Wednesday, November 6, 2024
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
Kyoko M: Entertaining for an Afternoon
Tell us a bit about your latest work.
My upcoming book is called The Starlight Contingency! It is Titan AE meets Nikita! It’s about two orphaned amateur thieves named Duke and Scarlett Nam. One night, in the middle of a heist gone wrong, they take shelter in a mansion that randomly transforms into a spaceship and exits Earth’s orbit. Scarlett and Duke wake up to find they are now prisoners aboard the Titan International Spaceship, which contains the last hundred-thousand members of the human race. It turns out an alien warship entered the solar system and destroyed the Earth not long after they stumbled onto the Titan, so now Scarlett and Duke have to survive with what’s left of humanity aboard the Titan.
It is also the first book in a trilogy, so books two and three are in the pipeline as well.
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
I almost always have elements of Found Family in my work. I love the idea of total strangers meeting, becoming friends, and becoming supportive of each other. You can’t choose your parents, but you can choose who becomes your family in the end and I always love writing about that.
I almost always write about mental health within the context of relationships, whether it’s part of the plot (as it is with my sci-fi book series, Of Cinder and Bone, and in the upcoming Starlight Contingency) or if it’s something that’s a theme or motif (as it is with my urban fantasy/paranormal romance series, The Black Parade). I think it’s very important that we remove the therapy stigma and encourage people to seek help when they struggle, so I choose to often portray my traumatized characters going to therapy in my books.What happened in your life that prompted you to become a writer?
It started off with my parents. My parents read to us as kids, so we grew up with a voracious appetite for books. My mom actually used to drop us off on the weekend at the library and we’d stay there and read while she ran errands the whole morning, and she never had to make us do that—we loved it. So I’ve always had an intense love of fiction, so as I got older, I started writing fanfiction with my friends (and that is also why my pen name is Kyoko M) and then midway through college, I attended a lecture by Jackson Pearce, a local author who talked about publishing books. I then realized that was something I wanted to do, so I wrote The Black Parade in 2010-2011 and then started shopping it around to agents. After about two years, I made no progress and my dad asked me to look into self-publishing. I did another year or so of research, then determined I could learn how to do it, and the rest is history.
What inspires you to write?
Lots of things. Some of my ideas came to me in a dream, like the main throuple/polyamorous relationship in Of Cinder and Bone, and there is also a high fantasy YA epic I’ve written that was inspired by a dream I had (unfinished, long story, but it will eventually see the light of day in some form). Some ideas are things I’m just really passionate about, like conservationism in my Of Cinder and Bone series, or things like healing from abuse and trauma and making your own family in my Black Parade series. The direct inspirations sometimes also come from others works I loved in the past. The Black Parade is directly inspired by both John Milton’s Paradise Lost and the 2005 film Constantine, starring Keanu Reeves. Of Cinder and Bone is directly inspired by Jurassic Park (1993) and Reign of Fire (2002). The Starlight Contingency is directly inspired by Titan AE (2000) and Nikita (2014). Often, I see something and love it and want to pay it tribute in something that I write, especially if it’s something that inspired me when I was young.
What would be your dream project?
I really, really want to be either a staff writer for a television show or a screenwriter for a major production. I just want to know what the actual process is like, from conception to execution, in adaptations via film/TV. I find it fascinating and my life’s goal is to have just one thing I’ve written adapted in any format, any director, any budget. Ideally, I’d love to win a contest for a screenplay I wrote and have it optioned for film and picked up by a large studio, but I also know most authors have this same crazy dream, so I acknowledge it’s unlikely, but I have actually finished my first screenplay and intend to begin shopping it in 2025 to at least try for my insane dream goal.
Another dream project would be since I’ve now written for Marvel Comics twice, I’d love to be able to contribute literally anything to the Marvel Cinematic Universe someday, in any tie-in or any capacity that they would have me. It’s been an honor to have the chance to write short stories for Marvel anthologies, and I certainly hope they consider me for any of their future projects.
If you have any former project to do over to make it better, which one would it be, and what would you do?
