Thoughts After Eight Years of Self-Publishing and About What’s Ahead

In the beginning… 

I published my first novel, The Emperor’s Edge, in December of 2010. I’d taken a short stab at querying agents, but at the same time that I was doing that, I got my first kindle, and I realized from a few blog posts (there weren’t that many at the time), that authors were not only publishing straight to Amazon but that they were making money doing it. More money, in some cases, than their traditionally published counterparts, who earned a smaller percentage of the pie and had to sell a lot more books in order to make a living wage.

I abandoned all attempts at querying and jumped in with the two novels I had been workshopping and considered complete. Encrypted was the second and remains one of my favorites, though it was The Emperor’s Edge that I turned into a series, eventually nine novels. (Encrypted did get a sequel, Decrypted.)

There weren’t any podcasts teaching book marketing or self-publishing techniques at the time, and the only sites where you could advertise were Kindle Nation Daily and G00dreads (pay-per-click ads). I didn’t have a lot of money for advertising or high quality covers, not that there was an industry of cover designers for indie authors back then. I commissioned some of my earliest art by contacting artists on Deviant Art.

For authors publishing in those days, there was a lot of stumbling around in the dark and figuring out what worked.

Fortunately, I found readers who enjoyed my work, and by the end of 2011, I was making about $3,000 a month with four books out (Encrypted and the first three Emperor’s Edge books). The income went up and down (making Book 1 free was what gave me my first big boost) when looking at it on a monthly basis, but as I published more books, the trend headed upward over time.

By 2013, I was making more than I ever had at my day job, and I’d long since transitioned to writing full-time. By 2015, I was making a lot more.

It was amazing to get to that point, especially since it had been drilled into my head as a kid that nobody makes a living writing fiction and that I should get a degree in business or computer science. It wasn’t until the kindle and other e-book readers came along, and we could upload books directly to the stores, that it became more viable.

Over the last eight or nine years, a lot of “mid-list” self-published authors have been making a full-time income and then some. Even though things have gotten more competitive, with countless titles now available in the ebook stores, there are still a lot of independent authors making six figures (and some seven).

From two novels to 50+ (becoming more prolific)

These days, I have more than fifty science fiction and fantasy novels out under my name and another dozen-odd under my pen name (Ruby Lionsdrake). “Ruby” publishes science fiction romance novels with more detailed sexy bits on the page.

(In case you’re curious, I started the pen name in part to see if I could anonymously start from scratch in late 2014 and still do well — you could and I did — and in part because a few readers complained when I published Balanced on the Blade’s Edge, which was a fantasy romance adventure with a more graphic sex scene than I’d done in my other series. After that, I decided to make LB a little more chaste and switch to RL if I was in the mood to write sex scenes. That waxes and wanes, I’ll admit, and Ruby’s fortunes along with it. The challenge of starting a pen name is that you need to keep publishing regularly to stay in people’s minds and keep selling books.

My first novel took seven years to finish. As you can see, I’ve learned to write more quickly, and I’ve published ten or more novels during each of the last three years.

Increasing my writing speed started out mostly as a challenge to myself (other full-time authors were writing 6,000 to 10,000 words a day, so why couldn’t I?). Balanced on the Blade’s Edge was the first book I wrote quickly (from rough draft to a manuscript ready for my editor in less than a month). And I loved it.

I loved finishing a novel that quickly (the rough draft in about two weeks), because I really got into the zone or the flow state or whatever the latest term is, and I was able to remember everything that happened early in the novel when I was writing later stuff. (When it had taken me months or even years to finish something, I ended up wasting a lot of time going back to re-read and dither around with early stuff.)

I also enjoyed the characters and the story–you can tell since what was supposed to be a one-off stand-alone fantasy romance, but it eventually turned into an eight-book series (later dubbed Dragon Blood) with a side novel (Shattered Past) and a five-book spinoff series (Heritage of Power).

Even though I’ve published numerous series by now, and my oldest, The Emperor’s Edge, remains a fan favorite, the Dragon Blood series has earned me more over the years than any of my other series. About $900,000 from the ebooks in the original eight-book Dragon Blood series (and the side novel, Shattered Past) since the first book was published in March of 2014. (For those who are curious, this series has never been in KDP Select/Kindle Unlimited and exclusive with Amazon. I’ve spent somewhere in the neighborhood of $5,000-$10,000 lifetime for advertising on it, usually pointing pointed toward the Books 1-3 bundle, which I often drop to 99 cents or free for sales.)

