I'll remember 2012 not as the year the world ended but rather as the year I sold my first novel, Brew. After years of writing short stories, this was a huge rush.
It was a great year for me, really. Thanks to my excellent agent, I sold two more books under another name, and thanks to these sales, some interest from the West Coast, and the confidence and support of my wonderful wife, I'm now living the dream and writing full time.
The year wasn't without challenges. Leaving my job made things tight, money-wise, and I had underestimated some of the psychological baggage of making the plunge into self-employment. But as more things sold, both financial pressure and psychological baggage lightened. Things are good now.
Due to lack of time and money, I also dropped out of Seton Hill's Writing Popular Fiction MFA program. A shame... I had passed the half-way mark, and I really loved the program and the people there. Still, I'm glad I had the experience, and I don't count my withdrawal as a failure. The program taught me a lot and enriched me with a wealth of friends, and I not only finished the book that was to have been my thesis project but also used to leverage that aforementioned excellent agent and sold it to a great publisher. So yeah, I'm glad I went to Seton Hill and count my abbreviated time there a smashing success.
A big year for me, 2012.
I intend to blog, a la Chris Shearer, about my reading year, as well as about the year in boxing. We'll see...
For now, how was your year? What were the ups and downs?
Monday, December 31, 2012
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Insomnia Has Me on the Ropes...
It's almost 3 a.m., and I'd have an easier time going ten rounds than falling asleep. Lay in bed for perhaps an hour, then rose to tool around the downstairs. I'm tempted to dive back into Perils of the Road, but that would only keep me awake longer. I'm in the mood to read a chess book, but I've sworn those off for a while. Maybe I'll read, then. Horatio Hornblower, here I come...
I Love Chess So Much...
I had to quit playing.
At least for a while.
When I play, all I want to do is play...
What are your dangerous obsessions?
At least for a while.
When I play, all I want to do is play...
What are your dangerous obsessions?
Shot-dodger Peter Aragno Boards the Braddockblog!
At these exponential growth rates, 99% of the human race will sign on with this blog within the next six months!
Blast the trumpets and toss the confetti for shot-dodger, naval expert, thriller writer, and gas-can zombie from New Jersey, Pete Aragno, who joined the Braddockblog today. This place is rapidly filling with my favorite people.
Pete has a blog, but it's cryptically devoid of material at this point, so I'll wait until he officially launches it to post the link.
Until then, thanks, Pete, for joining on!
Blast the trumpets and toss the confetti for shot-dodger, naval expert, thriller writer, and gas-can zombie from New Jersey, Pete Aragno, who joined the Braddockblog today. This place is rapidly filling with my favorite people.
Pete has a blog, but it's cryptically devoid of material at this point, so I'll wait until he officially launches it to post the link.
Until then, thanks, Pete, for joining on!
Today's Writing...
went really well.
I kept pushing through Perils of the Road, and though I apologize for the repetition, I leave the day's work even more convinced that this book is a keeper. Had a lot of fun working on it today, actually laughing aloud in a couple of places. These are definitely the best characters I've ever written.
I kept pushing through Perils of the Road, and though I apologize for the repetition, I leave the day's work even more convinced that this book is a keeper. Had a lot of fun working on it today, actually laughing aloud in a couple of places. These are definitely the best characters I've ever written.
Meatpunker Chris Shearer Climbs Aboard!
Three cheers for Meatpunker co-founder and award-winning author Chris Shearer, who is officially the third member of the Braddockblog!
Find out more about Chris, who's read more books than anyone I know, here.
Find out more about Chris, who's read more books than anyone I know, here.
And Thank Adam Browne, A.K.A. "The Second Member"!
Friday, December 28, 2012
Yesterday / Today
Got some good work done on Perils. Chopped some stuff, dug up a couple great scenes, continued to see a clearer over-structure.
Received my first rush of visitors the last couple of days, too. Sixty-some page views yesterday, fifty-some today. This is fun, and if you're reading this, thanks!
Along those same lines, received my first blog follower! Good ol' Quentin Dunne, a great friend and one hell of a horror writer, signed up. Thanks, Quentin!
Also heard from L.L. Soares and Mike Fletcher that it was tough to leave comments. I've tried to make it easier by fiddling with the Blogger board, but as I'm not exactly tech-savvy, it might take some further fiddling. Please let me know if you try to comment, and it doesn't go smoothly.
Finally, spent an inordinate amount of time today trying to figure out (with limited success) how to coordinate my new ipod with itunes, the computer, my wife's ipad, and most important of all, Audible audiobooks... the whole reason I wanted an ipod in the first place. After a drawn out struggle and plenty of cursing, I think I'm on the right path...
What have you been up to the last couple of days?
