Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Kicking it, new school

I'm almost down to the wire for this project, and calling on all of you, my friends, family, acquaintances, and a few random strangers, to do what you can to help.

This month has been pretty action-packed. I've plastered Moscow with flyers, gave a presentation at the Neill Public Library in Pullman, WA for National November Writing Month, and each weekend so far I've had free weekends for each of my books. Along with the free weekends, I've been doing 'Ask Me Anything' community interviews on Reddit (an exceptionally fun experience, I'd have to say!) 

My free weekends have gone amazingly well, with each of my books reaching #1 Space Opera on Amazon. Last weekend when RED was free, I was amazed to see it climb all the way up to #80 on the 'big board', the top 100 bestseller list for all books on Amazon. To date, over 5000 people have taken advantage of the free downloads. 

All of this is in an effort to promote my Kickstarter campaign, to fund EMWAN, the 4th book in the ARCHAEA series - and while I remain hopeful, I know hope doesn't necessarily float the proverbial boat. I need help.

What can you do? The answer is honestly, whatever you can. If you can pledge something to help drive momentum on this within the Kickstarter community, or even tell your friends and family "Hey, there's this really cool book on Kickstarter that you should check out - go to http://tinyurl.com/emwan", or, well, anything! 

What I need to make this happen, is support. Support of any kind... but lots of it, and as quickly as possible - time is running out fast!

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

November Madness

November has been a fantastic month for me - I was invited to speak to NaNoWriMo authors at a local library, I launched my Kickstarter campaign for my 4th book, EMWAN, I was featured in the local newspaper, and I've had my books listed on free weekends all month - I've even done some incredibly fun 'Ask Me Anything' posts on Reddit!

This weekend, however, is special.

Free 11/15-17!
Starting Friday, November 15 through Sunday, my third book RED will be free on Amazon! Why is that special, you might ask? Well... it's the first time it's ever been offered for free, and I am hoping that the momentum I've raised with the other free promotions this month will allow RED to knock it out of the park on the free bestseller list.

And all of this, is really to engage as many new readers and fans as I can, to help promote my Kickstarter campaign. I want readers to fall in love with the story, and to support the work I'm doing to bring them new books, faster! Who can wait a few years for someone to write a book in a beloved series? I sure can't. Well.. I guess I can because intrinsically i have no choice in the matter but... well, that's what the Kickstarter is all about.

This Friday, look for me on the iAMA subreddit, download RED, find me on Facebook or Twitter, and once you're whipped into a towering frothy frenzy for more epic adventure and the continuation of a great story - go to my Kickstarter! Tell everyone you know, and beg them to tell everyone they know... this thing can happen, but it will take every bit of help you can give.

Thanks for your support!

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

The words less written: writing the story you want to read

This is a motivational speech I gave to local authors at the Neill Public Library in Pullman Washington as an invited speaker for the National November Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) activities.

My name is Dain White, and I am an addict. I wake up in the morning with itching fingers, a story bursting through my soul, screaming for release.

I spend my day at work writing code, but in the back of my mind, an endless litany of adventure, science, stories, experience, and challenge churns along. Many of you may understand what it is that motivates me, because you feel the same motivations. You also have itchy fingers, and some of you are probably not even listening to this, or you’re trying to figure out a way to work this experience into your novel later tonight.

I am exactly the same way. As I am up here presenting this, stammering and blathering, I am already working out a way to have one of my characters relive this experience on paper. My experiences, and the experience of others in my life, play a big part in the stories I write.

Like many of you, I am challenged at times with an inability to write. The flesh is willing, but the spirit is weak, so to speak. I grapple with verb tenses, I use ‘of course’ too much, of course, and in general, I find myself being hyper critical and completely introverted about the work I am doing. I second, third, and fourth guess myself to death.

So how can we, as writers, push past the boundaries we set for ourselves? How can we rise to the challenge our motivation has set for us? How can we blast off, past all obstacles?

To paraphrase a person wiser than I am, the answer is ‘I don’t know’. I do know how I do it, however – and that is to just write. For good or bad, just put the words down. Try to be clever, interesting, and weave words into a warp and woof that walks wildly and wickedly into worth. Why not? It’s what all the real authors do.

When I write, I try to do one thing first: write the book I want to read. The kind of book I want to read is fun, entertaining, exciting, interesting and a little mysterious, and above all, visceral. I want it to leap off the page and play in my head like a blockbuster movie. I want to laugh, I want to cry, I want a roller coaster of emotion. I want depth and realism, and ultimately, I want my books to be my favorite books on my shelf.

And, while I do consider myself to be my very favorite author, it’s fair and encouraged to share with you, that I am considerably biased. The truth is, self-confidence is part and parcel of what carries me through to the end of each story, and drives me until the wee hours. I honestly and completely enjoy reading my books, and look forward to what happens next.

See, as writers, I think our job isn’t to tell other people stories, our job is to tell ourselves, but to share the story we really enjoy with others. Our stories, our characters, our vision and determination are fused together into a format that our readers will enjoy – because we enjoy them as well!