Yes, The Starlight Contingency for sure. I wrote it for NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) in 2011 and it sat in my document folders collecting dust for an entire decade until it was unearthed by John Hartness, the owner of Falstaff Books. Because I wrote it in a month, it has a bunch of things in it that had to be updated for the times and revised and changed. I like the changes, but I wish I’d had a little bit more time in the tight publication schedule to go over a few more character beats. There are some things I wanted to write for the two main leads that were more detailed, but simply got cut for time, so I hope that when I start the third book, I can touch on those places I wanted to improve.
What writers have influenced your style and technique?
As a kid, I read all kinds of things, but I’d say the series I read the most was the Redwall series by Brian Jacques (may he rest in peace). I devoured those books as a kid. They are so dynamic and engaging. My favorite thing is that the series never talked down to kids. They were often very emotional and moving and they had a fair amount of violence and serious subjects, but I still think it remains one of the best fantasy series of all time. It’s so well-written and I’m still fond of it to this day. I heard a rumor that they want to make another run at adapting it into a series and I really hope it happens, and with a decent budget. I’m aware of the cartoon series it had years back, but it’s very easy to tell they had a tiny budget and couldn’t quite do what was needed to make it a faithful adaptation.
What is the most difficult part of your artistic process?
Most of the time, the most difficult times for me are when I’m writing from Point B to Point C in any given story (so if Act One = Point A, Act Two = Point B, and Act Three = Point C, that is) and then the first round of editing. I hate editing. It means I have to read my own book about 800 times, so by the time it’s ready to go to a beta reader, editor, and proofreader, I hate my own book from simply having read it so many times to finish the revisions.
How do your writer friends help you become a better writer? Or do they not?
I certainly think my writer friends help me become a better writer. I love hearing them describe their books and poems, as it often will trigger a new thought or give me an idea in return. I have been very fortunate to know some extremely talented and compassionate writers over the years, and we all are trying to help one another grow their careers. In particular, I am part of a local group of POC authors who often throw events or cross-promote one another, and that in turn gives me the confidence to keep writing, even during tough times.
What does literary success look like to you?
It’s very hard to measure success in publishing these days. My goal with anything I publish is to simply entertain someone for an afternoon. I know that sounds vague, but really, I’m here to create a world that someone can escape to in the event that their life is less than satisfactory. Fiction has always been my escape, so I welcome the ability to do the same thing for other people. I want to be able to help them smile or maybe show them something new or be their comfort food book series when they need to feel safe. Anytime I get a detailed review that says they enjoyed the world I created, I consider that success. I just want to tell stories and have people enjoy them.
Any other upcoming projects you would like to plug?
As stated above, The Starlight Contingency is indeed part one of a trilogy, so the second book is on its way in the coming year!I would also like the plug two of Milton J. Davis’ upcoming anthologies and then one that I am included in as well: The Spacefunk anthology and the Terminus III anthologies will published in 2025, so please look up MV Media Atlanta for all the details for both of them. The Spacefunk anthology is a science fiction anthology penned exclusively by black, African, and African-American authors and poets, and the Terminus III anthology is a speculative fiction anthology penned exclusively by black, African, and African-American authors as well.
I am also a contributor to Captain America: The Shield of Sam Wilson, which is a Marvel Comics/Titan Books anthology that will be out January 20th, 2025. It is available directly from Titan Books, Amazon, and all major retailers of books. It should eventually be available in all formats upon release: ebook, paperback, hardcover, and audiobook.
For more information:
- Visit: http://www.shewhowritesmonsters.com
- Or find me on most social media platforms as @MissKyokoM
Monday, November 4, 2024
Motivational Monday: Silent Film Scripting (Lillian Gish)
(Copied and Pasted)
On this day in 1893, silent superstar Lillian Gish was born in Springfield, Ohio.
In 1988, I wrote to her asking if silent films had actual dialogue written
out in the scripts or if there was just a general description of what was
being said. This was her remarkable reply.
