Rayne Hall's Blog: Rayne Hall, Fantasy and Horror Author
May 29, 2015
"Writing About Villains" FREE until Sunday
The Kindle ebook "Writing About Villains" (part of the Writer's Craft series) is free to download from Amazon.
The guide reveals professional techniques and is recommended for all genres. However, it assumes that you've mastered the basics of fiction writing, and is is not suitable for absolute beginners.
The offer is open to all writers until 31 May. myBook.to/Vill
Writing About Villains

The offer is open to all writers until 31 May. myBook.to/Vill
Writing About Villains
Published on May 29, 2015 02:20
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Tags:
characterisation, characterization, characters, fiction-writing, free, genre-fiction, villains, writer, writer-s-craft, writing
January 25, 2014
Steampunk Literature Question
Any steampunk fans out there who can help me with this?
I'm trying to recall the titles and authors of two short stories I read about a year ago.
1. A steampunk story about the 1816 events at the Villa Diodati
2. A steampunk story about a reporter travelling on an airship with a new-fangled typewriter.
Both were (probably) published in two different steampunk anthologies, and I don't remember the books' titles either.
If you happen to recognise one of these, could you please let me know the title and author? If you don't, but happen to know steampunk literature 'geeks' who might, would you please forward this to them? Thanks.
Rayne
I'm trying to recall the titles and authors of two short stories I read about a year ago.
1. A steampunk story about the 1816 events at the Villa Diodati
2. A steampunk story about a reporter travelling on an airship with a new-fangled typewriter.
Both were (probably) published in two different steampunk anthologies, and I don't remember the books' titles either.
If you happen to recognise one of these, could you please let me know the title and author? If you don't, but happen to know steampunk literature 'geeks' who might, would you please forward this to them? Thanks.
Rayne
Published on January 25, 2014 07:06
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Tags:
steampunk
November 3, 2013
Author Reading Tonight (Hastings, England)
I'm participating in an evening of ghost and horror stories tonight at the Jenny Lind, Hastings, East Sussex, England.
There'll be other authors, too, including Jonathan Broughton.
If you're there, say hello. :-)
There'll be other authors, too, including Jonathan Broughton.
If you're there, say hello. :-)
Published on November 03, 2013 08:29
•
Tags:
author-reading, east-sussex, ghost-stories, hastings, horror, horror-stories, jonathan-broughton, performance, rayne-hall
October 23, 2013
I Bought Fifty Books By Indie Authors :-)
I went on an indie book shopping spree to show my support for indie authors. After the contempt Kobo showed indies, I wanted to give a token of my solidarity. Because I respect indie authors.
Here’s what I bought:
The Necromancer's Gambit – Nicolas Wilson
Fear of Widths - David D Levine
From Orbit by Rob Goforth
The Accidental Courier – Robert Darke
Cloaks of Vermin and Fish by Forrest Aguirre
Death in a Northern Town - Peter Mckeirnon
Mercury, Sulfur, & Salt - Ben Stahl
The Book of Revelation, Live Onstage and Four Other Stories -Douglas Kolacki
The Red Knight by Karen Davies
The Rubberband Man and Other Stories - J. David Clarke
Timeshaft - Stewart Bint
Water's Lover - J. Annas Walker
Whispers of a Storm - Anthony Lavisher
Wrong Place Wrong Time by David P Perlmutter
A Vampire Carol – Tara Maya
Lucid – A.J. Church
Don't Be Afraid – J.C. Piech
Clipped - Devon Mccormack
Bite Me – Lana Amore
Cursed – S.A. Archer
Earth Tones – Angela Wallace
Paulie – M.A. Myers
Luvya Getcha – Martin Price
The Answer to Your Question -Paulette Alden
Twisted: Four Paranormal Stories - Jonathan Broughton
Your Gift to Me Bonnie Bartel Latino
Writing Active Setting Book 2: Emotion, Conflict and Back Story Mary Buckham
Writing Steampunk - Beth Daniels
Fairy and Blood:Lilac - William J Crisel
Hannah’s Prayer – Regina Sanders
Freaks Like Us - Jackie Trippier Holt