I am going to paraphrase my own grandmother here a little bit. She’s an entertainer, and a drummer, and has been playing with various bands since the late 1950’s. Her wise words of wisdom (which I am going to attempt to paraphrase in some cogent manner) were: “If you are having fun on stage, and the audience can see you having fun, they will have fun as well.” When she plays the drums, she’s smiling, she’s animated, she laughs, and she’s absolutely awesome. It doesn't matter if my grandfather forgets the bridge, has a trombone malfunction, or spills his beer on the piano midway through a song – she’s vibrant, happy, and her laughter carries the band along as well as her drums. She sets the tempo, and the mood, in other words.

When you write, try to embody the same sort of emotion. If you enjoy your story, if you well and truly love the words you write, the structure, the syntax, the prose – the reader will as well. Just like my grandmother might smile or laugh when she plays, so should you! If you are writing something dark, scary, sad or poignant – if you don’t have tears welling up in your eyes while you write, your readers won’t either. Be true to yourself, but let yourself be true to the story.

The books I've written are reasonably light-hearted science fiction – classic ‘space opera’ if you will, a classy sort of story told in the same style as the grand old masters of the golden age of science fiction. I chose this genre, and this style, mainly because I have the most fun writing it! It’s not all fluff, however – I delve pretty deeply into the depth of emotions, into the stark raving terror that lurks beneath us all, behind every shadow – but, I approach conflict and negativity in my stories in a manner that is above all, classy.
This has allowed me to push pretty hard into terrifying, tense, or action-packed situations without fear that I am about to lose my reader because above all, I focus on the story first, second and third.

So, what exactly do I mean by story? What exactly do I do?

I guess it’s fair to say, that I don’t really know. In terms of actual mechanics of writing, I don’t usually outline or block out the story beyond a general sort of concept. I might write 3-4 pages of ideas, general plot points, interesting scenarios, maybe a few little snippets of conversation here and there to help me along when I get to that point in the story, then, I sit back a bit, read it a few times, think about how I can take the reader through the experience… and then…

I tend to throw it all away and let my fingers take me wherever they will. As I write, new ideas bubble up, new concepts, new twists and turns, and I just roll with it. I honestly can’t tell you how many times I've ended up writing something that at the time I was convinced was going to end up on the cutting room floor when I was done, but, in the end, turned out to be some of the most compelling, interesting, and eye-opening parts of my books. If you read my books, you can pretty much bank on the fact that any time something completely unexpected happens, it was also completely unexpected by me.

I do want to clarify something here – I don’t just blather a never-ending litany of stream of consciousness – rather, I approach the greater story in terms of smaller scenes, segments, and sections. I never let the entirety of the novel I am writing overshadow my efforts to write a page, paragraph, or even a word.

And while I am on the subject of words - - let me say this - - the words you use in your stories should leap off the page, they should transmit a deeper meaning, a deeper emotion, and a deep understanding of the greater story. It is perfectly fine to agonize over the correct word, the most interesting word, the most epic and suitable word.

In terms of actual mechanics, I almost never delete things that I write. I am a complete sucker for the words I write, I love them madly, unconditionally… but if I write something that I like, but it’s not the best place in the story for it, or it’s out of character, or it’s too over the top – whatever the reason is, I just smash the enter key a few times, go back up and start writing again. As I write, bits and pieces, sometimes individual words, sometimes sentences, paragraphs, or even entire sections end up jumbled, jostling each other at the end of my novel, waiting patiently for me to reconnect them to the story in some elegant, exceptional way.

Sometimes they don’t make it. Sadly, some bits and pieces do end up getting cut – but I've found as time goes on, as I continue to write, even bits that I thought were useless and ready for imminent destruction found a new life as a plot point in another novel. I guess what I am saying here, is treasure everything you write, even if it doesn't fit the moment, it may (and hopefully will) fit in somewhere else.

For me, one of the most challenging aspects of writing is dialog. I used to marvel at the effortless way Robert Heinlein would carry a story using nothing but witty conversation, his stories would leap to life in your head, and the mechanics of trying to tell who is talking in a conversation never impact the story. He was a master of conversational storytelling.

My motivation (as is yours, hopefully) is to improve, to constantly work on problem areas until they shine. For some it is tense, for others it is a dearth of adjectives – whatever it is, identify it, hurl it to the ground and kneel on its windpipe until it begs for mercy. You are the writer. You are the master of the story.

To fight my challenge with dialog, I adopted what I think is a pretty nifty trick: I don’t write any!

At least, not at first… I start by writing the descriptive parts of a section. What is happening, what it looks like, what it sounds like, tastes like, the emotions and fears about whatever is happening, the hopes and happiness, and every other part of the story except for the dialog. And then, I go back through the section and flesh it out with conversation.  I might convert some of the exposition into spoken dialog including some of the feelings and observations – while in other sections I may build on what I've written with new dialog that reinforces the exposition.