Saturday, November 2, 2024
[Link] ‘A shell of the place it used to be’: readers on the importance of libraries - and their fragile future
“There’s a random element to life, which I think is important to preserve. Browsing through books is not a rational activity; it’s not like using a computer search to find what you want. Serendipity is another word that comes to mind.”
For Jamie Page, 66, libraries can provide the kind of chance encounter that you can’t find in bookshops that mainly tout new titles. In 1980, he was an unemployed graduate wondering what sort of career he might have. One day, at Brompton library in Kensington, he stumbled across a book on bacteria. “I found it fascinating, he says. “It started my career and I’ve been working in science ever since.”
The aptly named Page is one of scores of people to share with the Guardian stories of how libraries affected their lives after reports of a decline in council-run libraries across the UK. According to an analysis by the BBC, more than 180 have either closed or been handed to volunteer groups since 2016.
The author Lee Child told the BBC that his crime thriller protagonist Jack Reacher wouldn’t exist without Birmingham’s libraries, which are under threat of closure. “You speak to any writer and they’ll tell you the same thing: that those early years of reading, reading, reading, reading for decades – that’s what turns you into a writer,” Child said.
“I’m so sentimental about it and so emotional about it, because that building saved my life at the time, it enabled it. It largely created it.”
Read the full article: https://www.theguardian.com/books/article/2024/sep/06/essential-for-me-readers-on-the-importance-of-libraries
Friday, November 1, 2024
Falstaff opens up The Starlight Contingency by Kyoko M.
Orphaned siblings Scarlett and Duke Nam have had it rough. Cast aside by society, they've managed to stay afloat as thieves on the streets of Alexandria, Virginia. Things plunge straight to hell when a heist goes wrong and they're on the run from the cops, but after they stumble into a nearby home to escape, something seemingly impossible happens - the house transforms into a spacecraft and leaves the Earth's orbit.
Scarlett and Duke awaken to find that they are now prisoners aboard the Titan International Spaceship. The Earth has been destroyed by the Bergleute des Todes, AKA The Miners of Death. Scarlett and Duke are given the chance to become soldiers to fight the aliens who destroyed the world.
The only thing left for them is the hardest thing of all: Survival.
The Starlight Contingency is the new space opera from USA Today best-selling author Kyoko M. (She Who Fights Monsters, Of Cinder and Bone).
Thursday, October 31, 2024
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
Free Hallowreading from Bobby Nash and Rick Johnson! Operation Silver Moon!
Are you ready for a free Halloween treat?
A free read for Halloween week. You can read the ebook of Operation: Silver Moon, a graphic novel written by Bobby Nash with art by Rick Johnson. You can get the ebook FREE on Amazon from now through Halloween Night (ends at midnight Pacific Time). Grab yours today!
https://www.amazon.com/Operation-Silver-Moon-Bobby-Nash-ebook/dp/B00XH21C0U
Tuesday, October 29, 2024
The Scariest?
Writers, what's the scariest story you've ever read? Ever written?
John L. Taylor: The scariest thing I ever read was probably The Hitchhiker by Christopher Pike (the story and title have nothing to do with each other). Though as an adult, The Russian Sleep Experiment has challenged that. As for scariest thing I've written, it would be "What Gasoline Won't Burn," a YouTube narration that I had written. I did this under a creative commons license, so feel free to adapt (https://youtu.be/1ybpIJw2HBM?si=hUC1owIkxb27vI_V) How scary a book is depends on what age you read it. These days, after spending decades as a CSI, fiction no longer scares me. But way back when, there was Steven King's Pet Semeatary and before that Ray Bradbury's "Something Wicked This Way Comes." As for the scariest story I've ever written, that would be "Choice of Damnation" a Bianca Jones story found in Monsters Among Us.
