Mark Leslie Lefebvre's Blog, page 13
August 11, 2023
Episode 318 – Rambling Reflections from the Road – Part 3
In this solo episode Mark reflects on the value authors can have for libraries, exhaustion of being on the road for several weeks in a row and too many commitments, and the feeling of “coming home.”
This episode is sponsored by patrons of the Stark Reflections Podcast.
Links of Interest:
DigipaloozaMark Leslie’s Books via OverDriveMark Leslie Lefebvre’s Books via OverDriveWhen Words CollideBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesYippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die HardThe introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
August 3, 2023
Episode 317 – Rambling Reflections from the Road – Part 2
In this solo episode Mark reflects on a few of the things he has learned from a couple of the craft talks given at his intense residency week in the Masters in Creative Writing program at Western Colorado University.
This episode is sponsored by patrons of the Stark Reflections Podcast.
Links of Interest:
Graduate Program in Creative Writing at WCUSteve Coughlin (Professor of English)Maya Jewel Zeller (Nature Writing and Poetry Faculty)Buy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesYippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die HardThe introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
July 27, 2023
Episode 316 – Free Your Inner Non-Fiction Writer with Johanna Rothman
Mark interviews Johanna Rothman about her latest book FREE YOUR INNER NON-FICTION WRITER.
Prior to the interview, Mark shares a personal update and a word about this episode’s sponsor

This episode is sponsored by Mark’s new book Yippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die Hard.
In the interview, Mark and Johanna talk about:
Why Johanna is often called The Pragmatic ManagerThe thirty-years of consulting that Johanna has experience withThe fact that she is not a “natural writer”Beginning to write in 1997 because she realized that speaking only wasn’t a great way to market her business as a consultantAdvice Johanna received from Gerald WeinbergHow Johanna began to write short fiction in 2016Being involved in the early days of “Agile” developmentWhy Johanna recommends writing in 15 minute chunks for non-fictionWho the idea reader is for Johanna’s book FREE YOUR INNER NONFICTION WRITERHow to keep a business-related blog interestingHow writing non-fiction includes universal story elements: “a person in a situation with a problem”The “write fast to write well” conceptThe importance of maintaining your voiceWhy Johanna writes a question of the week on her blogThe book Obliquity by John Kay and how detours might help us better in the long runAdvice Johanna would offer to writers for getting better at their own non-fiction writingAnd more…After the interview Mark reflects on the importance of your author voice as well as the divergent ways you sometimes find your way to your destination.
A few of Mark’s Die-Hard self-promo parody images:


Links of Interest:
Johanna Rothman’s WebsiteCreate an Adaptable LifeFree Your Inner Non-Fiction WriterBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesYippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die HardJohanna Rothman, known as the “Pragmatic Manager,” offers frank advice for your complex problems. She helps leaders and teams learn to see practical alternatives that help them achieve more agility in their work. With that knowledge, they can choose what—and how—to adapt their product development.
For almost three decades, Johanna has helped her clients experiment with agile and lean alternatives for every piece of their product development. As a result, her clients create more management agility which translates to better business results.
A prolific writer, Johanna is the author of 18 books and hundreds of articles about many aspects of product development. She uses her trademark practicality and humor to focus on what people can do—and not take herself too seriously.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
July 20, 2023
Episode 315 – Rambling Reflections from the Road – Part 1
In this solo episode Mark reflects on being overly stressed about having too much on his plate, and what seemed to have helped him deal with that.
This episode is sponsored by patrons of the Stark Reflections Podcast.
Links of Interest:
Buy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesYippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die HardThe introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
July 13, 2023
Episode 314 – Defeating Writer’s Block Using Penspyre with David Olive Jr.
Mark interviews David Olive, Jr (AKA David Grimdark) author and one of the engineers behind Penspyre a tool to help writers tackle writer’s block and productivity.
Prior to the interview, Mark shares a brief personal update, comments from recent episodes, and word about this episode’s sponsor.

