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Six Sentence Sunday, Jan 30

DevinHarnois.com Posted on January 30, 2011 by Devin HarnoisJune 23, 2012

Another Sunday, another six! Here’s more from Through the Fire:

Seeing them … yes, they had to make sure Balarak didn’t find out about them. His voice echoed in her head, You’re mine. A chill went through her at the thought of what could happen if their Master found out. Sahyuri took a deep breath and stepped away from Xemriel. “If I’m late, my superiors will start to wonder …” Her body shivered with the need to be near him, to feel his skin against hers.

For more Six Sentence Sunday goodness check out http://sixsunday.blogspot.com/

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Six Sentence Sunday, Through the Fire

Six Sentence Sunday, Jan 23

DevinHarnois.com Posted on January 23, 2011 by Devin HarnoisJune 23, 2012

I had such a good time last week that I had to do it again! So here are six more sentences for you, again from Through the Fire:

She didn’t say a word, she didn’t hesitate. Sahyuri threw her arms around his neck and kissed him.

Nothing in her life could come close to this. While her power wove with his, her body tensed and relaxed at the same time. The familiarity of his lips, of the way his arms wrapped around her waist, was almost enough to bring tears to her eyes. Kissing him was like coming home.

Check out all the other Six Sentence Sunday posts here: http://sixsunday.blogspot.com/

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Six Sentence Sunday, Through the Fire

Six Sentence Sunday

DevinHarnois.com Posted on January 16, 2011 by Devin HarnoisJune 23, 2012

From Through the Fire (WIP):

“I saw you in Hell, in Balarak’s house. I … I know you from somewhere, but I don’t remember meeting you.” The surprised, confused expression on his face was nothing she’d ever seen from a demon before.

“I … I remember you, too.” She shook her head, trying to clear it more, and took a step back. “Who are you?”

If you’d like to check out the other Six Sentence Sunday posts, check out http://sixsunday.blogspot.com/

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Six Sentence Sunday, Through the Fire

My Schedule for 2011

DevinHarnois.com Posted on January 13, 2011 by Devin HarnoisJanuary 13, 2011

This is the schedule I made for 2011. It’s the first time I’ve planned my goals month by month for a year (actually my schedule goes through 2012, but I’m not going to post all that).

January: edit Through the Fire

February: send Through the Fire to beta readers, start Erik’s Tale (I’m a little ahead on this!)

March: second edit of Marked

April: second edit of Through the Fire, submit Marked

May: submit Through the Fire

June: finish Erik’s Tale

July: start a new book (not sure what yet)

August: edit Erik’s Tale

September: send Erik’s Tale to beta readers

October: get the new book up to 40k

November: NaNoWriMo!

December: take some time off, wrap up

Posted in Uncategorized

Reflecting on 2010 and Goals for 2011

DevinHarnois.com Posted on January 2, 2011 by Devin HarnoisJanuary 2, 2011

Of course the big news for 2010 was that I signed my first contract with Samhain in January and my first ebook Darkness at Dawn came out in June.

A few stats for 2010 —

Words written: 176,505

First drafts finished: 2

Books edited: 1

For 2011, my goals include editing and submitting 2 books and finishing 2 new books. I’m trying to squeeze in a third book for editing, but we’ll see. The ultimate goal is to produce and submit at least 3 books per year, but that’s a slightly aggressive goal for someone that writes as slow as I do.

Posted in Uncategorized

15 Influential Characters

DevinHarnois.com Posted on December 6, 2010 by Devin HarnoisDecember 6, 2010

I got this from Bree of Moira Rogers, who got it from Vivian Arend …

Here’s the directions: Don’t take too long to think about it. Fifteen fictional characters (television, films, plays, books) who’ve influenced you and/or that will always stick with you. List the first fifteen you can recall in no more than fifteen minutes.

