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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

SIEGE Release Day!



SIEGE is officially out in mass market paperback today! You can purchase it at your local bookstores or your favorite online retailer!

The SIEGE Book Blitz is underway. For the next week guests posts will be appearing all over the blogsphere. Also, there is a big giveaway for signed autographed copies of ALL THREE mass market editions of AS THE WORLD DIES.

Click the image below to visit one of today's stops at Book Loving Me and enter the giveaway!


Friday, April 26, 2013

In Darkness We Must Abide: The Gift (Episode 4) Available Today!

Today the fourth episode of In Darkness We Must Abide, entitled The Gift, is available in most ebook formats at various online stores.  You can by the ebook in nearly every format at my website by clicking here. Or you can purchase the book at the links below.


Episode 4: The Gift

With the arrival of the new vampires, Vanora's life has once more been changed forever. The only mortal among the undead, she feels like an outsider in her own home. As her seventeenth birthday approaches, she struggles not only with her deepening feelings for Armando, but also her own burgeoning powers.

Armando continues to cause ripples in the lives of Vanora and her siblings. Nothing is every simple with him. I hope you enjoy this next step in the evolution of the characters and the story.


Don't forget to add the book to your list at Goodreads.
 

Also, check in with the Read Along hosted by Lori Parker at Parajunkee.



You can also download the first episode for FREE from my website by clicking on the book cover. You can also get it FREE at the Kindle store, iTunes, and Kobo Books.


You can purchase episodes 2-4  for .99 each at the following online stores.




Thursday, April 25, 2013

Cover Reveal: Episode 4 of In Darkness We Must Abide: The Gift


Episode 4: The Gift
With the arrival of the new vampires, Vanora's life has once more been changed forever. The only mortal among the undead, she feels like an outsider in her own home. As her seventeenth birthday approaches, she struggles not only with her deepening feelings for Armando, but also her own burgeoning powers.

Official Release Date: April 26, 2013
(will be available on April 25, 2013 at my online book store)

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Do You Think I'm Pretty? Because I Don't...But I'm Working On That...

Reflecting back on the last few weeks with all the cruel and salacious attacks on several women in the public eye for their weight and appearance by the media and general public, I struggled with a growing unease. If someone as beautiful as Kim Kardashian (who honestly I can't be arsed about) is called fat and mocked while pregnant, how does that reflect on women as a whole? What made me even more uncomfortable was to see authors under fire. I stumbled across some very snarky comments leveled at two successful New York Times Bestselling authors on a popular celebrity site. Though one of the women has been accused of being plagiarizer (which is a very serious charge), most of the people were mocking her weight and appearance. Even on Facebook I noticed an increase in memes mocking skinny women and declaring "Real women have curves," or ones mocking the weight of Americans by showing overweight women.

As someone who avoids looking at their own photographs, I felt increasingly ill at ease with the nastiness being hurled at women. I began to feel uncomfortable in my own skin. 

Just recently I told a friend how relieved I am in this celebrity obsessed culture that writers are NOT celebrities. If writers had to endure the same nitpicky coverage other artists have to go through, I didn't know if I'd want to stick around in the business. Stephen King, George RR Martin, and JK Rowling are probably the only three authors most people would recognize on sight. Though I have been recognized at conventions and around Austin, but it was by my fans, not by the general public.

Then I realized my relief stemmed from my own issues connected to my appearance.


Last week I saw this amazing video by Dove's Real Beauty campaign and it reduced me to tears and made me face the truth.


I won't lie. It hit very close to my heart. I knew if I had been one of the women in the commercial the image that my description would have created would have been quite hideous.

You see I have spent a huge portion of my life being more cruel and abusive to myself over my appearance than anyone else ever could be. In fact, if someone calls me "fat" or "ugly" it doesn't even phase me because most of my life I have pretty much agreed.

In the last few days I've dug deep to find the roots of this destructive self-hatred. 

My first memory of criticism of my appearance surrounds a family portrait that was taken when I was around five or six. I was incredibly excited about the portraits because I got to wear a new outfit, socks, and shoes. I remember getting ready to go to the studio, taking the photos, then waiting anxiously for the portraits to arrive.  For some reason, I was just enthralled with the whole process. When the portraits did finally come, I immediately regretted ever being excited.

