Chris Fox's Blog, page 33

February 1, 2015

First Ever Fan Art

Most days I still pinch myself to see if this whole author thing is still true. It’s been a goal for decades, and the idea that I’ve published a novel still floors me. What is even more surreal is that people seem to like it.


So much so that one of my beta readers for No Mere Zombie took it upon herself to create artwork for some of the characters. I find this incredibly humbling, because Kristi Benton (KB to her friends) gave up her own time to bring Trevor, Irakesh, Centia and Sobek to life. How awesome is that?


 


Trevor & Cyntia around the campfire


Trevor_Cyntia


 


Sobek being creepy


Sobek


 


Irakesh creating an Anakim


Anakim


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Published on February 01, 2015 14:40

January 27, 2015

The First Ark is live on Audible and iTunes

Woohoo! After a three week wait the audiobook for The First Ark is finally live. It’s only 90 minutes long, so I listened to the first half on the way to work. I’m blown away by Ryan’s performance, and love what he did with Osiris.


Also, for those waiting for the beta copy of No Mere Zombie invites will finally go out tomorrow. I have about 15 chapters left to go and will try to finish that this evening!


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Published on January 27, 2015 08:49

January 22, 2015

One Step Closer

I’ve finished the last major content edit for No Mere Zombie. I’m going to give the manuscript a quick proofread, then send it off to beta readers on Sunday. If you’d like to be one of them you can let me know here or join the mailing list.


Readers will have four weeks to deliver feedback, and I’ll include information about exactly the kind of help I need. This is your chance to help shape the plot for the next book!


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Published on January 22, 2015 06:24

January 16, 2015

No Mere Zombie: Deathless Book 2

Here’s a sneak peek at the cover art for Book 2! I hope it raises a whooooooole lot of questions about the cliffhanger.


final650


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Published on January 16, 2015 10:45

January 8, 2015

My first author interview

I was interviewed by Simon Whistler over on Rocking Self Publishing. Check it out! It runs long, about an hour and references the 10x article below. Also available on iTunes!


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Published on January 08, 2015 12:15

January 7, 2015

10x Thinking: Applying startup methodology to indie publishing

This is a reprint of a post I made over on Kboards, but it was suggested I include it as a blog post as well. I don’t do a lot of posts aimed at indie publishers, but why the heck not?


I live in the land of Uber and Fitbit, where Apple is king and Google Glass is normal. Where Elon Musk holds court and billionaires seek the next Youtube. San Francisco is a fascinating culture with different rules, and a wholly different religion. It’s called 10x Thinking, the art of Dreaming Big. Those who embrace it risk everything playing the great game of business. They invite criticism, and they listen attentively when it is given. They make bold choices, and study failures closely.


This religion is not for everyone. For every successful startup there are dozens of flameouts. It is high risk, high reward. If you have a day job you hate, or need immediate income then you should give very serious consideration to the publish often methodology many successful authors espouse here.


Publishing often will help hone your craft, and give you invaluable experience. It can show you what works and doesn’t, because you are iterating very quickly. My religion refers to this as prototyping. Without it you are simply too slow. Too ungainly. We recognize the value in rapid releases, but not at the expense of quality.


Thou Shalt Be Agile


The startup world adheres to the Agile methodology. We have scrum masters and sprints, software suites and epic debates. All surrounding one simple principle. What was true yesterday may not be true today. It will definitely not be true tomorrow. We embrace Wayne Gretzky’s philosophy that good players go where the puck is. Great players go where the puck will be.


This often means a sharp pivot, a dramatic change to your business. For writers that can be identifying a potential hot new genre, or experimenting with shorter (or longer) works. You must be able to react quickly, which is the essence of any successful business.


This is why you hear the drum beat of publish quickly, but as you’ll see below this must be done very carefully.


Thou Shalt Breakout


There are hundreds of billions of dollars in funding available in San Francisco. CellScope (my company) has already raised 5.6 million dollars. We’re a tiny fish in a very large pond.


