WHC 2011

Instead of a day-by-day breakdown of Austin’s World Horror Convention like many others write, I’m just going with a list of highlights and random thoughts.

— This con felt like four full days.  Usually the time goes by so fast, it feels like one day rather than several.  By Sunday afternoon I was ready to get home.  Doesn’t mean the con was bad, ’cause it wasn’t, but I did feel like I got my money’s worth.

— The plane flights were quieter than ever before.  I noticed as many e-readers as paperback books, and not one hardcover being read by other passengers.  I also didn’t see a single newspaper.  Everyone spent the flight on their iPods and Blackberries or other electronic devices.  Usually strangers strike up conversation with their seat mates; this time there was silence.  There has been a technological shift in the public consciousness, and nowhere is that more stark than at an airport.

— I was the only person still using a disposable camera, which made me feel borderline Amish.  Everyone else had moved to digital.  While I have a digital camera, I generally don’t take it with me on trips because I don’t want to risk losing it/scratching it/dropping it, etc.  After seeing the difference between the digital prints and the film ones, I’ll never use film again. 

—  Seeing old friends and meeting new ones.  This is true for every con, and I won’t name names because there’s no way to remember them all and I’ll end up leaving some out.  You know who you are.

— I really enjoyed the Jack Ketchum grandmaster speech.  Dallas read an emotional story then gave a great speech.  Plus, a Powerpoint presentation.

— Glad to have met Joe Lansdale and his family.  His public reading was fantastic and kept the audience in stitches.

— Shooting the breeze with Simon Clark about mythology and Peter Straub about publishing.  Talking with them gave me a couple story ideas.

— At the airport heading home I bumped into artist GoH Vincent Chong.  We were on the same flight to Dallas, so we talked at length while the plane boarded.  I had a lot of art questions for him, and he had a lot of writing questions for me.  That was an enjoyable end to the weekend.

— Overall I thought the con organizers outdid themselves.  The events, panels and guests were top-notch.

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WHC Photos

Here’s an assortment of pictures from over the weekend.  I’ll have a full account of the con in the near future.

F. Paul Wilson

With Weston Ochse

With Michael Kelly

With Stuart Young

Joe Hill and I (in mid-blink)

Ed Kurtz, Jack Ketchum, Sandra Kasturi, Joe Wight

With Simon Clark

With Joe Lansdale

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Booksigning 5/7

I’m attending the author fair at Hudson Library (8012 Library Rd.) this weekend, on Saturday (May 7) from one to three in the afternoon.  I’ll have copies of my books to sign and sell, so drop by and introduce yourself.  Then you can stop off at your local comic shop on the way home, because the first Saturday in May is also known nationally as Free Comic Book Day.

The two-part season opener of Doctor Who was great, a tonal shift from the rest of the series.  Now that BBC America is airing them same-day as in Britain, I no longer have to watch leaked copies on the Internet.  My favorite moment in the episode came when the Doctor dropped off River Song at her jail cell, the subtext being it was the end of their date.  I like when the Doctor gets flustered.

My predictions were wrong, it seems, and the episode had loose ends that I assume will be resolved throughout the rest of the season.  I look forward to finding out whether the Silents truly have been defeated, who the little girl in the spacesuit was and if the Doctor can rewrite time so he isn’t murdered.

Also keep an eye out for next Friday; I have something planned for the day.

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Back from Texas

I welcome any new visitors from WHC who may be dropping by for the first time.  I saw many old friends and met a lot of new faces over the weekend (including a deluge of Brits this year).  Feel free to poke around the site or get in touch.  I’ll have a more detailed report later this week, plus photos, but first I need to sleep and decompress.

And anyone who wants to be added to my preorder list for The Shadow Wolves, just drop me a line at jaredsandman@writeme.com and I’ll be happy to do that.  It should go on sale in July.

