Saturday, April 12, 2014

Love and the Science Fiction Action Heroine

I'm over at Fantasy Cafe today to take part in the always awesome Women in SFF month! As you might surmise from the title, I'm taking on the subject of romance in Science Fiction and the Devi books in particular. Here's a sample...
"There’s a deeply rooted belief in our culture that falling in love and admitting it makes a person weak. I can understand the logic. Loving makes us deeply vulnerable, and even the euphemisms for it—softer feelings, going mushy, melting for someone—are all in the language of surrender. That’s scary stuff for a character like Devi who is so invested in being strong and invulnerable, and I understand how a reader could view my decision as an author to have Devi succumb to these softer emotions as a betrayal. It doesn’t help that falling in love is also seen as a stereotypically female weakness, making it a double punch to my strong leading lady. So yeah, I get it. I also think it’s wrong."
Fun huh? Go on over and read the whole post! To celebrate, Orbit Books is also giving away a full set of the Paradox trilogy, so head on over for your chance to win, and I really hope you enjoy the post!

- R

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Part 1 of my interview with Elizabeth Moon is up at Orbit!

Soooooo this is where having a publisher is AWESOME. Orbit books set me and my ultimate author heroine Elizabeth Moon to do an interview series together. In between me being like...



I somehow also managed to actually type responses! They make sense and everything!

So if you want to see me and Elizabeth Moon talk some shop, head on over to Orbit's site and read away! Part 2, where we switch seats and I interview her, will be up closer to the April 22nd release of HEAVEN'S QUEEN!

SO EXCITED!!

Monday, March 10, 2014

My interview with Lytherus!

So this weekend was my birthday, and I was so busy drinking and running around and generally trying my best to slow the ever onward march of time that I didn't get a chance to post about the absolutely awesome piece online SFF magazine Lytherus did on HONOR'S KNIGHT!

First off, we have a very nice review of the book itself and, if you'll excuse me putting on my Pretentious Author Cap for a paragraph, I really like it not so much because they liked the book (though don't get me wrong, I'm over the moon that they liked it), but because they really got what I was trying to do with Devi and the multiple levels of information in the books. I can't even count how many hours I spent on this aspect of the story making sure I was keeping the reader guessing just as much as Devi about what was really going on, who her allies were, and who she should trust. Unfortunately, this is the sort of work where, if you do it right, the end result should be invisible, which makes it kind of a hard achievement to brag about. To actually read about it in a review is just amazing and I am so so so happy. Thank you, Lytherus!

There's also a chance to win a copy of HONOR'S KNIGHT for yourself at the bottom, so stop by for that at least! Free stuff!

Finally, I also did an interview with them about the Devi series and writing in general, and the questions were awesome. It's generally spoiler free, so if you're hungry for inside information about the Paradox books and what's in store for Devi, head on over!

Thank you and enjoy!

- R

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

I'm everywhere today!!

First up, happy book birthday to HONOR'S KNIGHT, which is out today!!


I don't think it's spoiling anything to say Devi has a rough time of it this go round. Gotta have lots of juicy problems to shoot for the third and final book, HEAVEN'S QUEEN, coming April 22, 2014!

To celebrate the launch, I've written a piece for Orbit about why powered armor is the best, so if you're here for real content, go check it out!!

And finally, I'm a guest at IndieReCon this week. I've got a new post for them called "Words Are Cheap" about what I've learned since writing my "How I Went From Writing 2,000 Words a Day to 10,000 Words a Day"post in 2011.I'm also doing a live chat on their site at 5:15 EST today. It's a good time and it's free, so I hope you'll drop by and say hello!

Whew, okay, I think that's enough crazy for one day. Thank you everyone for helping me make the launch of HONOR'S KNIGHT such an awesome success. And if you enjoyed the book, please consider leaving a review! They really really REALLY help :D

Thank you everyone, and I hope your Tuesday is as awesome as mine!

- R

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Grand Prize Giveaway!

Oh, what a crazy seven days this has been, but now, at last, we've come to grand finale. Time to announce the grand prize winner. Drum roll, please...


And the official winner of the HONOR'S KNIGHT raffle is... Jessi! WOOOO!!!!

Jessi! You win signed copies of both FORTUNE'S PAWN and HONOR'S KNIGHT plus a $50 Amazon.com gift card! HOORAY! Please contact me with your address and how you'd like the books made out and I shall send your prize post haste!