Danielle Procter Piper: The scariest one I read was a short. Two medical students were getting ready to put their cadaver up after class and one mentioned how cadavers sometimes sit up, groan, and even roll off of things. They walk their cadaver down the corridor into the elevator, enter it to go to the morgue, and while in the elevator there's a power failure. As far as ones I've written...they don't scare me, but my readers would have to vote on which was the scariest. Othy Morris: Brian Keene’s The Rising gave me absolute chills Lucy Blue: For years, my scariest read was Lovecraft's "The Rats in the Walls." But there were scenes in Grady Hendrix's The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires that left Lovecraft in the musty shade for me--Palmetto bug in the ear is all I'm gonna say. <shudders> But there are different kinds of scary--I put down The Silence of the Lambs and never picked it back up again when it first came out in paperback because I didn't need knowledge of that level of inhuman meanness in my head. (If I live to be a hundred, I will never understand the women who think Hannibal Lecter is sexy.) And The Exorcist (book, not movie) haunts me still even though I read it decades ago. I guess The Devil Makes Three is the scariest thing I've published so far. But there are sequences in my WIP that have given me nightmares. Paul Landri: The scariest lately was Revival by Stephen King. That ending had me messed up for days and days. I was home alone for a few days and I'm man enough to admit I slept with the light on. Scariest I think was a story that was a prototype for a character featured in the Crimson Howl series centering on a guy who discovered a mold like substance after a bad thunderstorm. It's a sentient alien organism that turns him into a cannibalistic monster. It ends with him getting his girlfriend pregnant and the twist is that the story is being told from the child's perspective as he is about to devour his mom. Weird Tales Magazine rejected it for publication but the feedback I got from them was great! They loved the premise and the prose was well written but it wasn't what they were looking for at the time. Scott Roche: Pet Semetary is probably the scariest one I've ever read. The scariest one I've ever written? That would be one of two. "Spiders, All of Them" is a short story I wrote about a dad whose son has a big spider collection of big spiders. And his newest one brings something new out in the boy. The dad isn't a fan. Or, "Let Go" about a dad who is trying to keep his family together during the zombie apocalypse even if it means going out and getting them fresh meat. Anna Grace Carpenter: Read? The Thief of Time by Clive Barker. (Which is shelved as Adult, but really more of a YA.) It sticks with me more than Weaveworld. [Those are the only two Barker novels I've ever read.] Written? Maybe the Southern Gothic novellas. One of my beta readers had nightmares after the first one. Kay Iscah: Erm... I tend to avoid horror as genre. If I'm up for a scare I'll read the news or a science journal. Tape worms...ugh. I enjoy action/creepy, but it doesn't necessarily lodge in my brain as "scary". Likewise I don't *think* I write scary, but may dip into creepy. Chris Riker: Read? Either Salem’s Lot or The Stand. Written: https://chrisrikerauthor.com/news/short-stories/youve-won-a-free-cruise-forget-your-worries-forget-your-life Brian K Morris: The scariest story I ever read was probably I Am Legend by Richard Matheson. It might be because I recall reading it on a hot summer's night in my bedroom. It was hot and we couldn't afford AC so I was minimally dressed. During one scene where the vampires crept up on our hero and was about to attack, a large bug landed on my bare shoulder. My next memory was standing at the foot of my bed, but not putting my legs over the side and walking down there. B Chris Bell: The Boarded Window by Ambrose Bierce. At the end, and it might take a minute, the hero realizes the unnatural. Then you do. Whoa! Brandon Barrows: Ever read: Kafka's Metamorphosis. Only story that truly freaked me out. Ronald Hanna: “The last man on Earth sat alone in a room. There was a knock on the door ...” -- KNOCK - Fredic Brown John Morgan Neal: I Am Legend by Richard Matheson and The Stand by Stephen King. I got sick when reading them.
Sean Taylor: The two creepiest stories I've read are both diametrically opposites in terms of why they creep me the hell out. "The Empty House" by Algernon Blackwood is perhaps the best use of setting to evoke tension and fright I've ever read. He's a master of that technique and it's on full display in this tale. "N." by Stephen King creeps me out because of how much I identify with the MC. I too and OCD (I used to only each French fries in fours and only listen to my car radio on even numbers, non-Prime levels, but I've weaned myself off those behaviors now thankfully). But, when I saw that it was those exact behaviors that kept out world save from another, that was truly frightening to me, along with the viral aspect that it could be passed on to new "guardians."