Received my first rush of visitors the last couple of days, too. Sixty-some page views yesterday, fifty-some today. This is fun, and if you're reading this, thanks!
Along those same lines, received my first blog follower! Good ol' Quentin Dunne, a great friend and one hell of a horror writer, signed up. Thanks, Quentin!
Also heard from L.L. Soares and Mike Fletcher that it was tough to leave comments. I've tried to make it easier by fiddling with the Blogger board, but as I'm not exactly tech-savvy, it might take some further fiddling. Please let me know if you try to comment, and it doesn't go smoothly.
Finally, spent an inordinate amount of time today trying to figure out (with limited success) how to coordinate my new ipod with itunes, the computer, my wife's ipad, and most important of all, Audible audiobooks... the whole reason I wanted an ipod in the first place. After a drawn out struggle and plenty of cursing, I think I'm on the right path...
What have you been up to the last couple of days?
Thursday, December 27, 2012
New Books for Christmas!
My awesome brother-in-law, Andrew, added five new books to my shelves this Christmas.
On Boxing by Joyce Carol Oates: If you know Joyce Carol Oates, you probably know her for her beautiful (and powerful) fiction. What you might not know is that she served as boxing stringer and wrote one of the best nonfiction boxing books I've read, On Boxing. I love this book, but around ten years ago, I lent my copy to a friend and never got it back. It'll be a joy to reread this one after all these years.
Speaking of Joyce Carol Oates, she also has a story in American Supernatural Tales. Edited by S.T. Joshi, this anthology includes stories by a lot of horrors heavy-hitters, including Lovecraft, Poe, Bradbury, and King, but I'm most excited to read "The Events at Poroth Farm" by T.E.D. Klein, which the best-read guy I know, Chris Shearer, says is the most perfect story ever written. Apparently Chris reads the story at least once a year. Now I'll have that option, too!
In my constant effort to balance light and darkness, I'm excited to dive into another collection, The One Year Book of Psalms. I've read the book of Psalms at least a couple of times, but I've never studied it. The One Year Book of Psalms splits the psalms into 365 readings, each psalm or psalm-piece paired with a devotional reading, a hymn stanza, and some additional feature, like a fact, quote, or Biblical parallel. I read the Bible every morning and plan to read The Old Testament and The New Testament back-to-back, start-to-finish, during 2013, so I'll just tack this onto my daily reading.
Before I meditate overlong on "turning the other cheek," however, I'll likely gobble up a book I've been wanting to read for a long time: Real Fighting, Adrenaline Stress Conditioning through Scenario-Based Training by Peyton Quinn. As the title suggests, this book is a look at "real" fighting -- as opposed to dojo sparring -- with a focus on learning "to control the adrenaline rush that occurs in the fear, confusion, and intensity of a violent confrontation." This book interests both on a personal level, as someone long obsessed with fighting and conflict, and on a professional level, as someone who writes horror stories and thrillers.
Another book that interests me both as a person and a writer is Gavin De Becker's The Gift of Fear. I first learned of this book through another excellent read, Meditations on Violence by Rory Miller. Shortly thereafter, The Gift of Fear was recommended to me by a friend who'd worked as an FBI agent and S.W.A.T. team member. Recently, thriller writer August McGlaughlin echoed the recommendation, saying The Gift of Fear was one of the best books she'd ever read. The subtitle, "And Other Survival Signals that Protect Us from Violence," gives one a fair idea of the book's content, which focuses on learning to spot "even subtle signs of danger -- before it's too late." This should be a great read!
Well, that was my holiday book haul, and I'm looking forward to these five reads. Now it's your turn: What books have you received lately?
On Boxing by Joyce Carol Oates: If you know Joyce Carol Oates, you probably know her for her beautiful (and powerful) fiction. What you might not know is that she served as boxing stringer and wrote one of the best nonfiction boxing books I've read, On Boxing. I love this book, but around ten years ago, I lent my copy to a friend and never got it back. It'll be a joy to reread this one after all these years.
Speaking of Joyce Carol Oates, she also has a story in American Supernatural Tales. Edited by S.T. Joshi, this anthology includes stories by a lot of horrors heavy-hitters, including Lovecraft, Poe, Bradbury, and King, but I'm most excited to read "The Events at Poroth Farm" by T.E.D. Klein, which the best-read guy I know, Chris Shearer, says is the most perfect story ever written. Apparently Chris reads the story at least once a year. Now I'll have that option, too!
In my constant effort to balance light and darkness, I'm excited to dive into another collection, The One Year Book of Psalms. I've read the book of Psalms at least a couple of times, but I've never studied it. The One Year Book of Psalms splits the psalms into 365 readings, each psalm or psalm-piece paired with a devotional reading, a hymn stanza, and some additional feature, like a fact, quote, or Biblical parallel. I read the Bible every morning and plan to read The Old Testament and The New Testament back-to-back, start-to-finish, during 2013, so I'll just tack this onto my daily reading.