The end result, my ultimate goal, is to weave character interactions into the story, to make the underlying momentum of the story dovetail perfectly with the dialog. I am always looking for a perfect balance, that Heinlein moment, the flow of conversation and story that melts away as you read, leaving you only with a perfectly clarified image in your head of the characters, the setting, the experience.

I have had reviewers state that my characters are so well visualized, they would be able to recognize them if they walked by on the street – and that is the ultimate praise, in my opinion.

Now I am going to step a little bit aside from the position I've seen Nano take recently, and talk a little bit about editing. I know, you've heard many times, don’t do it. Just put words on the page, and keep pounding along. That’s not terrible advice for some – but for me it would be disaster. I can’t just flood words into a mishmash and slog to the end of a novel like some grim, determined explorer reaching for the summit in the pre-dawn light – for me, the joy in writing is in the writing, not being done with writing.

I write a few pages, dive back in, modify, tweak, copy, paste, fix tenses, and of course, remove all the extra times I've said ‘of course’. I ‘edit as I go’, essentially, passing over and over through the words I've written and ‘lightly agonize’ over the choices I've made.

This helps me in other ways  as well. This process of layering, of constant revision, allows me to work through a section, read back into previously ‘finished sections’, to make sure they flow together well, and most importantly – this process provides me with all of the tools I need to work through distractions and interruptions. The process allows me to essentially dive right back in to the story and keep pushing.

I am a realist, however, and have learned that the written word is never perfect. It’s never done. The more I revisit the words I've written, the more I see opportunities for change, better structure, dialog, and all sorts of improvements – all of which will subsequently need to be edited, on and on, forever and ever, amen.

This sort of process isn't for everyone, of course – it may only be for me, and I’m okay with that. My process isn't the typical Nano process, and I’m probably not going to win this year, or maybe any year – but I am writing books, nonetheless. I’m having a ton of fun, and thoroughly enjoying every moment of it – yes, even the editing. For you see, by the time I am ready to begin editing, it’s greatly simplified. Far from the grueling slog through knee-deep mud and agony, for me, it’s more like a brisk walk through a cloudy day.

Well, until I hand my novel off to the ‘real’ editor, that is. Then the real pain begins. “but… it was perfect!

Here’s the thing – you can do it. You can write, you have what it takes to get to the end of the story, you just need to make it happen. Put yourself into whatever mental place you need to be to make yourself happy, and above all, make the entire experience as fun and rewarding as possible. Be true to yourself, and if you only reach a few people with your work – by all means, reach them well. 

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Super Random Fan Sweepstakes!



Enter to win, and become the first person on our planet to read the first 100 pages of the next ARCHAEA novel! You will be the envy of literally tens of fans!

Be the person you've always wanted to be: a WINNER!

How?

First, make sure you have an account on Twitter.

If you don't - set one up. Don't complain, just do it. Then, go to http://twitter.com/dainwhite and click "Follow". Again, no complaining... it's fun, and you'll thank me later.

Next, on the confirmation screen after you purchase ARCHAEA this weekend, Amazon has a link that says 'Share this to Twitter'. Clicking that link will create a 'tweet' that says: "I just bought: 'Archaea' by Dain White via @amazonkindle"

On May 1, 2012, I will randomly select you (not that other loser, but YOU) as the winner. How I will select you isn't necessary, but it will be as random as I can make it. Trust me, I can be pretty random when I want to be, so I will do my best to make it rutabaga... err, random.

I'll contact you through Twitter to make arrangements to deliver your prize, a lovingly handcrafted PDF (suitable for printing) of the first 100 pages of the next book. Seriously... how awesome is that?

Not only will you be the first person to read it, you'll be the first person to know the name of the book! You will have UNBELIEVABLE POWER AT YOUR COMMAND. Trust me, you will...

Good luck!

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

FREE! ARCHAEA! 4/26-28!



Hey everybody - just a quick note to let you know that I'm running a free weekend for my first book, ARCHAEA. If you like science fiction (or even if you don't) I beg you, please download and read this book, this weekend!

Tell everyone you know, share this to the ends of the earth and beyond! Even if you have read this, please delete it, and download it again! The last time I did this, I hit #1 in Space Opera on Amazon, and #9 in the main Science Fiction category... but I want to CRUSH it this weekend, I want to hit #1 on the free book list for all of Amazon. I can't do it though, without some serious support! Mark your calendar: 4/26-28 - download my book for free!

"But Dain, I don't have a kindle!" 

That's okay, read it on your phone, your Ipad, your laptop - Amazon offers free kindle readers for almost every possible device!

"But Dain, I don't have a device!" 

That's okay, read it in the soft, fluffy cloud by pointing a browser at http://read.amazon.com/

"But Dain, I don't like science fiction!" 

