Andrew Hiller's Blog, page 4

November 2, 2017

From NanoWriMo to A Guest of Honor

In the literary world, there are big fish, medium fish, small fish... I'm algae, but in two days, I travel to Roanoake, VA to serve as the literary Guest of Honor to an SFF Comic Con.

This journey started on a November day about three years ago. A friend challenged me to take on Nanowrimo. I had to ask what that was. She explained that it stood for Write a Novel in a Month and asked if I had a book in me. I stared at her and then glanced at my computer. My radio show had just been canceled, I was floundering, and I think she thought it would be a good distraction.

She was right.

It starteed with a fever, a frenzied state where every spare moment funneled itself into my fingers. I could hardly keep up with my thoughts. Nano's goal is 40,000 words in four weeks. I pumped out 60,000 in three.

I channeled newsroom experiences from NPR, VOR, and life, tapped philosophy, wrestled with the questions that laid siege to my conscious and unconscious mind and rode the river. I had no idea where the rocks lay or how many times I would flip over. I charted a course with no map, no life preserver, and no hesitation, but, I wasn't alone.

Writing is not a solitary experience. It requires friends, alpha readers, beta readers, editors, people who know how to pat your shoulder and those who know how to give your rump the kick it needs too.

Books also need strangers who become friends. When I put A Halo of Mushrooms out there I found some at Cons. Mars Con, Shore Leave, Awesome Con, and others provided a welcome to my books and readers who gave me a chance.

They also provided some of my favorite author moments!

Like the time someone stalked my table on a Saturday morning and cursed--

"Damn you!" before adding, "I bought your book last night and I'm already halfway through it!"

or the chance to sit shoulder to shoulder with A list authors and publishers on a panel to talk
trade

or even better the quiet moments where you talk craft with someone aspiring to create their own works.

That my work caught the eye of Charles De Lint or Dr. Who's Mark Wheatley is mind blowing, but the fact that it resonated with readers means more. I was that kid who read twenty books a Summer. I was the boy who demanded his friend read a newly discovered author and traded books freely. I'm the kid who liked to tell stories and never grew out of it. So, me being the GOH is about you being recognized. I'm you.

Well, I'm some of you and as I pack my trunk full of ideas, moments, iron wrought scaffolding to head into the world of adult Halloween. I wanted to write to say thank you.

Thank you for reading. Thank you for reviewing. Thank you for giving a piece of algae a chance. Thank you for spreading the word and letting me know what made you laugh or resonated with you emotionally.

I may wear the title of Guest of Honor this weekend, but this is our fantasy.
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Published on November 02, 2017 07:17

July 13, 2016

Trailing

So, I've been looking at a few book trailers and I'm wondering... do people really watch these? Some are fun. Some look wonderfully produced, but is it an act of self-indulgence?

If you watch them please let me know. Also, I'd love to know where you go to find them.

Thanks.

The oddest thing about being an author versus being a reporter is the need to tell the story of your story. Am I the endearing little mop head waving at his mother by the pool's edge shouting--

"Look at me! Look at me!"

before executing a dive.

Or am I the annoying little brat screeching while everyone is trying to tan, read, relax, or have a conversation before canonballing into the blue.

This weekend, I'll be a panelist at Shore Leave Con. I'll be talking about pitching and freelancing. Subjects I know pretty well from my radio work, but in a world suffocating in spam, I look at trailers, tweets, ads, promos, and wonder... if I fall under will anyone pull me out.

Look at me, MOM!

Andrew Hiller is the author of A Halo of Mushrooms, an environmental fantasy that spans from the Great Lakes to Malawi, but mostly takes place in a bakery. Inside the pages, a healer steals one of the last remaining mushrooms of the first faerie ring hoping to transplant it in an environment suitable for regrowing wonder and wisdom. It is perhaps the only novel of its kind in which the solution lies partially in desert.
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Published on July 13, 2016 13:09 Tags: faerie, fantasy, shore-leave, trailer, wonder

June 24, 2016

From the page to the stage and back again with John and Carol Barrowman

This year as my latest book emerged, I have plunged into the world of Cons. It has been a richer experience than I ever expected.

Cons are part fantasy, part dream fulfillment, part networking, and part business. Seeing the craft of the cosplayers, talking craft with your fellow authors. Getting to hear a tale or two of success or overcoming struggle fills you. More, when readers approach and share with you their reactions to your work... that's exciting!

With that in mind, I decided to blend my worlds. For years, I have hosted and produced features and shows for radio. Well, why only be an author at a Con. Why not record some of the chats?

For comic, TV, and YA fans, here's one I produced with Dr. Who, Torchwood, and Arrow star John Barrowman who with his sister write both original and adapted works.

https://t.co/lNGu4aCITJ
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Published on June 24, 2016 07:47 Tags: a-halo-of-mushrooms, arrow, barrowman, comiccon, comics, dr-who, hollow-earth, malcolm-merlyn, torchwood