You can learn more about how you can get your audiobooks distributed to retailers and library systems around the world at starkreflections.ca/Findaway.
In the interview, Mark and David talk about:
David’s love of reading as a young child and his love of fantasy novelsBegining to read eBooks on a dedicated reader, and reading WebnovelsStarting to write when interning in UniversityPutting some of his work up on WattpadThe Systems Design Engineering program David recently graduated from at University of WaterlooThe final year project that David and his fellow engineering students put together, which resulted in PenspyreThe procedural documentation of identifying problems related to the writing processReaching out to local writers from the Cambridge Writer’s Group as part of their research and investigationLearning the Google Spring methodHow Pensypre offers up AI-generated writing prompts to help a writer with their productivityThe research they’d done with writers leading them to believe they didn’t want a tool that would give them something they’d take word for word but that they needed something to help “get the ball rolling.”The metrics they looked at for their research with how writers engaged with the toolTheir study’s results showing that writers typically wrote 15% more in a 20 minute writing sprint using the tool than when not using the toolHow Pensyre is a tool David wanted to make as much for himself as for other writersThe “Continue the Story” option where you can focus on action, dialogue, or inner thoughts of the characters with various styles or moodsThe “Link the story” feature for briding two different scenes or moments or actions togetherThe “Describe” function that allows you to draw upon one or more of the five sensesPenspyre’s availability as a Google Docs extensionHow writers during the test kept the prompts unedited about 15% of the timeThe element of the software that suggests the level of “originality” score to the promptAdvice David would offer to beginning writersDavid’s thoughts on why writers shouldn’t be afraid of this new technologyAfter the interview Mark shares a few of his own reflections, thanks Patrons for their support and reminds them there’ll be a video walk-thru of Penspyre available for them at www.patreon.com/starkreflections.
Links of Interest:
David’s Author WebsitePenspyre WebsitePenspyre Extension on Google ChromeFindaway VoicesBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesYippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die HardDavid Olive Jr is a recent graduate from the University of Waterloo, Canada who has a passion for reading and writing fiction. As an aspiring writer he and some classmates decided to try and tackle writing productivity as their final year design project. The result was Penspyre, a tool that utilizes AI to give the writer contextualized writing prompts and help them be more productive.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
July 6, 2023
Episode 313 – Pioneering In Digital Indie Publishing with Peter M. Ball
Mark interviews author, publisher and RPG gamer Peter M. Ball who has been engaged in experimental and digital publishing since the very beginning of its appearance in the book industry.
Prior to the interview, Mark shares a word about this episode’s sponsor.

You can learn more about how you can get your audiobooks distributed to retailers and library systems around the world at starkreflections.ca/Findaway.
In the interview, Mark and Peter talk about:
Peter being a night owl who is most comfortable starting to write at about 10 PM at night and working through the nightHow, through necessity with a regular life schedule, Peter will get the writing done first thing in the morningPeter having wanted to be a writer since he was quite youngThe way that most of the work he has taken on in his life has been somehow affiliated with the writing worldDescribing the Gold Coast of Australia as Miami with slightly less charmThe undergraduate degree focus which mostly avoided genre fictionHow you can never escape poetry once you’ve done it, even years later being introgued as “Peter the Poet”How in the early 2000s Dungeons and Dragons open-sourced their rules, allowing people to provide material within their realmGetting involved in DriveThruFiction back in 2005The hunger for content that came out in that time periodHow changes in the RPG industry that