I've worn glasses since I was very small. I was born with awful vision. I had a new pair of glasses and they hadn't fully been broken in by the time we took the photos. My ears are slightly misaligned  so my glasses tend to sit awkwardly on my nose until one side bends and evens out the line. Well, that new pair of glasses sat at an angle across my face partially obscuring one eye. My father berated me over this "flaw" in the photo. He was furious with me. I still remember sobbing as he told me how much money he'd wasted on worthless pictures and how everyone who saw them in our Christmas cards would make fun of me. It was one of the first times in my life I dealt with his rage and certainly not the last. (I do not have a relationship with him and haven't for over twenty years.) He would continue to critique and mock my photos throughout my childhood. (I don't think my mom is even aware of this story, by the way.)

I've not been able to look at a photo of myself without shredding my appearance to pieces my entire life.

In the 1970's an "all-American beauty" meant blond hair, blue eyes, and a tan from the sun, not genetics. All the baby dolls and Barbie dolls stocking the toy stores were blond and blue eyed. The sex icon of that time was Farrah Fawcett. In books, films, and TV shows, most often the heroine was a blond with big blue eyes, the villainess was most likely a brunette. As a kid I absorbed all of this, looked in the mirror and saw a black-eyed, dark olive-skinned, brunette staring back at me. I knew from a very young age I was anything other than pretty according to the beauty standards upheld by the media. 

Living in a largely Hispanic community, I quickly shot up in height over the heads of the other girls. I literally towered over most of them. By 10 I hit puberty and took on the curvy shape of my mother's side of the family. I longed to be petite (most of the girls were shorter than 5 foot 2 in junior high, I was five foot six), small boned, straight haired, and small-breasted. I literally remember walking down the halls and being able to stare over the heads of almost everyone else - boys and girls - for years. It didn't help that my breasts drew a lot of ire from other girls. I was called a slut many times before I actually knew what a slut actually was.

So I wasn't a petite, straight haired girl. I wasn't the tall, skinny, blond, blue eyed girl. I was none of those things. I looked in the mirror and saw masses of dark curls, a big nose, small lips, and a severe lack of cheekbones. By my teens, my self hatred had reached epic proportions. I could barely look in the mirror.

My mother (who is such a great person) realized I was struggling and took me to see a film at the library during a special summer event. Sophia Loren was the lead actress. I had never seen such a beautiful woman in my entire life. She had dark skin and hair like me and a figure very much like my mother. I was enthralled. 

Though I wasn't completely cured of my self-hatred, I did slowly start to accept that I would never look like Christie Brinkley. 

Of course, I also grew up around other girls who were being taught to hate their own looks. We all learned very young that to hurt another girl you just had to call her "fat" and/or "ugly." Those two words could shred any girl. Sadly, as an adult, I still hear those words hurled by women at other women.

Throughout my teens and twenties I struggled to overcome my intense hatred of my looks. I couldn't look in a mirror or see a photo without internally ticking off everything that was wrong with me. It wasn't until a trip to Italy that I finally felt beautiful. Seriously, the attention I got was obscene. And, to my surprise, the blond, blue eyed girls from Australia were not the women getting all attention. It was me. Of course, the second I was back in the States, all the self-hatred came flooding back, but for a short period of time I knew what it felt like to be pretty.

I wouldn't feel that way again until I met my husband. When he looks at me, I feel pretty. He's the only person in this world that makes me feel like I'm attractive and desirable. It took me years though to actually believe he found me beautiful. 

In fact, it took me YEARS to learn how to accept compliments. Years! To this day, if someone compliments me I struggle to believe them. It's hard to drown out the voice inside my own head.

Yet, in a weird way it's made me strangely immune to people attacking me and my looks. A few years ago another woman hurled the dreaded "fat and ugly" phrase at me and it slid off of me like water.  I have called myself much worse.