As for the creepiest I've written, I'd have to say it's "The Ghosts of Children" in my collection A Crowd in Babylon. It's a time travel warning about how hell hath no fury about a woman scorned. I love to read it at cons, but it always makes me feel icky. No spoilers. Go read it yourself. Despite being a horror fan I've only written one horror story. And that short story was more of a premise for a short film idea. Taco Hell was the title.
Sunday, October 27, 2024
Saturday, October 26, 2024
[Link] Why I Write: Let Me See About Getting the Words Right
by Gary Phillips
I write because I can’t draw. Growing up in South Central back in the day, me and the fellas read and traded Marvel comics. You might sneak in a DC book now and then—say, an issue of Green Lantern rendered in the fluid style of Gil Kane. But certainly not a goofy Batman book. This was before writer Denny O’Neil and artist Neal Adams brought back the hardcore Batman, the template for The Dark Knight.
Marvel, however, was different. Beneath Spider-Man’s mask, the teenage angst was plain on Peter Parker’s face. The Hulk’s internal struggle was unending, involving both his horror at reverting to “puny” Bruce Banner and Banner’s own at becoming the man-monster. In the pages of Fantastic Four, meanwhile, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby introduced the Black Panther and the scientifically advanced kingdom of Wakanda. Mesmerized by those monthly adventures, made vivid by the art of Kirby and Steve Ditko, my younger self desperately wanted to write and draw my own comic books.Harrowing real-life occurrences also captivated me. In my neighborhood barbershop, as well as other barber shops and beauty parlors in the hood, various kinds of stories were told by patrons and haircutters. Often, they involved brothers who had run afoul of the cops out of 77th Division, which patrolled our area. The comics and the community: this would be the transmutable clay out of which I’d later mold my novels.
The desire to tell stories led me to reach out as a teenager. Before the internet, like-minded youngsters would get together to produce comics with their own characters. Maybe a hundred copies would be reproduced on a desktop Gestetner duplicator. Or, if enough money was raised, offset printed. Trying to get my work into those fanzines, I stumbled across mystery and crime mass-market paperbacks, as well as science fiction, all of it available on the spinner racks at the Thrifty drugstore. Dashiell Hammett, Chester Himes, Andre Norton, and those Bantam reprints of 1930s Doc Savage pulps with eye-catching covers by James Bama.
A few more years would go by before it finally sank in that drawing comics wasn’t going to be my vocation. Yet even as I picked up a slew of rejections for my art, a few of the letters I got back did note that the writing wasn’t bad. Well, OK, then, let me see about getting the words right. This period dovetailed with my burgeoning community activism, which focused on the matter of questionable policing in my own and other Black and Brown neighborhoods.
Protesting police abuses led me to the anti-apartheid movement, which in turn fueled my participation in direct actions against the contra war, financed by the Reagan administration. From there, I went on, among other endeavors, to become a labor organizer and the outreach director for a community foundation. I found myself reflecting on these undertakings in nonfiction pieces for newsletters. Somewhere along the line, I started writing weekly op-eds for a community newspaper and a progressive media service. This discipline of writing on deadline proved useful to me when it came time to tackle writing a novel.
To write a book at first felt daunting. But looking back, it was an organic development.
Read the full article: https://www.altaonline.com/california-book-club/a61958649/why-i-write-gary-phillips/
Friday, October 25, 2024
AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION PRESENTS JUNGLE TALES VOL. 3
New Pulp writers Carson Demmons and Terry Wijesuriya offer up this duo of action-packed adventures while writer Curtis Fernlund introduces Jenna the Jungle Girl. This volume also includes a bonus jungle yarn by Bob Madison where a seasoned big-game hunter, Richmond Kane, ventures into the forbidden land of the cannibal Bogas in desperate hope of finding his lost brother.
Artist John Gallagher provides the black and white interior illustrations and Ted Hammond the stunning color cover. All put together by award-winning book designer, Rob Davis. Here is old-fashioned action and adventure reminiscent of the best of the classic jungle pulps.