happened were later echoed a few years later in the eBook fiction publishing spaceThe issues Peter recognized in 2006 in creating role playing game material where somebody else held the licensce for itChallenges of submitting fiction to markets from a country like AustraliaSpending six weeks at an Australian branch of the Clarion Writers Workshop and how that dramatically changed the perspective forced on him from his university educationContinuing to submit his fiction to the traditional markets but paying attention to what was going on in the self-publishing, digital publishing, and indie publishing spaceLaunching Brain Jar Press in 2017 largely as a vehicle for publishing his backlistWhy cutting your teeth in short fiction can be greatHaving a plan to indie publish his own books for about ten years, make all the mistake on his own books, rather than someone elses, and getting solid learning and experience from it to benefit his pressWorking with Kathleen Jennings on a poetry collection right at about the time her first book with Tor went hugeThe idea for a series of short chapbooks with four or five essays per writer in order to bring these remarkable articles the authors had already written back into availabilityBorrowing the cultural capital of all the people they’re publishing so that they can grow and eventually launch new writersHow Peter fell in love with print quite accidentallyThe requirement of having to have an online store for the pressThe joke that it’s cheaper to get things to Narnia than it is to get them to AustraliaThe thought exercise Peter does regarding how many books he has to sell to make it to $100Understanding the market base that you’re likely selling to as a small specialized indie pressPeter’s impatience for just replicating what midlist are publishing is doing in the face of such wonderful, free, and dynamic digital tools when one can be breaking the model, expanding, and forming new ideas and new productsether Peter has been doing much of his own writing since launching Brain Jar Press 2.0The flash fiction writing Peter has been able to do during a few 8 minute breaks at workWhat Peter is most optimistic about with what’s happening in the publishing world nowAnd more…After the interview Mark reflects on Peter working in publishing and writing related realms, the value of connecting with others in the industry, and Peter’s thirst for innovation and experimentation within digital publishing.
Links of Interest:
Peter M. Ball’s WebsiteBrain Jar PressFindaway VoicesBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesPeter M. Ball is an author, publisher, and RPG gamer whose love of speculative fiction emerged after exposure to The Hobbit, Star Wars, David Lynch’s Dune, and far too many games of Dungeons and Dragons before the age of 7. He’s spent the bulk of his life working as a creative writing tutor, with brief stints as a performance poet, gaming convention organiser, online content developer, non-profit arts manager, and d20 RPG publisher.
Peter’s three biggest passions are fiction, gaming, and honing the way aspiring writers think about the business and craft of writing, which led to a five-year period working for Queensland Writers Centre as manager of the Australian Writers Marketplace and convenor of the GenreCon writing conference. He is now pursuing a PhD in Writing at the University of Queensland, exploring the poetics of series fiction and their response to emerging publishing technologies.
He’s the author of the Miriam Aster series and the Keith Murphy Urban Fantasy Thrillers, three short story collections, and more stories, articles, poems, and RPG material than he’d care to count. He’s one-half of Brain Jar Press with his partner, Sarah, publishes his own work under the Eclectic Projects imprint, and resides in Brisbane, Australia, with his wife and two very affectionate cats.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
EP 313 – Pioneering In Digital Indie Publishing with Peter M. Ball
Mark interviews author, publisher and RPG gamer Peter M. Ball who has been engaged in experimental and digital publishing since the very beginning of its appearance in the book industry.
Prior to the interview, Mark shares a word about this episode’s sponsor.

You can learn more about how you can get your audiobooks distributed to retailers and library systems around the world at starkreflections.ca/Findaway.