Before I meditate overlong on "turning the other cheek," however, I'll likely gobble up a book I've been wanting to read for a long time: Real Fighting, Adrenaline Stress Conditioning through Scenario-Based Training by Peyton Quinn. As the title suggests, this book is a look at "real" fighting -- as opposed to dojo sparring -- with a focus on learning "to control the adrenaline rush that occurs in the fear, confusion, and intensity of a violent confrontation." This book interests both on a personal level, as someone long obsessed with fighting and conflict, and on a professional level, as someone who writes horror stories and thrillers.
Another book that interests me both as a person and a writer is Gavin De Becker's The Gift of Fear. I first learned of this book through another excellent read, Meditations on Violence by Rory Miller. Shortly thereafter, The Gift of Fear was recommended to me by a friend who'd worked as an FBI agent and S.W.A.T. team member. Recently, thriller writer August McGlaughlin echoed the recommendation, saying The Gift of Fear was one of the best books she'd ever read. The subtitle, "And Other Survival Signals that Protect Us from Violence," gives one a fair idea of the book's content, which focuses on learning to spot "even subtle signs of danger -- before it's too late." This should be a great read!
Well, that was my holiday book haul, and I'm looking forward to these five reads. Now it's your turn: What books have you received lately?
Chris Shearer Posts a Free Story
Over at his blog, A Pulp Solemnity, award-winning author, meatpunker, and all-around cool guy Chris Shearer just posted a very short story called "Such Sweet Thunder". It lives up to the title. Check it out here.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Good Sign...
Christmas time is family time here in the Braddock household, and that's a great thing. Love it.
But here's a good thing that runs contrariwise: I'm anxious to write.
I won't write now, as I'm loving time with my wife, who so rarely gets time off work, and with the rest of the family, but I'm at least a little distracted by wanting to return to Perils of the Road, and that's a very, very good thing, I think...
But here's a good thing that runs contrariwise: I'm anxious to write.
I won't write now, as I'm loving time with my wife, who so rarely gets time off work, and with the rest of the family, but I'm at least a little distracted by wanting to return to Perils of the Road, and that's a very, very good thing, I think...
Monday, December 24, 2012
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Progress...
Another good day yesterday. Continued to push through the old manuscript, rereading and writing notes -- lots and lots of notes. With this new session behind me, I'm even more excited and more confident that this is a book worth saving. More important still, I'm even more confident that I can save it.
I'm going to restructure it and anchor the point-of-view more firmly. It will change the story completely, yet it will save a lot of the stuff that I love.
For now, I'll keep pushing through. Once I'm finished, I'll write out a rough synopsis. Then I'll write a rough and basic outline, paying attention to the three acts. From there, I'll expand that rough outline into a more detailed outline. Finally, I'll lay it all out on butcher paper, with an emphasis on scenes, which I'll group into sequences and acts. With each scene, I'll note the basics, including the conflict and most important of all, how the characters' lives change as a result of each scene.
Lots of work, but it's worth it. With other writing responsibilities lined up, I might never have a full block of time to dedicate exclusively to this, so I need to have it framed out, allowing me to come and go whenever I have an extra hour.
I'm going to restructure it and anchor the point-of-view more firmly. It will change the story completely, yet it will save a lot of the stuff that I love.
For now, I'll keep pushing through. Once I'm finished, I'll write out a rough synopsis. Then I'll write a rough and basic outline, paying attention to the three acts. From there, I'll expand that rough outline into a more detailed outline. Finally, I'll lay it all out on butcher paper, with an emphasis on scenes, which I'll group into sequences and acts. With each scene, I'll note the basics, including the conflict and most important of all, how the characters' lives change as a result of each scene.
Lots of work, but it's worth it. With other writing responsibilities lined up, I might never have a full block of time to dedicate exclusively to this, so I need to have it framed out, allowing me to come and go whenever I have an extra hour.
Friday, December 21, 2012
Yesterday...
Writing went really well... though I wasn't really writing, exactly. My butt-in-the-chair time was focused and productive, and as I went through the old manuscript (Perils of the Road), all sorts of stuff came clear to me. The two most important things: I really love this story, and I think I know how to fix it.
Such fun -- and I'm looking forward to working on it again this morning. I love it when writing sweeps me up like this, and I start stealing the odd minute here and there, obsessing over the story morning, noon, and night.
Such fun -- and I'm looking forward to working on it again this morning. I love it when writing sweeps me up like this, and I start stealing the odd minute here and there, obsessing over the story morning, noon, and night.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Time to Write...