I share this as a nah-uh to those who say you can’t write quickly and produce good stories. I’ve written books that weren’t very good that took a long time to pen, and I’ve written books quickly that are favorites of mine (and of fans). This isn’t to say that everything I write quickly is wonderful (after 60-odd novels, I definitely have some favorites, and I have some duds), just that it doesn’t matter a whole lot if a book took a year or a week to write, at least for me.

To stay self-published or to try for a traditional publishing deal? 

This is a question I ask myself from time to time.

When I look back at my path, I’m so relieved I didn’t get a nibble from agents with that original handful of query letters, because traditional publishing is — let’s face it — a slow slog. Even if I’d been lucky enough to get a deal, I never would have replaced my day job income after two years (odds are, I wouldn’t have even seen my books published by then).

But many authors now hybrid publish, meaning they have some books traditionally published (you still get a lot more visibility overall that way), and they self-publish other works on the side, where they take home that 70% of the sales price. It’s a pretty good gig, if you can get it.

Despite modest successes over the years, I’ve never hit it really big and had a book or series stick at the top of the Amazon sales charts for months and months (though Dragon Blood and Fallen Empire had good runs!), but I’ve had a few series do well enough to be noticed, at least insofar as literary agents go.

I’ve talked to someone who had read my books and seemed like a genuine fan, and I’ve been contacted by someone who saw my books were selling well, read a couple of chapters, thought they seemed okay, and wanted to represent me. You can guess how fast I said no thanks on that one. I can’t say that a Big 5 publisher or Hollywood producer has ever come knocking, so I haven’t had to wrestle much with temptation.

Yes, there’s still some temptation. I know I’d never make as much with a traditional deal (and I know I’d bristle at how slow the process was, how much they’d want me to edit, and that my fans would have to pay $9.99 or $14.99 for an ebook instead of $5 or less), but I still have my imposter syndrome moments and admit it would be nice to have one trilogy out there available on the shelves at Barnes & Noble. Especially now that I’ve made enough money to buy my house outright and sock away some extra.

I’m pretty nonchalant about it, though, and have filed this in the “someday” category. It’s possible that something appealing will come my way, and I’ll say yes, but I’m not so enamored with the idea that I’m pursuing it.

I do have a publisher for a lot of my audiobooks. Since those cost a lot more to produce, I’m generally happy to foist the work off on someone else and just get a quarterly bank deposit. I’ve done some of my series on my own (hiring a narrator and producer through ACX), and it’s time-consuming and so far hasn’t paid off in a big way for me.

Concerns about the future?

I’ve always had a bit of a glass half-full outlook and expected things to get harder for self-publishers, basically since the day I started. Believe it or not, when I published at the end of 2010, I thought I’d missed the boat. Amanda Hocking and a lot of huge success stories had already come and gone, and the secret was out. Self-publishing had become viable, and hungry authors were flocking to upload their trunk novels.

But I believed then, as I believe now, that it’s possible to gain enough fans that you can make a living as a creator. So long as you’re willing to work on your craft and also be a bit of an entrepreneur. This doesn’t necessarily mean writing to market (though it’s certainly OK if you enjoy what the market is craving), just learning a little about marketing and writing books with enough commercial appeal to find an audience.

I’m not a write-to-market person, mostly because I’ve never enjoyed what’s popular. One of the reasons I started writing was because I struggled to find the kinds of stories that I enjoy. What I do try to do is mesh what I want to write with what has a chance at selling.

It’s possible to make a living selling to fans of a niche, but if that niche gets too small… well, you’re only making a few dollars per sale. So, doing the math suggests your fans need to be in the thousands, not the hundreds or dozens, at least if you want to make a living.

In the last couple of years, we’ve seen more and more ebooks coming into the market (traditional publishing has gotten more backlist stuff out there, self-publishers have gotten very efficient and are publishing more and more novels, and then you’ve also got people hiring ghost writers to publish books by the dozens), and we’ve seen a rise in the cost to advertise and “gain visibility.”

On Facebook and Amazon, we’re bidding against each other and being encouraged to spend a dollar or more for a click (which may or may not turn into a sale). Some folks are speculating that we’ve entered a pay-to-play market where it’s not going to be possible to get seen and find a readership if you don’t have money to invest.

I agree that there is more competition. The books available have increased exponentially, but most of the English-reading markets are considered mature, meaning there probably won’t be more ebook buyers this year than last.

But do you have to come into this with piles to spend on advertising? Enh, I think there are still ways to be seen and find readers without dropping thousands a month on Amazon ads. Ads give you a brute force option to get your book seen. Which can be great. I’ve certainly started spending more on launches in the hope of gaining new readers with new series.