The White Death and Other Ghastly Ghost Stories - Debbie Kuhn
True Monsters - Judas X. Machina
Gossamer Wings and Other Stories - Scott Zachary
Full Circle -Terry Tyler
Untethered - Katie Hayoz
Northman - J.D. Hughes
Twisted Tails - Kensington Gore
The Highlander – Zoe Saadia
Terms & Conditions Apply – Pippa Jay
The Sundered – Ruthanne Reid
Severed – Dax Varley
Darkness Rising – Ross M Kitson
Dark’s Daughter, Hope – Joshua E. Bigger
The Harmony of Isis – Catherine M Walter
Destiny Binds - by Tammy Blackwell
Bullhorns: Screams of the Innocent - Brian Dunagin
Nightmares and Angels – David King
POED – Candy Korman
Angefire: Dark Angel – Hanna Peach
The Forest Between – Eugene Weiss
Heart on Hold – Sara Barnard
The Rython Kingdom - Mandy Eve-Barnett
Division of the Marked - March McCarron
I chose some books because I like the genres, others because I wanted to try something different, some because they were recommended to me or because they took my fancy at the moment. Some titles are authored by people who follow me on Twitter, who belong to my writing groups, who supported my stand against Kobo’s anti-indie discrimination, or who have contributed stories to the Ten Tales anthologies. Others were random picks.
The list contains more than fifty titles, because some of them were free. Normally, I don’t care whether a book is indie or trad pubbed, I just want a good read. But this particular shopping spree was for indie books only. I believe all of these to be indie books, but sometimes this is difficult to ascertain. Where possible, I bought the books from Smashwords (a site genuinely supportive of indies). I also bought some from Amazon.co.uk and a few paperbacks. I didn’t buy any from Kobo .
I look forward to many hours of reading pleasure. :-)
Rayne Hall
Here’s what I bought:
The Necromancer's Gambit – Nicolas Wilson
Fear of Widths - David D Levine
From Orbit by Rob Goforth
The Accidental Courier – Robert Darke
Cloaks of Vermin and Fish by Forrest Aguirre
Death in a Northern Town - Peter Mckeirnon
Mercury, Sulfur, & Salt - Ben Stahl
The Book of Revelation, Live Onstage and Four Other Stories -Douglas Kolacki
The Red Knight by Karen Davies
The Rubberband Man and Other Stories - J. David Clarke
Timeshaft - Stewart Bint
Water's Lover - J. Annas Walker
Whispers of a Storm - Anthony Lavisher
Wrong Place Wrong Time by David P Perlmutter
A Vampire Carol – Tara Maya
Lucid – A.J. Church
Don't Be Afraid – J.C. Piech
Clipped - Devon Mccormack
Bite Me – Lana Amore
Cursed – S.A. Archer
Earth Tones – Angela Wallace
Paulie – M.A. Myers
Luvya Getcha – Martin Price
The Answer to Your Question -Paulette Alden
Twisted: Four Paranormal Stories - Jonathan Broughton
Your Gift to Me Bonnie Bartel Latino
Writing Active Setting Book 2: Emotion, Conflict and Back Story Mary Buckham
Writing Steampunk - Beth Daniels
Fairy and Blood:Lilac - William J Crisel
Hannah’s Prayer – Regina Sanders
Freaks Like Us - Jackie Trippier Holt
The White Death and Other Ghastly Ghost Stories - Debbie Kuhn
True Monsters - Judas X. Machina
Gossamer Wings and Other Stories - Scott Zachary
Full Circle -Terry Tyler
Untethered - Katie Hayoz
Northman - J.D. Hughes
Twisted Tails - Kensington Gore
The Highlander – Zoe Saadia
Terms & Conditions Apply – Pippa Jay
The Sundered – Ruthanne Reid
Severed – Dax Varley
Darkness Rising – Ross M Kitson
Dark’s Daughter, Hope – Joshua E. Bigger
The Harmony of Isis – Catherine M Walter
Destiny Binds - by Tammy Blackwell
Bullhorns: Screams of the Innocent - Brian Dunagin
Nightmares and Angels – David King
POED – Candy Korman
Angefire: Dark Angel – Hanna Peach
The Forest Between – Eugene Weiss
Heart on Hold – Sara Barnard
The Rython Kingdom - Mandy Eve-Barnett
Division of the Marked - March McCarron
I chose some books because I like the genres, others because I wanted to try something different, some because they were recommended to me or because they took my fancy at the moment. Some titles are authored by people who follow me on Twitter, who belong to my writing groups, who supported my stand against Kobo’s anti-indie discrimination, or who have contributed stories to the Ten Tales anthologies. Others were random picks.