In the interview, Mark and Peter talk about:
Peter being a night owl who is most comfortable starting to write at about 10 PM at night and working through the nightHow, through necessity with a regular life schedule, Peter will get the writing done first thing in the morningPeter having wanted to be a writer since he was quite youngThe way that most of the work he has taken on in his life has been somehow affiliated with the writing worldDescribing the Gold Coast of Australia as Miami with slightly less charmThe undergraduate degree focus which mostly avoided genre fictionHow you can never escape poetry once you’ve done it, even years later being introgued as “Peter the Poet”How in the early 2000s Dungeons and Dragons open-sourced their rules, allowing people to provide material within their realmGetting involved in DriveThruFiction back in 2005The hunger for content that came out in that time periodHow changes in the RPG industry that happened were later echoed a few years later in the eBook fiction publishing spaceThe issues Peter recognized in 2006 in creating role playing game material where somebody else held the licensce for itChallenges of submitting fiction to markets from a country like AustraliaSpending six weeks at an Australian branch of the Clarion Writers Workshop and how that dramatically changed the perspective forced on him from his university educationContinuing to submit his fiction to the traditional markets but paying attention to what was going on in the self-publishing, digital publishing, and indie publishing spaceLaunching Brain Jar Press in 2017 largely as a vehicle for publishing his backlistWhy cutting your teeth in short fiction can be greatHaving a plan to indie publish his own books for about ten years, make all the mistake on his own books, rather than someone elses, and getting solid learning and experience from it to benefit his pressWorking with Kathleen Jennings on a poetry collection right at about the time her first book with Tor went hugeThe idea for a series of short chapbooks with four or five essays per writer in order to bring these remarkable articles the authors had already written back into availabilityBorrowing the cultural capital of all the people they’re publishing so that they can grow and eventually launch new writersHow Peter fell in love with print quite accidentallyThe requirement of having to have an online store for the pressThe joke that it’s cheaper to get things to Narnia than it is to get them to AustraliaThe thought exercise Peter does regarding how many books he has to sell to make it to $100Understanding the market base that you’re likely selling to as a small specialized indie pressPeter’s impatience for just replicating what midlist are publishing is doing in the face of such wonderful, free, and dynamic digital tools when one can be breaking the model, expanding, and forming new ideas and new productsether Peter has been doing much of his own writing since launching Brain Jar Press 2.0The flash fiction writing Peter has been able to do during a few 8 minute breaks at workWhat Peter is most optimistic about with what’s happening in the publishing world nowAnd more…After the interview Mark reflects on Peter working in publishing and writing related realms, the value of connecting with others in the industry, and Peter’s thirst for innovation and experimentation within digital publishing.
Links of Interest:
Peter M. Ball’s WebsiteBrain Jar PressFindaway VoicesBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesPeter M. Ball is an author, publisher, and RPG gamer whose love of speculative fiction emerged after exposure to The Hobbit, Star Wars, David Lynch’s Dune, and far too many games of Dungeons and Dragons before the age of 7. He’s spent the bulk of his life working as a creative writing tutor, with brief stints as a performance poet, gaming convention organiser, online content developer, non-profit arts manager, and d20 RPG publisher.
Peter’s three biggest passions are fiction, gaming, and honing the way aspiring writers think about the business and craft of writing, which led to a five-year period working for Queensland Writers Centre as manager of the Australian Writers Marketplace and convenor of the GenreCon writing conference. He is now pursuing a PhD in Writing at the University of Queensland, exploring the poetics of series fiction and their response to emerging publishing technologies.
He’s the author of the Miriam Aster series and the Keith Murphy Urban Fantasy Thrillers, three short story collections, and more stories, articles, poems, and RPG material than he’d care to count. He’s one-half of Brain Jar Press with his partner, Sarah, publishes his own work under the Eclectic Projects imprint, and resides in Brisbane, Australia, with his wife and two very affectionate cats.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
June 30, 2023
Episode 312 – The Dialogue Doctor Will See You Now With Jeff Elkins
You can learn more about how you can get your audiobooks distributed to retailers and library systems around the world at starkreflections.ca/Findaway.
Prior to the interview, Mark shares the winners of the complimentary tickets to BookMARCon, the surprise winners of complimentary pizza, a personal update, and a word from this episode’s sponsor.