1. Spike – Buffy the Vampire Slayer

2. Sawyer – Lost

3. Dexter

4. Riddick –  Pitch Black

5. Peter Blood –  Captain Blood

6. Arabella Bishop – also Captain Blood

7. Zuko – Avatar: The Last Airbender (the series, not the movie)

8. Harry Dresden – Dresden Files by Jim Butcher

9. Erik – The Phantom of the Opera (novel and musical)

10. Japhrimel – Dante Valentine series by Lilith Saintcrow

11. Jill Kismet – series of the same name by Lilith Saintcrow

12. Squall – Final Fantasy VIII

13. Dream of the Endless – Sandman series by Neil Gaiman

14.Roland – The Dark Tower series by Stephen King

15. Lobo – from a story in “Wild Animals I Have Known” by Earnest Thompson Seaton

So that’s my strange little list. It’s a little heavy on the angst and the anti-hero, but after all, that’s what I love. 😉

Posted in Uncategorized

Air Pirates Excerpt #1

DevinHarnois.com Posted on November 13, 2010 by Devin HarnoisJune 23, 2012

Zeke went into the guest room to check on Ms. Gillard. She startled a little when he entered and gave him an embarrassed smile.  “We’ll be on our way in a moment, Miss Gillard.” He shut the door behind him to give them a bit of privacy. “How are you feeling?”

“Emma, please.” She smoothed the fabric across her lap. Was it simply a nervous motion or was she self conscious about being on a ship full of strangers in her night dress? Maybe it was a bit of both. “My head is still quite sore but Mr. Lewis seems to have done a fine job. He also gave me something to ease the pain.”

“Did he end up giving you stitches?” There was a chair near the door and Zeke settled into it.

“Yes. There were four.” One of her hands started to creep toward her head and she stopped herself. “I’m sure he did a fine job, but I never want to experience that again.”
She’d had a soft life if a few stitches was that bad to her. Zeke remembered the screams of men having their limbs sawed off with nothing to dull the pain. If they were lucky, they got a few mouthfuls of whiskey, and if they were luckier, they passed out early in the operation. “I suppose you wouldn’t. Emma, I wanted to talk to you about your magic.”

She stiffened. “You won’t let it go, will you?”

“No, I won’t. And don’t lie to me and tell me you don’t know anything about it. For one, I know you felt the same thing I did when we touched. And for another thing, you look old enough that your magic should have manifested a few years ago. Although I suppose it’s possible you could be a late bloomer.”

Emma’s chin quivered just a bit. “It’s a curse. It’s the devil’s work.”

“I’m not surprised that’s what you’ve been told after what–” He almost said we did and caught himself. “happened in the war.”

“Those witches, those sorcerers, they … they killed a lot of people. The Union made a deal with the devil to defeat the South.” She looked down at her lap, her fingers clenching on the edges of her wrap.

Guilt fought a brief battle with anger. Anger won. “So we’re evil, are we? And just what did you do to get the devil’s attention?” He gave her a long look up and down.

Emma’s mouth dropped open. “I—I beg your pardon. I’ll have you know that I’m a good Christian woman and I will not tolerate such talk or such improper looks from you.”

“But you said yourself that this magic we have is evil. So to follow your logic, you must have done something to invite the devil into you.”

“Captain Donovan!” She got to her feet, still gaping. “If you continue in such a manner I will leave this ship by any means available, including jumping over the side if I must.”

They locked eyes. Zeke reminded himself that he wanted to help her, not insult her and drive her away. “My apologies. My temper got the better of me.” Emma stayed where she was, so he just went on. “Magic is a gift, not a curse. It was given to us by our creator, and it’s up to us to use it for good or evil, right or wrong, or the confused area in between.”

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Air Pirates, NaNoWriMo

Stories That Resonate

DevinHarnois.com Posted on October 28, 2010 by Devin HarnoisOctober 28, 2010

There are certain stories and certain characters that resonate with me, like a tuning fork humming inside me. These things go deep, and make themselves comfortable in my subconscious. Often I will take bits and pieces of these stories and characters and make something new with them. I suspect most if not all fiction writers do the same thing. The writer is just sitting there, minding their own business, and one or two of these bits floats up to the surface, maybe collides with something external, and BAM! Suddenly there’s a new story idea. When a good one of these hits you, and hits you hard, it’s one of the best feelings in the world. That’s what happened to me late this winter, while I was trying to write something totally different. While reading a book at lunch, a bit from the book and a song I’d wanted to turn into a story for a while smashed into each other. I remember saying “Whoa” out loud.

