Hugh Howey's Blog, page 55

August 25, 2013

Tampa Comic Con – Day 3

This has been one of the best events ever. Another busy day today. I feel bad that I’m out of so many books (WOOL and DUST are both gone), but I’ll be happy when I’m lugging a single box back to the hotel. Thanks a ton to everyone who came out.


Next week is WorldCon in San Antonio. And next year, I’m going to do DragonCon in Atlanta, instead. I hear so many great things about that convention. It stinks that you have to pick one or the other, as they’re always on the same weekend. Helps that WorldCon will be in London next year!


After WorldCon, my next event will be in Watertown, Massachusetts. And then it’s off to Europe for two wild and crazy months!

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Published on August 25, 2013 10:11

August 24, 2013

#7

!!!


Just found out that DUST is hitting the New York Times bestseller list at #7! Thank you, one and all. Such an honor and thrill. I appreciate all that you’ve done for this series.


The USA Today gives you due credit in a brief write-up. It’s the fans who make this possible. I’m forever grateful.


As for Day 2 of Tampa Con, it’s even more insane than Day 1. Swamped with readers. So many people who came out just because they’re fans of WOOL. Spoke with a few absent fans over the phone. And nearly bawled as one fan (Sarah) teared up and freaked out when she saw that I was here. WOOL is her all-time favorite novel, she says. Today, she is my all-time favorite fan.


Looking forward to Day 3!


 

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Published on August 24, 2013 11:54

August 23, 2013

Tampa Con Day 1

Friday at Tampa Comic Con. Man! What a day. I was up until 12:30 signing books and packing up thumb drives. Slept a little, got up and packed the car and hit the road for Tampa. But first, a stop at a random post office along the way and 150 packages to send out. They love me there. Really.


I got to the hotel at 11:30, threw my bag in the room, and pushed a bellhop cart across the street to the convention center. I had my table set up at noon, right as the doors open. And it’s been a busy blast since. I brought all the books I had at the house, and it looks like they won’t last through tomorrow. I’m blowing them out at $10 apiece.


Right now, I’m hanging out with Jimmy Palmiotti, one of the writers for the Wool comic. Great costumes, already a lot of traffic, and I can tell that this weekend is going to go by much too quickly.

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Published on August 23, 2013 12:50

August 20, 2013

Tampa Comic Con!

It’s Con Time! This weekend, I drive across America’s penis for Tampa Comic Con. I’ve got some great surprises in store for those who can attend. The comic book people are making posters for me to sign, and the backs have some of the rough panels the artist has cooked up thus far. Jimmy Broxton is a brilliant illustrator. I really love the way this comic is coming together.



I’ll also be signing copies of I, ZOMBIE in blood, copies of WOOL and DUST and others. And I’ll have a handful of the thumb drives with me (though they are going quite fast. Scarily fast, in fact).


I have a panel on publishing and writing you can attend, but the rest of my time will be spent on the main floor at one of the signing tables. So you can bring books for me to sign, gab a while, and check out all things comic and geekery.


 

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Published on August 20, 2013 16:18

We Have Winners!

Update: The Thumb Drives are now available on the sidebar!


Also: Someone asked about the size of the thumb drive. They’re only 256MB, so they aren’t useful for lugging tons of stuff around. Good for e-books and not much else. I like to think that adds to the Silo-esque retroness of the things, but the truth was that these puppies go up in price really fast with capacity, and I made them to give them away.


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Published on August 20, 2013 07:31

August 19, 2013

Maker, Hacker, Writer.

On Wednesday, I’ll be participating in a live Q&A where anyone can ask me anything and expect some form of honest answer. Leading up to that, I thought I’d share two of the questions I get the most these days and also explain how this past weekend at the Boing Boing and Ford Ingenuity Hack-a-Thon helped me to better understand my usual answers.


The number one question I get is why I chose to self-publish. When I wrote my first novel, I spent a few weeks querying before two small publishers expressed interest and made offers. This was already more than I expected, so I took an offer and had a wonderful experience editing and publishing my first novel.


When the contract arrived for the sequel, there were a few reasons I decided to put the book out on my own. The two strongest reasons were the desire to control every aspect of the book’s creation, and the awful feeling I had when signing over the rights to my work. There are a lot of other reasons I thought self-publishing made more sense (the tools are available to anyone; the book will be in print for the rest of my life; I was going to be responsible for the majority of the promotion; the pay was a lot better). But it really came down to control. I didn’t want to hand over the thing I’d made. I wanted to craft it from beginning to end.