And with that, our raffle is over! Thank you to everyone who helped me spread the word about Devi. You have all be a giant help and I couldn't do any of this without you. Seriously. Without readers, I have no job. I OWE YOU MY LIFE... O__O

*Ahem* well, thank you again for everything and congratulations to all the winners! I am dedicating tomorrow to mailing books (assuming the mail is still working what with this ice storm). Weather permitting, all prizes will be mailed tomorrow. Thank you again, and I hope you love HONOR'S KNIGHT!!


Day 7 Winner and Grand Prize Hype!

Okay, I TOTALLY BLANKED and didn't post a winner yesterday. I'm really sorry, and without further ado, Monday's winner is....Carl V. Anderson!!! Come on down!!



Thank you so much for helping promo this book! Please contact me with your address and how you'd like the book made out.

And with that, this is our FINAL DAY! I'll be announcing the grand prize winner tonight (for reals this time), and it's anyone's game. Keep spreading the word about HONOR'S KNIGHT and Devi in general and posting about it in the comments on the original post and I'll keep tallying your entries!

Again, thank you everyone for helping me launch this book! Sometimes book promo can feel like so much shouting into the void, and I want you to know that I really, really appreciate all your help. I couldn't do this without you!

See ya'll tonight!!

- Rachel

Thursday, January 23, 2014

FAQ: Managing Your Inner Editor

Continuing my Frequently Asked Questions series, here's another question I hear all the time (including yesterday on Twitter!): how do I write through my Inner Editor? How do I protect my creativity and output from that constant nagging feeling that I'm doing this wrong, that I'm not good enough and never will be?

This is a complicated issue, and one that will never be fully resolved, because feelings of insecurity and inadequacy are just part of being a writer (or an artist, or a human). The entire practice of writing your thoughts out and then putting them up not just to be read, but to be judged, is nerve wracking for everyone (and anyone who claims they're not anxious when their book goes out for the first time is either enlightened or a liar). But while these insecurities and fears are universal and inevitable, they don't have to rule your life. They can't, or else you'll never finish anything. So, here's how I deal with my "Inner Editor," hopefully it will also be helpful to you.

Let's start with some terminology. Though I use it myself because it's the accepted label for the phenomenon, I actually take great umbrage to the term "Inner Editor." An editor is someone who criticizes your book in order to help you improve it. They are on your side. What we're talking about here is really more like your Inner Amazon Reviewer. And not one of the good ones either, but the truly toxic, anonymous, nitpicking trolls who tear books down for the thrill of it.

That's how I think of the voice in my head, not as an editor or a critic or anyone with actual authority on the subject, but as a troll. I respect my editors and critics, I value their input, but trolls have nothing to offer the conversation, and ninety nine times out of a hundred, neither does the nagging voice in your head.

This isn't to say you should ignore potential problems you notice while writing. You do, however, have to remember to be cognoscente of the fact that not all issues are worthy of action. "My heroine needs to make more choices so she doesn't end up a passenger in her own story" is a valid criticism that deserves consideration. "Vampires are stupid, only stupid people write about vampires" is not. Neither is "[Insert famous author here] never used that word," or "No one will ever want to read this."

As with pretty much everything in writing ever, the key to managing your inner Amazon troll is mindfulness and attention. If you're writing or editing and you're just constantly down on yourself about what you're producing, stop a second and ask, why? Why am I being so mean to myself? Are these valid criticisms, or am I just afraid and taking it out on my work? And remember, it's perfectly normal and okay to be afraid. The act of writing something you're going to ask people to read means opening yourself up to rejection, and everyone is afraid of rejection. But you do need to recognize that fear for what it is when it's clouding your judgment of your work. You also need to realize that your viewpoint here probably won't be objective, so I highly recommend having a trusted critique partner (I use my husband) who can look at your story and tell you if it actually sucks or if you're just being ridiculous.

The most important thing to remember in all of this is that no story is perfect, or is going to please all people. Even The Last Unicorn has 1 star reviews (I HAVE NOTHING IN COMMON WITH THOSE PEOPLE). No matter what you write, someone's going to hate it, and that's okay, because someone else will love it beyond reason. All you can do is write the best book you can, and if it flops or falls apart, make the next one better, and never ever make long term decisions ("I'll never write again") off short term freakouts. Because at the end of the day, writing is a vocation, not a one time effort, and the more you write and submit and publish and deal with rejection, the less frightening the process becomes.

