Welcome to my “DON’T YOU HATE BLOG TOURS?” Book Tour.
Shannon has been naïve, ah, kind enough to lend me her blog.
Book Tours.
Are they dead? Are
they the Walking Dead? Sometimes
seemingly done-to-death concepts can sizzle if we do it in a new light.
As in: “Hey, the woman wants a green dress; turn on the
green light!”
You ask, “What is there new to do?” You aren’t asking that? Well, I’m asking it for you because I’m your
friend, because I want you to sell books …oh, all right … because I want to sell books.
Listen to super-agent Donald Maass:
“There are only TWO things that sell books…a good book
and word of mouth. Period.”
Jeez, look at all those rolling eyes out there. I hear you: “How do you get good Word of
Mouth, for crying out loud?” And, boy,
have I cried out loud at that question.
Ever hear of Book Clubs, my friends? Gee, thanks, some of you out there think I’m
number one … but, guys, you’re using the wrong finger.
Oh, you’re using the finger you wanted? Oops.
Book clubs are critical and wonderful influencers when it
comes to talking up new books … ah, that’s WORD OF MOUTH for those of you
finger-shaking critics!
It is why I included a substantial Reader Discussion Guide
at the end of my latest book. I know you
want to know its title.
You don’t? Well, I want you to know, so there!
For your own questions – ask the reader if the characters
changed by the end of the book, has the reader changed by the end? Were there memorable bits of dialogue? Was there a favorite character?
You know your theme of your book. Ask the reader what they thought the theme to
be. My theme in my new book?
“My back; your knife.
My gun; your head.” Not
really. You’ll have to read it to find
out what it really is.
This March board the Xanadu,
the 1st Air/Steamboat, on a honeymoon cruise for Paris and the
Unholy Lands where death, betrayal, deceit, and murder reign supreme … and that
is just in the newlywed’s bedroom!
The passengers? An
insane Abraham Lincoln, a crippled General Sherman, a vampiric Benjamin
Franklin, a clueless Mark Twain, 11 year old Nikola Tesla, and his faithful
black cat, Macak.
Cost of Passage? Only
$9.99!
Want more? Here is
the music I listened to while writing the battle between the Xanadu and Captain Nemo’s Nautilus:
Thank you for stopping by on your book tour that isn't a blog tour, Roland!
#
Now for some links. Bear in mind that I'm merely passing them along, not endorsing them. Always do your own due diligence before submitting.
Accepting Submissions:
Uncanny Magazine is seeking speculative fiction. 750-6000 words. Pays $.08/word. Deadline is February 29. Thanks to John Wiswell for the reminder!
Syntax and Salt is seeking magical realism for their first issue. Up to 3500 words. Pays $10 unless you win an Editor's Choice, which is $25. Deadline March 18.
Lit Select is seeking stories in the theme "What Went Wrong?" for Legendary Stories. 2000-8000 words. Pays $30. Deadline March 30.
Less Than Three Press is seeking LGBTQIA fairy tales for Fairy Tales Slashed: Volume 7. 10,000 to 20,000 words. Pays $200. Deadline March 31.
Cori Vidae is seeking erotica involving tattoos for kINKED. 3000-20,000 words. Pays in profit shares. Deadline March 31.
York Literary Review is a new literary journal. They accept fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, essays, reviews, visual art, and photography. No more than 5000 words. Pays £50. Deadline March 31.
Tayen Lane Publishing is seeking literary fiction for the 2016 Articulated Press Short Story Anthology. Up to 5000 words. They are also seeking science fiction for their Procyon Press Science Fiction Anthology 2016. This one is up to 7000 words. Pays $100, plus contributor copies. Deadline for both is March 31.
Truancy is seeking flash and short stories retelling fairy tales. Up to 3500 words. Pays $15.
Shattered Prism is seeking speculative fiction. 1500-5500 words. Pays $.06/word.
