Category Archives: Podcasts

P.T. Hylton co-hosting TBR Podcast tonight

Tonight at 9 p.m. EST:

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Reading with Writers 4: John L. Monk #amreading

A few weeks ago, Patrick Stemp, co-host of the TBR Podcast, invited me to participate in an interview on his blog called “Reading with Writers” —  a different sort of interview format focused primarily on other people’s books, and not my own.

I was more than happy to participate.

http://patrickstemp.com/reading-with-writers-4-john-l-monk-amreading/

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Author Stories Podcast: Simon Whistler in the hot seat

About to listen to this. Simon whistler’s a great interviewer. It’s nice to see him in the hot seat this time:

http://hankgarner.com/episode-twenty-nine-with-simonwhistler/

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Super Bowl ads have nothing on me: Armcast Dead Sexy Horror Podcast

Mostly for fun, I recorded an advertisement for my latest book, “Thief’s Odyssey,” on Armand Rosamilia’s horror podcast. I love his podcast, listen to it all the time. He interviews lots of great writers and even filmmakers. He’s also sort of fun. If you’re curious, give it a try here: http://armcastpodcast.libsyn.com/arm-cast-podcast-episode-3…

My little advert is somewhere during the podcast, but I won’t say where. I’m impish that way. A rebel. Something to be reckoned with.

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TJ Redig Guest Post: Platform, Platform, Platform!

The following gluten free message for authors (trad or indie) comes courtesy of TJ Redig, creator of the Scrivener Soapbox, where I had my first ever podcast interview. He also has a strange new supernatural thriller out and it looks really cool: The Philosopher’s Load. Be sure to check it out.

Platform, platform, platform!

It’s no secret that agents and publishers want to see one thing (besides, you know, being able to write a good story) from querying writers: a successful platform. That’s how I ended up developing a podcast. Side note, I eventually decided not to go the traditional route, but the same rule applies. If people don’t know about you, they’re definitely not going to know about your novel.

The idea for Scrivener Soapbox was born during a class at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis where I had enrolled in a multi-week course taught by Dawn Frederick from Red Sofa Literary and Editor Jake Klisivitch on the traditional publishing process (e.g., querying, contracts, cover design, platform building, etc). Overall, I found the class to be an incredibly valuable experience for anyone deciding between the traditional and self-publishing routes. Dawn actually sat down with me later on to review a contract I had been offered by a small press for The Philosopher’s Load. Thank God too, because I can’t read legalese.

That was one heck of a tangent. Regarding how I’d build my platform, I had an ace up the sleeve: recording experience. Many years of my life were spent as a musician living way under the poverty line, eating canned beans just to survive. I had accumulated a great deal of equipment and studio knowledge over that time and at one point had a fully functional home studio for demos (you want to shell out the bucks for a real studio and engineer when you’re doing EP/LPs). All the gear has since been sold off, but I knew exactly what I’d need to make a quality production and laid out the figures in a blog post. You could drop the webcam from the final figures too. I stopped doing video when factors outside of my control (e.g., the quality of the guest’s Internet connection) affected the recording’s overall quality

Giving authors, many of whom were relatively unknown but had incredibly interesting stories, a soapbox to talk about their work was one of the best ideas I’ve ever had. One, I got to hear from others what worked and what didn’t (often in great detail after the recording ended). Two, I met a bunch of genuinely interesting people. Three, my name got catapulted into the social media stratosphere. Despite being a podcast host, I’m actually a pretty quiet person, so that third benefit was the most valuable.

Here’s the number one, far and away most important thing I learned: A traditionally published author has to sell a lot more books to make a living than a self-published author. I’ve talked to successful writers of both camps and it’s incredibly clear that the far more lucrative route is self-publishing. Increased exposure can come with the traditional route, but you could also end up with a publisher who does nothing to promote your book and yet takes a substantial amount off the top.

Learn more about TJ Redig by visiting his website: TJREDIG.COM.

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Filed under Indie Publishing, Podcasts, Publisher's Advice, Writing Market

My favorite TBR Podcast (Youtube) yet — and didn’t even mention me :P

Ok, so I mentioned these folks last time because they were all like “I read Kick” and “greatest book ever” and “John L. Monk is my hero.”  But this episode didn’t have any of that.  Despite that major flaw, I found it to be one of my favorite episodes ever.  Basically they named like 10 of my favorite books and talked about all these cool genres and came up with examples from them.  Just a great episode.  If you haven’t listened to any of them yet, do yourself a favor and listen to the one where they talked about how great I am. Then listen to this one:

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Discoverability with Kristine Kathryn Rush

stephen_campbellOk, so the interviewer mentions me in the beginning, but I honestly thought it was a great interview for indie authors and recommend listening. This guy Stephen Campbell seems to be knocking them out of the park with his interviews. Last time with Russell Blake, this time with K Rush.
http://theauthorbiz.com/tab028-discoverability-kristine-kathryn-rusch/

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TBR Podcast #32

I think Carol Ervin will get mentioned tonight — sorry for the late post!

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Russell Blake Interview — listening while working

So I’m doing some repetitive tasks today and put this on in the background. Surprisingly, I can follow along. It’s actually quite interesting, fun, etc.

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Science Fiction & Fantasy Marketing Podcast

I’d heard about this wonderful podcast from a post on kboards.com, but they weren’t yet on iTunes so I held off listening. Now they’re on iTunes and I’m subscribed for life — this is a great podcast.

Incredible hosts:

One of the things I like about this podcast is they talk about self-publishing, primarily. They’re pretty focused. They go back and forth a lot, really think about the topics, and come up with great insights. For example, I just finished an episode where they talked about price points for various lengths/genres of books. Before that, I listened to an episode that talked about the mistakes they’d made when they first got into self-publishing.

Fun, smart, positive people.

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