An email will be going out to my Mailing List tonight, and it will include a chance at a Free Thing. What? You’re not signed up for my Mailing List, which is so important that I’m using capital letters when I reference it?
Tag: promotion
Proof of life
The con hasn’t killed me yet.
It may have driven me insane, though.
I need a salad.

SEARCHING FOR MALUMBA: Anybody wanna help me out?
I’m starting to look around for promo opportunities for Searching for Malumba: Why Teaching is Terrible, and Why We Do It Anyway. It’s currently available to preorder for $4.95, and comes out October 27th.
If anybody’s interested in a guest post, or an interview, or anything like that, or knows anyone running an education blog who might be interested in such things, would you mind letting me know in comments? We can work the details out by email.
Thanks!
End-of-year sale continues!
We got started a bit late, so I think you’ve probably got until midafternoon eastern time today before the novels jump to $1.99, but I just had my best day ever on Amazon. Quick, hop on the bandwagon while everything’s 99 cents!
Tonight (maybe) a reflection on the last school year, and definitely pie.
Announcements! Cool announcements!
FIRST: In what, surprisingly, counts as my first actual sale as a writer outside of self-publishing, my short story “Culaqan” is being published in December by the brand new literary anthology known as the 2014 World Unknown Review, edited by blogbuddy L.S. Engler. The story has been on the site for a bit, so some of you may have read it before, but I’ve pulled it until some time after the anthology comes out. If you’re interested, though, the very short stories “Crossroads” and “Confession” are set in the same universe. Sort of. I think.
I’m super excited about this, and expect to hear more about it as more details about the anthology are released and we get closer to release date, which I believe will be sometime in December.
SECOND: Just because I don’t plan on shopping on Black Friday doesn’t mean I’m not going to encourage other people to do so. Both of my books are going to go on sale sometime late Wednesday night and will stay on sale at least through Friday night, and possibly for the entire weekend depending on how things go. Because of the way the different online retailers work, the sales are going to be slightly different depending on where you like to get your books from:
At Amazon:
- The Benevolence Archives, Vol. 1 will be $.99
- Skylights will be $2.99.
At Smashwords:
- The Benevolence Archives, Vol. 1 will remain free, because it’s free now (like literally right now. You can click on that link and go download it, in a wide variety of ebook formats, right now.)
- Skylights will be, and I’m really interested in seeing how this goes, set-your-own pricing. Which means that you can have it for a penny if you want (and I think they’ll let you have it for free) or if you’ve been reading me for a long time and you have way more money than you know what to do with you can pay a thousand dollars for it. Consider it a Christmas present for your favorite blogger. Or just pay a penny. I’m good either way, so long as some more folks read the damn thing.
Main thing? Amazon won’t let me make stuff free if I’m not a member of Kindle Select, which I’ve opted out of, so I’ve got to set it at $0.99. I’ve tried to price-match Benevolence Archives with Smashwords half a dozen times and it doesn’t work. Do keep in mind that you can get Kindle editions of everything through Smashwords, as well as versions for any other ebook reader, but you may have to do some sort of rigamarole to get your file onto your device since it won’t do it for you.
Where should you get your books from? Wherever you want, although I’ll admit I’m really curious about what will happen with the choose-your-own-adventure pricing at Smashwords. Skylights hasn’t sold terribly well, even compared to the watermark Benevolence Archives has set, and it’ll be interesting to see what happens with it.
Expect the volume of promotional stuff to increase a bit around here through the weekend, of course. I’ll try and find some other way to be entertaining along the way, though.
BLOGWANKING/SOCIAL MEDIA WANKING: On Twitter
Just so I’m sure we all agree, paper.li is basically just a spamming service at this point, right? Does anyone use this site for anything actually useful? I’m not actually going to link to them; feel free to look them up yourself if you like, but the site has attracted my attention twice now, and I haven’t liked it either time. The first time was when they published a photo of my kid that I’d put on my blog and shared it under the “Adult” category for no clear reason. I locked the picture down, putting it behind a password, and removed links to it from Twitter.
This morning when I got up I had a notification that someone had retweeted a tweet that mentioned me– although oddly I hadn’t gotten a notification of the original tweet. That message led me to discover this:
I hope it’s obvious to anyone who reads me that I did not write that nonsense, nor have I heard of the book I’m supposedly “sharing.” The site has a “prevent mentions” function, although to use it you have to tweet at them, so I’m a little skeptical that asking to keep my name off of their site is going to do anything. But this is annoying as hell. I tweeted at the person who RTed the original tweet and haven’t heard anything back yet from them.