PULP FICTION FOR A NEW GENERATION!!
Available now from Amazon in paperback and soon on Kindle.
Thursday, October 24, 2024
Best Practices: Write Something Scary!
Hey, writers! Give me your one best piece of advice to help someone learn to write something actually scary for a reader. And... GO!
Dread is that feeling that keeps a reader’s stomach unsettled, that scene that makes them feel phantom pains in the same limb or joint the killer keeps sticking a pin into, the sum of all the chills up a spine and “what if” scenarios of the mind a reader keeps accumulating during the time it takes to read your tale.
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
Sunday, October 20, 2024
[Link] Script Collection: Supernatural Horrors That Still Send Shivers
by David Young
Horror has so many dimensions, but one of the most celebrated and explored is the horror of that which is supernatural. It’s not enough to be an extension of the natural—the horror we mean is the stuff of legends, myths, or creatures beyond the veil. Spirits, curses, devils, psychic disturbances, and living products of the mind all create stories we shudder to tell. That means they also provide the fuel for some of the most terrifying or fun horror films in history!
Script included in this article:- The Exorcist
- The Babadook
- Poltergeist
- The Witch
- Candyman
- A Nightmare on Elm Street
- Hellraiser
- Final Destination
- House
- Rosemary’s Baby
- Friday the 13th
- The Evil Dead
- The Grudge
- Krampus
- It
- The Conjuring
- Annabelle
- The Omen
- The Ring
- It Follows
- Insidious
- Carrie (1976)
- The Shining
- Fright Night
- Hereditary
Saturday, October 19, 2024
National Freedom to Read Day
Today is National Freedom to Read Day, sponsored by the American Library Association. I know you know how to celebrate -- with a book! But it's more important than ever this year -- as the Authors' Guild says, "Books unite, bans divide." Speak up for your library. Speak out against bans. Buy a challenged book and give it to someone who needs it. Wear your button proclaiming "I read banned books." Vote for candidates who support public libraries. Support the freedom to read. #writersofinstagram #ireadbannedbooks #freedomtoread #ilovelibraries
Friday, October 18, 2024
AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION PRESENTS BOOK HUNTERS’ APPRENTICE
Qing began life as a prized the little prince’s prized golden carp living carefree in a delightful pond on the royal estate. Then one day he ingested a magical soul stone and found himself evolving into consciousness. With this came other abilities such as being able to flight and change his shape; even into human form.
All of which would have been terribly confusing and maybe dangerous until he encountered the gifted Book Hunter Master Zhi Wanku who was instantly captivated by him. Enough so that she offered to accept him as her apprentice and teach him the proper way to continue his growth into a fully realized dragon.
From that moment on their adventures together were the stuff legend and along their journeys they encountered all kinds of weird and bizarre people and creature. Some would become staunch allies in their battle against the sorcerer Zhu Khan and his army of puppets locked away in might mountain fortress.
Once again Barbara Doran weaves a beautiful and thrilling Chinese fantasy with truly memorable characters in a story rich with humor and adventure. Artist Gary Kato provides the interior illustrations and Guy Davis the stunning, colorful cover.
AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION – PULP FICTION FOR A NEW GENERATION!
Available now from Amazon in paperback and soon on Kindle.
Thursday, October 17, 2024
Creative Non-Fiction
Hey, writerly types, we spend a lot of time covering fiction on this blog because that's the main topic we discuss. But what about the other side of creative writing? No, not poetry. I'm referring to creative non-fiction. Let's bang that drum this week, shall we?
What kind of non-fiction do you prefer to write/read? Personal essays, how-tos, researched topics, true accounts (biographies, true crime, etc.)?
Alisa Richie Childress: I write personal essays. I write stories from my own life about mental health struggles (mine and my son's). Caregiving for me mother who passed from Alzheimer's last year. A lot about grief as I lost both of my parents in three years, my dad from cancer in May 2020, and my mom from Alzheimer's in June 2023. I write about parenting and what it is like to raise a child who had a major mental health crisis and who is gay (we live in a red state with conservative family members). Mostly I with about whatever I feel like I need to get out and what I hope will help others. My blog is alisachildress.com. I have been published in physical and online journals and write a lot on Medium.