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Innacurate Royalties

Sci-fi writer Kathy Rusch had an interesting post last week about Big Six publishers possibly underreporting e-book figures.  Read it here:  http://kriswrites.com/2011/04/13/the-business-rusch-royalty-statements/.  This week she has a follow-up with reaction from other writers and literary agents.  See here:  http://kriswrites.com/2011/04/20/the-business-rusch-royalty-statements-update/

Seems e-book discrepancies don’t fall within the margin of error, as writers who have both indie and traditional books find their indie titles outselling the Big Six ten-to-one.  If you see similar potential errors in your latest royalty statement, contact the professional writers’ organization of your genre.

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Update

It’s been a few weeks since I last posted because I’ve been busy with my forthcoming fourth novel, The Shadow Wolves.  I’ll have the synopsis and cover posted shortly, so look for that.  I’m in the proofing stage now, which means it’ll go on sale this summer.  If you like novels about werewolves, this’ll be one book worth snagging.

Next week I’m attending the World Horror Convention in Austin, TX.  If you can make it, drop by and I’ll be happy to sign some books — they don’t even have to be mine.  I’m sure there will be photos to post afterward.

Keep checking back ’cause I’m working hard behind the scenes and have something exciting lined up for the months of July and August.  Details to follow.

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Doctor Spec

The new Doctor Who trailer went live earlier today.  And the first one in case you missed it. 

I’m going to take another guess at River’s identity, at least pertaining to how she and the Doctor first meet.  The Doctor’s taken prisoner (hence the long beard in the trailer) and River’s his “handler” while he’s held hostage at Area 51 and forced to aid America in its Space Race.  She helps him escape, naturally.  There’s a line in “The Pandorica Opens” when she says something like, “Oh Doctor, why did I ever let you out?”  I think that’s the connection. 

And in the new trailer, the Doctor’s unnamed nemesis says, “I’ve killed hundreds of Time Lords.”  I still say this points to the Valeyard.  He is the Doctor after all, and we know the Doctor has killed ”all the Time Lords.”  It’s the type of smart clue for which Moffat is known.

Anyway Series 6 starts on BBC America on April 23rd with the season opener, “The Impossible Astronaut.”  Be sure to check it out.  I’ll be interested to see whether my guesses are any good.

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Leisure Reading

I fully support a boycott of any publisher that doesn’t pay their authors.  As such, join in the Leisure Books/Dorchester Publishing boycott starting today.  Author Brian Keene has more information and a detailed history of the Dorchester meltdown at his website:  http://www.briankeene.com/?p=6140.

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Essential Reading

Here’s a wonderful, in-depth snapshot of the current state of publishing, courtesy of JA Konrath and Barry Eisler.  Barry just walked away from a half-million-dollar advance from St. Martin’s Press so he can publish his next book himself.  Who will be the next bestselling author to do the same?

Caution, it’s a long post but well worth a read.  Feel free to repost or retweet it to all your reader or writer friends.

http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2011/03/ebooks-and-self-publishing-dialog.html

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Dreamland On Sale

You’ll notice information under BOOKS and STORE regarding my latest novel, Dreamland.  The book went on sale a few weeks ago.  I also did some tweaking to the site, so there’s some new links and stuff if you wanna poke around a bit.  Synopsis and sales info:

When Derek White captures footage of a desert firefight between the Air Force and a pair of UFOs, his becomes the evidence the world has awaited.

Confirmation of extraterrestrial life, it’s the type of proof that’s dangerous in the wrong hands and revolutionary in the right ones. Many would give their lives to protect Derek’s recording; more would kill to destroy it.

As Derek uncovers a vast government conspiracy, the Men in Black dismantle his life from the inside out. With his sanity at sake, he’s forced to seek the enigmatic Mr. Majestic, the one person who can provide a full disclosure of the truth. Except to find Majestic, he must break into a covert military installation.

Outsiders call the place Area 51.

But insiders know it as Dreamland.

Digital E-Book: $2.99

Amazon Kindle – http://amzn.to/g9DSp2

Barnes and Noble Nook — http://bit.ly/g7wFf9

Smashwords (for iPad, Stanza, Kobo, etc.) — http://bit.ly/eLpjOd

Trade Paperback (200 pages):  $10.00 — http://bit.ly/fSPog1

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