The other thing I’ve done is that I’ve started using the JustUnfollow app. I don’t like that it occasionally tweets for me but I delete them when it happens (hint, guys, I’m happy to just send you money if I like your service) and I think the functionality is worth the minor occasional annoyance. I had a conversation with a few folks yesterday about whether an auto-reply to people who follow you is worth the time it takes to set it up and ended up deciding it wasn’t, but the base Twitter app doesn’t seem to be telling me about all of my new follows anymore and I’d like to keep up a more or less 100% follow-back ratio for a while.
(For those wondering: this means that at the moment I’m following close to 1900 people. It means that the main Twitter feed is a firehose that no one could pay attention to. Basically the rule is that if someone interacts with me or if I notice them consistently they get added to a much smaller list that I pay attention to consistently. TweetDeck is wonderful for this purpose, even if there’s not a mobile app for it.)
The other good thing about using JustUnfollow is it makes it a lot easier to aggressively grow my follower list again, which I’ve been looking to do lately. I can pick people who have already followed and/or interacted with people I already know and scoop up a whole bunch of ’em at once. It’s not the most targeted way of acquiring followers, I know, but at least I’m grabbing people who I can reasonably suspect might be interested in what I’m doing over there. So if you’re seeing this because I followed you recently, I did that because you’re already following someone who I think I have stuff in common with. Hi!
Ultimately, I want to get to a point where if I send out a Tweet it’s got a good chance of being seen by a few hundred people, and then I’ll stop worrying about growing my follower list as much. Right now my average over my last 20 Tweets is 111.5 impressions, so I’ve got a way to go yet. I figure I’ll get there right about exactly when the service either shuts down or finds a way to make itself radically less useful (coughfacebookcough) so we’ve got that to look forward to.
(Follow me here, if you aren’t yet.)
INTERVIEW: D. Emery Bunn, author of DARKNESS CONCEALED
You may have noticed if you hang out with the same crowd of Super Cool Independent Writer People that I do: D. Emery Bunn’s book Darkness Concealed released earlier this week.
Because I am lazy and didn’t get to it in time a skilled marketer, I suggested to Emery that we do an interview but schedule it for Friday— today, in other words– so that folk would see it heading into the weekend and maybe he’d get a little bump. Totally has nothing to do with me not getting my shit together before launch day. Nothing at all.
Anyway, I wrote some stupid questions and fired them off his way and he actually put up with my nonsense. Check out the interview, and check out the book:
1) Forget the book for a minute; tell me about yourself.
But…but…the book! Okay, fine, I’ll talk about me. Engineer by day; writer, reader, and gamer by night. I never found the beach interesting enough for long walks on it, and I positively love a crescent moon.
Is that enough? No?
Cruel taskmaster…more specifically I do both tabletop and video games, depending on the night. I’m a hardcore Twitter addict, and still wonder how I thought it was pointless for years before starting on this writing thing.
2) Now tell me about Darkness Concealed. Who’s the target audience? What other writers or books would you compare it to?
In a sentence, Darkness Concealed is about a recurring apocalypse no one can explain, and the quest of four strangers to try to explain it at their own peril. It’s dark fantasy, with liberal doses of mystery and horror everywhere. Oh, and a ton of humor. I’m not morbidly depressing, only slightly saddening.
I’ve got several target audiences. People who…
…are tired of stock fantasy tropes used in stock ways with very few twists to mix it up.
…want to try to solve an intricate mystery where most of the answers are hidden.
…want a detailed exploration of philosophical themes and subtext without having them browbeaten.
…love engaging characters with vastly different personalities.
…desire to have an uncertain conclusion instead of a foregone one.
3) Does your book pass the Bechdel test?
It passes it with straight A’s, 100%, and flawless victory. I have two female characters in the story, and at no point do they talk about a man in a romantic way. At best, they have their gripes with the two males accompanying them.
4) Give me your single favorite sentence from Darkness Concealed.
A single one? You sure you didn’t mean “top three” or “quick hit list”? I swear, you’re a sadist. I’d have to say it’s the very opening line:
“Mommy, what’s going on?”
In so many ways, those words encapsulate the entire plot and theme of not just this story, but the trilogy in sum.
5) Describe your process for writing the book a bit. How long did it take you? How long did the idea for the book percolate in your head before you finally had everything on the page?
I’m going to answer this backward…ish. The land of Telthan came into my mind in December 2008 as the result of wanting to apply to a worldbuilding play by post D&D campaign. I was taking a shower (ha!), thinking about what it should be, and one sentence came to me: “It’s a peaceful, idyllic pastureland…except the one day where nearly everyone dies.” Thus was born the Darkening and the land it afflicts.