Every investor is looking for the same thing. They want to back The Next Big Thing. They don’t care if you can make a profit quickly. They care whether you can create or fundamentally redefine a market.


Nothing else matters. I understand the advocates of publishing quickly, because as some authors have pointed out that gives you more swings at the ball. More chances for a home run. But it risks sacrificing brand to do it. Mediocrity is dangerous, and excessive speed risks falling into that trap.


Thou Shalt Brand


Brand is everything. Your audience must not only know you exist, but eagerly await every product. They must become devotees of your religion, advocates in the quest for more converts.


Achieving this is the holy grail, the reason Apple succeeded and Blackberry face planted. It requires polish, consistency and patience. Your brand is like a garden, requiring constant care and attention if you want it to bloom.


You must not just create good products, but great ones. In our world that means amazing covers. Incredible blurbs. Stellar reviews, awarded to stellar products. Fail in any of these areas and readers will lose faith.


There can’t be any weak spots in your brand, any chinks in your armor. This is why investors give startups millions of dollars over several years before they expect them to show their work to anyone.


I’m guessing almost everyone here was an avid reader growing up. I devoured a fantasy novel every single day for years. I couldn’t tell you the names of the vast majority of books I read. I have no idea who the authors are.


But I remember Tad Williams. I remember Robert Jordan. I remember Michael Crichton. There was something different about their books, something that set them apart. My religion is all about identifying that something, then harnessing it.


If you want to break out you must master your craft, creating incredible stories readers absolutely love. The kind of books they will wait years for, just like they do for George R.R. Martin. Otherwise you are forgettable, and there is no worse fate.


Thou Shalt Beta Test


We all know how bad our first drafts are compared to a releasable product. Software works exactly the same way. You make a minimum viable product, then you show it to a handful of people.


You listen closely to their feedback and add or remove features accordingly. You show it to a larger group of people and see how they react, then iterate again. This process is repeated many times before you end up with a product worthy of The Almighty Brand.


Advocates of quick publishing iterate many times, often with disposable brand names. This allows them to learn while insulating them from the consequences of mistakes. I nearly took this approach for that very reason, but my time in software has taught me the value of user experience testing.


Releasing a product means immediate profit. It means seeing what things people will buy, but it doesn’t necessarily tell you why they bought it. To understand that you need to ask the right questions, and measure the trends in a limited subgroup of customers.


In our case that means finding your potential audience and having them beta read your book. Not just one or two people, but twenty or thirty. It means asking meaningful questions about what worked for them and what didn’t, then refining your product accordingly.


I re-wrote the first forty thousand words of No Such Thing As Werewolves almost from scratch after my first round of beta reading. My characters gained more definition, plot holes closed and my pace tightened.


Then I showed it to my writing coach, who tore apart my prose and pointed out the remaining flaws in the plot. I integrated her feedback, then showed the book to another crop of beta readers. They had a few last minute suggestions, but in general they loved it.


This process made me an immeasurably better writer, which made the first draft of the second book much stronger. I’m following the same process for that book now, and by the time I release it will be closer to mastery of my craft.


Thou Shalt Ship


There is a point of diminishing returns, and many writers never release a product because they are forever tinkering in a vain quest for perfection. I don’t think you should pump out unpolished products every month, but you DO need to put out products.


No Such Thing As Werewolves wasn’t perfect when I released it. There were over 20 typos, and several inaccuracies about the military hardware (*cringes*). But that didn’t matter. What did was reader reception.


Almost every beta reader and reviewer responded with one of two statements. Where is the next book, or I can’t wait to see the movie. This is gold in the 10x World. It means you have a chance to breakout.


Thou Shalt Iterate


I aimed for a small initial test market. 10s of copies a day, not hundreds or thousands. I listened to what my audience is saying, and am making changes based on that feedback.