Yet, in the last six months or so I have realized its time to fight back against that internal voice. It's time to fight back against that horrible programming in my head. I honestly can't look at a photo of myself without tearing my appearance apart, but at least I do try to look at them now. I'm always amazed at how some people post a billion photos of themselves when I struggle to just post one. I have sat and untagged photos from book signings and conventions just so I don't have an anxiety attack. But recently I have even forced myself to take self-portraits and put them on facebook. It's very, very hard to do so. When at appearances, when people take photos, I feel stark fear inside myself, but I have started to remind myself that they just want to document meeting a writer who's work they enjoyed.

I don't want my nieces to feel the way I do. I don't want any other woman to feel this way. It's horrible. It's destructive. And it robs so much joy out of  life.

In a society that judges a woman so harshly on their appearance, how do we fight back? How do I fight back?

I'm not sure. But I'll start by posting a photo.


This is me and PJ Hoover, another Tor author, at BookPeople last week. We had a great panel and a lot of fun. When I first looked at this photo, I started ripping myself to shreds, then forced myself to stop. Instead, I concentrated on remembering how much fun I had, how nice PJ was, and focusing on things I do like about myself: my eyes, my smile, and my hair. 

I will never be as beautiful as a celebrity, actress, or model, but I am who I am. I have love in my life, a career that's wonderful, and a life full of goodness.

Someday that evil voice inside of my head that whispers that I'm worthless due to my lack of physical perfection will be gone. 

Someday...



Thursday, April 18, 2013

Cover Reveal: PRETTY WHEN SHE DESTROYS

Yesterday over fifty bloggers revealed the cover for the third book in the PWSD trilogy and the response was pretty much unanimous.

"Creepy!"

Which was exactly the intention of the cover. Pretty When She Destroys is a very dark book. Amaliya's powers develop even further and she is forced to face her worst fears. The cover by Claudia McKinney of Phat Puppy Art clearly depicts Amaliya's evolution into a very powerful necromancer vampire.


Amaliya Vezorak always believed she was destined to live a failed life in obscurity until she was brutally murdered by an ancient vampire named The Summoner and reborn as a powerful vampire necromancer. Now it is up to her to save the world…


So what do you think of the cover for the final book in the trilogy?

Monday, April 15, 2013

Give My Blog Some Lovin'

With Google Reader soon to be no more, please make sure to follow my blog via some other blog reader. I prefer Bloglovin, but there are many other choices out there.

I'm in the middle of wrapping up a novel, but I will have news soon about an upcoming release.

Have a great Monday!

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Friday, April 12, 2013

In Darkness We Must Abide Episode 3 is Available Today!

Today the third episode of In Darkness We Must Abide, entitled The Arrival of Armando DeLeon, is available in most ebook formats at various online stores.  You can by the ebook in nearly every format at my website by clicking here. Or you can purchase the book at the links below.

Episode 3
A mysterious new vampire appears in the life of the Socolis. Is he friend or foe?

Armando is a very important part of the serial and I'm thrilled he has finally entered the story. He's a very complicated character that adds quite a bit to the narrative. Enjoy!



Don't forget to add the book to your list at Goodreads.
 

Also, check in with the Read Along hosted by Lori Parker at Parajunkee.



You can also download the first episode for FREE from my website by clicking on the book cover. You can also get it FREE at the Kindle store, iTunes, and Kobo Books.


You can purchase the 2nd and 3rd episodes for .99 each at the following online stores.




Thursday, April 11, 2013

The Last Bastion of the Living: A Futuristic Zombie Novel Tops Yet Another List

The Last Bastion of the Living: A Futuristic Zombie Novel was not an easy book to write. There were times when I felt completely overwhelmed by the story and all the plot threads I was weaving together. Yet, when I finished the novel, I knew I turned out one of the best books I've written thus far.

To my immense joy, the novel has had consistently good reviews, excellent sales, and has become a favorite of a lot of fans.

"Best of..." lists are subjective, of course. As are reviews. But there are certain lists that I get very excited about. Barnes & Noble Book Blog (Explorations) is one of them. I was absolutely thrilled when The Last Bastion of the Living was declared the #1 Zombie Release of 2012 and Siege was #7.  But this week I was floored when The Last Bastion of the Living made the top of the list (yep, the top spot!) for The Top 20 Books of the Last Decade on the Barnes and Noble Book Blog!

