Richard Lee Byers's Blog, page 29

March 10, 2014

CARAVAN OF SHADOWS is available again.

My novel CARAVAN OF SHADOWS (a tale of ghosts set in the original World of Darkness) is now available again after being out of print for a number of years. If you're interested, follow the link.

http://www.drivethrufiction.com/product/127244/Caravan-of-Shadows?term=Richard+Lee+Byers
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Published on March 10, 2014 18:27

March 4, 2014

The next Fantastic Four movie

My new Airlock Alpha column discusses the forthcoming Fantastic Four movie:

http://airlockalpha.com/node/9885/astrojive-how-do-you-do-fantastic.html
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Published on March 04, 2014 05:01

March 3, 2014

Crossing the Streams Reddit AMA Tuesday 3/4/14

Many of the writers involved in the Crossing the Streams book giveaway contest (including me) are doing a Reddit AMA tomorrow. Come join the conversation starting around noon.

http://www.reddit.com/r/fantasy
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Published on March 03, 2014 06:10

February 20, 2014

I was a guest on the Gamer's Tavern podcast

I was a guest on the Gamer's Tavern podcast to discuss the Forgotten Realms. You can listen to that here:

http://gamerstavern.org/episode-20-forgotten-realms/
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Published on February 20, 2014 18:36

New Sundering video

In case you missed it, Sundering gamers, there's a new video call to arms up as of this week.

https://www.wizards.com/dnd/sundering.aspx#dnd/sundering/main/5
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Published on February 20, 2014 18:30

February 19, 2014

Crossing the Streams 2014: A humongous multi-author contest

Crossing the Streams 2014 is a ginormous multi-author book giveaway. Some of you may have entered these contests before as this is the second time this event has run. For others, this’ll be the first time, as it is for me as a participating writer. Here’s how it all works.

Nearly two dozen science fiction, fantasy, and horror creators–mostly novelists, but some short story and comic writers as well–have come together to create a series of contests for you guys. Each of us is running one on his or her own site.

The specific details vary from author to author. For example, my contest (described below) will likely not be the same as that found on Ari’s site or Erik’s.

However, each contest has some details in common. Specifically, each of us will select two winners from the contest on his or her own site. Each of those winners will receive one signed book, free, from the author whose contest they won. So, for instance, if you win here, you win one of my books. If you win on Dave’s site, you win one of his, etc.

But wait, there’s more! Once the contests have ended, all the authors involved will choose a single mega-ultra-hyper-super-winner from all the entries on all the sites. That fortunate soul will receive a signed book from each of the authors involved. In other words, around twenty-five freebies.

You can only enter each author’s contest once, but you’re welcome to enter each of them, and in fact, we hope you’ll take a shot at all of them. Even if you don’t win the grand prize, it’s entirely possible to win more than one of the individual contests.

You can find a complete list of the authors involved, as well as links to their sites, below. But first, here’s how to enter MY contest.

Send me an email at rleebyers@mac.com

The subject line must read, “Crossing the Streams.”

In the body of the e-mail, tell me your favorite monster from science fiction, fantasy, or horror (books, movies, TV, comics, whatever) and why that one is your favorite. You can tell me in as much depth or detail as you like. A single sentence is okay, and so are a few paragraphs.

I’ll select two winners. I’ll choose one at random, so even if you don’t think your explanation is all that interesting, you’ve still got a shot. I’ll pick the other based on what I think is the most insightful and/or entertaining answer.

By entering, you grant me the right to publish your answer here on my blog. And of course, everyone who enters is also in the running for the two dozen books that make up the grand prize.

Entries must be received between February 19 and March 19, 2014.

My two winners, and the grand-prize winner, may choose either of the following.

BLIND GOD’S BLUFF: A BILLY FOX NOVEL (trade paperback) (urban fantasy)
PATHFINDER TALES: CALLED TO DARKNESS (mass market paperback) (sword and sorcery)

If you’ve got any questions, please ask either with a response here or via email.