I have a few (hopefully) uninterrupted hours today, and I'm going to make the most out of them, unplugging from the web, thumbing the phone to silence, and sinking into the new book. Fun, fun, fun!
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Uh oh...
I think I've started my next book.
While this might sound like great news, it's a mixed blessing. I have a revisions to finish, and I'm contracted to finish another book -- not to mention the other one 60% written...
But this "new" one has me by the throat. I wrote a bunch of it (77,000 words + hundreds of pages of notes) years ago, meandering all over and finally throwing it aside. Okay... that's not entirely true. It threw me aside, like a rodeo bull tossing a lightweight rider.
A couple days ago, I was thinking about it, though, and the old light bulb went off, and here we go again. The last couple of years, I've spent a lot of time thinking about structure and characters, and returning to the old book, I'm seeing huge (but fixable) problems with both of those aspects. And after a couple days of pouring through the pages, I'm seeing how it could be a much, much better book, while still retaining the stuff that kept me coming back to it.
One piece of which is disturbing levels of violence...
But mostly it's the characters. I've never slept quite soundly, after abandoning them. I really like them. Even if the protagonist and point of view need changing, I think they're the best characters I've ever written.
So here we go again. I've packed my 60%-finished novel into mothballs. While I wait for the editorial letter that will direct my revisions on the finished book, I'm going to jump into the "new" one, which is called Perils of the Road.
While this might sound like great news, it's a mixed blessing. I have a revisions to finish, and I'm contracted to finish another book -- not to mention the other one 60% written...
But this "new" one has me by the throat. I wrote a bunch of it (77,000 words + hundreds of pages of notes) years ago, meandering all over and finally throwing it aside. Okay... that's not entirely true. It threw me aside, like a rodeo bull tossing a lightweight rider.
A couple days ago, I was thinking about it, though, and the old light bulb went off, and here we go again. The last couple of years, I've spent a lot of time thinking about structure and characters, and returning to the old book, I'm seeing huge (but fixable) problems with both of those aspects. And after a couple days of pouring through the pages, I'm seeing how it could be a much, much better book, while still retaining the stuff that kept me coming back to it.
One piece of which is disturbing levels of violence...
But mostly it's the characters. I've never slept quite soundly, after abandoning them. I really like them. Even if the protagonist and point of view need changing, I think they're the best characters I've ever written.
So here we go again. I've packed my 60%-finished novel into mothballs. While I wait for the editorial letter that will direct my revisions on the finished book, I'm going to jump into the "new" one, which is called Perils of the Road.
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Monday, December 17, 2012
Permuted Press Slates BREW for August 2013!
Woo-hoo!
Permuted Press, your one-stop-shop for everything post-apocalyptic, bought my debut novel, Brew, slating it (tentatively) for August, 2013, with an unabridged audio version to release simultaneously from Audible.com. I'm stoked!
In case you're curious, here's a quick pitch of Brew, followed by kind words from some of my favorite authors.
Ever been to a big college town on a football Saturday
night? Loud drunks glut the streets, swaggering about in roaring packs, laughing
and leering like sailors on shore leave. These nights crackle with a dark
energy born of incongruity; for beneath all that smiling and singing sprawls a
bedrock of malice.
Erupting from this mean soil is Brew, a novel of survival horror that unfolds in a single,
apocalyptic night, when hard-partying College Heights swaps beer pong and
karaoke for arson, rape, murder, and cannibalism. One minute, everyone's having
a blast, partying it up after another football victory; the next minute, all
those crowded bars, balconies, and house parties look like so many acres of
hell.
An embattled cast of unlikely heroes, including a
charismatic drug dealer, a disenfranchised army vet, and a smart,
tough-as-leather girl, struggles to survive, while Herbert Weston, the
brilliant sociopath who engineered the entire catastrophe, strolls the chaos,
fulfilling sadistic fantasies.
"Brew is a keg of dark fun and Braddock pops the thing like a shook-up bottle of Bud. It's got brains and it's got heart. The late Richard Laymon would have loved this one. Me? I gulped it right down, with no hangover in the morning." – Jack Ketchum, four-time Stoker Award winner and author of The Girl Next Door and The Lost
"Bill Braddock's Brew is a heady mix of high-octane horror, razor-sharp characterization, and full-throttle action. Flesh-eating mayhem has never been so intoxicating!" -- Tim Waggoner, author of Like Death and The Harmony Society
"If you're going to chow down on people, you need to wash it down with something delicious. Brew is a deeply satisfying treat of a novel. Scary as hell, deep as the pit, and wickedly enjoyable." --Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Flesh & Bone and Assassin’s Code
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