To say the very least, I'm ecstatic!

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

In Defense of Writing from Multiple Points of View

Sometimes it boggles my mind how much change occurs in the book world. Every day there seems to be a new development in how we read, publish, and write books. The landscape has changed tremendously since 2008 when I first self-published As The World Dies. The zombie genre was just taking off and self-publishing was just beginning to become accepted. When I signed my book deal in 2010 with Tor to publish As The World Dies, I was one of the few authors to jump from self-publishing to being traditionally published. Now it's common place.

The publishing aspect isn't the only part of the publishing industry that changes, but also books themselves. When I was a kid, Young Adult meant books like Where The Red Fern Grows and Catcher in the Rye. There was also fluffy fun stuff like Sweet Valley High, scary Goosebumps and old standbys like Nancy Drew and the The Hardy Boys, but it was tweens that were eating up these books. Teenagers had already graduated to the likes of Ann Rice and Stephen King.

Now Young Adult is huge. It's not just tweens and teens reading  the genre, but adults as well. Urban Fantasy didn't even exist in its current form when I was growing up, but now it sits beside its fraternal twin, Paranormal Romance cluttering huge portions of bookstores.

With the advent of these newer, more popular genres, first person storytelling has become the dominate voice.
first person
n.
1. The grammatical category of forms that designate a speaker or writer referring to himself or herself. Examples of forms in the first person include English pronouns such as I and we and verb forms such as Spanish hablo "I speak."
2. A discourse or literary style in which the narrator recounts his or her own experiences or impressions using such forms: a novel written in the first person.
3. A perspective in a video or computer game that shows only what a character would see.From the Free Dictionary 
Most of the books I read now are from first person points of view (POV). It's rare to find a book in this genre that is not first person. Because readers are so used to first person POV, they sometimes find it difficult to immerse themselves in third person narratives. Add in multiple POVs, and some readers balk completely.
third person
n.
1. The grammatical category of forms that designate a person or thing other than the speaker or the one spoken to. Examples of forms in the third person include English pronouns such as she and they and verb forms such as Spanish hablan "they speak."
2. A discourse or literary style in which the narrator recounts his or her own experiences or impressions using such forms: an essay written in the third person. From the Free Dictionary 

I noted over the last few years that a few readers were flummoxed by the third person narrative of Pretty When She Dies and Pretty When She Kills. A few even shared their desire that the second book had been wholly from Amaliya's point of view.  The Pretty When She... trilogy is not really Urban Fantasy, but has often been categorized as such. Therefore, a lot of people expect a first person narrative.

Today I thought I'd discuss first person pros and cons, why I continue to write in third person and from multiple POVs in most of my novels, and why I feel third person is one of the best storytelling devices.

To First Person Or Not to First Person
First person narrative is when the writer tells the story in the voice of their primary protagonist. The reader is restricted to that one pov and all the details of the story that the reader receives is through that one set of eyes and ears.  First person pov can be a powerful tool in writing. It can draw the reader into the mind of the protagonist in a very dynamic way and elicit strong emotions because of the intimacy the reader has with the main character.

Whenever I embark on a new novel, I always connect with the main protagonist first and then meet the rest of the cast, so to speak. As the full scope of the story unfurls in my head, I can ascertain very quickly if the novel will be better suited for first person or third person.

I have only written in first person on two occasions.

Lady Glynis in The Tale of the Vampire Bride is a much more powerful character in first person. Because she is a young lady of the 19th century living in Regency era Europe, her situation is far removed from the modern day reality of most women her age. By having her give voice to her own thoughts, its easier for the reader to connect with her.

Christy and Adam in The Midnight Spell are sharing their POV on the events unfolding in their lives, so my co-author, Kody Boye, and I thought it would be best if we had them speak for themselves. It also made it much easier for us to write the novel since I wrote for Christy and Kody wrote for Adam.