The list contains more than fifty titles, because some of them were free. Normally, I don’t care whether a book is indie or trad pubbed, I just want a good read. But this particular shopping spree was for indie books only. I believe all of these to be indie books, but sometimes this is difficult to ascertain. Where possible, I bought the books from Smashwords (a site genuinely supportive of indies). I also bought some from Amazon.co.uk and a few paperbacks. I didn’t buy any from Kobo .
I look forward to many hours of reading pleasure. :-)
Rayne Hall
Published on October 23, 2013 10:05
•
Tags:
buying-books, indie-authors, indie-books, indie-publishing, kobo, rayne-hall, solidarity, support
October 21, 2013
I Find This Disturbing
If anyone still thinks that Kobo pulled books because of their erotic content, consider that Kobo is promoting books like this:
[caution before you read the blurb. It may be disturbing]
http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/eboo...
At the same time, Kobo pulled picture books for 4-year-olds, poetry collections, textbooks, sweet regency romances....
In the UK, Kobo pulled books by just one criterion: If written by an indie author, it was pulled. (In the US, a mix of bizarre criteria was applied)
The really gross aspect is that people searching for deleted indie-authored children's books get shown books like that one.
[caution before you read the blurb. It may be disturbing]
http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/eboo...
At the same time, Kobo pulled picture books for 4-year-olds, poetry collections, textbooks, sweet regency romances....
In the UK, Kobo pulled books by just one criterion: If written by an indie author, it was pulled. (In the US, a mix of bizarre criteria was applied)
The really gross aspect is that people searching for deleted indie-authored children's books get shown books like that one.
Published on October 21, 2013 15:48
•
Tags:
censorship, de-sade, discrimination, erotica, indie, indie-authors, indie-publishing, kobo, kobo-fiasco, kobo-geddon, rayne-hall
October 20, 2013
This Weekend, I'll Buy 50 Indie Books
I'm going to buy fifty books by indie authors.
Indie authors have been treated so shabbily by Kobo (what Kobo did in the UK beggars belief) that I want to show my respect and support.
I'll buy the books mostly from Smashwords, and some from Amazon.co.uk. Definitely not from Kobo. :-D
I'm going to enjoy this shopping spree.
Indie authors have been treated so shabbily by Kobo (what Kobo did in the UK beggars belief) that I want to show my respect and support.
I'll buy the books mostly from Smashwords, and some from Amazon.co.uk. Definitely not from Kobo. :-D
I'm going to enjoy this shopping spree.
Published on October 20, 2013 04:01
October 19, 2013
The Kobo Fiasco - Update
(You may want to read my previous post on the subject first, to understand what it's about.It's two blog posts back.)
The main disaster zone is definitely the UK. I've tested every indie author I know, and nobody's books are still available on Kobo.
Here's the shocking twist: When I search these authors (non-erotic ones), Kobo shows me other books instead.. pornographic ones! Considering Kobo's justification that they were cleaning up the catalogue, this is a sad joke.
With other countries, I get conflicting reports. Some people in the US tell me they can see indie authors in Kobo's catalogue, though not everyone. Others report that they can see indie books in the catalogue, but the buy links have been disabled.
Some bizarre though rare variations occur, too. One person from the US told me they could see all my books on Kobo - but they were attributed to "author unknown". Go figure.
Kobo still hasn't installed an 18+ filter, which would surely have been the first step in solving their problem.