The campaign failed. Too much overhead for the DM and the players. I took the setting wholesale and started my own campaign to explore it, and go over the full arc that was in my mind. Two attempts at my own campaign failed, because the arc was too particular, too limiting to the players. This was even after I’d written up a full campaign arc outline while at Basic Military Training, pouring my pent-up creativity straight into the pages. In a lot of ways, I consider the outline some of my most creative work.
Problem is…I lost the outline while moving to my first base in July 2010. I thought I’d left it at my hotel room the night before making it there. I wrote the first, second, and third drafts based purely on the memory of that outline. Then a month or so ago I was sifting through some old files and out it falls. It’s sitting over there on my desk, so unlike what I’ve written onto the page, but the same general idea.
Back to the present…
Honestly, writing this book is a study in me being a procrastinating fool who doesn’t realize what he has in his hands. I wrote the first draft mostly during NaNoWriMo 2012, wrote another 23k in the two months following…then abandoned it because I’d written myself into a corner.
I didn’t touch it again until NaNo 2013, ending up stumbling around for the first couple of days trying to remember my plot thread. You see, I threw out the first draft as an unsalvageable mess. This has since turned into a trend with my other work.
Anyways, NaNo 2013. I wrote…a lot. The entire second draft, weighing in at 103,259 words, got completed that month. Me getting stuck in Dallas-Fort Worth airport due to a nasty winter storm certainly helped (15k from those 48 hours alone). But I finished it…and I loved what I’d written. Sure, it had faults, but I had finished a novel all the way through. (Point of context, I’ve won NaNo 3 times…and only finished the resultant novel once)
And if I can write a novel, gosh-darnit I can revise the thing into publishable shape. I sent the draft off to a few beta readers, who came back with some good things to go and fix. Which I did…slowly. Procrastination and a ton of other responsibilities are nasty conspirators, and while it took me about a month (January) to finish the first part and another three weeks (February-March) for the third, parts 2 and 4 were on hold until the middle of May. Whereupon I knocked them out in six weeks.
I sent the finished third draft at the beginning of July to far more beta readers than the second had seen…and got the right comments back. The kind that say “fix these minor issues, polish the grammar, and publish”. None of them actually said that, but what they commented on signaled that.
6) If the book had a soundtrack, which bands would be featured?
Blind Guardian, Hammerfall, DragonForce, and tons of orchestral in the vein of Hans Zimmer and John Williams. Honestly, put Blind Guardian’s Sacred Worlds (Warning: extremely epic, and must be played loud) on in the background whenever Gerald is featured.
7) If you die halfway through writing the third book in the Darkness trilogy, which author would you pick to finish your work? Don’t say Brandon Sanderson.
At this point in time, I’ll be happy with finishing the second book. I don’t have any author in mind for that sort of thing.
8) How long would it take Grond to beat up your main character?
And here I thought Grond was the more pragmatic of the two. Why beat up a bunch of random people he doesn’t know who haven’t wronged him? Anyways, I consider all of my characters main, so…
Caleb: One punch and he’s down. Bonus points for getting him to mumble “I must have done something wrong.”
Alexandra: They’d fight each other to a stalemate, realize that it’s pointless, and shake hands before parting ways.
Ivan: Would take a punch, then jump back and demand an explanation “for the unexpected and undeserved intrusion upon my personal space. And this nasty bruise.” Would promptly evade every other punch until he got so tired that he’d fall unconscious all on his own.
Liz: No punch would land. He’d throw one, and she’d skip out of the bar without a second thought about fighting fair.
9) Assuming I love it, how long do you think it’ll be until the sequel comes out? Any other projects in the pipeline that we should know about?
Assuming you love it? I thought that was a foregone conclusion. 😉
Tentative plan on Darkness Revealed is next summer. We’ll see how it goes.
For October, I’m going to get back to the second draft of my cyberpunk novella Nikolay. It’s all about a guy who just wants to not be normal…in a world where normal is enforced by law.
10) I pre-ordered it like four days before it came out. Shower me with affection!
Only four days? Real fans would’ve preordered it one week out, when I pushed the final copy to retailers! Here, have a token of my gratitude instead of a shower of it.
Thanks for putting up with me, at least for a little while. Oh, and if people are wanting to know where to harass me:
– Blog (includes free PDF of Darkness Concealed): www.DEmeryBunn.com
– Twitter: @DEmeryBunn
– EMail: emery (at) DEmeryBunn.com
Oh, and the book is on Amazon , Google and Kobo. Go get it!



