Category Archives: Indie Publishing

I don’t like to B.R.A.G, but…I won a major award!

No, not this one — I got a B.R.A.G medallion forย Kick. They have something going on kind of like my Awesome Indie Project, where they promote indie books that meet their standards. Now I want to create a medallion made for my Awesome Indies! ๐Ÿ™‚ย  I wonder if any would put it on their books… Ah well, I’ll never actually make one, so let’s just say “of course they would” and move along.

Here’s what the folks at B.R.A.G look at:KICK Plot, Writing Style, Characters, Copy editing, Dialogue, Cover/Interior layout.

I’m working on getting the medallion updated for the book, because hey, why not? It’s a nice little graphic and I appreciate what these folks do for indies. In addition to a medallion, they also put the book on their site, and have written reviews for Amazon, B&N, and Goodreads (at the moment, the B&N one is still processing). Lots of other things, too, like displaying the book when they do trade shows, facebook stuff, tweeting, and some other cool things I forget.

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One of my Awesome Fans, and new Facebook friend, reading “Kick”

Amy’s a really cool fan who reached out to me a few months ago on Facebook to say hi. She’s really into cosplay and lives in the faraway mythical land of England. Here she is reading my ancient grimoire “Kick.”

amy_reading_kick

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Book Three of the Jenkins Cycle is available for pre-order on iBooks

A happy bit of news: “Hopper House,” book three of The Jenkins Cycle, is available for pre-order on iBooks.ย  I didn’t do Amazon (yet) because of their draconian pre-order rules. I may put something up later though, we’ll see.

The book’s official release date is August 15. I’d hoped to get it out in July, but that didn’t give me enough time for professional editing, so I pushed it back.

And so, without further ado, here’s the cover (designed by author and scientist E.E. Giorgi) and a link to the book over on Apple iBooks:

hopper_house

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Kick is finally getting traction on iBooks

When I moved my books to Apple’s iBooks platform, I was sort of surprised that “Thief’s Odyssey” took off so well, and that “Kick” — my leading book on Amazon — did not. Today’s sudden appearance in the “Top Sci-fi & Fantasy” category on iBooks warms my cold, shriveled, heart. Now that sales are picking up, all I need to do is figure out which color Lamborghini best fits my rakish personality.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/kick/id955247892

Screen Shot 2015-06-05 at 10.21.21 AM

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More iBooks news — #43 in Mysteries and Thrillers

* UPDATE 1* — Isn’t it cool how Lee Child’s book and mine sort of match? I love unintentional awesomeness. (cover design by Lindy Moone)

* Update 2 * — I didn’t want to spam people with another screenshot post, so I’ll just post today’s here. Thief’s Odyssey is at #38 ๐Ÿ™‚

Screen Shot 2015-06-01 at 8.43.16 AM

* Update 3 * — 32 this morning!ย  I think this might be my last day in this promotion. Won’t know till later this afternoon.

Screen Shot 2015-06-02 at 8.20.13 AM

Original post:

What a great Sunday. Better than that other Sunday — last Sunday. That was the Sunday where I hadn’t sold anything on iBooks since putting my book there a month ago. Haha, those days are gone, never to come again. I’ve already quit my job and taken out a loan for a private jet. Not just any private jet — this one’s a prototype developed by NASA.

Before I get carried away, here’s the latest screen shot, which I took using my brand new 120 processor super computer (also developed by NASA):

Screen Shot 2015-05-31 at 10.30.30 AM

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Featured placement over on Apple’s iBooks store

I have a featured spot over on Apple for “Thief’s Odyssey” and “Kick” — pretty happy about it, because it’s tough to gain traction over there.

Gather, ye, and witness the wonder and joy that is iBooks!

Screen Shot 2015-05-26 at 1.55.25 PM

And here’s Kick….Screen Shot 2015-05-26 at 1.57.47 PM

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Guest Post from Ray Litt of “Dirty Little Bookers”

ray_littIn response to my not-so-subtle favor request, John has gifted me a blogspot. So I revisited his site for some guest-blogging inspiration, and here’s a few lines into his latest post (a Droll Troll sneak peek):

“Heโ€™d been in an animated discussion with the councilโ€™s blue-skinned woggim over whether or not fish smelled fishy to other fish.”

An Indie with Pratchett in his veins?ย Irresistible.

Anyway, I’m not here to fangirl. I’m here to tell you about a Writer Con in Orlando this September.

SF:SE hits Orlando this September: Dropping a wicked footprint on con culture

My organization, Dirty Little Bookers, is hosting the coolest Speculative Fiction party around;ย a celebrity-centric event focused on the exploration of publishing and networking, and the celebration of entrepreneurial passion.

SF:SEโ€”Speculative Fiction: Southeastโ€”is an event for all lovers and artists of Speculative Fiction, a term encompassingย Horror, SciFi, Fantasy, Paranormal and Weird.

At the Sheraton Orlando North in Maitland, Florida on September 25-27, 2015, you’ll witness a marriage of cultures: conference standards such as workshops, panels and editor one-on-ones, together with convention debauchery like werewolf LARPing, masquerade balls and a tattoo gallery. All events will be shared with authorial greats like Orson Scott Card, Jacqueline Carey, Peter V. Brett and Kelley Armstrong, and a slew of industry icons.