I liken this to an artist who isn’t satisfied simply painting on canvas. They also feel the need to choose the matting and the frame, to hang it on the wall just so, and to light it appropriately. How the painting is observed is a combination of all these things, just as how a book is enjoyed is affected by font selection and size, the spacing, where a sentence ends on one page and begins on another. It’s all important to me. While working with a publisher, I wanted to get on the phone and discuss these minutiae but worried about being a pain in the ass. Doing it myself removes that worry. I can be a pain in my own ass.


The other question I get a lot of these days all fall into the category of: Are you freakin’ stupid? These are questions on DRM, piracy, and fan fiction. I’m against the first and all for the second and third. DRM is bad for those who pay for their media and a minor annoyance at best for those who steal it. And my stance on piracy is that I don’t care if people steal my work. I similarly don’t care if they buy my books at a used bookstore, read them on a friend’s Kindle, or borrow a copy from a neighbor’s bookshelf. The challenge is to be read. Figuring out ways not to be read seems silly to me. I’m not alone in either of these stances, but my view on fan fiction is a bit more outlying.


The idea of the immutable novel is rather modern. Storytelling began as an oral tradition, when tales were swapped, spliced, modified, and augmented by each teller. Even when books began to be written down, translators and transcribers would often make tweaks and add their own twists as they were copying the text. And beyond the printing press, you had greats like Dickens who would serialize a story and then change those texts slightly as he combined them into novels. Stories weren’t meant to sit there, unchanged and unmoving through the years. They can, but that’s a recent invention. Fan fiction is much older. It harkens back to the Homeric epics and the lore lost to time.


What I realized this weekend at the Boing Boing and Ford Ingenuity Hack-a-Thon is that my writing philosophy is a product of the Maker and Hacker culture in which I grew up. My love of crafting a product from beginning to end, which means teaching myself the typographical secrets of kerning and widows and orphans, or figuring out Photoshop for covers and Indesign for interiors, fits with maker culture and the obsessives who want to craft a thing from concept to launch.


It was from embracing the crowdsourcing mentality at an early age that I learned to be comfortable with fan fiction. This is literature, hacked. DRM-free is all about open sourcing material, making it part of the commons. Not worrying about piracy is because . . . well, I was a pirate. I knew firsthand that trying out a product was the surest way to get me to support it. What’s true of software could be true of books.


My first career was as a computer repairman at a Tandy store. This is where I picked up the traits that would color my writing career. I loved to build my own computers from scratch. I loved to tinker, to steal software, to share what I learned on bulletin boards, to make things do more than what they were designed to do. Watercool a PC just to push the chip to its limits? That was me. Rewrite the hex code of a saved computer game to open up new abilities? It was more fun than the game itself. You think I would be happy just writing the words and handing them off to someone else? Not on your life. You think I would want to lock up these words, make them difficult to access, difficult to change? It would go against everything I’ve done as a user.


I like making things. I like hacking things. That affects who I am as a writer.


 

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Published on August 19, 2013 08:25

August 17, 2013

Nobody Clean!

There will be a lot of DUST today. All I can ask is that nobody clean. Please. Be that disruptive force. Hope. Dream. Live.


Go outside and play.

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Published on August 17, 2013 04:16

August 16, 2013

How freakin’ awesome are these?

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Published on August 16, 2013 15:47

W.O.O.F.?

Bandit: “I don’t get it.”


Lisa: “What don’t you get?”


Bandit: “If it’s World Order Operation Fifty, how come the book ain’t called WOOF?”


Reading Dust copy


Bandit: “And you promised there would be sheep.”


 

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Published on August 16, 2013 10:09

August 14, 2013

CreativeLIVE Course!

You may have noticed my shiny new website. Well, it was put together by Tim Grahl of OutThink Group. Tim has helped me streamline a ton of the things I do on a daily basis (like how I handle signed book orders). Tim is a genius when it comes to managing time, creating logical workflow, and using simple tools to amplify social media marketing. I’ve learned a lot from Tim about what works and what doesn’t. And now you can too!


Tim has been invited by CreativeLIVE to put together a two day seminar on selling your first 1,000 books. He already has a brilliant book on the topic that every writer should check out. I’ve been invited to join Tim in San Francisco for a couple of the sessions. We’ll discuss his methods and take questions from a live audience. I’m really looking forward to this.


To find out more, go here. Or check out the video below.



 

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Published on August 14, 2013 13:55