During their conversation Mark and Jeff talk about:
Jeff’s “nickname” as “The Dialogue Doctor” as well as his background as a writerWhat Jeff has seen in the past eight years that he has been involved in the indie author spaceThe latest novel Jeff released in March 2023 co-authored with J.P. Rindfleisch called NRDS: National Recently Deceased Services which is described as “Ghostbusters meets The Office”The first collaboration Jeff had done with his best friend years agoWanting to reengage in and looking for a way to give back to the author community in 2020Adapting what he does professionally, training professionals in difficult conversations, and leveraging that to help authors apply those skills to their writingDoing more than 200 1:1 sessions since 2020 with authors to help them with their dialogueLiking helping writers perhaps more than he even likes writingThe Dialogue Doctor community that seems to operate as a problem-solving communityJeff’s book The Dialogue Doctor Will See You Now, coming July 1, 2023The structure of the book, which is hear the problem, learn the philosophy and the strategy for fixing it, then do a reading challenge, then a writing challengeThe emotional journey a character goes on and the emotional shape of storiesHow you can have all the right plot points but not have the right emotional journey and the reader will disconnect from itReplacing the words hero, alley, and villain with terms like vehicle (the point of view character), the engines (characters who help move them forward), the anchors (those who weigh the vehicle down or bring out the worst versions of the vehicle)If you need the character to struggle, put them in scenes with their anchorIf you want a big emotional moment where the character has to make an emotional choice, have the character enacting upon the influence of the anchor, then introduce the engine into that sceneHow when we talk about dialogue we’re really talking about overall character interactionBuilding a character voice and ways of building a dynamic cast around a character where they can all build upon one anotherThe difference between segments and scenesJeff’s “Apple a day” style advice for writersAnd more…After the interview Mark reflects on dialogue being one important aspect of overall character interaction, the readers emotional journey, and the value in helping other authors.
Links of Interest:
Jeff Elkins WebsiteThe Dialogue Doctor WebsiteKurt Vonnegut on the Shape of Stories (YouTube)Full Kurt Vonnegut Lecture (YouTube)Findaway VoicesSpotify Royalty Increase (Findaway Blog)Converting Your Audiobook From Exclusive to Non-Exclusive (Findaway Blog)BookBub Blog: Promoting Your Audiobook For Skyrocketing SalesBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesJeff Elkins coaches authors and podcasts as the Dialogue Doctor. Since launching the Dialogue Doctor in 2020, he’s held over 200 1-on-1 coaching sessions with authors focused on helping them improved their dialogue. In addition to 12 novels, Jeff is the author of The Dialogue Doctor Will See You Now: How to Write Dialogue and Characters Readers Will Love — a primer on how to write great dialogue, dynamic character voices, and powerful casts of characters.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
June 22, 2023
Episode 311 – Being a Career Self-Publishing Author with Lindsay Buroker
Mark interviews Lindsay Buroker, a full-time independent fantasy and science fiction author who has written over a hundred novels, appeared on the USA Today bestseller list, and has been twice nominated for a Goodreads Readers’ Choice Award.
You can learn more about how you can get your audiobooks distributed to retailers and library systems around the world at starkreflections.ca/Findaway.
Prior to the interview, Mark shares an extremely short personal update, and a word from this episode’s sponsor.
During their conversation Mark and Lindsay talk about:
Lindsay’s first appearance on the Stark Reflections Podcast, back in December 2018The last time they saw one another in person, back in Vegas at 20BooksVegas a few months prior to the global pandemicLindsay’s start in self-publishing, which started just prior to Christmas in 2010How she had been about to hit the publishing button for her first book when she received an offer back from an agent – and she decided to just go ahead and hit that “publish” buttonUsing Podiobooks to release the first three books in audio for freeDoing a Kickstarter to pay for the audiobook production back in 2012What it was like self-publishing back in 2010 through 2013Writing in different genres, the various experiences of doing that, and the surprising number of readers who willingly follow her on this journeyListening to her fans, but actually responding more to sales than to requests from her readersThe writing, editing, proofreading, betareading, publishing process Lindsay loops throughAlways being aware of the possibility that the sales and consistent income might not always be thereLaunching books to her fans “direct” via Patreon prior to pushing them into KDP SelectHow an introvert like Lindsay can deal with being in such high demand from the author community and the reader communityPseudo-retiring the weekly schedule of The Six Figure Author Podcast and considering doing an episode once every quarterBooks that Lindsay would recommend new readers might want to start withAdvice Lindsay has for authors who prefer to “follow the muse”And more…After the interview Mark reflects on a few things about Lindsay’s unique journey as well as how much he enjoyed returning to her books as a reader.