But when I started, there was barely anyplace to advertise. If you were writing in a smaller genre and didn’t know what you were doing with cover art (this was me), you probably struggled just as much to be seen back then as you do now.

I believe that you can still make a Book 1 in a series free and use social media, group promos, and small inexpensive ads to get readers to find and download your book. After that, it’s really up to you and the job you did with the story as to whether those readers will want to continue on (and are willing to pay to do so).

I do think it’s getting tougher for new authors to jump in with a full price book and find readers (if they don’t have much money for advertising). For the last few years, KDP Select and Kindle Unlimited (and Amazon exclusivity) has been a place where new authors can launch a full-price book and gain some traction (since people could borrow unlimited books with their monthly fee), but we’ll see if that continues indefinitely.

As a new author today, I would expect to have to write a series and make the first book free or 99 cents in order to (one hopes) suck people in. And then I’d expect to write another series. And another. If lightning strikes, and you get some massive hit, that’s awesome, but expect to work (write) year in and year out to make a living at this, and you won’t be disappointed if that’s what the future has in store.

The good thing is that you don’t have to sell piles of your first book or rank in the Top 20 for your category on Amazon to be a successful author.

I usually have a more recently published series that’s selling well enough to be on a chart somewhere, but I make good money every month from books that aren’t charting anywhere. Readers find my free Book 1s (I usually have at least three free series starters at any given time, which I pay to run promos on now and then, or put into inexpensive boxed sets with other authors, so we can take advantage of everybody’s reach), and enough of them go on to buy subsequent books in this series for me to continue to make up stories for a living.

Which is amazing.

The pessimistic part of me doesn’t think self-publishers will always be able to make as much as they can now, but I do believe that creators will always be able to find a way to reach their fans and earn an income from doing it. I’ve seen a lot of marketing tactics come and go over the last eight years, but the free sample continues to work. The free sample just has to be exactly what at least some readers are looking for.

Posted in News | Tagged , , , | 31 Comments

Editor Taking New Clients

This post is for my author friends out there. I am occasionally asked for recommendations for editors, but my usual editor, Shelley Holloway, has gotten pretty popular and tends to be reserved many months out. Not entirely because of all the work I send her. 😀

But my beta reader and backup editor (only “backup” because I met her a couple of years after Shelley), Sarah Engelke, is taking on new clients if you need someone coming up. She offers a wide range of services from fact checking to audiobook proofing (she’s done a lot of mine) to various levels of editing.

http://www.engelke-editing.com/

Posted in Editing | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Science Fiction Romance Meets Fun Alien Critters in the Pets in Space 3 Anthology

I don’t usually post about my pen name projects on this blog, but “Ruby” has a new sci-fi romance novella out in the Embrace the Passion: Pets in Space 3 anthology. And it’s fun. 🙂 All the authors wrote new stories for the anthology, and mine is from Ruby’s Mandrake Company universe and features a cute furry alien creation inspired by Star Trek’s Tribbles. My beasties have a few more appendages though. And love apples. Because… who doesn’t?

So, if science fiction romance is your cup of tea, I hope you’ll check out this anthology. 10% of the proceeds to go the Hero Dogs charity, and every story features romance and some kind of pet.

Pets in Space 3 < — Yup, that’s the place to get it (the link directs you to your preferred store — this one is up on Amazon, Apple, Kobo, Google Play, and Barnes & Noble).

I’ve invited three of the authors to share stories about their involvement in this project below, so keep reading if you’re intrigued! Also, you can find a picture of my Tribble-esque pet if you read all the way to the bottom. 🙂

Pauline Baird Jones — Destination Dangerous

Alien planets solar system on a backdrop spiral galaxy

When I laid out the foundation of Operation Ark in my novel, Lost Valyri, I thought I was being smart. The heroine and hero were supporting characters in the novel and Operation Ark was going to be fairly straightforward.

Their task was to return some freed prisoners to their homes.

As soon as I turned my attention to Operation Ark, simple began to get complex.

  1. The prisoners weren’t all from the same planet.
  2. They weren’t even from the current star system.
  3. Their planets were scattered around the star system they were from.
  4. Me AND my characters didn’t know what we didn’t know.

But we found out.

I had created the alien technology for City and Kraye to make the trip in a reasonable time frame. I even had supporting characters from Lost Valyr who would help them out. What I hadn’t considered was the world building I would need to do for each return.

So my word count for Operation Ark ran a little bit over. I don’t feel as guilty as perhaps I should because my previous Pets in Space stories had word count leftover, but I still faced the challenge of getting them where they needed to go, and then get them out again.

