Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The Muse video trailer

Hey! This is the day I've been waiting for...the unveiling of the trailer movie for The Muse, by Fred Warren.



We are also taking pre-press reviewers right now, so get in touch with me if you're keen to read and help us promote it!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Anatomy of a Book Blurb

Today we worked on the book blurb for the back cover of The Muse. As I chatted to Fred, my friend Connie came online, and because I know she's always got an idea or three up her sleeve, I dragged her into helping us out. Here is what ensued - edited for length and to avoid spoilers.

It's wonderful what an hour and three authors can do!



13:08


Grace has joined
Fred has joined
Connie has joined
Fred: Hi, Connie!
Connie: Hey Fred :)
Grace: Thanks for coming!
Connie: I love a party
13:09
Grace: Current blurb in need of pep:
Stan Marino is a writer with a problem–he can’t find the creative push he needs to fulfill his vision.
One day, the inspiration he’s been seeking finds him, and he thinks his problems are over–but they’re just beginning.
Somebody else is pulling his strings now.
Stan discovers that reality is stranger than he ever imagined, and he, his friends,
and a host of people he’s never met are locked in a life-or-death battle with a vast enemy.


Grace: So far we've agreed that the last line should be:
13:12 Stan has found his muse, but will he survive it?
13:13 I want us to see this as a piece of poetry. Not with rhyme, but with a rhythm that draws the reader in.
Connie: I like that last line :)
Connie:
13:16 Okay, I don't like the first line.
Fred: Stan Marino needs a muse. He's written himself into a corner again.
Connie: Better
Grace:Good tie in to the title.
Connie: He's written himself into a corner. Again.
13:17 Grace: Yeah!
Fred: Nice.
Connie: Better cadence
13:18 Fred: Or we could use ellipses: He's written himself into a corner...again.
Grace: Now the part about inspiration finding him.
13:19
Suddenly seized by an inspiration that invades his life (...)
Connie: What is the inspiration?
Grace: lol that is the question
13:20 Fred?
Connie: The better to help you write my dear...
(snicker)
Fred: Well, there's the inspiration he needs, and the inspiration he thinks he needs, which is the crux of the story.
13:21 Grace: We don't need to delineate those in the blurb though eh?
Fred: No
Connie: No-- but it matters with the direction you point folks in.
So they get thirsty for more.
Fred: A shot of inspiration is all he needs to finish his story.
13:22
Connie: Okay-- that's a great second line.
Grace: Aha!
13:23 Fred: Connie, where have you been these past six months??
Connie: lol
Fred: Oh, great, now I've found a muse. uh oh.
Connie: Ha!
Grace: Ditto.
Lol, etc.
Connie: Promise-- no evil personality :)
13:24 Fred: That's a relief.
Connie: Here's where a question would work well---
For line #3
Grace: As well as the question at the end? Sure, let's try it.
13:25 Connie: If you're going backcover copy.
Grace: Yep.
Connie: You'll have what-- 5? 7 lines?
Grace: Something like that. I'm flexible :)
Connie: So try a question. Then another couple of statements, then your line at the end.
13:27 Fred: A shot of inspiration is all he needs to finish his story...where is he going to find it?
Grace: Finally, it comes. But why is it taking over his life?
Fred: What Stan doesn't know is that his inspiration has found him, and it's about to take over his life.
Grace:
What Stan doesn't know: Inspiration has found him, and it's about to take over his life.
Fred: Yeah that's what I was going for.
13:33 Grace: Now something about the life or death battle
13:35 Grace: Ripped from reality, he must band with friends and strangers in a life-or-death battle with a (insert adjective) enemy.
Unpredictable maybe.
Connie: I like the ripped from reality
13:36 Grace: Does that give away too much?
Connie: Not at all-- I think you need it.
13:37 Grace: "stand" is better than "band"
13:38 Connie: Not knowing the story, I want the 'ripped from reality' to keep reading.
Fred: or, He's been ripped from his reality, thrown into a life-and-death battle with a lethal enemy.
13:39 Grace: Ripped from reality, he must stand with friends and strangers in a life-or-death battle with a powerful and unpredictable enemy.
Fred: eh, not sure if I like "lethal"
Connie: Ripped from reality is a good start to that sentence.
Brings the focus to a shift in the story
Grace: Exactly.Fred: Yeah, that grabs the imagination.
13:40
Connie: Merciless enemy
powerful enemy
Grace: Merciless. That's pretty good. What says Fred?
Fred: ooh, merciless. I like.
13:41 Grace: Ripped from reality, he must stand with friends and strangers in a life-or-death battle with a merciless enemy.
Connie: Okay-- good flow on that one.
Fred: friends and strangers is accurate, but it's bugging meGrace: Me too, a little. I could live with it.
13:42 Connie: Another phrase that's more descriptive?
Connie: Ripped from reality, he must stand in a life-or-death battle with a merciless enemy.
Grace: A motley crew?
Connie: Just drop the phrase
13:43 Fred: I think Connie's close there.
Grace: Yeah. But I think the idea of teamwork is a very powerful one. a la Lord of the Rings book 1
Connie: strangers doesn't imply friends
or teamwork
Grace: ok so strangers is out.
13:44 Connie: Maybe that's why I don't like the phrase.
Grace: they sort of appoint him the leader. Not sure if that's any use.
Connie: AHA!
Grace: (I love it when she does that)Fred: was that a light bulb?Connie: Yes :)
Connie: Ripped from reality, he must lead...
13:45
Fred: aha!Grace: Ooo!
lead a motley crew
Connie: Ripped from reality, he must lead a (something something something) in life or death struggle with a merciless enemy.
Grace: That's it...
13:46 Fred: ragtag army? sounds like Battlestar Galactica
Connie: Motley crew is great- but may have rock group connotations here in the USA
Grace: Ok, if you say so
Fred: She's right
13:47 Grace: Ragtag army's not bad.
Connie: I like ragtag.
Fred: though they're not quite an army
Grace: But are they really ragtag? lol
Fred: ragtag band of lost souls?
13:48 Connie: Band of lost souls-- like the sound of that.
Fred: kill the ragtag
Connie: Ripped from reality, he must lead a band of lost souls in a life or death struggle against a merciless enemy.
Against is two syllables.
13:49 I think one might be better.
Fred: fight with, rather than struggle against?
13:50 Grace: how about a confrontation?
Fred: battle with
Connie: I like battle or struggle-- whichever's most accurate.
Fred: battle is more active
13:51 Grace: Okay, battle it is.
Grace: I think we're done! Thanks so much Connie!
Fred: Thanks for the help, Connie. Wonderful!
Connie: You're welcome--
That was fun!
Grace: Awesome! We'll hire you again
Connie: Lol
later taters.Fred: bye
Connie has left
13:52 Grace: So the complete masterpiece, ta da:

Stan Marino needs a muse. He’s written himself into a corner...again.

A shot of inspiration is all he needs to finish his story...where is he going to find it?

What Stan doesn't know:
Inspiration has found him, and it's about to take over his life.

Ripped from reality, he must lead a band of lost souls in a life-or-death battle with a merciless enemy.

Stan has found his muse, but will he survive it?

13:53 Fred: Ok, that's a lot more gripping than where we began.
Grace: It's the true essence of the tale.
13:54 Fred: I think it works. What do you think?
13:55 Grace: It's awesomeness!
Fred: Or, Awesome Sauce, as I heard somewhere a few days ago.
13:56 Grace: Ha!

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Down to the Wire

Autumn is just around the corner, and the production schedule for The Muse is accelerating. That's a good thing. I'd probably fiddle interminably with the story if allowed to do so, but we've agreed on the final draft and the front cover design, and can now proceed to sending an electronic pre-production copy to reviewers. If all goes well, we'll gather positive comments for the back-cover blurb and/or flyleaf and generate some good buzz.

The entire editing and review process has been cordial. Grace has been very patient with me when I've dithered on some small detail or other (cover fonts, for example), and her inputs on the writing have been insightful. She catches problems that I miss, which is, of course, a very good trait in an editor.

At the moment, Grace is finishing up a nifty video trailer for the book, accompanied by Michael Rogers' haunting music. I'm experimenting with some e-book translations of the manuscript--looks like an Adobe pdf version will be a snap, and I'd like to have a Kindle version available as well, but that will take a little more work. I'm also planning blog tours and online interviews for November. Once we have hard copies available, I can start making the rounds of the local independent bookstores to see if they'll be willing to stock the book or maybe even host a signing. There are also the regional SF&F conventions to consider, but I'm thinking it might be better to work in concert with some other Lost Genre Guild writers to provide some larger-scale representation there.

Marketing..brrr. This will be a big stretch for me.

I also need to provide Grace a slightly less-scruffy picture of my ugly mug. That may require a minor miracle.