Links of Interest:
Lindsay Buroker’s WebsiteLindsay on TwitterLindsay on FacebookSinister Magic (Book 1 in Death Before Dragons)6 Figure Authors Podcast (new episode June 20, 2023)Episode 54 – Personable Publishing with Lindsay BurokerMentions/apperances of Lindsay on Stark ReflectionsFindaway VoicesBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesLindsay Buroker is a full-time independent fantasy and science fiction author who loves travel, hiking, tennis, and vizslas. She’s written over a hundred novels, appeared on the USA Today bestseller list, and has been twice nominated for a Goodreads Readers’ Choice Award.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
June 15, 2023
Episode 310 – Book Marketing and BookMARCon with Dana Claire
Mark interviews Dana Claire, an award-winning author and the Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Book Brush about her writing, about Book Brush, and about the virtual BookMARCon conference.
Prior to the interview, Mark shares comments from recent episodes and a word from this episode’s sponsor.
You can find out more about BookMARCon at https://bookbrush.com/bookmarcon/
During their conversation, Mark and Dana talk about:
Dana’s background as a creative person as a writer, including the influence of her mother, an English teacher, and her college experienceJoining forces with her mother who wanted to write a children’s book, and Dana who wanted to write an adult book – and the resulting young adult book they decided uponLosing her mother unexpectedly, and then honoring her mother’s memory by releasing the book the had planned onSome of the issues and errors Dana made when publishing her first book (The Connection)Dana’s experience and background doing marketing and promotions for major companiesBeing an author who has both traditionally published and self-publishedDana’s belief in conferences and how important that has been to her author careerPitching her novel to fourteen different publishers at a conference, and how it got picked up because of thisWhat Book Brush is – online software to make promotional images for books, including 3D versions of the books, within thousands of images that place it in specific settings and environmentsHow Book Brush is updated weekly and there’s always something new available for writers to take advantage ofThe way Book Brush can be very community driven so that authors don’t feel so lonelyWhat BookMARCon is (a three day virtual event – August 11 through 13, 2023), the origin of it, and how that MAR stands for MARKETING. (Book Marketing Con)The agent pitches that will be a part of this virtual conferenceThe importance of the “personality fit” that can happen between authors and agentsSelf-publishing a book that her agent didn’t want to pick up, and how that led to it winning an award and also being involved in a few things Dana isn’t yet able to publicly talk aboutHer novel Sideliners being optioned for TV because Hunterland was optioned for televisionHow self-published titles can help sell more of an author’s traditionally published titles and vice versaMore about the various topics that’ll be covered during BookMARConHeart-felt advice that Dana received from an agent during a meeting where the book she’d pitched was rejected and how that stayed with her and kept her motivatedThe $199 USD registration fee for this conferenceThe Early Bird special registrants can get at the price of $149 until the end of JulyHow you can get $50 off the conference registration using code MARK50Advice that Dana would offer to other writersAnd more…After the interview Mark reflects on the importance of conferences to a writer’s career, particularly from the networking and connections made there, Dana’s great advice for writers, and the unique way that Dana signs her emails to authors as the company’s COO.
Links of Interest:
Dana Claire’s WebsiteBook BrushBookMARConEpisode 209 – From Zero to Four Figures with Paul Austin ArdoinEpisode 284 – Collaborations in AI with Elizabeth Ann WestFindaway VoicesBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsBest Book Ever PodcastLovers Moon PodcastThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesDana Claire is an award-winning author and also serves as the Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Book Brush, overseeing the company’s daily operations, spearheading strategic initiatives, and expanding the platform’s offerings. With her experience as an author, Dana brings a unique perspective to Book Brush, enabling her to empathize with the needs of the community and provide tailored solutions. With nearly two decades of experience in marketing and sales, she is well-equipped to bridge the gap between traditional marketing and the literary world. Dana currently resides in sunny Los Angeles, California with her biggest fan, her husband.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0