I think one of my favorite planets was the Cygninains’ planet. They were some swan-life sentients with a brood of cygnets that they needed to take home. I think I might have had the most fun creating their home world. Here’s a snippet from their first contact with the other creatures who shared their world:

Something, maybe the sense of movement out of the corner of her eye, had City glancing down at the water barely a foot from where she stood. It moved, the ripples horizontal to the shore now. She realized there was a shadow where there hadn’t been one. A shadow that reached into the drifting mist in both directions. And then a line of fins broke the surface. A long line of fins.

“It will not eat you.”

City tore her gaze away with difficulty—and kept her weapon pointed down with even greater difficulty as the shadow continued to flow past. At her feet stood one of the swans, with her cygnets circling her like small planes.

She swallowed. “It won’t?”

“It eats,” a wing swept against a bush and it said a word City didn’t recognize.

“It’s a herbivore,” Dr. Dauwn breathed out, his tone somewhere between awe and horror as the end of the thing finished its pass with a twitch of its tail fins.

“It was curious,” the swan said.

 

I hope you’re as excited for the release of Embrace the Passion: Pets in Space 3 as I am. Here’s the blurb for Operation Ark:

 

She’s a USMC Sergeant deployed to the Garradian Galaxy.

He was raised by the robots who freed him from slavery.

It’s a match made nowhere anyone can figure out.

They clashed as enemies but joined forces to defeat a common foe. Now they’re tasked with returning some freed prisoners to their home worlds. In the next galaxy. With an alien, a robot, and a caticorn. It was a bar joke without a punch line, though Carolina City has a feeling it is out there—like the truth.

Kraye isn’t eager to return to his galaxy where the dark secret of his past lays in wait, but he’s willing to risk it in hopes that Caro can teach him what the robots couldn’t: how to be human.

Together they must face a dangerous journey, a lethal enemy with a score to settle, their unexpected desire, and an uncertain future if they make it out alive.

Can Caro and Kraye navigate the minefields—both emotional and space based—to land a happy homecoming for the sentient animals in their care? Can the man raised by robots learn how to kiss the girl while the starchy Marine decides if she is willing to bend the rules for a happy ever after? Don’t miss Pauline Baird Jones’ newest Project Enterprise story!

Please join us for the next round of adventures with romance, danger and pets! All of it happening in space!

~

USA Today Bestselling author Pauline Baird Jones never liked reality, so she writes books. She likes to wander among the genres, rampaging like Godzilla, because she does love peril mixed in her romance.

 

Veronica Scott — Star Cruise: Mystery Dancer 

Thanks for having me as your guest to talk about my story for this year’s Pets In Space3: Embrace the Passion anthology!

I love going back to revisit my interstellar cruise liner, the Nebula Dream, for these PISA stories, as the ship cruises through the futuristic human civilization known as The Sectors.  I’ve written a number of books and novellas centered on events aboard the ship now and find the whole cruise setup lends itself to telling a good scifi romance adventure tale. Readers new to my world don’t need to know a lot of backstory to enjoy the events, and for those who have read others in the series, it’s a nice return to see some favorite characters (I hope!).

So I had the pet and the heroine – a possible princess on the run who was also perhaps a jewel thief and her genie-like feline – but now I had to make her fit into the Nebula Zephyr’s population seamlessly. Since the hero would be one of the former Special Forces soldiers who make up the ship’s security force, I had to be able to make the two meet and fall in love. I’m not a ‘crime caper’ person. Movies like ‘Ocean’s 8’ or other similar stories leave me unmoved, although I appreciate the intricate plotting and the hunky handsome movie stars. So I didn’t want to actually write a jewel thief subplot in any depth for this story. My interests were more on the Anastasia-like subplot as to whether she was really a longlost princess and of course my mysterious alien pet.

So how could I get Tassia on the ship if she wasn’t going on board to steal other people’s jewels?

The Nebula class interstellar cruise ships have casinos and theaters and lavish shows, like Las Vegas or on big cruise liners today, so of course they have a resident troupe of performers. I’ve wanted to do a story about the Comettes dance troupe since I wrote my very first published scifi romance, Wreck of the Nebula Dream (a sister ship of sorts to the one I write about nowadays) and mentioned the fact that these ladies existed. Dancing exquisitely seemed like a skill a girl who was perhaps a royal princess might have acquired, right? So I decided to show her becoming the newest member of the Comettes as a way to travel between star systems….throw in at least one fabulous jewel and the PISA3 story came to life!