Keep checking back for programming and guest updates, or sign up to participate yourself! We have exhibitor tables available–a good opportunity to showcase your work to a room full of specfic readers. Or join the team and become a panel moderator, workshopper or performance artist! There are a ton of ways to get involved. If you just want to come and get weird for the weekend, our tickets are cheap and the hotel room is cheaper. We know that author events can sometimes be stuffy andย inaccessible, so we’re stickingย with genre con pricepoints. Be warned, though–we will sell out.

Any questions, please contact me at raylitt@raylitt.com. See you in September!

http://sfse2015.com

@sfse2015

FB: speculative fiction:Southeast

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What’s magical and snooty and read all over?

Witness ye of little faith! Forsooth! The time has cometh for ye to readeth a storyeth ofย  magical adventureth!

Below you shall find the first part of my glorious masterpiece, “Droll Troll” — one of many stories in the charity anthology “For Whom The Bell Trolls.”

My initial thought was to release but a short selection of punctuation…but I’ve kindly given in to my generous nature and thrown in a few words, too.

Now, I know what you’re thinking: “Oh John L. Monk, you’re so amazing, so kind and generous to give us this tiny sample for free, because all your other stuff is ever so slightly more expensive, and yes I promise to buy a book one day, I totally swear…”

Forsooth, I say!

I give to you…basically for free…the first 1/4 of the story!!!

—-

droll_troll_acornDroll Troll

Somewhere on Earth, in a dark forest shrouded in mist, hidden inside an acorn that had always been there, a committee of faerie lords convened around a table of polished obsidian to discuss the urgencies of the day.

Lord Snoot banged his gavel and yelled, โ€œOrder please, lords and ladies, thank you very much!โ€

โ€œBut I still havenโ€™t made my point!โ€ a very important high elf said. Heโ€™d been in an animated discussion with the councilโ€™s blue-skinned woggim over whether or not fish smelled fishy to other fish.

โ€œOh really,โ€ Lord Snoot said to the elf. โ€œWell, we certainly wouldnโ€™t want to interrupt your pressing discussion, now would we? Whatever could it be this time? How heavy is sunlight? Why does celery matter? Why would an elephant ever be in a room? If you gave a shivering street urchin an entire loaf of bread, would he only eat the crust? Or maybeโ€”โ€

Whatever he was about to say was immediately drowned out by the fairies, who were loudly rushing to tackle these timeless mysteries. Anything to put off โ€œgetting to the pointโ€ or โ€œarriving at a consensusโ€ or perhaps achieving โ€œrelevancy.โ€ Each of which, they collectively agreed, was just a little too much like work, and thus more befitting lesser beings.

The discussion raged back and forth at a furious pace while Lord Snoot, the only elf in attendance with any sense of responsibility, banged his gavel repeatedly on his woggim assistantโ€™s head to re-establish order. There was something terribly important they needed to discuss today, or so the woggim had told him, and it had nothing to do with heavy sunlight or theoretically stinky fish.

Suddenly, just when all looked to be lost, just when Lord Snoot thought theyโ€™d run out of time and the world would suffer a terrible fate because nobody was listening to him, out of nowhere, at that exact moment…well, actually, nothing happened. However, about two minutes after that, a heavy gong sounded from somewhere in the great hall, reverberating around the magically reinforced acorn walls again and again and again (and again and again (and then again just one more time)).

Some of the more delicate faeries clamped their pointy ears and squeezed their eyes shut. One beautiful celestial elf fainted and fell to the floor, twitching and sputtering things like โ€œceleryโ€ and โ€œurrgle,โ€ while less aristocratorious beings pointed and snickered and poked each other in the ribs/wings/antennas.

Lord Snoot banged his gavel harder on his poor assistantโ€™s head. And the high elf from way back at the beginning of all this stated firmly and loudly, โ€œI have forgotten what I wanted to say,โ€ and sat down in a huff.

When everyone had calmed down enough to look up, they saw their number had grown by exactly two trolls, who were standing near the entrance to the hall.

โ€œAhem,โ€ one of the newcomers said. He was a bark-skinned wood troll with a mouthful of needle-sharp teeth.

The other one, a shorter, somewhat cute troll with a shock of fiery red hair, smirked and cocked his head toward his partner.

โ€œWhat he said.โ€

Silence descended upon the room so suddenly that all in attendance could now hear the meaty clunks of Lord Snootโ€™s gavel whacking the poor woggimโ€™s head for order. But nobody much liked the woggim, so that was fine.

โ€œAnd just who the keebler are you supposed to be?!โ€ Lord Snoot shouted down at the trollish intruders.

โ€œIโ€™m the guy,โ€ the wood troll said, โ€œwith the solution to your little problem.โ€

โ€œAnd together,โ€ the shorter, cuter one said, โ€œwe shall solve your problemโ€”โ€

โ€œโ€”shortly!โ€ the wood troll shouted, pointing at his companion and grinning madly.