Where First Person Gets Really Tricky-Trapped in One Mindset
When you're writing from just one point of view, the entire story ends up skewed to that one character's perception. Readers usually believe that the lead characters is somehow infallible in how they process information. If another character disagrees with the main character, even if that other character is right, the reader may side with the protagonist because they're locked into that mindset. The first person protagonists should not be considered reliable narrators.

A main character shouldn't be perfect. They need to evolve and change over the course of their story.

Of course, if a character is flaw ridden and the reader finds them annoying, the author can lose their audience very quickly. If you're stuck with one unlikable person throughout a book, it's very easy to set the book aside.

The internal workings of a character can be difficult to relay in first person. People normally change their minds a lot and often revise their own viewpoints. To keep all that straight without the character looking like they're mental is not always easy. I'm always amazed when people consider first person to be the "easy" way to write a novel. I always find it a lot more challenging.

Where First Person Gets Really Tricky-Trapped in One Place
A first person story traps the reader in one place--with the main protagonist  There is no way to know what is happening anywhere else within that universe. The story is completely confined to wherever the protagonist is hanging out any particular moment. Therefore, vital information to the plot has to be discovered in a way that doesn't seem contrived. This is where we might end up with long winded speeches by the baddie explaining what they've been up to the whole novel. Also, the scope of the world can be lost on the reader when confined to just one spot on the map.

Where First Person Gets Really Tricky-Multiple Points of View
In both The Tale of the Vampire Bride and The Vengeance of the Vampire Bride, I quickly realized that though the story was best told from Glynis's point of view, I needed to share the viewpoints of a few other characters as well. I was stumped as to how to do this until I considered Bram Stoker's Dracula. It's written in first person, but has multiple viewpoints expressed through diary entries, letters, and recordings by the characters. I employed this same writing device in my story. There was absolutely no way I could do it otherwise. There were vital bits of the story that just had to be told from another character's point of view for the reader to get the whole picture.

Sometimes this device works. Sometimes it doesn't. It's difficult to execute different POV in first person. Each voice has to sound different. Also, its dangerous to employ because it can change the way your readers view your character when they finally get a peek inside their head.

I read one series where the first book was from one POV. In the second, it alternated between the main character and her lost love. Well, I had adored her lost love in the first book, but hearing his POV made me dislike him. In the first book he seemed so smart, stable and a little mysterious. In the second, when we finally got to see his inner workings, he came across as weak, whiny, and dumb.

Why Third Person Rocks - I Can Give The Reader the Big Picture
One of the reasons why I love writing in third person is that I'm not trapped in the mind of one character. I can move from one character to the next, building up the story with their individual viewpoints.

Let me explain further.

In Pretty When She Kills there is a lot of information fed into the story by the supporting cast of characters. All the puzzle pieces are moving into position to set up the third and final book. There is no way that I could have written the novel in first person. I would have lost the dynamic and terrifying prologue immediately and a good chunk of the rest of the novel as well. Though the first book was primarily from Amaliya's point of view, and then Cian's, the world expanded dramatically in the second book because it had to. Though Amaliya has about twice the amount of scenes as everyone else from her point of view, some readers were upset that there weren't more. Yet, to construct the story the way it needed to be, I couldn't do that. It would have been unrealistic. Being in third person and implementing multiple POV allowed me to create the story I wanted to tell.

Why Third Person Rocks - World Building
In the Last Bastion of the Living  I was able to provide a much richer world-building experience for the reader due to Maria and Dwayne seeing it from two different vantage points. The readers ended up with a more detailed description than if I had just kept everything in Maria's POV.

Also, I always feel a bit weird when the protagonist in first person gives extreme details about the world around them in a way that seems out of character. When I read from a child's POV and they're going on about the curlicue designs on the pressed tin ceiling of a 20th century house, it comes across as odd.

Third person allows me, the writer, to give you a better description of what is going on and the world than my character could.

Why Third Person Rocks - Richer Characterization
If I had written As The World Dies just from Katie's POV or Jenni's POV, the readers would have never gotten to know some of the other characters as well as they did. By alternating POV, I was able to build a much more dynamic community around the two women and draw the reader deeper into the story. The reader didn't have to guess what the other characters were thinking, but actually got to take a peek.