Anthology Blurb:

Pets in Space™ is back! Join us as we unveil eleven original, never-before-published action-filled romances that will heat your blood and warm your heart! New York Times, USA Today and Award-winning authors S.E. Smith, Anna Hackett, Ruby Lionsdrake, Veronica Scott, Pauline Baird Jones, Carol Van Natta, Tiffany Roberts, Alexis Glynn Latner, E D Walker, JC Hay, and Kyndra Hatch combine their love for Science Fiction Romance and pets to bring readers sexy, action-packed romances while helping our favorite charity. Proud supporters of Hero-Dogs.org, Pets in Space™ authors have donated over $4,400 in the past two years to help place specially trained dogs with veterans. Open your hearts and grab your limited release copy of Embrace the Romance: Pets in Space™ 3 today!

STAR CRUISE: MYSTERY DANCER blurb:  Tassia Megg is a woman on the run after the death of her elderly guardian. Her search to get off the planet in a hurry comes when chance directs her to an open dance audition for the luxury cruise liner Nebula Zephyr’s resident troupe. If there is one thing Tassia can do, it is dance!

Security Officer Liam Austin is suspicious of the newest performer to join the Comettes. She shows all the signs of being a woman on the run and seems to fit the Sectors-wide broadcast description of a missing thief, accused of stealing priceless artifacts. As he gets to know Tassia during the cruise, he starts to wonder if she’s something more – a long vanished princess in hiding from deadly political enemies of her family perhaps? And what’s the story with the three-eyed feline companion other crew members swear Tassia brought aboard the ship? Does the animal even exist?

As the ship approaches its next port of call, all the issues come to a boil and Liam must decide if he’ll step in to help Tassia or betray her. Life is about to get very interesting aboard the Nebula Zephyr as Liam tries to uncover the truth. Could F’rrh, the peculiar alien cat he has been hearing about, be the key to the mystery and Tassia’s fate?

The excerpt – part of Tassia’s audition for the troupe:

Sure enough, Tassia’s number was posted as part of the callbacks for round two, as was Micki’s.

The remaining applicants were given an hour to change and stretch and prepare. Chatting to each other amiably, the judges left the room by a door on the far side.

“Aren’t you going to change?” Micki asked curiously. She was putting on a pretty spangled costume accenting the color of her hair and eyes.

“Nothing to change into.” Tassia shrugged. She’d decided a long time ago not to be embarrassed about things she couldn’t alter. Leaning her head against the wall, she ran through the steps in her mind of the ritual dance she’d decided to perform as a solo. It was artistic, graceful, and technical. Maybe the wrong choice for this audition, where the job was to be in a popular entertainment ensemble, with an audience of tourists, bored interstellar businessmen, and a sprinkling of rich Socialites, but it was all she had to offer. Her core training was from the temple of her childhood, reinforced by Xandrina as they’d traveled, enriched a bit by other dance styles she’d studied in bits and pieces along the way. But in this environment today, under all the stress, it was best to dance from the heart. A loud noise in the corridor outside startled her, raising her pulse, then one eyelid began to twitch with stress. I’ve got to calm down or I don’t stand a chance. Tassia tried to regulate her breathing and ran through a few simple stretches.

“I could lend you a scarf.” Biting her lip, Micki pulled a large floral print length of material from her dance bag. “Make it into a sarong skirt maybe?”

Tassia sat on the floor to begin more advanced exercises. Pulling her ham string or suffering any other injury for lack of preparation would be a disaster.

Micki floated the scarf in front of her face. “Honey, take it. You don’t want to come across as too desperate, like you gotta have the job or you won’t eat again. Makes them wonder why you’re so hard up, y’know?”

There was logic in the thought so, with murmured thanks, she accepted the fabric square. As she played with her steps and the gauzy material, she realized it would integrate well into her routine and serve as a nice accent.

All too soon the second phase of the audition began with the thirty women remaining. Again Tassia watched intently to see what the director seemed to like. She found her gaze straying to the lone man, the security officer, and sharply reprimanded herself. He had no reason to doubt her story, her fake papers were impeccable, and—even if he was handsome in a roughhewn way—well there was no time in her life for dalliance. Even if she made it to the ship.

Micki’s solo was full of energy and sexy moves, and the judges reacted very favorably, making notes on their handhelds and smiling. Her infectious grin and all those curls were hard to resist.

Tassia refused to let herself feel nerves. She’d done this dance thousands of times, under Madame Xandrina’s exacting eye. She wouldn’t fail either her late dance mistress or herself.

Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/40237564-embrace-the-passion

Website: https://www.petsinspaceantho.com

Pets in Space™ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/PetsInSpace/

~

USA Today Best Selling Author Veronica Scott grew up in a house with a library as its heart and thought there needed to be more romance in everything but especially science fiction.  Blog: https://veronicascott.wordpress.com/

 

Alexis Glynn Latner — Starway

Creating characters is a mysterious process. A writer may need to have the hero’s friend or the heroine’s colleague in a story. The writer might then look around their invented universe to see if somebody from another story could be this person. Or perhaps the new character is a relative of an already invented character. That’s what I did in my story “Starway” in Pets in Space: Embrace the Romance. The hero’s friend Koi is a cousin of an important secondary character in my next novel, Witherspin (2019).

Because I knew his nationality (from the interstellar city-state Wendis) and his family (the Low family, who are important in the Wendisan Service Guild), I had a good start on creating Koi.

Any new character has to have a few distinctive traits—possibly assigned on the fly when a deadline is impending. It’s also possible for a character to develop a whole life, past and future, of their own. That’s what happened in writing “Starway.” The interstellar hotel called Starway offers almost anything a traveler might want, including sex. Koi is a sex worker, which is a legitimate profession under the highly respectable aegis of the Service Guild. Then Koi turned out to be trans. (Inspiration happens. While working on the story I met someone who generously helped me understand being trans.) Feminine dress and manner—sometimes—is part of who Koi is.

Something else I discovered about Koi is his true name. Wendisans all have nicknames, derived from given names which tend to be those of ancient heroes and gods. I had to come up with an ancient, noble and unwieldy name for which Koi is a likely nickname. Since Wendis is partly based on Japan, I did an Internet search for Japanese heroes and gods. One name rang like a bell in my imagination: Tsukuyomi is a moon god. Modern, anime-influenced drawings of Tsukuyomi show a slender figure with long dark hair and an air of mysterious power. Perfect!

Koi meant a pretty fish. It was a nickname that made it easy for someone to take Koi for less than he might be. Danyel had known Koi long enough to suspect that there was much more to Koi than met the eyes (and other body parts) of his clients.

Oh yes. Koi Tsukuyomi Low is a secret agent of Wendis—dedicated to the safety of Wendisan citizens and the independence of Wendis in dangerous times. He has a past and a future too. He’ll appear again in the final version of Witherspin, where some exciting scenes unfold in Starway.

Star, drawn by our talented artist Nyssa Juneau, is on a cute tote bag from Zazzle (https://www.zazzle.com/embrace_the_passion_pets_in_space_3_alexis_tote_bag-256602506761583359.) Wendisans themselves don’t use tote bags. They unfold a large, thin, strong cloth and neatly knot the ends to make a portable package, as I once watched a Japanese patron do at the University library where I work. Creating cultures is as much fun as creating characters!

~

Alexis Glynn Latner, based in Houston, writes science fiction about space exploration and star travel, adventure, hope and love. Her Website is www.alexisglynnlatner.com.

* * *

Thanks for reading through these guest entries. As promised, here is a picture of my “Quashi” critter:


The science fiction romance (with alien pets) anthology you’ve been waiting for…

Embrace the Passion: Pets in Space 3

Posted in Ebook News, Writing | Tagged , , | 5 Comments

Junkyard — Part 4 and Epilogue (a free science fiction novella)

Here’s a Friday-night post to finish up the Junkyard novella!

If you want a free copy of the final ebook when it’s been edited and I have cover art for it, please sign up for my Fallen Empire newsletter: https://lindsayburoker.com/book-news/fallenempire/

There are a bunch of other bonus goodies when you sign up too (including the “Bearadise Lodge” short story with McCall, Junkyard, and Scipio).

Now, let’s finish this novella…

Junkyard Part IV

McCall found the dog sitting and waiting by the cargo hatch when she came in. She had left it open so he could leave whenever he wished. Apparently, he hadn’t wished.

“Good to see you up,” she told him.

She didn’t have any ration bars on her, but he didn’t make any moves to eat her. He even thumped his tail on the deck. Promising.

“Is your name really Junkyard?”

He cocked his head and looked curiously at her.

“Yeah. I didn’t think so. I’m not very good at naming things though. I don’t think anyone in my family was. Our dog when I was growing up was named Buddy.”

He ran out onto the cargo ramp but paused after only a couple of steps. He looked back at her and wobbled his tail a little uncertainly. It had stopped raining, so that couldn’t be the problem. Besides, if he’d been living in a junkyard, he ought to be used to the elements.

“You want me to follow you?”

