past, but of all Peter Jackson’s incredible work on the screen, my favorite film of his remains The Frighteners.

Jeffrey Combs, Michael J. Fox, Jake Busey, Dee Wallace, and so many other incredible talents worked on this movie. Dee Wallace, especially, helped bring Megan Daniels to life in Spectral Advocate. Not so much for the crazed mania she portrayed as Patricia Bradley, but with how attached she remained to Johnny Bartlett. They could not be apart, and that aspect I felt was key for Megan in Spectral Advocate.

It’s a freaking phenomenal movie. I might be the only one on the planet that thinks so. (Or so my wife believes…) You should check it out.

Next:

The never-before-seen bonus story I wrote back in 2015 that delves into Cal Cooper’s visit to Bethesda.

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Filed Under: Commentaries, Spectral Advocate Tagged With: author commentary, DSA, DSA Season One, Spectral Advocate

Spectral Advocate Author Commentary 4

October 30, 2023 By Lou

Welcome back to another look at Spectral Advocate. As with the other author commentary pieces, there will be spoilers so watch out! This time I’m talking about the subplot threads in the book and the constantly changing team dynamics.

Team Dynamics

I’ve always said I like to play with the team when it comes to the DSA. For me, there is nothing more fun than seeing how the main cast handles their interactions with each other and with the randoms they come across. It is infinitely more satisfying to write a Lincoln/Sullivan exchange than yet another briefing from Zac to the entire department, because those types of exchanges don’t occur regularly, so they have to pack a lot of punch.

In my mind, I’ve always viewed the DSA as starring Ben Riley and Morgan Dunleavy. Everyone else is a supporting character behind these two leads. They are my Mulder and Scully. Everything centers around them.

Looking back on Season One, I find it funny to see that, though they might be my leads for the DSA, they really weren’t together a whole helluva lot. My personal memory imagined them together constantly, yet reading through the first season, only Promethean so far has had the two of them as primaries on a case.

It’s weird how the mind remembers things.

This was, of course, by design to some extent. In The Bridge, I needed the cast isolated and dealing with their own problems. Spectral Advocate, though, opened the door for Ben to feed off someone new. (Not to mention someTHING new as discussed last time.) I thought it was important, again, to keep Ben isolated especially in light of Abigail Winslow’s clear deception with the DSA. She was brought in to spy on Ben, but he couldn’t possibly know by whom.

That level of distrust made it easier for him to want to handle things solo.

But what about Morgan?

I’m not going to delve into her sexy time with Zac. (That’s for a different forum.)

Her time tracking down Lincoln, though, is something I thought was very important to develop for the series. Lincoln, since Promethean, has been M.I.A. in his search for the Witness. For me, subplots work best when there are touchstones to the main plot and/or main cast. You’ll see that again during Season Two, Book Three.

Bringing Lincoln and Morgan together again cemented the importance of his search and everything he had learned up to that point. He is carrying this massive weight, knowing what the Witness has seen with the DSA and the threat against them. Instead of questioning that knowledge, Lincoln hangs onto it like a lifeline.

Motivation was the key.

His motivation comes from grief over Ruth’s loss.

Morgan’s comes from somewhere else completely. Her rage at the Witness for Bellbrook puts her at odds with Lincoln immediately, something she never thought possible.

I really wanted to pull at the DSA cast. With each book, I want them questioning everything, even themselves. That’s where the true heart of the series comes from–through these relentless tests and situations no one could possibly understand.

Morgan, blinded by rage for the Witness’ crimes, can’t support Lincoln’s decisions. And Lincoln, lost to grief, can’t see any other way to move forward. The Witness is his only path in his eyes. That separation really sold the tension between them in the junkyard scenes.

Unintended consequences

Every choice needs weight. The scenes developed in these subplots were opportunities to give the cast a chance at redemption and to show the reader why some didn’t take that chance.

Building these moments, layering in the tension and the conflict behind the main plot, are some of my fondest memories from Season One. I wracked my brain with each one, wanting more and more from the characters, and they absolutely delivered.

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Filed Under: Commentaries, Spectral Advocate Tagged With: author commentary, DSA, DSA Season One, Spectral Advocate

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