The Pitfalls of Third Person
I obviously love writing in third person, but it can be done very badly. I have learned a lot over the course of the last few years while studying the editing notes on my novels. I have definitely cleaned up some bad habits.

Third person can go horribly wrong when a writer head hops from character to character in one scene. Or from sentence to sentence. A scene should be locked to one character's perception. To head hop in one scene is confusing to say the least.

Third person doesn't mean that ALL the characters in the book should get a scene. Only information pertinent to the story should be revealed through the different viewpoints. I've seen some books where every character got a scene, even if it had nothing to do with the story. Boooring.

Multiple POVs should enhance your story and give your primary characters fuller definition. It's always fun to see how a main character may be absolutely wrong in their assumptions about another character or a situation. It's like watching a movie where you know their is a monster in the other room, but the character has no idea and you're screaming at them not to open the door. In third person, I get to build up suspense by revealing the monster in the other room. In first person, you may get the surprise of the monster jumping out, but none of the build up.

Third person fails when it keeps readers from seeing the internal workings of a character because the writer is too busy describing everything but what the character is thinking or feeling. It's all about the action, or world-building, and nothing about the character.

Final Thoughts on First Person Versus Third Person
Not so long ago, third person multi-person POV novels were the norm. The majority of books used this style. Some of those books were great, others were not. Now the majority of books seem to be first person and again, some are great, some are not. Though I personally prefer third person as a writer, I enjoy a well-written first person narrative. Yet, lately, I have seen where first person has gone horribly wrong.

I admit that when I see comments from readers wishing that I didn't use third person or multi-POV I worry that I'm letting them down, but I also have to tell the story to the best of my ability. For some books first person works, for others it wouldn't work at all.

Monday, April 8, 2013

The Exciting New World of Writing Serials - A Discussion with Author Susan Kaye Quinn

Today on our blogs, author Susan Kaye Quinn and I are both posting a recent discussion we had via email on writing serials. Much to our surprise, we both dipped our toes into the revitalized world of serials at about the same time.

Susan's new serial is the Debt Collector.
DebtCollector serial by Susan Kaye Quinn
What’s your life worth on the open market? 
A debt collector can tell you precisely.Lirium plays the part of the grim reaper well, with his dark trenchcoat, jackboots, and the black marks on his soul that every debt collector carries. He’s just in it for his cut, the ten percent of the life energy he collects before he transfers it on to the high potentials, the people who will make the world a better place with their brains, their work, and their lives. That hit of life energy, a bottle of vodka, and a visit from one of Madam Anastazja’s sex workers keep him alive, stable, and mostly sane… until he collects again. But when his recovery ritual is disrupted by a sex worker who isn’t what she seems, he has to choose between doing an illegal hit for a girl whose story has more holes than his soul or facing the bottle alone—a dark pit he’s not sure he’ll be able to climb out of again.www.DebtCollectorSeries.com

My new serial is In Darkness We Must Abide.

In Darkness We Abide serial by Rhiannon Frater


In Darkness We Must Abide is the epic saga of one young woman caught in the dangerous world of the creatures of the night.
Already living in the shadows due to her albinism, Vanora is just a little girl when her older brother inadvertently unleashes a terrible evil from the family crypt that changes their lives forever. 
As she grows up in a world where beautiful deadly beings hunt by night, one captures her eye and her heart. Yet, can she trust the mysterious Armando? For there is a powerful entity plotting to claim her when she reaches adulthood in order to fulfill an ancient prophecy, and her enemy has enveloped her in a web of deceit, casting doubt on all she believes to be true. Soon, she will have to fight not only to save those she loves, but also for her very soul.

I hope you enjoy our conversation and learn something new about our new projects.

SueYou would think we got together in a dark room and concocted a plan to release serials at the same time! Your In Darkness We Must Abide serial is neck-and-neck with my Debt Collector serial in their release schedules! I pre-wrote the first four episodes before I started releasing – I’m working on episode six right now, with a planned nine altogether. That way I can have a reasonable every-two-weeks release schedule while still writing the series as-I-go.  What’s your release schedule look like? Are your episodes prewritten?