So while you'll probably never be truly rid of your inner troll, your ability to tell it to STFU will increase exponentially, as will your ability to sort through the negative noise to find the important things your real inner editor is trying to tell you, the actual problems you need to fix to make your book better, and that is the voice you should be listening to.

Good luck with your writing and I hope this helps!

Monday, January 6, 2014

FAQ: To blog or not to blog

First up, OMG Fortune's Pawn did so well as the Kindle Daily Deal yesterday! Thank you everyone for helping to spread the word and make it a success!! Now, back to our regularly scheduled blog...

Back in November (before my life went crazy. Ahhhh, those innocent days!) I had a ton of fun doing my annual National Novel Writing Month Q&A thread on the Fantasy forums. There were a lot of good questions, but a few in particular came up over and over again. I was very happy with my answers, but these days you have to dig through 13 pages of forum posts to find them, and no one likes that. I still want to get the info out there, though, because these are clearly the issues that weigh on people's minds! So to preserve the information I put out, I'm going to be doing a series of posts here on my own blog answering these Frequently Asked Questions, starting with the single most popular query:

Do I need a strong social media presence as an author?

Agent blogs must really be pushing this, because people were obsessed with this question! I can see the anxiety. I mean, writing a book and trying to sell it is a daunting challenge already, but then be told you have to go out and gather a huge herd followers on Facebook/Twitter/Tumblr/Instagram/Goodreads/etc and maintain a popular blog/website? That's a lot of pressure.

At this point, I feel the need to reiterate that I'm not an agent and I haven't been a new author since 2010, but I do have a little experience with the author side of this whole "publish books" thing, and I'm just going come out and say that I think people are putting too much weight on this as a requirement. 

When you're trying to convince someone to take a chance on your book, be it an agent, publisher, or the general reading public, it's nice to be able to say "oh, and I also have 500,000 Twitter followers and get 1000 comments on every blog post." Preexisting popularity is a good sign that you've got something to offer. It makes you seem less like a risk and more like a success bandwagon (with a built in potential audience) everyone wants to ride. But while it's undoubtedly much easier to get people on board if you're already a star, none of this changes the fact that you still have to have something amazing to give them once they get there.

As much as publishing has changed over the last few years, one core fact remains as true as it ever was: the book is everything. An new author with no web presence and an amazing book will beat a new author with a huge social media network and a lousy book every single time. That said, of course, people with huge networks usually have all those followers precisely because they're entertaining and amazing (see The Bloggess and Hyperbole and a Half as two fantastic examples), but the impressive social media reach is the effect, not the cause. They became popular because they created something other people wanted to read, not the other way around.

So to anyone out there wringing their hands over the idea that a giant social media network is somehow vital to being a successful author, don't. I'm not saying you should ignore social media. You need to have a website up with basic information no matter what, and having professional accounts on the major social network sites you enjoy is also a good idea. This is your business front, the professional face you show to the world since writers don't have shop windows. (It's also a good way for potential agents/publishers to see whether or not you're crazy.) 

That said, no one expects you to have a huge social media reach yet. They'd love if you did, of course, but it's hardly mandatory. A great blog/Pinterest/Instagram account is always a bonus, even if it's not writing related. So if you already have a social media platform you enjoy, go for it! But if the idea of blogging regularly makes you break out in hives, don't worry about it. No one wants to read a blog where every post is "Sorry I took so long to blog," anyway. To get started as an author, all you need is a clean, sane, professional presence on the web and a great book, and you can guess which of those is the most important.

I hope that helps relieve some anxieties! Again, this is just my opinion, so take it with a grain of salt. Still, I've yet to meet anyone in publishing who would turn away a book they loved because the author failed to meet the required number of Facebook friends. Social media presence can be built later, but a good book is priceless. Never let the hype take your eyes off the prize: writing a book everyone will want to read.

Happy writing!
- Rachel

Friday, January 3, 2014

2014 - The final Paradox novels and my new series!

Well, after a long and traumatic December, things have finally settled down here at the Aaron/Bach writing factory, which is great because 2014 is shaping up to be a huge year for new stuff!

