This is it, ladies and gentlemen.

This is it.

My novel, The Remembrance, will officially be released on Saturday, May 6th.

We will be celebrating this momentous occasion at In Perpetual Motion on Saturday night, with a book release party. Come one, come all to Detroit (er, Ferndale), Michigan! Listen to incredible music, revel in drunken debauchery, and get your copy of the novel signed!

If inebriated craziness isn’t your thing – I’m looking at you, – we will be holding a book signing at Lansing’s Gone Wired Cafe, the very next day. Sunday, May 7th, from 2 PM to 9 PM.

Not only will we have copies of The Remembrance available for purchase and signing at both events, but in a few days from now, you’ll be able to pre-order your copy. It’ll be ready and waiting for you when you get there, and I’ll even wait for you to show up to sign it. The softcover will cost around $15, while the hardcover will be about $25. I’ll announce the pre-order here, and provide a link to PayPal.

For those of you that are out of state, or even out of country, but would still like me to sign in your town, fear not! *cue trumpets* Get in touch with and bug your local book store. A signing tour isn’t out of the question this summer, especially if crash space can be provided. ;)

Think you’re interested, but not quite sure? Free e-book teasers will be available at PenguiCon in Livonia, MI. After the convention, on Monday, April 24th, the teaser will be available for download from the novel’s website. As always, feel free to tell your friends about these events, and to bring them along. All are welcome.

Holy crap, am I excited.

The irony of passive voice in my novel’s release announcement has not escaped me.

From , who got it from .

From this blog entry by J. Steven York:

“Rules da 8 – How Becoming Published Will Change Your Life

Rule da 8: When you make your first sale, your problems are only beginning.

Rule da 8.1: Publishers don’t buy books, they buy careers. If you aren’t thinking past your first book, you are of very little value to anyone. Pray the publisher forgets to ask.

Rule da 8.2: Wash, rinse, repeat. Repeating is the hard part.

Rule da 8.3: The only time a second book can be easier than the first book is when the second book is already written, and even there lie pitfalls.

Rule da 8.4: You can’t rest on your laurels unless you have some, and even then, laurels don’t pay the electric bill.

Rule da 8.5: Sharks gotta swim, writers gotta write. Sharks stop swimming, they die. What does this tell you about writers?”

[Fiction] Girl Ritual

So, I haven’t written anything new in a while. And by that, I mean, not in worlds that I haven’t already created.

A few nights ago, I had a scene in my head that was demanding to get out. So, I let it out.

It looks like it’s going to be a lead-in to something bigger. Aren’t they always?

As always, looking for constructive criticisms. :)

She squatted low, so she could feel the heat from the new fire. It was newly birthed, and so its life was tenuous at best. Any of the drafts in this house had the power to kill her infant blaze; such an event would send her home with her task unfulfilled. Offending the powers that she planned to call upon was not a good idea. This was, really, the reason she was here in the first place. She gently fanned the small, orange flames, and then positioned her small frame to block a sudden gust of wind. Too little, and her progeny would starve. Too much, and they would be slaughtered.

Finally, a dry-rotted piece of two-by-four crackled to life. She was bathed in a sudden excess of orange light. She looked no older than sixteen, though her birth records would disagree. A stained blanket served her as a skirt. The rags of a hole-riddled t-shirt, taken from the corpse of a homeless man like a deer skinned for its hide, were wrapped around her chest for modesty’s sake. Streaks of dirt and mud adorned her skin in decorative patterns. Her blonde hair was wild, save for four small braids, each with a token or charm on its end.

More pieces of the old house caught as her children grew. The heat pushed her back, and her shuffling drove a splinter into her tiny foot. Frowning for a moment, she maneuvered her bony knees into a sitting position, and examined the sliver. It was wide, and she used jagged fingernails, multi-color polish chipping off with time and use, to pry the splinter out. A small droplet of blood welled up where it had pierced her skin, rolled down her foot and onto the floor.

So, it was to be that kind of rite. That kind of night. She smiled, because it was all that was left to her.

The hardwood floor was beginning to catch. She tilted her head up, and could now see the shattered rafters, tatters of pink insulation hanging like icicles. Her progeny were growing strong. The fire would soon spread outward along the floor. It would reach the rivulets of gasoline that she’d left, and it would race off into bedrooms and bathrooms; it would learn to climb and to descend stairs. In its creation, life, and death, her progeny would consume this abandoned house–a perfect sacrifice for the powers that slept in the city.

She whispered the words of awakening into the growing fire. Her children took the words as they did the wood. She named four names for the victims, paused, and then named two for the perpetrators. Standing slowly, she approached a broken window. She gingerly took a shard of glass and sawed off a tuft of her thin, straight hair. Approaching the fire, standing now, the girl tossed her hair in. She inhaled the stench of her burning hair deeply, sacrificing a part of herself in the sacrifice of the house. Tossing the glass into the fire, she turned around and headed for the open front door.

She slipped into her tattered shoes and walked out into the nighttime street. Another few steps, and the girl could hear the faint wailing of sirens. The emergency response was slow, but it would come. She sat on the dirty sidewalk on the far side of the street, facing the abandoned house. She would drink in the sight of her sacrifice until the firefighters tried to kill her children, or until there was no more of the sacrifice for the flames to consume.

Progress Reporting Again

The formatting is done, and the novel looks -pretty-, if I do say so myself. Granted, Lulu‘s font selection is fairly limited, but you deal with what you’ve got. :)

I’m at Gone Wired, and and are sitting across from me, doing the final red-penning.

Instead of tearing out my hair, I’m trying to finish up the Ubuntu install on ‘s wonderfully old Sony Vaio. Thank goodness for the Ubuntu Forums.

So. Must not bite off fingernails.

Progress Reports

I finished the last sweep last night. Next is formatting, which means I need to go to lulu.com and read their formatting guidelines, as well as find a standard font size, type, and spacing for hardcover novels.

and will be doing a final edit on Saturday.

I’m more excited than I can remember being about anything.

Progress Report

Last night, I finished all of the robot-ish rewriting. No more giant, no more transforming, but still with the robots and the swords and the New Samurai and the goodness.

Have a couple of artists working on the cover graphic. It’s going to be sweet. AND professional.

The next step is to the last sweep of the novel, to make sure that I’ve removed all of what I wanted to remove, and kept what I wanted to keep. I must use this as a reward for finishing my Islam paper, otherwise it might have difficulty getting written.

The paper, that is.