Rhiannon: I did find it amusing that we seemed to be of the same mind about serials. I was really surprised when I saw you were about to release about the same time I was. But great minds think alike! My serial is actually an old novel that I trunked long ago because I had no clue how to submit my novel for publication and did it all wrong. The local library had horribly outdated information and I lived in a very small town in Texas, so it was a disaster when I subbed to publishers. I was so soundly rejected, I tossed the book into the back of my mind and locked the file away on my hard drive. Last year I stumbled across the novel and decided to take a peek at it. As I was reviewing the novel and realized a few things. 1) It was enormous-basically the size of about three novels. 2) It was very episodic. I do tend to write cliffhanger endings to chapters, so I shouldn't have been surprised. 3) With some tweaking it would make a great serial because it was so episodic. The challenge, of course, was making sure each episode actually works as a separate piece and makes for a fulfilling reading experience. My other novels would make horrible serials except for AS THE WORLD DIES. A serial is a completely different creature from a normal novel. Luckily, In Darkness We Must Abide already read like a serial when I started slicing it up. For the In Darkness We Must Abide launch, I wanted to be sure to have at least four episodes "in the can" so to speak. I wanted there to be leeway for any possible delays I might experience from my other writing commitments. (My Tor contract comes first!) The release schedule is two to three weeks depending on factors, but I do announce the next release date at the end of each installment. I'm presently working on Episodes 5 and 6. We are considering releasing a paperback omnibus after the 5th episode. I still have readers who aren't part of the ebook revolution. The end of the 5th episode is a good spot to end that "season."

Sue: *nods throughout your entire answer* I couldn’t agree more that serials are a completely different creature from a normal novel! That episodic storytelling requires a more complete and satisfying experience to the reader than they would get from just a few chapters of a novel. I’m really enjoying the freedom the format gives to dive into details in each episode that maybe would get lost in a novel. I see each one as almost a mini-novel, with themes and characters that are self-contained… even if they flow into the next episode as well. And I love that readers are adventurous enough to try out this new form – I think they’re as pleasantly surprised with the reading as I am with the writing. Ok, let’s talk pricing! Right now I’m sticking with 99cent episodes and $2.99 collections of three episodes. I see your first episode is FREE (go get it right now)! How long do you plan to keep it that way? And how do you plan to price your 5-6 episode omnibus?

Rhiannon: I really love the fact that I can further flesh out my original story in a serial because I don't have to worry about the over all page count (word count). I can write the story as fully as I want without restriction as long as I'm keeping it interesting for the reader. It definitely allows me to go even deeper than I usually would when keeping an eye on my word count. Though the first episode was free on my website, Kobo, and iTunes, it took awhile for Amazon to finally price match and make the Kindle version free. I'm thrilled they finally did so! My goal has always been to have the first episode for free. Readers are still discovering serials, and I can understand the reticence to invest time in one. Making the first episode free allows readers to make a non-monetary investment while deciding if they actually like my writing and the story. My serial may not be for some, while others may love it. Hopefully, those who enjoy the first installment will then buy the subsequent episodes, all of which will be priced at .99. I'm still not certain about the pricing of the actual paperback of the first season. I have yet to make a final decision on whether or not whether I'll be doing an electronic omnibus for the episodes in the first season, and if I do what the price point will be. I know some people think that serials are a money scheme, but the reality is that the low price point on the installments does not garner a high royalty. If no one reads the installments, the serial doesn't make any money at all. Yet, serials demand the same attention as a full-length novel. Cover art, editing, promotion, etc.  
Sue: Yeah, the low royalty on the 99cent episodes made me quiver at first, especially when it came to paying for cover art. But I decided that covers always help people decide to pick up the story, so I went with gorgeous cover art and a top notch cover designer. I’ve considered pulling the individual episodes after the e-collections are available (three sets of three episodes, each about the length of a short novel), but I love the covers too much! And I would like to leave the first episode or two available for sampling anyway, so we’ll see when I get there. Since readers are asking for it (and serials - for me - are all about listening to fans), I recently decided to do a paper edition as well... but not until the end of the nine-episode season. Otherwise, it doesn't make sense in terms of price. 
I’m very conscious of making this a high value proposition for my readers – I want them to feel like they’re getting their money’s worth in entertainment for the series. This is one thing that I think serials do really well (if they’re done right) – they deliver a tremendous amount of story and entertainment packed into each episode. There’s a low commitment on the reader end – they try it; if they like it, they come back for more. And the entertainment value builds as the serial progresses, just like a TV season, where you enjoy each episode, but you’re looking forward to the big season finale! As a writer, I’m enjoying the heck out of creating that experience.
My next release (Episode 4 – Broken) is April 17th! When is yours?