That's okay - don't read it... JUST DOWNLOAD IT and tell everyone you know how utterly groundshakingly mind-blowingly AWESOME it was! (Seriously, it's not really a super hard-core sort of sci-fi book, it's more like a lighthearted, funny, and very interesting / engaging adventure sort of story... even if you don't like sci-fi, you'll love this book!)

"But Dain..." 

NO MORE BUTS! I command you, this Friday, Saturday, or Sunday (or whatever those days happen to be for my wonderfully upside down friends in Australia, New Zealand and Singapore) click this link! The future of all of human civilization may depend on it! (Unlikely... but it sure sounds epic!)

Click this: http://www.amazon.com/Archaea-ebook/dp/B006PXUNXK

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Celebrate Spring!

Spring is a wonderful time. All across the northern hemisphere (except for Idaho) flowers are blooming, trees are turning green again, and grass is that fresh, rich green you had almost forgotten.

Idaho laughs at this season, and tosses in rain, snow, sleet, hail, rain, frost, and some more rain just in case you didn't get the point. As I write this, it's cold, windy, and grey - Pretty Much Winter, is what we Idahoans call this season... for good cause. 

For the rest of this hemisphere, however - this is a time of awakening, a time to crawl out from under blankets and sweaters, to find sandals and shorts, to wander outside with eyes blinking at the burning brightness of that strange yellow thing in the sky. It's time to celebrate!

Or is it?

I suspect that for many of you, as wonderful as you might wish the weather is outside, your proximity to the great state of Idaho has turned the weather outside cold, dark and windy. 

I apologize, on behalf of my state, but to help you curl up with a good book (or three) and spend a weekend lounging slothfully, coffee cup at hand, reading...I've decided to buck tradition, and put all three of my books up for sale this weekend, for the low, low, low price of 2.99. That's one penny shy of three dollars!

If you are one of the lucky few who have a wonderful weekend of warm sunny spring weather coming...you might as well pick up a good book (or three) anyway, because otherwise you'll have to mow the yard, pull weeds, till the garden, clean the gutters, prune bushes and maybe paint or build something. 

Trust me, reading Archaea, Janis and Red will be more fun than all of the above...and ultimately, cheaper. 

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Old-time radio play... in space?

The little sister of one of my oldest friends...let's call him Forrest (because that's his name, and we might as well keep picking on him) reached out to me on facebook with an idea that I couldn't turn down, to write a serialized radio play for her theater troupe.

First, let me make this totally clear: I am a life-long fan of Firesign Theater. 

I love every last bit of every thing they did, and I honestly can't tell you how many times I've listened to Ralph Spoilsport, Nick Danger, or Tiny Little Doctor Tim, living in a life-size replica of the Taj Mahal made entirely out of oleomargarine. If you're shaking your head in disbelief at the moment, I can commiserate - but I'd also suggest you RUN (don't walk) to get your hands on as much Firesign Theater as you can.

Also, to be clear - in no way, shape or form, will what I write bear even the slightest bit of resemblance to Firesign Theater, aside from the fact that people will be reading the script live, with sound effects. Instead of radio, they're going to put it up on a podcast - but other than that, I am confident that my attempt will be at best, a very pale imitation of the true comedic genius that was Firesign. 

It was suggested that I take some moments from my books, and trim them down, cut them up, and hybridize them into thirty minute serials... but I had a better idea. 

I am instead, writing Brand New™ material, using this opportunity to flesh out a moment in the book that was really just briefly described, but for which there are vast opportunities for expansion and dialog. 

Which moment, you might be asking?

Sorry, I wish I could tell you. Forrest only lives ten hours away, you know, and while that's pretty far to drive for a vacation, it's really not that far at all when you have an ass-kicking to deliver.

I am really excited about this opportunity to push a new dimension of entertainment, and have completed the first draft of the first episode, though it's really little more than a sketch at this point, and needs a bit more work before it's ready. 

The style of writing is a lot different from what I am used to, but it really gives me a lot of great opportunities to play on human reactions - and after all, that is pretty important. We as listeners become a fly on the wall to the event, watching and listening to it unfold. 

I can say 'it smelled like the worst thing you can imagine' in a book, but when you hear Gene howl in anguish at the miserably nasty reek leaking through the slowly opening hatch, well, that's a whole new dimension! 

Oh blast. I may have given too much away there.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Giving away the story

I have a childhood friend named Forrest who is adamant, and I use that in the man-of-steel manner, that at no time in or around his person, should the ending of any story ever be told. 

Now, I know we all have these tendencies - but as an author, telling people about the ideas I am having works so well to grow the story, it's almost as much of a part of the process as writing it. 

It's like being part of a book club for which there is no book. The end result, is really amazing. All day I think about different little layers and details, then at night when I get home, I hammer them into existence on my keyboard. 

It's a good thing Forrest lives ten hours away. It makes it almost impossible for me to ruin the story for him. 

Not that I wouldn't really enjoy seeing more of him, because I would - he's an awesome person, through and through - but he would intensely hate me giving away the story, even a tiny little piece. He probably wouldn't even want to read this post, writing a story about giving away a story would almost certainly carry some of the same weight for him.