First up, we've got the final two books of my SF series! After kicking things off with a bang in FORTUNE'S PAWN, Devi Morris's tour of destruction continues in HONOR'S KNIGHT (Feb 25, 2014) and HEAVEN'S QUEEN (April 22, 2014). I can't say how happy I am that Orbit's releasing these books so close together! I wrote the series to be one continuous story, and I absolutely can not wait for you guys to read the thrilling conclusion. Seriously, the final half of HEAVEN'S QUEEN is the most intense thing I've ever written. SO! EXCITED!

In other thrilling news, I'm pleased to announce that FORTUNE'S PAWN will be the Amazon Daily Deal on January 5 (this Sunday!). So if you haven't read the book yourself or if you have, and you know someone who you think would like it, this is your chance to pick up the FP ebook for only $1.99! That's a steal! I'll be making tons of announcements the day of, of course, but this is your official heads up!

But exciting as all of that is, it's not what I'm most excited about. That honor is saved for what comes next...MY NEW SERIES!! 


As the youngest dragon in the Heartstriker clan, Julius survives by a simple code: keep quiet, don’t cause trouble, and stay out of the way of bigger dragons. But this meek behavior doesn't cut it in a family of ambitious magical predators, and his mother, Bethesda the Heartstriker, has reached the end of her patience.

Now, trapped as a human and banished to the DFZ--a vertical metropolis built on the ruins of Old Detroit--Julius has one month to prove to his mother that he can be a proper, ruthless dragon or lose his true shape forever. But in a city of modern mages and vengeful spirits where dragons are considered monsters to be exterminated, he’s going to need some serious help to survive this test.

He only hopes that humans are more trustworthy than dragons...

Remember back when I was talking about writing a dragon book? Well, here it is: a new near future UF series about dragons and magic and general awesomeness coming in JULY 2014 from, well, me actually! I will be self publishing this new series this July.

"Hold up, Rachel," you might say. "Why the sudden jump to self publishing? Did your editor reject this book or something?"

Not at all! I actually specifically wrote this book for self publication. I decided to go this route for several reasons, many of which you've heard before (wanting more control over the publication process, better royalty rates, getting to pick my own cover, etc.), but the main reason I decided to self publish was a purely Rachel problem. See, I write fast. Like, really fast. And the cold hard truth is that New York simply cannot buy my books as quickly as I can write them.

Self publishing provided me with a ready solution to this conundrum, and I feel that this new series is the perfect candidate for this grand experiment. Nice Dragons Finish Last is very much like my Eli books in tone, but with a modern twist and an expansive new world. I've also invested a great deal of my own time and money into making sure these new books are edited and proofed to the standard of my NY published books.

Long story short, I think you're really going to like it! I'll be posting more details (and sample chapters) as we get closer to the July pub date. As always, thank you thank you thank you for reading, and I hope you're ready for something awesome in 2014!

Yours,
Rachel

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Announcements and So Forth

Sorry for the longer than usual radio silence, peeps, but we've had a bit of an emergency here at Casa de Aaron-Bach. My 3-year-old son got an infection in his leg that required racing to Atlanta for surgery and a lengthy stay at the pediatric hospital. As you can see, he was most displeased.

When I write "death glare" in my books, this is what I mean.
He's getting better now, but things were very scary there over the weekend. We're hoping to be home before Christmas, but it all depends. I do think I've aged 20 years over the past 5 days, though. Thank goodness we have such a supportive family who lives near by!

Because of all this drama, I haven't gotten to say how amazingly grateful I am to everyone who helped make FORTUNE'S PAWN such a huge success! With the exception of SPIRIT'S END, this has been my best book launch ever, and I owe it all to you guys. Thank you so much to everyone who bought and reviewed the book. You have given me the best Christmas present ever!!

And just a reminder to everyone I left hanging with FORTUNE'S PAWN's admittedly tense ending: the next Paradox novel, HONOR'S KNIGHT, comes out February 25, 2014! That's only 2 months from now! I'll be posting an excerpt and hopefully announcing my new new series next month (yes, another new series! What? I write fast :D). 

In the meanwhile, I hope you have a great holiday and that everyone in your family is healthy. Seriously, as my son can tell you, it sucks to be in a hospital at Christmas. Much love to you and yours, and I'll be back at the end of the month to do a year's end wrap up! 

<3s div="" forever="">
Rachel