He ran to the bottom of the ramp, spun a circle, and looked back at her again. Continue reading

Posted in Free Fiction | Tagged , , | 66 Comments

Junkyard — Part 3 (a free science fiction novella)

Hey, folks! Many thanks to those of you who have grabbed a copy of Fractured Stars. It picks up the adventure of McCall, Scipio, Junkyard (and a new hero) a couple of years in the future.

But for now, let’s continue on with the story of how McCall met Junkyard! (If you’re coming in new, make sure to start with Part I).

**Just a reminder that this hasn’t been edited yet. I should have the final (edited) ebook version in November. Thanks for taking this early peek!

Junkyard Part III

McCall sipped espresso from a cup as she sat in her office and watched the traffic camera footage at ten times normal speed. She had tried coding a search algorithm, but as she’d feared, it had been too difficult to instruct the ship’s computer in regard to what looked suspicious. Numerous delivery vans visited the warehouse every day, dropping off supplies for the sugarhouse, and others came to pick up drums of syrup. In addition, large farm and logging vehicles rolled down the street many times a day on their way to their rural destinations.

“What’s this?” she murmured, leaning forward in her chair and swiping her finger through the display to pause the playback.

A black ship had appeared on the nearest traffic camera. It had flown over the maple trees, the back fence, and hovered over a towering debris pile in the middle of the junkyard.

“Zoom in on the ship,” she ordered the computer.

It complied to the best of its ability. The camera had been focused on the street, and the ship had stopped at least a hundred yards inside of the junkyard. It was only luck that it showed up at all.

“Identify the model of the ship,” she said, hoping the computer could tell from the blurry outline. She didn’t see any identification, so it was unlikely she could look up the owner, but this could be the starting point she’d sought. The time display on the footage informed her that this had happened at two hours past midnight local time. The dark ship wouldn’t have been visible to the human eye if not for the lights along the perimeter of the junkyard.

“Unknown model,” the computer informed her.

Unknown?

“Affirmative.”

That was strange. It wasn’t as if there were that many manufacturers of spaceships in the system. The sys-net had information on anything large enough to have been produced in even a limited run.

“It is a spaceship, right?” McCall asked. “Not simply an aircraft local to this moon?” Continue reading

Posted in Free Fiction | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Junkyard — Part 2 (a free science fiction novella)

Here’s the next installment of Junkyard!

That’s a picture of a wolfhound down there, so not quite the mixed-breed mutt that Junkyard is, but that’s how I imagine his face. And his height!

If you need something to read after this, Fractured Stars, the novel that’s set a couple of years later, is officially out.

Junkyard Part II

McCall felt much more comfortable back on her ship, sitting in her office with the search algorithms she’d refined over the years spitting out data on the displays floating over her desk. Thank the suns. Her nerves were frayed after the tour of the noisy, cramped, employee-filled sugarhouse, and her nostrils were still protesting the cloying scent of maple syrup that had clogged the air like pollution in Perun Central.

Irish Wolfhound dog, sitting, , isolated on white

Analyzing data in her quiet odor-free office soothed her.

The names and faces of Dunham’s employees hovered in a row in one display. The names and addresses of black marketeers known to handle agricultural products floated in another. None of them had offices on Dasos Moon, so Dunham’s assumption that a thief would have to take the stolen syrup to the spaceport to ship off-world was reasonable.

The traffic logs from the spaceport, information that wasn’t public but that she knew how to get, currently hovered behind the other displays. She was in the middle of trying to convince the local traffic cameras that she had the right to see the vids from the last two months of comings and goings on this rural street. Skimming through such logs would be stultifying, but she doubted whoever had doctored the warehouse’s security cameras would have been able to diddle the county’s recordings, and if a vehicle large enough to tote away two hundred tons of syrup had arrived, it would be noticeable. She might even get lucky and be able to magnify the image to identify the people, androids, or robots that had loaded the cargo.

A knock sounded on the closed hatch.

“Come in, Scipio.”

He stepped inside and got straight to business, something McCall appreciated about him. Continue reading

Posted in Free Fiction | Tagged , | 38 Comments

Junkyard — Part 1 (a free science fiction novella)

Hi, folks!

I’m working on Agents of the Crown, Book 4 (Elven Fury!), but I took a break to write a new novella and a novel in my Fallen Empire science-fiction universe. Except the stories take place before the fall of the empire. And they feature some new characters.

If you’ve read my short stories “Here Be Dragons” in the Bridge Across the Stars anthology or “Bearadise Lodge” (free for those who are signed up for my sci-fi newsletter), you’ve already met my skip tracer, McCall, her trusty dog Junkyard, and her android business partner Scipio. This novella is a bit of a mystery adventure and shows how she first met up with Junkyard (and where his name came from) and how Scipio officially became her business partner.