My Unindicted Coconspirators:

You can find the names and links for my fellow authors below. I hope that when you visit their sites, you’ll look at more than just the contest info. These are some seriously talented creators, and this is a chance to discover them and their work.

Anyway, good luck!


Ari Marmell: http://mouseferatu.com/index.php/crossing-the-streams-2014-a-massive-multi-author-contest/

Betsy Dornbusch: http://www.betsydornbusch.com/2014/02/crossing-streams-2014-contest.html

Darrin Drader: http://www.darrindrader.com/?page_id=19

Dave Gross: http://frabjousdave.com/crossing-the-streams-multi-author-contest

Erik Scott de Bie: http://erikscottdebie.com/?p=1141

Erin M. Evans: http://slushlush.com/2014/02/crossing-the-streams/

Erin N. Hoffman: Link to be announced.

Gabrielle Faust: http://www.gabriellefaust.com/archives/6813

Howard Andrew Jones: http://www.howardandrewjones.com/crossing-the-streams-2014

James L. Sutter: http://jameslsutter.com/news.html#CrossingTheStreams

Jeff Salyards: http://jeffsalyards.com/wp-admin/post-new.php

Joshua Palmatier: http://jpsorrow.livejournal.com/422516.html

Marsheila (Marcy) Rockwell and Jeffrey J. Mariotte: http://www.marsheilarockwell.com/contests.html

Matt Forbeck: http://www.forbeck.com/crossing-streams-2014/

Paul S. Kemp: http://paulskemp.com/blog/crossingstreams/

Saranna DeWylde: http://www.sarannadewylde.com \ Crossing the Streams-Massive Multi Author Contest

Scott Lynch: Link to be announced.

Wendy N. Wagner: http://winniewoohoo.com/?p=248
 
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Published on February 19, 2014 07:40

February 15, 2014

A guest post from M. Todd Gallowglas

This is Richard speaking, but just for a second. Please enjoy a guest post from fantasy author M. Todd Gallowglas and then check out DEAD WEIGHT: THE TOMBS and his other works here: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_0_8?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=m.+todd+gallowglas&sprefix=M.+Todd+%2Caps%2C228

Take it away, Todd!

“Begin in an experience, real or imagined.” – Richard Hugo

I’ve read a lot of fantasy. A LOT. I’ve been reading fantasy since I got The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe back in the second grade. That was a long time back. Back when really, the only mainstream fantasies either had a talking lion or a ring of power. But I digress. With all the fantasy I’ve read, I’ve made the observation that fantasy writers have two mindsets when they compose a work of fantasy. One is, “I’m writing this for fantasy readers, so I’m going to trust them to suspend disbelief so I can jump right into the fun weird stuff.” The other is, “I’m writing this for anyone who might pick up my book, who may or may not be a fantasy reader, and so I need to ground the story firmly in a believable reality before jumping into the fun weird stuff.”

When I first started writing, like seriously writing with the intent to be a professionally published writer, I fell into the first group. That was in high school. I remained in this for the better part of two decades. It took reading Steven Erikson, Jeffry Eugenides, some Jim Butcher, Naomi Novik, lots of Harlan Ellison, World War Z, and a degree in Creative Writing to move me firmly into the second camp. DEAD WEIGHT was a big part of that change. Now, I’m not saying one way is right, and the other way is wrong. It’s just about knowing the audience you’re targeting your story toward. Many a devout fantasy fan will turn away from a book where the weird stuff doesn’t start showing up soon enough.

I wrote the initial draft of DEAD WEIGHT with the fantasy reader in mind. The very first scene opens with a skirmish between a platoon of Marines and some faerie cavalry mounted on unicorns. No build up. No setting or easing the reader into this strange world where Marines are tromping through the back woods of Arcadia. I just went right for combat: guns firing, blood spraying, screams, and death. No context for any of the magical and legendary things. That was in my second semester at SFSU.