Rhiannon: I'm very lucky to have a publishing team in place for this serial. My husband is creating the covers for the serial. He went to college to study game design, so doing covers is a bit different for him. I personally think he's doing a great job. The covers have been very well-received. Ashley from BB Designs designed the typgraphy, which is very striking. I loved how she laid out the episode title. I honestly would not have been able to afford to do the serial if not for my husband taking on the covers. Serials are a big money investment when it comes to editing and covers. My hope, of course, is that people will gobble up the serial and spread the word about it. Right now I suspect I will leave the serial for sale in installments and sell paperback omnibuses of the seasons for the diehard dead tree format fans. Of course, I will respond to fan demand and adapt accordingly, but we'll see how it all plays out. This is all new territory for not only readers, but writers, too. While constructing In Darkness We Must Abide, I'm definitely keeping in mind such shows as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Being Human (UK), and Breaking Bad. Buffy had filler episodes, but the other series have shorter seasons so there aren't any detours. I'm trying to create a very intense, in depth, but fully fleshed out reading experience. I want fans of the serial to come away feeling they just saw a great TV show. I'm aiming for a very cinematic feel while being able to indulge in the depth that the written word provides. In Darkness We Must Abide continues in Episode 3, The Arrival of Armando DeLeon.  He's a character we've only had glimpses of so far, but he gets to enter the stage in a very dynamic way. I think the fans will be very enthralled with him. He's very enigmatic.  And the episode will be available April 12th, 2013 

Sue: See? Neck-n-neck with those releases!

Rhiannon:I have a question for you: Do you feel writing a serial has made you grow as a writer and further develop your voice?

Sue: That’s a great question! Everything I write helps me grow as a writer… at least I try to further my skills in each work. This serial in particular is an exploration of my darker side – simply because that’s the story, not because it’s a serial. The format, though, is definitely demanding writing - it’s challenging to let the story that I envision unfold while also staying open to reader feedback along the way. As I mentioned somewhere else, this is the toughest writing I’ve ever loved!
Any last topic we haven’t covered?

Rhiannon: I believe we have covered everything! It appears we are both agreed that serials are not easy to produce, or a get rich scheme (like some people think it is), but a new way of reaching readers. So far, I'm loving the experience. 



Rhiannon Frater is the award-winning author of the As the World Dies trilogy and several other vampire and zombie books. She publishes both independently and through Tor publishing, and is represented by Hannah Gordon of the Foundry + Literary Media agency. You can find all of Rhiannon’s books here.

Susan Kaye Quinn is the author of the bestselling YA SF Mindjack series. Her new Debt Collector serial is her more grown-up SF. Her steampunk fantasy romance is temporarily on hold while she madly writes episodes to keep Lirium (the titular Debt Collector) happy. Mostly she sits around in her pajamas in awe that she gets make stuff up full-time. You can find all of Susan’s books here.


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Saturday, April 6, 2013

Huge Amazon Sale on Rhiannon Frater Novels in Paperback

Amazon has a ton of my novels on sale right now in paperback format. This is your chance to snag one or two you haven't bought yet! The sale includes the new editions of the Vampire Bride series and all of the Pretty When She series.

Plus, you know, sales help keep me writing full-time. My royalty checks pay the bills and keep me tied to my computer. So if you have all the books already, buy one for a friend, or at least spread the word. Spread the love.

Thanks!


Monday, April 1, 2013

The First Episode of IN DARKNESS WE MUST ABIDE is FREE on Kindle



The first episode of my supernatural serial is now free on Kindle! Grab your copy today!


Get a free epub version (for Kobo and Nook readers)