I’m sending it off to my editor to work on in October, so this is on the rough side, but if you don’t mind, please jump in. I’ll be sharing it in 4 or 5 parts over the next couple of weeks to go along with the release of the novel, Fractured Stars.

Oh, and that’s Scipio in the artwork down there. He’s a snazzy dressing android, as you’ll see!

Junkyard: Part I

Frost edged the mossy cracks in the pavement in front of Maple Moon warehouse and sugarhouse. McCall Richter wrinkled her nose, imagining the frozen crystals coating her cilia, and tucked her hands under her armpits as she walked. Her new employee, Scipio, said nothing of the cold, but frost wouldn’t bother an android capable of repairing spaceships from the outside. While in flight.

Plumes of smoke wafted from the chimneys of the sugarhouse, infusing the crisp early spring air with the scent of maple syrup. Imagining cherry-red furnaces inside, McCall wished her instructions said to meet the owner in there. But she was supposed to meet Mr. David Dunham in the warehouse after landing, its corrugated steel walls just as frosty as the pavement.

She looked wistfully back at her ship. The Star Surfer, its sleek purple hull gleaming under the early morning suns, its environmentally-controlled interior always at a comfortable temperature, rested a mere fifty meters behind her. The interior also happened to be comfortably free of unfamiliar people with expectations she didn’t know if she could meet.

Maybe it wasn’t too late to back out…

A trio of men walked out of the warehouse, and she held back a grimace. They wore trousers and parkas, not combat armor, but that didn’t make her any less wary. They were strangers, and she always felt the need to put on a mask for strangers. Force a smile, make eye contact, pretend talking about planetary weather wasn’t inane. There was a reason she usually only accepted jobs via text.

“For future reference, you’re not allowed to set up meetings,” she muttered to Scipio.

The android gave her Inquiring Head Tilt Number Two—in the three months he had been aboard her ship, McCall had mentally catalogued the various facial gestured he was programmed with and given them labels. She often had a hard time reading human faces, but his features arranged themselves in precisely the same manner to simulate well-defined emotions, which made them easier to grasp.

“You gave me the position of personal assistant and said I should interact with people on behalf of your business. Is setting up meetings not a typical duty?” Continue reading

Posted in Free Fiction | Tagged , , , , | 25 Comments

The Agents of the Crown Fantasy Series Kicks off with Eye of Truth (preview chapters)

Many thanks to those of you who read all of Eye of Truth (Agents of the Crown, Book 1) on my blog this summer. The ebook is now releasing on Amazon where it’ll be exclusive for the rest of 2018, so I need to take it down from my site. I am allowed to leave up a couple of preview chapters, so those are below for anyone who missed the earlier postings.

If you’re not an Amazon-shopper, look for Agents of the Crown in 2019 at Kobo, Apple, Barnes & Noble, and Google Play. Also look for my recent series Heritage of Power and Sky Full of Stars to come out of Amazon exclusivity and into those stores this fall.

If you hate waiting, you can always sign up for my Patreon campaign. For $5 a pop, you can get my novels (in both e-reader formats and also as a PDF) before they are published.

If you like Amazon just fine, here are the links to Book 1 (available today) and Book 2 (coming on August 31st).

Eye of Truth

Book 2: Blood Ties

And here you’ll find the blurb and first two chapters of Eye of Truth:

Description

After ten years at war, Jev Dharrow looks forward to hanging up his sword, relaxing with a cool mug of ale, and forgetting that the love of his life married another man while he was gone. But when his ship sails into port, a beautiful woman wearing the garb of an inquisitor from one of the religious orders waits to arrest him. 

His crime? 

He’s accused of stealing an ancient artifact with the power to start another war. Jev would gladly hand over the artifact to stop more suffering, but he has no idea where it is or even what it looks like. The inquisitor woman definitely has the wrong person. 

Inquisitor Zenia Cham grew up with nothing, but she has distinguished herself as one of the most capable law enforcers in the city, and she’s next in line to become archmage of her temple. All she has to do is find the Eye of Truth, and her superiors are certain that Jev has it. 

He tries to charm her with his twinkling eyes and easy smile, but she’s not letting any man get between her and her dreams. Especially not a thief. 

If Jev can’t convince Zenia they’re on the same side, find the artifact, and clear his name, his homecoming will turn into a jail sentence. Or worse. 

 

Chapter 1

Continue reading

Posted in Ebook News | Tagged , , | 16 Comments