I hired a proofreader to give the manuscript another pass. I tightened my blurb. Very soon I’ll be redoing my covers to be more uniform. The initial 2,000-3,000 people who bought my book will see a beta version of it.


The rest will see a polished uniformly branded product.


My Plan for 2015


In April when book 2 launches I will aim for my first Bookbub. I will market anywhere and everywhere to drive readers into my sales funnel, knowing that the product they are about to consume is the best one I could have produced.


I plan to stay agile, to adjust my strategy as often as necessary to make better products and to continue honing my craft until I am the type of writer that inspires fandom.


This means consistently releasing products. A novel every six months, something readers can depend on. If they like my novellas (The First Ark is doing well so far, but its too early to tell) then I will release one three months after every novel so something comes out every quarter.


Will that be enough to keep readers interested? If my stories are good enough, yes. If my user testing was accurate the books will spread, hopefully like wildfire.


I will help that along of course. As I’ve said elsewhere marketing is key. I need to get my books in front of people who will love them. That will be the topic of its own post, but many of the tools for doing this are things we’re already familiar with. Boxed sets is a great example.


With every book I’ll become a better writer and I will learn more about what my audience craves. In doing so I plan to redefine a currently underserved market.


Vampires have been huge for years. So have zombies. But there is a dearth of good werewolf books, and those that do exist take a completely different approach than I do. So I’m re-defining werewolves. Watch carefully what happens next Halloween. If I do my job right werewolves will be The Next Big Thing.


Am I both arrogant and ignorant for not releasing a short novella every month? Maybe. I’m gambling that my path leads to mastery of my craft and the existence of a strong brand marketed to a user tested audience.


It will be interesting looking back at this post in 6 or 12 months to see if I face plant like Blackberry or soar like Apple. In the mean time I’d love to answer questions and to hear about flaws in my plan.


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Published on January 07, 2015 09:31

December 24, 2014

No Mere Zombie is coming

I have good news for those who finished the first book and are cursing me for dropping that horrendous cliffhanger.


I’m in the middle of the last heavy content edit and should be done the first week of January. After that No Mere Zombie is off to beta readers. The goal is an April release, and I believe I can make that happen.


If you haven’t read No Such Thing As Werewolves I’d stop here, because spoilers lie ahead. 


The ending was messed up, right? Of all the things that could have happened to Trevor. Jesus. So what happens to the poor guy? I’ve decided to give you a sneak peak at his fate. He plays a large role in Werewolves Versus Zombies. In fact, he’ll be on the cover.


Below you’ll find his first PoV chapter. Completely unedited. I hope you enjoy it.


Chapter 2- Nameless


The shambling corpse had lost his name. It hovered just out of reach, as distant as the stars. It bothered him, this lack of a name. Bothered him a great deal. Almost as much as his imprisonment, an unwilling passenger in a body that had its own agenda. His body shambled forward, weaving through the deserted street. He passed unfamiliar houses, odd structures set atop two-foot stilts. They were different than the houses the nameless corpse knew, with thinner walls and thatched roofs. It would have been interesting to inspect them more closely, but his body shambled forward with no regard for his wishes.


He staggered, tripping over a shape in the darkness. His body looked down at the obstruction. A corpse, or what remained of one. The flesh had been meticulously stripped clean. The bones cracked, already drained of marrow. The tide of hunger rose, threatening to overwhelm him as it had so many times over the last week. It never abated unless he was feeding, resuming the very instant he stopped chewing.


His body turned its gaze back to the town, studying the line of houses. The flickering light of a candle came from a window four houses down on the left. The darkness obscured any differences, making the house identical to its neighbors. His body shambled towards it, slow and awkward. That frustrated him too, though he didn’t know any other way of walking. It felt…wrong.


His leg shook violently as he raised a foot, but he avoided toppling as his body set it on the first step. It creaked loudly under his weight, but it held. He attempted the second. Then the third. A fourth step carried him to the door, faintly illuminated by the glow in the living room window. A gasp came from inside. The light winked out.