Em Taylor did an interesting experiment: She searched "School of" on Kobo - something a child might likely search - ... and 80% of titles displayed were erotica! That was *after* Kobo deleted all indie books. Do we need any further evidence that pulling indie books was idiotic?
(If you don't believe this, check the screenshot Em posted in the comments section of the first Kobo Fiasco blog post.)
In the meantime, some people claim that Kobogeddon never happened, that we're imagining things. That's because they still see their books on their Kobo Dashboards, because they access the US site, or because they're convinced that "Kobo would never do such a thing."
Yeah. Right.
The main disaster zone is definitely the UK. I've tested every indie author I know, and nobody's books are still available on Kobo.
Here's the shocking twist: When I search these authors (non-erotic ones), Kobo shows me other books instead.. pornographic ones! Considering Kobo's justification that they were cleaning up the catalogue, this is a sad joke.
With other countries, I get conflicting reports. Some people in the US tell me they can see indie authors in Kobo's catalogue, though not everyone. Others report that they can see indie books in the catalogue, but the buy links have been disabled.
Some bizarre though rare variations occur, too. One person from the US told me they could see all my books on Kobo - but they were attributed to "author unknown". Go figure.
Kobo still hasn't installed an 18+ filter, which would surely have been the first step in solving their problem.
Em Taylor did an interesting experiment: She searched "School of" on Kobo - something a child might likely search - ... and 80% of titles displayed were erotica! That was *after* Kobo deleted all indie books. Do we need any further evidence that pulling indie books was idiotic?
(If you don't believe this, check the screenshot Em posted in the comments section of the first Kobo Fiasco blog post.)
In the meantime, some people claim that Kobogeddon never happened, that we're imagining things. That's because they still see their books on their Kobo Dashboards, because they access the US site, or because they're convinced that "Kobo would never do such a thing."
Yeah. Right.
Published on October 19, 2013 02:07
•
Tags:
indie, indie-authors, indie-publishing, kobo, kobo-fiasco, kobo-geddon, rayne-hall
October 18, 2013
:-) Dear Indie Authors
Kobo may treat you like s**t, but I love you.
Published on October 18, 2013 09:56
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Tags:
indie-authors, indie-publishing, kobo, kobogeddon, rayne-hall, solidarity
October 17, 2013
Authors Beware: Address Harvesters
Be careful when accepting someone's offer of free promotion. There's almost always a catch. Many are email address harvesters. They use your email address and pester you with promos for their own books.
Sadly, they treat this as a mailing list, and assume they can use your address in any way they please, sell it, use it to spam you, share it with others so they can spam you.
Today, I've asked one of those spammers to stop this sort of thing. I thought she might simply be ignorant about netiquette and not realise how obnoxious her behaviour is, so I asked her politely.
She got stroppy because (in her opinion) having promoted my book obliges me to put up with whatever she does with my email.
Hmm.
It seems that once these people have published a book, they forget all about courtesy, consideration and common sense.
Authors, be careful whom you give your email address. Remember that not all promotions are beneficial. Do you really want your book promoted one of those obnoxious pests? Your reputation may get tainted by association.
And please, authors, don't become one of those obnoxious pests yourself.
Rayne
Sadly, they treat this as a mailing list, and assume they can use your address in any way they please, sell it, use it to spam you, share it with others so they can spam you.
Today, I've asked one of those spammers to stop this sort of thing. I thought she might simply be ignorant about netiquette and not realise how obnoxious her behaviour is, so I asked her politely.
She got stroppy because (in her opinion) having promoted my book obliges me to put up with whatever she does with my email.
Hmm.
It seems that once these people have published a book, they forget all about courtesy, consideration and common sense.
Authors, be careful whom you give your email address. Remember that not all promotions are beneficial. Do you really want your book promoted one of those obnoxious pests? Your reputation may get tainted by association.
And please, authors, don't become one of those obnoxious pests yourself.
Rayne
October 16, 2013
The Kobo Fiasco
Some of you may already be aware of what's going on. Others may not.Here's a simplified summary.