The short troll turned angrily and said, โ€œListen, elf face, if you insist on this constant mockery of my perfectly normal height, youโ€™ll regret it!โ€

Some of the elves in attendance bristled at the epithet elf face, but because bristling is a rather silent sort of reaction to an insult, nobody actually noticed.

โ€œNever mind that,โ€ Lord Snoot said. โ€œWhat are you doing at my committee meeting?โ€

โ€œMy nameโ€™s Oaky Doaky,โ€ the bark-skinned troll said.

โ€œAnd you may refer to me by my ancient trollish name,โ€ his short, yet perfectly normal sized partner, said. โ€œWilliam Molehill Dew. Or Will Dew, for sh…uh, hmm…โ€

Oaky Doaky leered at him. โ€œYou were gonna say โ€˜for short,โ€™ werenโ€™t you?โ€

Will bit back a retort and just glared. Because thereโ€™s nothing worse than being trolled by a wood troll.

From the obsidian conference table, the sound of gavel-whacking suddenly died off, as there was no longer a woggim to whack anymoreโ€”heโ€™d fallen to the floor, semi-conscious.

Lord Snoot placed his now useless gavel down and said, โ€œWell, well, even trolls must have names, how wonderful for you. But we have very important business to attend to, and you werenโ€™t invited, and nobody here likes trolls at all, so you really should be off to your bridge or billy goat gruffing or whatever it is you do, or should I say Dew, thank you very much.โ€

โ€œ…shshn shivished shmm…โ€ his woggim assistant muttered from his prone position on the floor.

โ€œSorry, what did you say?โ€ Lord Snoot said, leaning over him.

โ€œ…sashi I isvitedsh tham…โ€

โ€œCome again?โ€ Lord Snoot said, scratching his head, a study in befuddled poise.

The blue-skinned woggim lurched unsteadily to his feet, adjusted his coat, picked the gavel up from its resting place on the council table, and smashed it over Lord Snootโ€™s head.

โ€œBecause I invited them, you simpleton!โ€ the woggim roared.

The other council members stewed in outrage over the woggimโ€™s behavior, but stewing was just as silent as bristling, so again nobody noticed.

โ€œWhat do you mean you invited them?โ€ Lord Snoot said, rubbing his head. โ€œAnd why do you have my gavel? Iโ€™m the only one who gets to use it!โ€

Ignoring him, the woggim turned to the motley assemblage and said, โ€œLords and ladies of Faerie. I invited these industrious trolls here for a very important reason. Thereโ€™s an asteroid heading for Earth and it will destroy the world, and our little acorn home, in three days time.โ€

This time the assemblage of fairies neither stewed nor bristledโ€”they shrieked and cried and swore and moaned and made a terrible ruckus. The blue-skinned woggim raised the gavel and was about to use it, then thought better of it and whistled loudly for attention.

โ€œYou there,โ€ he shouted to a particularly obnoxious sniveler. โ€œShut up, you. Everyone, shut up or there wonโ€™t be any refreshments later, not for anyone!โ€

Well that did it. With their refreshments in jeopardy, those fairies capable of high order spells quieted the room with a shimmering cone of silence. The acorn grew so magically quiet, in fact, that if a tree in the forest outside fell over, the acorn would have remained just as noiselessโ€”because the one had nothing to do with the other.

A minute later, Lord Snoot began yelling and yammering at everyone to reverse the spellโ€”in pantomime. The spell-casters mouthed words that didnโ€™t word, shouts that didnโ€™t shout, and calls to the elements that couldnโ€™t have called back even if they wanted to. It was hopeless. The world was in danger, and even if someone knew what to do, they couldnโ€™t tell anyone what it was.

William Molehill Dew looked at the fairy lords in disgust, shook his head and pulled out a glittery, pink wand. Then he tapped-out three glittery taps in the air as if knocking on a doorโ€”and a freestanding, inter-dimensional doorway fell open!

Before anyone could overreact, Will pointed his wand at Oaky and swished him through the door. Then he did the same to the woggim and Lord Snoot. The other fairies were only marginally less useless, so he left them there to argue in silence.

Free ride’s over! Download “For Whom The Bell Trolls” and read the rest.ย  All net profits donated to “Equality Now,” a charity organization that helps women and girls around the world.

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2015 eFestival of Words “Best Horror Novel” nomination for “Fool’s Ride”

2015nomineeWhoever nominated me, you have my thanks. I think of “Fool’s Ride” as more of a dark fantasy than pure “Horror,” and please don’t ask me how to distinguish the two. I do know the book is a bit darker than book 1, so I don’t feel too bad about cutting in on other authors’ action. Really, it’s just nice to be nominated.

http://www.efestivalofwords.com/2015-nominees-complete-list-t573.html

 

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Best Podcasts for Self-Publishers

For those of you who don’t memorize my blog and check it each time to see if I’ve added another tab, you’re in for a surprise: I added another tab!

Here’s where I list all the podcasts I listen to on a regular basis, and a little bit of info about each one. Enjoy!

https://john-l-monk.com/podcasts/

 

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