He listened. Breathing came from behind the door. There were heartbeats. Two of them. Both rapid. Should he be able to hear heartbeats? No, he was positive that was wrong. Different. New.


He raised a trembling hand to the door handle, wrapping a weak grip around it. It turned with a click, the door creaking open with a little urging. Shouldn’t they have locked the door? Or at least blocked it with a dresser or bed? Clearly these people had never seen a zombie movie.


His body staggered inside, gaze sweeping the room. It was gathered in darkness, except for the patch of bamboo planks in the pool of moonlight. The heartbeats were more frantic now, thundering from the corner of the room. He could just barely make out a pair of shapes huddled against the wall. One taller, sheltering the smaller one. A woman and child. Horror bloomed, giving way to panic. Every fiber of his being yearned to warn them, to scream that they should run. All that emerged was a low wail, the first time he’d been able to force his body to do anything.


It shambled across the room, moving towards the doomed family. Why didn’t they run? They could probably make it past him. He was slow, ungainly. Yet they cowered there, praying he wouldn’t notice them. His body crossed the gap in three awkward steps, then lunged at the larger figure. She flinched, but made no attempt to run. Instead she shoved the smaller figure forward. “Antonio, ejecuta!”


The little boy shot to his feet, bolting across the bamboo floor like a deer as he burst from the room into the night. His head turned to watch the boy’s flight, then turned back to his prey. He seized the woman’s arm, biting savagely into her shoulder. His weight bore her to the wooden floor with a hollow thump as he began to feed. At first she screamed and thrashed, but that grew weaker as he tore loose mouthful after mouthful. The hunger faded for the first time in days. In its place came clarity. He remembered.


There had been a pyramid, surrounded by bright lights. Men with guns. Werewolves. That couldn’t be right, could it? There was no such thing as werewolves.


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Published on December 24, 2014 10:06

Werewolves Versus Zombies is coming

I have good news for those who finished the first book and are cursing me for dropping that horrendous cliffhanger.


I’m in the middle of the last heavy content edit and should be done the first week of January. After that Werewolves Versus Zombies is off to beta readers. The goal is an April release, and I believe I can make that happen.


If you haven’t read No Such Thing As Werewolves I’d stop here, because spoilers lie ahead. 


The ending was messed up, right? Of all the things that could have happened to Trevor. Jesus. So what happens to the poor guy? I’ve decided to give you a sneak peak at his fate. He plays a large role in Werewolves Versus Zombies. In fact, he’ll be on the cover.


Below you’ll find his first PoV chapter. Completely unedited. I hope you enjoy it.


Chapter 2- Nameless


The shambling corpse had lost his name. It hovered just out of reach, as distant as the stars. It bothered him, this lack of a name. Bothered him a great deal. Almost as much as his imprisonment, an unwilling passenger in a body that had its own agenda. His body shambled forward, weaving through the deserted street. He passed unfamiliar houses, odd structures set atop two-foot stilts. They were different than the houses the nameless corpse knew, with thinner walls and thatched roofs. It would have been interesting to inspect them more closely, but his body shambled forward with no regard for his wishes.


He staggered, tripping over a shape in the darkness. His body looked down at the obstruction. A corpse, or what remained of one. The flesh had been meticulously stripped clean. The bones cracked, already drained of marrow. The tide of hunger rose, threatening to overwhelm him as it had so many times over the last week. It never abated unless he was feeding, resuming the very instant he stopped chewing.


His body turned its gaze back to the town, studying the line of houses. The flickering light of a candle came from a window four houses down on the left. The darkness obscured any differences, making the house identical to its neighbors. His body shambled towards it, slow and awkward. That frustrated him too, though he didn’t know any other way of walking. It felt…wrong.