No, Forrest would have me run out of his sight on a rail, suitably tarred, and/or feathered, as appropriate. Not really, but he would fix me with a look of imminent mood change, and I would relent, naturally - he is my friend after all. 

Many of you might want me to share the story I'm writing, think about where it's headed next... but there's a double-edge to that wicked sword we just found, and it's a good thing I noticed, because you might have cut us both to ribbons. Here, put that blasted thing down before you hit the cat.

What was I saying? Ah, yes. 

As an author, it's really hard for me to share the story as it unfolds, because at this point, it's a fragile little structure, timid and shy, and prone to instantaneous failures of existence. As I talk about it, or think out loud, some times I run the risk of listening to myself.

We should always, in all ways, try to avoid that. Each and every one of us sounds like buffoons, so it makes it easier. 

As much as I might want to tell you the type of story I am writing, I can't. While many of you would enjoy being part of the process, watching the the next book grow and form, in little samples, snippets, out-takes and cutting room casualties... at least one of you will be Forrest, and others will appreciate his fervent guardianship of the story to lesser extents.

Heck, maybe we all do, deep down.

(If you want me to include you in the super secret inner-circle group of friends I send random thoughts and ideas to, leave a small, brown paper wrapped package behind the bridge on the next moonless night. I'll be the one wearing the carnation mustache, and the crimson tie. Don't tell Forrest. I am looking at you, Dale.)

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Tangled torments

Writing is like, punishing yourself for thinking.

You have a story inside, but it's a tangled mess. Unraveling it is often less fun than trying to overhaul a 1400 yard twisted nylon longline skate with a few hundred halibut hooks all tangled in their beckets and ganyons, festering with the rotten bait that wasn't cleaned off the season before, in the pouring cold April rain of Southeast Alaska.

And before you ask... yes, I know personally how horrible it is to do the above, getting paid $10 per skate, having a monstrous pile of tangled mess on one side of a table, and a tiny little pile representing a meager grocery shopping trip (eggs and maybe milk, but not bread) on the other - a weeks worth of work. Bloody palms rubbed raw with that most exquisite of modern torture devices, the Swedish Fid...but I digress on my digressions.

The point I was trying to make, is pulling a story out of the snarled mess that is my mind on the best of days is one of those life-changing tough challenges like training to be a Navy Seal, or talking a seven-year-old daughter out of another Hello Kitty toy. My problem, such as it is, is that my story isn't just the books I've written - it's about 20 more waiting for their time to filter through my fingers into the screen, and then into the mind of my readers.

I have things I feel like I have to do to set the stage for other things that set the stage for even more things, and honestly, I can't tell you how many times I write the same exact thing, not remembering that I wrote about that 20 pages earlier. I read a sentence, and my head practically explodes with great ideas I have to ruthlessly, savagely denigrate into submission, or I'd never get anything written.

Is it a curse, or a gift? My readers sure seem to like the end result, and for that, I can't thank them enough for the motivation and encouragement to go on... every person that takes the time to write a review on Amazon, is like literally walking up to me and giving me a hug, as if to say "There, there, it'll all be okay... you can do it, just keep writing!"

And so, on I go... into the endless black depths of my head, looking for the thread that lets me unravel this mess into a story we can all be proud of. Wish me luck!

(P.S. As I was writing this, I got my 1000th twitter follower! Congratulations @surrealinsight, you get a free chrome-plated toaster that works. Just kidding, you get a retweet... but you deserve so much more!)

Monday, March 11, 2013

Casting roles part II


Fantasy Casting

We all play this game: read a great book (like The Monkeywrench Gang, by Edward Abbey) and then try to come up with the cast if it was made into a movie.

Maybe it's a testament to the character development, the story, the pace of the books (or a combination of all of the above) but many people (myself included) can easily envision movies being made about Captain Dak Smith and the crew of the Archaea. Some of my readers have been playing a similar game with my books, coming up with their dream cast for the roles of each character.

So far, on twitter, facebook, and emails I've reached a pretty good consensus on some of the characters, though like any other good 'fantasy cast', as people suggest improvements or detractors for actors, I'm happily adjusting.

Captain Dak Smith: So far, the favorite has been Patrick Warburton, narrowly edging out Stephen Colbert. Colbert has the eyebrows, but he's not physically as well suited for the role, I think. His character is so well known, I think it'd be hard for people to see past his personae, and see the part he's playing as the captain. Patrick Warburton has the look, the lantern jaw, the commanding presence, and most importantly, a laconic delivery that would really accentuate the calm and unruffled manner of the captain.

Gene Mitchell: Corbin Bernsen is my personal favorite for this role, he looks the part and he's got a pretty epic scowl. He's smart, opinionated, and has the endearing character that Gene needs. A close runner up is the voice of Cave Johnson, and one of my favorite actors, J.K. Simmons. His only detraction is that he's generally more likable than curmudgeonly, and might not be as believable as a master engineer.