Clubhouse Magazine is seeking stories for 8 to 12 year old boys. This is a Christian magazine. Between 500 and 1800 words, depending upon type of story. Pays between $.15 and .25 per word.
Of Interest:
Chrys Fey and L. Diane Wolf have combined forces! You can get a full manuscript edit by Chrys and print & ebook formatting by L. Diane. They list the prices on this post, so there are no surprises. As a bonus, L. Diane's husband does cover design.
What do you think of Roland's non-blog tour book tour? How about his cover? Any of these links of interest to you? Anything to add? Any news to share?
May you find your Muse.
Accepting Submissions:
Uncanny Magazine is seeking speculative fiction. 750-6000 words. Pays $.08/word. Deadline is February 29. Thanks to John Wiswell for the reminder!
Syntax and Salt is seeking magical realism for their first issue. Up to 3500 words. Pays $10 unless you win an Editor's Choice, which is $25. Deadline March 18.
Lit Select is seeking stories in the theme "What Went Wrong?" for Legendary Stories. 2000-8000 words. Pays $30. Deadline March 30.
Less Than Three Press is seeking LGBTQIA fairy tales for Fairy Tales Slashed: Volume 7. 10,000 to 20,000 words. Pays $200. Deadline March 31.
Cori Vidae is seeking erotica involving tattoos for kINKED. 3000-20,000 words. Pays in profit shares. Deadline March 31.
York Literary Review is a new literary journal. They accept fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, essays, reviews, visual art, and photography. No more than 5000 words. Pays £50. Deadline March 31.
Tayen Lane Publishing is seeking literary fiction for the 2016 Articulated Press Short Story Anthology. Up to 5000 words. They are also seeking science fiction for their Procyon Press Science Fiction Anthology 2016. This one is up to 7000 words. Pays $100, plus contributor copies. Deadline for both is March 31.
Truancy is seeking flash and short stories retelling fairy tales. Up to 3500 words. Pays $15.
Shattered Prism is seeking speculative fiction. 1500-5500 words. Pays $.06/word.
Clubhouse Magazine is seeking stories for 8 to 12 year old boys. This is a Christian magazine. Between 500 and 1800 words, depending upon type of story. Pays between $.15 and .25 per word.
Of Interest:
Chrys Fey and L. Diane Wolf have combined forces! You can get a full manuscript edit by Chrys and print & ebook formatting by L. Diane. They list the prices on this post, so there are no surprises. As a bonus, L. Diane's husband does cover design.
What do you think of Roland's non-blog tour book tour? How about his cover? Any of these links of interest to you? Anything to add? Any news to share?
May you find your Muse.
12 comments:
Awesome advice, Roland. Thanks for the suggestions! I'd never considered writing a book club discussion guide. (Okay, maybe I had, but I had no idea where to start.)
*waves at Shannon*
*tips my Stetson to Shannon* Thanks, Shannon for having me and being such a gracious hostess.
And thank you, Crystal, for liking my not-tour post. :-) I hope I gave you an idea or two for a book club discussion guide in your next book.
Is this the same as the study guide or different?
Hi Shannon and Roland - adding in the Reader Discussion Guide - it certainly makes sense ... and I'm sure will add interest to each of your readers ... good luck - cheers Hilary
Same as the study guide but I also put links to two melodies I used in the book, Holly. I wanted to add depth to the readers' enjoyment.
Thanks, Hilary. I hope it does as you suggest. :-)
Ready to board with you!
Any week now, and the Xanadu will take to the skies! Take warm clothing for the brisk winds and high collars to keep the vampires at bay!
Shannon, thank you so much for letting me visit and talk a bit. You are a gracious hostess, and I really had a fine time. :-)
I do like a man with a Stetson. ;)
Book club discussions are a good idea. Even as a solo reader, I often read the discussion guides to help me think more about the book, especially if it made me think.
Hi, Hilary!
Thank you for coming by, Roland! It was fun.
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