His leg shook violently as he raised a foot, but he avoided toppling as his body set it on the first step. It creaked loudly under his weight, but it held. He attempted the second. Then the third. A fourth step carried him to the door, faintly illuminated by the glow in the living room window. A gasp came from inside. The light winked out.


He listened. Breathing came from behind the door. There were heartbeats. Two of them. Both rapid. Should he be able to hear heartbeats? No, he was positive that was wrong. Different. New.


He raised a trembling hand to the door handle, wrapping a weak grip around it. It turned with a click, the door creaking open with a little urging. Shouldn’t they have locked the door? Or at least blocked it with a dresser or bed? Clearly these people had never seen a zombie movie.


His body staggered inside, gaze sweeping the room. It was gathered in darkness, except for the patch of bamboo planks in the pool of moonlight. The heartbeats were more frantic now, thundering from the corner of the room. He could just barely make out a pair of shapes huddled against the wall. One taller, sheltering the smaller one. A woman and child. Horror bloomed, giving way to panic. Every fiber of his being yearned to warn them, to scream that they should run. All that emerged was a low wail, the first time he’d been able to force his body to do anything.


It shambled across the room, moving towards the doomed family. Why didn’t they run? They could probably make it past him. He was slow, ungainly. Yet they cowered there, praying he wouldn’t notice them. His body crossed the gap in three awkward steps, then lunged at the larger figure. She flinched, but made no attempt to run. Instead she shoved the smaller figure forward. “Antonio, ejecuta!”


The little boy shot to his feet, bolting across the bamboo floor like a deer as he burst from the room into the night. His head turned to watch the boy’s flight, then turned back to his prey. He seized the woman’s arm, biting savagely into her shoulder. His weight bore her to the wooden floor with a hollow thump as he began to feed. At first she screamed and thrashed, but that grew weaker as he tore loose mouthful after mouthful. The hunger faded for the first time in days. In its place came clarity. He remembered.


There had been a pyramid, surrounded by bright lights. Men with guns. Werewolves. That couldn’t be right, could it? There was no such thing as werewolves.


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Published on December 24, 2014 10:06

December 19, 2014

Big news!

Not only is the audiobook for No Such Thing As Werewolves live on iTunes, Audible and Amazon but the pre-order for The First Ark is up as well. Merry Christmas, me =)


Also, after feedback from the mailing list I’m going to post a chapter from Book 2 that reveals Trevor’s fate after the end of the first book. That will be up on Christmas Eve!


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Published on December 19, 2014 10:12

December 17, 2014

Adventures in Audiobooks

I went through a reading dry spell for several years where I’m not sure I picked up more than two books. That’s horrifying considering back in high school I used to devour a book a day. All that changed when I discovered Audible.com.


Suddenly I could download a book wherever I happened to be and listen to it while driving. Or hiking. Or working out. Or walking. Or grocery shopping. Just like that I was back into reading in a BIG way. I started listening to at least one book a week. It reminded me how much I loved reading, and for the last several years my audio library has swelled.


Now I finally get to add to that library. No Such Thing As Werewolves is now an audiobook, and has just made it through QC. It will be live in just a few days!


Creating the audiobook was far simpler than I ever would have expected. Amazon has a company called ACX (Amazon Creative Exchange) that pairs up authors and narrators. All I had to do was post a chapter and the auditions came rolling in by the truck load.


I settled on Ryan Burke, who did an amazing job bringing the characters to life. He uses a full range of emotion and gives each character their own distinct accent and cadence. It took him about three weeks to record the entire thing, and another week for me to listen to it and tag corrections. Ryan fixed the few errors, and just like we were done.


The finished product is absolutely amazing, and I am beyond thrilled that I get to listen to my own novel. It’s too early to really predict anything, but I firmly believe people will love it. I’ve attached a sample. What do you think?



https://chrisfoxwrites.files.wordpress.com/2014/12/04_no-such-thing-as-werewolves_chapter-2_em-06.mp3
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Published on December 17, 2014 09:36