Yak Onebull: Adam Beach would be perfect for this role, though he's not really big enough physically - While a ton of these movies would have to be CGI, I don't know how feasible it would be to shoot Yak like Gollum, Tron Reloaded, or Captain America. It'd be better to find someone that fits the physicality of Yak a little better, though looks-wise, Adam Beach is perfect. He looks smart, tough, and capable.

Jane Short: My personal favorite for Shorty is Natalie Raitano. She's not as well known, but that really can help a movie character stick with the mind of the viewer if they aren't always trying to superimpose previous characters over the top of the one they're seeing played by a well known actor. This is really Stephen Colbert's main downfall. Natalie Raitano is short enough, has a 'cute as a button' look, but is a significantly tough gal. She looks like she could easily elbow hook you into the cold hard deck.

Stephen Pauline: This character is really hard to pin down. Aaron Stanford has been suggested, and he definitely has the right look and character to play Pauli - though he may be a little young. Dak and Pauli came up through the Academy together, so it makes sense that they be roughly the same age (though Pauli is definitely a little younger). Someone else suggested Sean Patrick Flanery. He fits the look well, is close to the same age as Dak, and has a darker personality that fits the role well - but I am not very familiar with either of these actors. I guess for me, the jury is still out, I haven't seen anyone yet that really leaps out as perfect for Pauli.

Do you have any suggestions? Hit me up on facebook or twitter - I'd love to hear from you! Remember... this is all just in good fun. At no point in time do I actually expect my books to be made into blockbuster movies - this is for entertainment purposes only.

If you are one of the above-mentioned actors, please don't send hired goons to knock on my door.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Casting roles...

A fan on twitter is having some fun / getting me in trouble by linking Nathan Fillion into a role of Captain Dak Smith... Of course, I'd crawl through ten miles of broken glass and barbed-wire just to touch the ground he walked on, but thinking more about it, I think we really need him at the helm of Firefly.

So who would work for Captain Smith?

I'd love to see Stephen Colbert, or Patrick Warburton in the role of Captain Smith. They have the supreme confidence, the rapid fire wit, the heroic never-fail attitude, and of course - the correct eyebrows. That's the most important. Either of them would be awesome.

Thinking about the rest of the crew, it's a pretty fun game to come up with actors for the other roles... Now we need to cast Pauli, Gene, Yak and Shorty (last, but not least...)

Any ideas? Let me know in the comments, or on Twitter @DainWhite - for extra points, link your actor to the tweet. Who knows... maybe one of them will make it happen?

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Giving it a kick?

I wish I could just write. My life would be so much simpler, so much more serene... so much more caffeinated. Unfortunately, I can't. My life is only possible, because like many of you, I work for a living somewhere, doing something, and it's not writing. Okay, it is writing... but it's writing code. Equally as addicting, but not as fun as science fiction and adventure.

Many people have begged me to quit my day job and write, but the simple fact is, I can't provide for my family through book sales alone. Not with my current exposure and publication level. What I need to do, is seek a real book deal / contract, or possibly crowd-source funds so I can retire to a comfy spot and start mashing keys in earnest.

I've been thinking about using Kickstarter to try and fund a year's worth of writing. If I could devote 60 hours / week on writing, I could really push out the books - of this I am confident. Janis was written in 30 days, and while my life was pretty much consumed at that point by writing, I was also working.

If I wasn't working, a book / month would be a pretty realistic goal.

How cool would it be to have ten more books from me this year? We can dream, right? Well, I can, anyway. I'll dream enough for everyone, and have some left over to spare.

I'm still thinking about what sort of rewards I could give for Kickstarter. So far I have kicked around ideas of offering signed paperbacks of my books, rights to name characters, planets, suggest cool story ideas...

What else might motivate you to pledge money to make me quit my day job?


Thursday, February 28, 2013

My dreams, shattered.


Imagine my surprise, at the following letter showing up in my inbox:

Dear Mr. White, 
We are contacting you as a potential candidate for our team of scientists, physicists and engineers dedicated to designing and building the first tokomat-powered intra-galaxy space ship. Your published novels indicate an impressive knowledge of the components and software needed for the success of this endeavor. Our company, Space Trek International, has generous financial backing from several nations and we can offer you a six-figure salary to start. 
We are working in a 10-year time frame so time is of the essence. Please respond if you are available and we'll go into more detail. 
Sincerely,
Barton L. Fitzroy, CBO, DSc

Of course, it was a little strange that they misspelled tokamak, but I figured what the heck, it doesn't hurt to be polite. I replied with:


I am absolutely interested in learning more about this - please let me know what I can do to help.

Warmest regards,
Dain White

How does this story end? In ABJECT SADNESS and TEARS OF IMPOTENT RAGE, as the next reply was:

GOTCHA ~Grampa

It's not even April 1st. How am I supposed to go on after this? There isn't a super secret think-tank team that wants me involved with building a starship? No six figure salary? You mean to tell me I have to immediately and WITHOUT DELAY go back to my mundane existence?
 
