Cold Blooded - Where it all started
I own a one man auto/truck repair shop in Oakland, CA.I write adventure fiction with a political slant, and unconventional poetry. Using my day-job to keep me going, I continue my assault on the publishing world with each action packed day. Any questions or comments you'd rather not make public, please use the address below. Sock Puppets welcome. :) E-Mail: nilson_brothers@hotmail.com
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
The Crime Cove Review of Cold Blooded II: Sins & Sanctions
A reviewer, Kat McCarthy, who writes a review blog titled The Crime Cove, did a wonderful review of Cold Blooded Book II: Killer Moves. She perceived every single thing I'd hoped readers would enjoy about Nick McCarty's second adventure in Killer Moves. It helps that Kat also belongs to my Facebook Reader's Fan Club. Kat also does the reviews on Amazon, which as my author friends know, we need reader reviews to stay in this business. :)
Sunday, January 25, 2015
New Progress
Hard Case Book V: Blood and Fear is nearing completion. I’ll be approaching
the 100,000 word mark Sunday night. For the fans of the series, this episode will
not disappoint. Between girls’ softball coaching, street fights, Boko Haram
terrorists, and an EMP (Electromagnetic Pulse) threat, John Harding’s crew have
their work cut out for them. The Monster Squad is all back with a lot more on
the line to lose, and therefore to also protect.
Best of all, this series entry will have a new collaborator on
production. My Grandson Colin, who turns thirteen this May, will be doing the
cover for Blood and Fear. I bought him a new iMac Retina setup, because he
produced his own sports and music video clips so well just using his phone. It
has Final Cut Pro editing software, and he produced a cover exactly to my
specs. He will be on board with RJ Parker Publishing Inc as my Illustrator. I
should have a sample of his cover to post next week. He’s fine tuning the text now.
His name will be listed in the credits from now on. I know someone beyond this
trail of tears will be looking down, and loving every second of Colin’s new
endeavor.
Thursday, January 15, 2015
A Fan Page
A fan of everything I write started a Facebook page where nearly
400 people have joined. I don’t take something like that lightly. Her name is
Jennifer Thomas. Thanks Jenn. She is a reader who reviews what she reads on
Amazon religiously in addition to her making it possible for my publishing
partner RJ Parker and I to interact with readers. I’m nearing 88,000 words in
my novel Hard Case Book V: Blood and Fear. It does help to know people are
reading our offerings, and enjoying them. The best part about a fan page like
Jenn created is an author can interact with readers, and dispel the notion of
aloofness we get. Not all of us are like JD Salinger, who wrote ‘The Catcher in
the Rye’, and never offered anything else. :)
Some of us woe begotten writers just plain write. We’re not afraid
of criticism, and we frankly don’t care what the hell people think about our
offerings. We can’t! Once we believe we’re writing for someone else, what we
write is doomed. Sure, there are many people who abhor pulp fiction, which is
what I write. They have many alternatives. If you want someone to be
entertained by your writing, they have to be entertained by what you write… and
not by what you think they want you to write. Thanks, Jenn! :)
You can find the fan page here... if you'd like... :)
Monday, January 12, 2015
Just The Facts
I’m asked
many times why I don’t charge more for my full length novels, especially since
a few of my series novels have become popular, and fifty thousand words has
become the new norm for novel length products. I’ll admit to some very simple
truths. I’m not Stephen King, James Patterson, or Tom Clancy. I’m not even in
their realm of popularity, or close to it. I enjoy what I do, but I’m not blind
to marketplace facts. My partner, RJ Parker, and I have tried everything to enhance
our products for the market. Giving them away, or doing 99 cent sales is a hit
and miss proposition. We either keep writing or disappear. That’s the standard.
While I understand the arguments for pricing according to standard, I also
realize we as authors are in a wild west type market. If you don’t have Stephen
King type name recognition, you’re fighting for a step on the ladder with thousands
of others. The argument is we’re cheapening the market. That’s a funny one,
because if I charged $5.99 and up for my novels out of the chute, I’d disappear
in a heartbeat, which the mainstream publishers would love. It would mean less
competition. :)
Here’s
the real downside I see as a writer. When I started out, I wrote 150k length
and above novels, because I loved the storytelling. Novels the length of my
offerings such as PEACE and SOTELLO, and CASSERINE take time to create with a flowing scene depiction
and ending. I could write those length novels every time I begin a new
offering, because I’m a storyteller. I’m not a marketer, or a ‘short-story as a
novel’ con artist. I write novels with characters capable of transporting me
past this reality trail of tears, and therefore the readers I seek to reach. I’ve
accepted the shorter domain between 90k and 110k as my parameters for what
attracts readers, and I damn well deliver to the best of my ability for the
bargain price of $2.99. Until I’m popular enough to return to much longer
novels, I will compete in the market I’ve chosen. I promise the story won’t
suffer, but reining in my prolific storytelling side must be gauged to the market
– hence the $2.99 cost. I hate serials, so every one of my novels, including
the series additions, always have an ending, I hope has readers wishing for
more, but always holding a completed storyline. That’s the blog for today as I
shoot past 84k in Hard Case Book V: Blood and Fear. :)