Later that semester in my Characterization class, I wrote a piece for a writing prompt that turned out to be the actual beginning of the story, or at least, what I thought was the beginning of the story. If you’ve read DEAD WEIGHT: The Tombs, this exercise was the very first draft of when Boy Scout wakes up in the dingy apartment. Off and on throughout the next few semesters, I played around with different scenes that I thought might or might not be part of the Dead Weight world. I wound up using it for the primary project in an independent studies course, and as my final project for graduation. Through nearly iteration of the story, Alice LaPlante helped guide me to seeing the story for what it could be. She helped me take it from a gritty war story that existed as a series of moments out of context, to a rich story about a cast of characters dealing with a surreal war and coping with the aftermath.

Most of our focus was that first scene with Boy Scout in his apartment. We determined that I was, in fact, going to begin the whole story there, and that would frame the rest of my tale. Through carefully guided questions and exercises over three classes over three semesters, Alice instilled in me the idea that the greatest speculative fiction must pull the reader in with a sense of almost hyper-reality, and that must happen well before the strangeness happens. Then, when the strangeness does happen, the writer must, so as not to jar the reader from the world of the story, do so with such fluidity and skill that the reader completely accepts whatever strangeness creeps into the narrative.

This is not easy to do. A close friend, who happens to be a fairly savvy and intelligent reader, gave me the greatest compliments I’ve ever received from DEAD WEIGHT. She was a beta reader for part of the story before I turned it as my final project. She read what would eventually become the section title “Uninvited guests.” When we met to go over her comments, the first thing she said was, “When I started it, I thought you weren’t writing a fantasy. It wasn’t until {spoilers retracted} that stopped and realized it was a fantasy. Yay me!

Really, that’s the job of all writers, to draw the reader into the story’s reality without raising questions or suspicions. It’s hardest for those of us writing about things that don’t and can’t exist within the real world. If we want our stories accessible to all readers, we have to work double time and triple time to get people to buy in and go along for the ride. If we can create a sense of truth behind the fantastic, they’ll follow you – not only in spite of the weirdness, but if you really set it up well, they will follower faster and more eagerly because of the weirdness.

M. Todd Gallowglas is professional storyteller and word spinner. When he was a child, he wished that he could be a left-handed red head, because he thought they were the most special and different people in the world. Because he was a brown-haired righty, life had forced him to create his own path to being special and different. He chose to make up stories of fantastical worlds of adventure, believing in them so completely, that several of his teachers questioned whether he knew the difference between fantasy and reality. The jury is still out. He is the bestselling author of the Tears of Rage sequence and the Halloween Jack books. DEAD WEIGHT is his first published foray into Urban Fantasy. He lives with his wife, three children, more pets than they need, and enough imaginary friends to provide playmates for several crowded kindergarten classes. Find out more about M Todd Gallowglas and his books at www.mtoddgallowglas.com
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Published on February 15, 2014 06:33

February 13, 2014

Yet another kind review of THE REAVER: THE SUNDERING BOOK IV

A kind review of THE REAVER: THE SUNDERING BOOK IV from Seattle Geekly:

http://www.seattlegeekly.net/2014/02/tuesday-reviews-february-12-2014/
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Published on February 13, 2014 06:26

February 11, 2014

The latest SFWA controversy

I don't usually comment on these things, but when I found out about the latest SFWA controversy (the Bulletin/Truesdale Petition thing), my first thought was, "This is why we can't have nice things."

By which I mean, this is why we aren't going to have young writers interested in joining the organization or even regarding it with respect.

And I'm not saying that it never does anything worthy of respect. But these periodic explosions over alleged sexism and racism, or alleged political correctness and censorship depending on which side is your side, have absolutely become the public face of SFWA.

Wouldn't it be cool if someday SFWA got a lot of publicity for achieving something of actual practical benefit to writers? I know, I'm a crazy dreamer!
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Published on February 11, 2014 11:02