Kobo realised that *some* indie-published books in their catalogue contained illegal or icky erotic content. So they pulled *all* indie-published books.
Yep. You've read that right.
Here's some more info:
The books aren't permanently deleted, they're quarantined pending individual reviews. That sounds fair enough until you think about it. Can you imagine how long it will take Kobo staff to check several hundred thousand titles individually? Especially considering that Kobo staff are overworked and can't even cope with their normal workload.
Kobo spent much time and money courting indie authors and persuading them to publish with authors. With one fell swoop, they've destroyed that trust.
What caused this sudden action? This is where you may laugh: A tabloid newspaper in Britain published an article showing that a retailer in Britain was selling books containing incest. This exposure caused outrage against that retailer. All that retailer would have needed to do was instal an 18+ filter. Instead, they panicked. And Kobo (supplying that retailer) panicked too.
If Kobo genuinely thought there was an emergency, I can understand that that they would take a rapid drastic action.It might have made sense had they decided to temporarily quarantine all erotic books, or all books containing certain suspicious words such as 'Daddy', and check them for illegal erotic content.
But to do this to all indie books, simply because they're indie?
Note: Bestselling erotica titles were not pulled - an interesting instance of double standards.
On the plus side, Kobo sent an email to authors that books would be quarantined and why. I appreciate being informed. That's something. Alas, only authors who published directly with Kobo received that email. Authors who published to Kobo via Smashwords or D2D were not informed. They were shocked to see their books had vanished.
Moreover, that letter was worded to give the illusion that only a few titles would be temporarily removed pending review. It did not admit that *all* indies were pulled with one fell swoop.
And moreover, the letter is full of hypocritical statements such as "Our goal at Kobo is not to censor material; we support freedom of expression." and "Further, we want to protect the reputation of self-publishing as a whole."
These claims are in direct contradiction to Kobo's actions.
My subjective assessment: B***S**T.
The situation is of course more complicated than I've described. For example, not all books were removed at once. Mine were still in the Kobo catalogue yesterday - but today they've disappeared. And Kobo has several websites (some of them are regional, some are by other criteria) and the sweeping deletion has not happened to all of them at once. I believe some (but not all) American customers can still get all titles. If you're an author, your books will still show on your dashboard page even if Kobo has pulled it from the catalogue.
I suggest we allow Kobo until Friday to sort out this mess they've created. They may realise their mistake and do a u-turn, and restore books wholesale the way they've deleted them, and then remove individual suspect titles the way they should have in the first place.
If Kobo don't backtrack by Friday, I suggest it's time for authors (indie authors and sympathetic trad authors) and readers (especially Kobo customers) to unite and speak up.
If we allow Kobo to get away with this monumental breach of trust, other retailers and publishers will think they can do the same.
Some months ago, readers and authors used social media to campaign against the outrage of banks censoring books (the famous Smashwords vs PayPal case). We were very successful then. PayPal backed down, the freedom of literature was restored, and the credit card companies also gave up their self-appointed role as book censors.
If Kobo doesn't correct their anti-indie stance, it's time to speak up. Tweet, retweet, blog etc about it. Feel free to share this blog post. On Twitter, we're currently discussing suitable hashtags. #kobofiasco and #kobogeddon are emerging as favourites.
Some authors are already removing books from Kobo, calling for Kobo boycotts etc.
However, I suggest we wait before we take drastic action. Kobo *may* after all get their act together and sort this somehow. I suggest waiting until Friday before we get seriously active.
I used to have a positive opinion of Kobo, and used to promote Kobo a lot (largely because I hoped it would grow into a strong competitor to Amazon). But now, I'm no longer sure.
If Kobo manages to review all the pulled books, to delete the illegal ones and restore the legal ones by Friday, I'll applaud them. Otherwise, I'll be in the front lines of the #kobogeddon campaign.
Rayne Hall
Fantasy & Horror Fiction
Dark * Dangerous * Disturbing
viewAuthor.at/RayneHall
Kobo realised that *some* indie-published books in their catalogue contained illegal or icky erotic content. So they pulled *all* indie-published books.
