Another night of brainstorming on the next story. I'll try and produce something to share tomorrow!
General
Following Up An Improbable Journey
An Improbable Journey has been released, and it's doing remarkably well, by far my best received work to date. I'm incredibly excited about that! I'm working now on the next story in the series. Long-time readers may know that I have already started on a sequel to it, but that one takes place several years in the future, and isn't a story I'm ready to finish right now. Corwin is going to have a few more adventures before he gets to that one, I think.
More tomorrow!
Delays
Sorry everyone, I really thought I was going to get the An Improbable Journey story out in the store by now, but I've been working on a HUGE post for GeekBeat on the new Communities that they've introduced. This has taken up so much of my time that I haven't been able to put the book together. Tomorrow the post should be done, and the book will follow right after.
Captain Corwin Koell
It is decided, and so it shall be done. Captain Corwin Koell has languished in the depths of obscurity and forgotten works in progress for far too long, and so tomorrow I am going to resume work on the forgotten sequel to An Improbable Journey. In celebration of this, I have given it an official working title; Colony Bound.
I'll also be sprucing up Deck the Hulls, the sorta-kinda Christmas story I wrote last year, and I'll see about getting that up on Amazon soon for the Holidays. I'll be writing another one this year, though I think I'll do it in advance of the holiday instead of waiting until the 25th. If all goes well, I'd like to get 3 more works out on the Amazon store this month. Keep your fingers crossed!
50,000 x3 in 13 months.
It has been 13 months since I started writing full time. When I put it that way, it just utterly blows my mind.
In that time, I've completed National Novel Writing Month twice, and also completed one instance of Camp NaNoWriMo. That's 150,000 words in 13 months, not counting all the other writing I did every single day of those 13 months.
I'd like to thank everyone who's been reading this stuff I throw together and put out there, and especially everyone who comments and gives feedback on it. Your numbers may not be large, but I can't begin to tell you how large your impact is. I wouldn't be the writer I am now, nor would I be the writer I will be tomorrow, without all your feedback and support.
I'm just about recovered from this latest NaNoWriMo, so it's time to think seriously about what I'm going to work on next. I have two books well under way; The Price of Entanglement still needs to be finished, and though NaNoWriMo's done, The Diffident Hero isn't even close to done. I have several works in progress from months ago that I need to return to at some point, and the feedback I've gotten from the short fiction I produced over the autumn has been nothing short of mind-blowing, so I want to do a lot more of that too.
Did I tell you all about that? One of my heroes from when I was a teenager, Scott Murphy, ex of Sierra Online's Space Quest series and half of the Two Guys from Andromeda, bought and read My Abstract Life and really liked it. He very kindly gave me permission to quote him on it.
@gordmcleod The My Abstract Life story you wrote reminded me of Ray Bradbury and the Twilight Zone. Good stuff.
— Scott Murphy (@SlashVohaul) November 27, 2012
The path ahead of me isn't looking very easy, and I'm sure it's not the last time it'll look hard. But every time I hear back from someone who's read what I wrote and enjoyed it, or cares enough to point out a problem in it that I can fix, or takes the time to say "Hey, thanks," it just shows me more and more clearly that easy or not, this is my path, this is what I have got to do. And it makes it all worth while.
Thanks, everyone.