There’s also a slower formation of a story idea, where it swirls around getting stronger and stronger, and one day you realize it’s become a whirlpool. At that point it’s easier to give in than to fight it. That’s where I’m at now. Yesterday I gave in to my muse and started a retelling of The Phantom of the Opera. I’ve been calling it “Erik’s Tale” in my head for weeks. This goes back to the resonance thing, because The Phantom of the Opera is one of those stories that settled deep in me (the musical as well as Gaston Leroux’s novel). Trying my hand at this tale is exciting, but I’m also scared. I mean, really, who the hell am I to try to tackle a classic like this?

I’m still giving it a try, though. Hopefully my love of the story and my daring changes will combine to make something that others will find enjoyable.

Posted in Uncategorized

eBooks: Why Lower is Better (For Everyone!)

DevinHarnois.com Posted on September 10, 2010 by Devin HarnoisSeptember 10, 2010

This is only my personal opinion, so take this with a grain of salt.

I hear publishers justifying higher costs for ebooks by saying they don’t want to “lower the perceived value” of books and/or that “producing an ebook costs virtually the same as a print book” so they need to have a higher cost than the $9.99 price point Amazon loves so much. The first point might be a somewhat legitimate concern, but the second point doesn’t hold much water unless the book is going to be digital only. The costs of producing the book in print have already been factored into the cost of the printed book, which is still over 90% of the market. Producing and selling an ebook version of that same book would cost only server storage and code monkey to format it. Subtract out the cost of printing and storing a physical book and it might not cost anything more.

Here’s my wild idea: ebook prices should be lower, maybe even lower than $9.99. Why? Let’s say a customer has $10 to spend, and she wants book A for sure. If book A is $10, she buys it,  and that’s that. Book A’s publisher and author get their money (the numbers I’ve seen have the publisher getting MORE margin for digital than print, and the author earning virtually the same for either format). But what if book A was $5? Maybe the customer saves the other half. But maybe she spends that, too, on book B. So, book A at $5 would indeed be getting less, but book B is getting MORE. $5 is more than $0, which is what it would have earned in the first scenario.

What if the next customer comes along looking for book B, and ends up getting book A too? Then book A has just earned as much as in the first scenario and may have earned a fan they wouldn’t have otherwise had if each customer could only buy one book at $10. The customer might recommend it to a friend, and if that friend likes it, they might recommend it someone else, and so on. And when the author comes out with their next book, they could have a larger fan base ready to snap it up – which is also good for the publisher. Selling more books at a lower price could lead to earning more money overall. That’s good for everybody.

p.s – pricing the ebook higher than the mass market paperback … all I can say is WTF?

Posted in Uncategorized

Lessons in Writing: You’re Allowed to Suck

DevinHarnois.com Posted on August 23, 2010 by Devin HarnoisAugust 23, 2010

I’m a slow writer. I know what comes out in the first draft isn’t perfect, but I want to get close. I want the words to sound right. I want it to flow. So I sit down and take an hour or more to squeeze out 500 words. It takes me six months or more to finish the first draft of a novel, and that’s a significant speed increase over my early novels. This is all before editing, getting feedback, more editing, polishing, and then waiting to see if anyone even wants the thing. If I want to make a career out of this, that kind of pace just isn’t going to cut it. What I need to do (besides, you know, get better) is to speed up, and the biggest chunk of time is eaten up by that damn first draft.

As Hemingway said, “The first draft of anything is shit.” I know things are going to change in later drafts, so why do I need to be so picky about the first one? What I need to do is keep reinforcing the lesson that Mur Lafferty and so many others repeat: You’re allowed to suck. It’s okay to make a mess. I don’t need to find the perfect word to describe something. Everything can be fixed later. The goal is to get the first draft finished. I’ve managed to embrace this idea three times for NaNoWriMo, churning out a 50,000 word novel in just 30 days. But once November is over, the slow pace creeps back in. I don’t expect to manage that level of intensity more than once a year, I think it would make me burn out rather quickly. What I’d like is to get my first draft time down to five months, or four, by getting more words down in a shorter amount of time.

During a first draft, I can suck. I can stop right in the middle of a scene because it’s boring and I want to do something else. I can name a character That One Guy and give him an actual name later. I can write sentences so bad they make me fall out of my chair laughing. And you know what? You can, too. It’s just the first draft. Anything goes. So have fun, go wild, do anything to keep those words coming. I give myself permission and I give you permission: You’re allowed to suck.

Isn’t that a freeing thought?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged first drafts, NaNoWriMo, you're allowed to suck

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