Yep. You've read that right.
Here's some more info:
The books aren't permanently deleted, they're quarantined pending individual reviews. That sounds fair enough until you think about it. Can you imagine how long it will take Kobo staff to check several hundred thousand titles individually? Especially considering that Kobo staff are overworked and can't even cope with their normal workload.
Kobo spent much time and money courting indie authors and persuading them to publish with authors. With one fell swoop, they've destroyed that trust.
What caused this sudden action? This is where you may laugh: A tabloid newspaper in Britain published an article showing that a retailer in Britain was selling books containing incest. This exposure caused outrage against that retailer. All that retailer would have needed to do was instal an 18+ filter. Instead, they panicked. And Kobo (supplying that retailer) panicked too.
If Kobo genuinely thought there was an emergency, I can understand that that they would take a rapid drastic action.It might have made sense had they decided to temporarily quarantine all erotic books, or all books containing certain suspicious words such as 'Daddy', and check them for illegal erotic content.
But to do this to all indie books, simply because they're indie?
Note: Bestselling erotica titles were not pulled - an interesting instance of double standards.
On the plus side, Kobo sent an email to authors that books would be quarantined and why. I appreciate being informed. That's something. Alas, only authors who published directly with Kobo received that email. Authors who published to Kobo via Smashwords or D2D were not informed. They were shocked to see their books had vanished.
Moreover, that letter was worded to give the illusion that only a few titles would be temporarily removed pending review. It did not admit that *all* indies were pulled with one fell swoop.
And moreover, the letter is full of hypocritical statements such as "Our goal at Kobo is not to censor material; we support freedom of expression." and "Further, we want to protect the reputation of self-publishing as a whole."
These claims are in direct contradiction to Kobo's actions.
My subjective assessment: B***S**T.
The situation is of course more complicated than I've described. For example, not all books were removed at once. Mine were still in the Kobo catalogue yesterday - but today they've disappeared. And Kobo has several websites (some of them are regional, some are by other criteria) and the sweeping deletion has not happened to all of them at once. I believe some (but not all) American customers can still get all titles. If you're an author, your books will still show on your dashboard page even if Kobo has pulled it from the catalogue.
I suggest we allow Kobo until Friday to sort out this mess they've created. They may realise their mistake and do a u-turn, and restore books wholesale the way they've deleted them, and then remove individual suspect titles the way they should have in the first place.
If Kobo don't backtrack by Friday, I suggest it's time for authors (indie authors and sympathetic trad authors) and readers (especially Kobo customers) to unite and speak up.
If we allow Kobo to get away with this monumental breach of trust, other retailers and publishers will think they can do the same.
Some months ago, readers and authors used social media to campaign against the outrage of banks censoring books (the famous Smashwords vs PayPal case). We were very successful then. PayPal backed down, the freedom of literature was restored, and the credit card companies also gave up their self-appointed role as book censors.
If Kobo doesn't correct their anti-indie stance, it's time to speak up. Tweet, retweet, blog etc about it. Feel free to share this blog post. On Twitter, we're currently discussing suitable hashtags. #kobofiasco and #kobogeddon are emerging as favourites.
Some authors are already removing books from Kobo, calling for Kobo boycotts etc.
However, I suggest we wait before we take drastic action. Kobo *may* after all get their act together and sort this somehow. I suggest waiting until Friday before we get seriously active.
I used to have a positive opinion of Kobo, and used to promote Kobo a lot (largely because I hoped it would grow into a strong competitor to Amazon). But now, I'm no longer sure.
If Kobo manages to review all the pulled books, to delete the illegal ones and restore the legal ones by Friday, I'll applaud them. Otherwise, I'll be in the front lines of the #kobogeddon campaign.
Rayne Hall
Fantasy & Horror Fiction
Dark * Dangerous * Disturbing
viewAuthor.at/RayneHall
Published on October 16, 2013 05:22
•
Tags:
censorship, indie, kobo, kobo-fiasco, kobogeddon, rayne-hall, twitter
Rayne Hall, Fantasy and Horror Author
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