Wednesday, May 30, 2012

zombies

Still at work on the fantasy novel. About 67K words/217 pages in, thinking the first draft will finish at 100K words/320 pages--so I'm guessing I'm 2/3 done with the first draft. Hope to finish by mid August, then let it rest for a few months before revision.

Already imagining the next project. I'm thinking zombie apocalypse. Lurchers, not runners. Zombie condition provoked by stimulant-use to deal with chronic overwork amongst upwardly bound young professionals--tainted caffeine pills, or energy drinks, or something. So: yuppie zombies. Looking forward to a chance to splatter some yuppies.

The two novelettes I've currently got up on Kindle both have zombie-elements, though neither is a classic zombie-style story. The idea of dead or brain-dead people cursed to continue walking the earth, unable to rest, has deep resonance for me. And not just for me. Lots of people are fascinated by zombies.

Lots of horror ideas relate to zombies, or un-death, too. Vampires are sort of like zombies. Robots can also be like zombies--moving and acting without life.

Recently, in the news, a story of zombie-like behavior in our world. Horrific, scary stuff.



Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Grant Morrison and uninhibited imagination

About a month ago I put up a post about a book I like called Writers on Comics Scriptwriting. The book is a collection of interviews with people who write for comics, and it brings together perspectives from a lot of really great writers. One of the most entertaining interviews in the book is Grant Morrison's, who wrote The Invisibles and We3 and All-Star Superman. Like the other writers, Morrison's got a lot of useful info about the peculiarities of writing for the comic book medium, the challenges and rewards of working with artists, etc., but the interview gets really interesting when he starts talking about how he was abducted by aliens, how he uses the comics he creates as magic sigils to affect his real life, and other far out stuff like that. The guys an interesting character, to be sure.

He's so interesting, in fact, that some guys made a movie about him called Talking With Gods. Here's the trailer.



I watched the movie a few weeks back (you can watch it free on Hulu), and then I checked a whole bunch of his comics out from the library, and I've been reading Grant Morrison like crazy since then.

Not all of his stuff is perfect, but at his best Morrison's stories are exhilarating and intriguing and--to put it plainly--a whole lot of fun. Probably the work I liked best was All-Star Superman, which is all the more significant because I normally am not interested in the Superman character at all--he's just too boring-ly perfect and omnipotent to interest me. Morrison's story, though, manages to take the omnipotent, uber-grand scale of Superman, and frame a story to meet those dimensions. What I mean is: Morrison deals with Superman as an archetype, as an idea more than a person. The world Superman exists in, consequently, is a fantasy world, a place to explore ideas about our reality--and about the values and perspectives we develop to help us deal with that reality--without attempting to recreate something that feels authentically real. The story becomes a parable, but a parable of epic scale. And, partly because of that, Morrison captures some of the wonder and optimism we feel as kids, but he does it with a story that has no taint of immaturity.

Reading All-Star Superman, and watching the Grant Morrison movie, has helped remind me of how much fun it can be to just dream big dreams, to let my imagination run wild. It's easy to feel obligated to write stories that try to stay true to reality, but that can be inhibiting, too. Why not go all in for fantasy? There's joy to be found there, sometimes.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

free download days

I'm not sure if it's solely due to the day of the week, but last Wednesdays free-downloads of The ElectroLive Murders only reached 23 in number, which is less than ten percent of the download numbers from the Friday and Saturday before. Maybe putting it that close to the first day hurt the numbers, too.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

update: still ain't paid

Last month, after finally making some sales on the Kindle titles I've got up, I finally reached the sum of $10, which means I've finally earned enough to get paid. Unfortunately, Amazon is no longer issuing paper checks for any amount less than $100, so in order to receive my earnings I'll have to give them direct access to my bank account for a transfer. And then it'll take 60 additional days before their system disburses on the monies earned earned thus far.

I haven't entered my bank info onto their system yet, though I probably will despite my unease with having one more hackable place with my private information on it. Or maybe I'll just keep waiting, and hope that in another couple of years I'll actually reach the $100 mark, and be able to request a paper check.

I'm not overly cynical about any of this, though. I've had stories and poems published by more than a half-dozen other groups, and haven't seen money from any of them either. Obviously, I know that writing isn't the best way to use your energy if making money is the goal.

But I do wonder how much money Amazon has made through selling titles on Kindle, and never had to pay any portion of it out, either because the author never reached $10, or wasn't willing to add account info to the Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing site. I've heard that over a million titles have been published on the Kindle. If even 10% of those titles never sell enough copies to earn $10 (and I bet the percentage of sub-$10 sellers is a lot higher than that), that's 100,000 titles that have earned money that Amazon gets to keep all for itself.

Other news: despite having 350 copies of ElectroLive Murders downloaded during last week's two free days, the end result has been just one review and 10 additional sales. I've also logged 2 sales of Cool Blue since that drive, so possibly those are the result of people wanting more after having read ElectroLive, but in the end it hasn't started the snowball rolling downhill after all.

I figured I'd put ElectroLive up for free again today, to see how it'd do on a Wednesday. We're 75% done with the day, and there've been less than a dozen downloads so far.

Oh well. None of this is a particularly big surprise, and none of it will put a significant damper on my mood. I'm used to it.