 

Are you a literary agent?

On the off chance that by some miraculous quirk of timing and fate, the person reading this is a literary agent that specializes in science fiction, I wanted to let you know that I should be contacting you in the near future on bent knee, begging for a moment of your time and consideration of me as your next author and client.

I say 'should' rather than 'will', because to be honest, I am still pretty overwhelmed by the process of separating the good from the bad in your industry. Trying to find an actual literary agent in a seemingly infinite universe of opportunistic blood sucking pathogens that call themselves literary agents, is a pretty challenging task.

I wish there was an easy method an aspiring-to-be-published author like myself could use to litmus-test my way past the predatory hucksters that seem to have infected your industry to a point at which there may be no hope for recovery.

At first, I thought maybe the agents that distance themselves thoroughly from authors, either by means of setting the bar inordinately high for contact to be made, or by simply ignoring any and all attempts to contact them, I thought they may be the actual real agents... but now I am not sure. Definitely the agents that want to talk with me aren't the ones I need to talk with, I get that... but does this industry need to be so adversarial, so utterly contemptuous to the authors that make the entire publishing industry function?

Surely, there can be a middle ground we can all meet on, somewhere between the greedy hordes of opportunistic budget-sucking parasites that clamor for my attention, and the lofty, unassailable fortress of the upper crust-de-la-crust of publishing society that won't return a call unless it's engraved in platinum foil and delivered by carrier pigeon on Wednesday evenings between 6:53 and 6:57 pm (all other queries will be ignored).

Surely, among you, there is one. One person with a fervent desire to find the Next Big Thing™, with the connections and experience to do something about it. Surely... there is one.

Is that person you?


Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Reviews as advice

I had a pretty astute reader dive deep between the lines of Archaea and surmise (correctly) that the author must have some sort of background in programming. Her review was:


Grow up with E.E. (Doc) Smith? Learn about life from Heinlein? H.Beam Piper one of your favorite authors? Dain White's Archaea is space opera at its best, complete with a (literal) deus ex machina. Well, maybe not QUITE a goddess, but Janis comes close and she's definitely 'ex machina'. I'm planning to download and read the other two novels about this merry band of space-farers. Some nice touches for those of us who program for a living - a hunky marine for me, a cute (don't call her small) weapons engineer for you plus a good selection of other characters. 
It's not great literature, but it's a great ride while it lasts - and there are 2 more to read! 
Now how can I learn to program without bugs and rewriting?


(emphasis mine)

It's maybe not as well known, but yes, as a point of fact I am a bit of a coder myself, and I started making websites professionally in 1995, and have been developing highly relational, intuitively managed dynamically generated database-driven web applications since 2000. This is part of the challenge I have when faced with writing a person like Pauli. In a way, he's a direct mirror of my own psyche, his insouciant slouch is mine, his furious fingers burning the keys off his board are mine. I can (quite easily) relate to his all-nighter tendencies, his drive to build the impossible, to write the code that can't fail.

As I am first and foremost the kind of person that tries to break the mold in everything I do, I decided to step outside of my science fiction author persona, and answer her question:

If you liked Archaea, I can't wait to see what you think of Janis and Red! As far as programming goes, above all be consistent in your approach, name variables intuitively and either write intuitive, self-documenting code, or put some extra time into comments and documentation. A good approach to application design is to work on the breadth first, then work on the depth, and test and debug as you go. Only add complexity to systems that are engineered with a solid, robust and scalable foundation. Lastly, remember... at the end of the day there really are no bugs, only extremely exciting undocumented features that need interfacing. Good luck, and thanks for reading!

Monday, February 25, 2013

No more fever

Well, it took about 12 days or so, but I finally managed to see my way through a horrible fever virus, called Pharyngoconjunctival Fever. It was awful. At first, I tried writing, thinking that the fever would add some sort of elusive creative spark, and drive me to new feats of eloquence... but in the end it became more and more challenging to make sense of anything at all, and I had to pack it in, and settle for misery.

Being sick sucks. I hate it, and so should you... and if you don't, then you need to seek help. I had a sore throat, a chest cough that hurt but wouldn't do anything, a runny yet stuffed nose, and eyes that felt like they were full of itty-bitty shards and splinters of broken glass. My eyes still feel awful, actually... but the worst part was the day-after-day endless marathon of fever. Not a little fever either, not the kind you can put a brave face on and soldier through. I had the wrapped-in-a-blanket-shivering-uncontrollably kind of fever (at the peak, I hit 103.8 and I was on no less than three different OTC meds!)

My throat still aches a bit, my cough is still there, and still not very productive, and my eyes still feel horrible, like they're packed full of grit... but at least I can think again. Fevers are the worst...

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Research, lies and science fiction.