Brian K Morris: I like to read mostly historical and scientific books when I read nonfiction. These days, I'm mostly into the business behind the creative efforts (such as how the comic companies were run by people affiliated with organized crime, or the boom/bust periods of comic books) these days. I also enjoy books on writing and marketing because I always want to do better at my job.
L. Andrew Cooper: I’ve been writing a lot of interviews for which I do extensive prep and into which I put significant thought, so that’s a biggie. Otherwise, I’ve done a lot of academic literary and film criticism, and after a long hiatus, I recently got back into film criticism a bit and found I still enjoy it. As for reading, I enjoy reading non-fiction for research related to whatever I’m writing (fiction or non). Otherwise, I enjoy reading philosophy.
Elizabeth Donald: Nonfiction is my bread and butter. I took my journalism degree into the newspaper world in 1997 and have worked in the news ever since, including my time on the national ethics committee and as president of the St. Louis Society of Professional Journalists. I was a full-time newspaper reporter for more than 20 years and I covered every beat except sports. I have stood in the snow outside a murder site and waited for an indicted governor at the end of a long dusty road and interviewed a president before he was anybody. Sometimes it was the county fair and sometimes it was the vicious beating death of a toddler. I wrote stories that changed the law and stories no one read.
I went freelance in 2018 so I could have the freedom to go to grad school and begin teaching, but I have continued to work for local and regional news organizations, for regional and national magazines and so on, including a few investigative pieces. Freelancing has also given me the freedom to write more personal essays, writing essays and other free-form nonfiction, most of which is published on Patreon and Medium if it is not picked up by a magazine.
Scott Roche: Read - Biographies, history (particularly of science), and religious topics (not solely my religion, though primarily). Write - How to, reviews, commentary, and I'm getting to the point where I want to write some memoir-adjacent stuff.
Sean Taylor: I read a lot of various shades of nonfiction, everything from religious stuff (both classic like Augustine's City of God and contemporary progressive like Jim Wallis and Keith Giles), political/cultural stuff (currently reading White Rage and Hatemonger), to history (my fave is Lies My Teacher Told Me), and then also more fun stuff like books about horror and giallo movies and bios of my favorite actors and actresses. In terms of writing, I tend to do more essays about reading (like here on the blog), movie reviews (for a new book), and articles about the art and craft of writing.
Van Allen Plexico: Most of my top sellers are nonfiction. Two books about the Avengers comics (I edited and coordinated both and wrote sections) and five books about Auburn sports (co-authored with my podcast cohost).
The Avengers books got me badges to Heroes Con and raised a lot of money for charity; the Auburn books have gotten me TV and radio appearances, speaking engagements before alumni/fan groups, and several book signings.
So yeah, I love writing nonfiction.
I also enjoy reading it a lot -- as a History professor I sort of have to -- and I find nonfiction works better in general on Audible than fiction does. So it's easier for me to listen to.
When writing non-fiction, particularly if you also write fiction, how does your routine or strategy differ from when you write fiction (if at all)?
Elizabeth Donald: Nonfiction and fiction use completely different brain cells, at least for me. My newspaper colleagues used to joke that I could sneak in a novel when the police beat was quiet, but I can’t work that way. After 25-odd years of writing news every day, I can turn out a high-quality news story in 15 minutes. It’s like falling off the proverbial log. Fiction, on the other hand, requires a good energy environment, the right caffeinated beverage, the alignment of the stars and planets and possibly the sacrifice of the nearest available virgin for the words to come. You’d think it would be easier to write stuff you can make up rather than the stuff that has to be accurate, ethical, responsible and all that jazz, but for me, the reverse is true. This goes back to one of those old writing saws we all hear and ignore: practice practice practice. Every word you write makes you a better writer, and I know journalism is easy for me because I’ve written 2-5 stories every day for decades. If I wrote fiction all day, every day for the next 20 years, maybe that would be like falling off a log.
Van Allen Plexico: I've found that when writing nonfiction I tend to outline very carefully beforehand--more even than I do in fiction. With fiction, I'm usually trying to leave myself lots of leeway to change the story as it wants to change when it unfolds.
With nonfiction, I need to know up front, "Okay, this section will cover the Sonny Smith years of AU Basketball; and this first chapter will be about how Auburn hired him and his first press conference and the preseason and then how his first team fared. And then the next chapter will be about how he recruited Charles Barkley and about Charles as a freshman. And then a separate chapter just of funny stories about Charles. And then..." sort of like that.
Alisa Richie Childress: I do not really write fiction, but I would like to. I have written a short piece in the Imaginarium anthology and am working on another. I have some ideas for novels. But I do not have a good fiction writing process. Or really a great writing discipline at all. I am working on this.
L. Andrew Cooper: Although I’m big in outlines for both fiction and non, for non, there’s an even more structured funnel process that goes from reading and research to organizing notes into conceptual groups that become outline points that become sections, paragraphs, etc.
Sean Taylor: It's actually easier for me to write nonfiction than fiction. I think this comes from being a Literature major in college and having to write so many essays and papers. They just kind of roll out of my brain onto the page. Fiction becomes so much more personal and that slows me down a lot because I really try to get my first draft super close to the way I want it. Nonfiction is the kind of thing I tend to trust myself to go back and edit/rewrite as needed.
Brian K Morris: Before I focused on New Pulp fiction, I wrote a number of articles about comic books. Usually, I'd look for the drama in the project (editorial whims, stumbling blocks in the production process, inherent challenges in changing a series' direction, etc.) and build a narrative with a satisfying conclusion. For instance, one of my favorite articles for Back Issue Magazine was about the final tales of the Silver Age Supergirl, how she'd gone from Superman's Secret Weapon to public acceptance, on-off powers, different locales, then her eventual death to become a spirit that helped talk people off the ledge, returning to her roots as a "secret weapon" for good.
What do you find most fulfilling about non-fiction writing?
Scott Roche: For me, any writing scratches roughly the same itch. Writing non-fiction does tap into a different vein. It requires more research/experience. For me it requires a different kind of brain work. I wouldn't say it uses a different part of your brain since I haven't done that research and am not a psychologist/neurologist, but it would make sense to me if it did.
Elizabeth Donald: I always knew I wanted to write and create, and I wanted to be in public service. Journalism allowed me to indulge both, while also engaging my brain, and I was able to make some small difference in the world around me. It is an incredibly difficult job, poorly paid with wildly unpredictable hours and an enormous emotional and mental toll, and as a weekend bonus, absolutely everyone hates you! We burn up new journalists at an alarming rate. But I loved it, and I still do. Doing what we do is a privilege, and one I’ve never taken for granted: we tell people what happened today, because they need to know. It’s that simple, and that complex, and completely unappreciated in this modern era. We write the first rough draft of history, as Phillip Graham said, and that is an enormous responsibility, as well as our honor.
Sean Taylor: When I write about writing, which is the bulk of my nonfiction, I'm telling the story of who I am directly. When I write fiction, it's still telling my story too, but it's far more subtle, far more hidden behind the symbols and the themes. With nonfiction, I can just come out and say what I think, feel, believe, etc.
L. Andrew Cooper: I get to say what’s on my mind quite directly!
Alisa Richie Childress: The type of writing I do is very cathartic. Putting it all in paper helps me to organize me thoughts and my feelings in a way that I cannot do if I keep them in my head, it even if I am just journaling. Having an imagined audience to talk to helps me with clarity. I also hope that I am helping others. It really makes me feel good when someone tells me how much something I said resonated with them or helped them in their journey.
Brian K Morris: I enjoy finding out new ways of looking at something real, whether it's the history of a comic book character, getting perspective on a creator and their thinking, or instructing WHY something has merit, such as writing book reviews and how simple it can be.