Last night, I got a bit mired down in some research for my new novel. After some methodical digging, I came across some research papers written in Russian that Google was kind enough to translate, and I found the moment where science fiction (specifically, my personal brand where 'seat-of-the-pants' science is hurled at the keyboard) meets reality, or at least, speculative quantum physics.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Pulse


This was my contribution to an Amazon author anthology. While I’m not really a horror writer, the concept of vampires intrigued me when I was younger. I drew on my love for the archetypical experience, and wrote the beginning of a pretty fantastic horror story, if I could pull it off. It’s hard, writing books… sometimes, they seem to carve chunks out of your soul. I know you’d rather have me writing my next novel, rather than building a blog, and I can only beg forgiveness. If it’s any consolation, the following story was written last year. Let me know in the comments what you think – would you want to see a book like this?

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

More Accolades

In my author discussion forum on Amazon, Ronald Moody (quite possibly the nicest person on the planet) had this to say:

Rated all three books at five stars. I think that's the first time that's happened. You sir sure know how to spin a good yarn. You are now firmly in place on my top ten authors list. I read all three books in four or five days. And I think it's the first time for that as well.

This is what it is all about, friends.

First Review

Red received it’s first review today, and I was taken aback. For an author to know someone even read the thing is often it’s own reward, but when someone takes the time to fire up Amazon and let me know, it really offers a glimpse into the mind of the reader – what they liked, what they didn’t. Each and every review, good or bad (and sometimes, especially bad) breathes life into the prose, engaging with it in ways that the author cannot.
As may be considered ironic (not that I do, I wouldn't admit to know what that means) I am my biggest fan, and truly enjoy reading and re-reading these books. In a way, one of my fans said it best, it’s as if I wanted something more from the genre, and set out to create it. Because I have so much fun writing these books, it’s especially gratifying to learn that for at least one other person on this planet, I’ve succeeded.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Hacking the blogger

I guess I am a little like Pauli… deep down, I am a bit of a hacker at heart. I noticed that Blogger has HTML and CSS overrides, so I hacked on it to put my own background in here (the one I am using is too large and Blogger wouldn’t let me update via upload) and then while I was at it, I used some semi-transparent PNG files to make the post and page background semitransparent.

I am trying, somewhat, to match the look I have on my twitter feed, though not really taking enough time on it to try and make it look seamless. I might, later. Breaktime is over, time to dive back into the new story. We’re about to slip to Oort Station, as requested by the Vice Admiral. Something has happened, and it’s a Really Bad Thing™ – you know Gene is not happy about this one.

The moment when…

image

Goodreads Updated

Hello Goodreaders! I’ve updated my author page to reflect the launch of RED, and linked my brand new shiny blog. Goodreads is an amazing site, though I do admit I am not really sure how to use it effectively. For example as of this writing, I have no idea how to add a link to buy RED on Amazon.com. Live and learn, I guess…

Sunday, February 10, 2013

RED hit the top 20 in ‘Hot New Releases’ on Amazon in its first weekend!

I was really amazed, given the volume of sales for Red over the first weekend it was published, that it would hit the top 20 list for ‘hot new releases’. This is an amazing result, considering the sheer volume of books published on Amazon every day.

It’s a great book… have you read it yet?

http://www.amazon.com/Archaea-ebook/dp/B00BCWIBUG

Diving into the next adventure

I’m currently blazing off into the depths of deep space in the newest ARCHAEA adventure – though it has not yet been named, I have a few ideas that go along with the theme of the story. What that is, I can’t say yet… but I will say that the book starts in the next second after RED ends – an instant transition.

I like the idea of readers finishing one book, and being able to dive right in to another without skipping a beat. The story takes off, too - and I don't mean that in the normal eyeball-squishing manner. I am only about 70 pages into it, but they’re some of the most engaging, adventure-packed pages I’ve ever written.

RED Launch and Free Weekend

I launched my latest novel, RED last Friday, and took the opportunity to run a free weekend with a Kindle Direct Promotion for both ARCHAEA and JANIS. I balanced promoted posts on Facebook, with a pretty regular barrage of promotional tweets, and the end result was pretty excellent.

ARCHAEA held the #1 spot for the Space Opera category, and JANIS climbed to #4 in Science Fiction Adventure. ARCHAEA hit #9 for all science fiction on Amazon, and topped out at #281 overall on Amazon. Considering there are millions of books listed on Amazon, to hit #281 was pretty awesome.

I gained about 20 more followers on Twitter, and hopefully didn't lose any... I am always a little apprehensive about spamming people, so I tried to make my tweets interesting (or at least not horribly obnoxious) and didn't tweet flood people too badly.

As far as actual sales went, I didn't do too terribly - as of this writing, I sold 24 copies of RED, hopefully as people work through ARCHAEA and JANIS, they'll want to keep reading the story and sales will continue for a while. It's not really all about sales, of course... I have a day job, and as much as I wish it was writing, it isn't... so I am really most excited at this point to think that there are a few thousand people out there reading the adventures of Captain Dak Smith and the Archaea.

Tweets