Archive - November, 2010

A Special Message from Author Seth Harwood

I rarely let anyone commandeer my website — or my podcast feed — but Seth Harwood’s got something important to share, and I can’t say no to ultra-talented colleagues. I hope you enjoy his audio message, and support the release of Young Junius!

–J.C.

THIS BLOG NOW HIJACKED BY YOUR BOY…

What’s up, everybody, it’s your favorite crime caper commentator Seth Harwood aka Your Boy here to take over J.C.’s feed and give out some audio Young Junius lovin’!

This recording comes from an event I did recently at Borderlands Books here in San Francisco with Scott Sigler. That’s right, the FDO himself showed up and read a few lines. I know you’ll enjoy this section!

Click here to download or listen now.

If you’d like to order your own copy of Young Junius the print novel from Tyrus Books, listen to the complete podcast or read it as a free PDF, come on over to my site now. I hope you’ll spread the word about it if you do.

Enjoy and have a happy holiday!

–Seth

Book Review: Content Rules

I can’t rave enough about Content Rules, the new book by Ann Handley and C.C. Chapman. Here’s what the book is about. My review follows.

Whether it’s bite-sized tweets that allow you to forge relationships on Twitter, blog posts that give your readers must-have advice, ebooks or white papers that engage (and don’t bore), videos that share the human side of your company, interactive webinars that deliver a valuable learning experience, or podcasts that can be downloaded and listened to on the fly (and more!) . . . now more than ever, content rules!

Today, you have an unprecedented opportunity to create a treasury of free, easy-to-use, almost infinitely customizable content that tells the story of your product and your business, and positions you as an expert people will want to do business with.

Ann Handley and C.C. Chapman, business writers, speakers, and marketing thought leaders for clients such as The Coca-Cola Company, HBO, and Verizon Fios, show you how to leverage all of today’s tools to create content that truly speaks to your audience.

My review:

Packed with verve, zero-B.S. insights, tangible examples and success stories, Content Rules absolutely delivers on its promise of providing a practical and achievable road map for businesses to embrace — and celebrate! — content-fueled marketing. Especially heartening is its applicability far beyond the affluent walls of big business; independent businesses and creators will especially benefit from this book.

There’s wisdom in Ann Handley’s and C.C. Chapman’s words, mostly because they hail from the gumption-soaked world of content creation themselves. These authors do far more than pay lip service to the value of content — they breathe it and create it every day.

I rarely endorse books without reservation, but Content Rules is one of those works that is truly a Must Read for businesses, indies, salty creative veterans and curious newcomers. The book is brimming with incalculably valuable anecdotes, how-tos, and hard-earned advice. A steal, at any price.

As a seasoned creator who uses content as a marketing tool to promote his work, I cannot recommend Content Rules more highly. Pick up a copy at Amazon. You won’t regret it.

–J.C.

How Long Does It Take To Make A Podiobook?

I just received an email from an aspiring podiobook author, who wanted to know how long it takes to create a single podcast novel episode. I thought I’d share my reply with you guys.

When I was creating and promoting the  7th Son podcast novel trilogy, the workload broke down like this. These results were also typical for the other podfic projects I’ve completed. For a finished 45-minute episode:

  • 90 minutes to record
  • 5 hours to edit
  • 2 hours to write/record/edit “talky talk” openers and closers
  • 1 hour to upload and post, with shownotes

This doesn’t include the heroic number of hours spent promoting the podiobook, or interacting with listeners via Twitter, Facebook, email and IM. That was often as many as 30 hours a week — from the time I got home from the day gig to the moment I went to bed.

This also doesn’t include the time it took to write, edit, and rewrite the novels before they were recorded as podcasts.

That’s a lot of time, peeps.

–J.C.

New digs, new office

I get a lot of questions from folks about writing and rituals: How many words do you write a day? What software do you use? Do you listen to music when you write?, etc.  Over the years, I’ve also encountered questions about my workspace: What does it look like?

I recently moved from South Florida to the Denver area, and have spent the past month working hard to make my home office (which I use for my creative writing and the day gig) a warm and welcoming place for me to herd words for hours on end. I’m becoming increasingly proud of the office, and — partly to finally answer the question What does it look like? and partly to selfishly, proudly preen at how it’s shaping up — I reckoned it was time to post some photographs. I pray you’ll indulge me. :)

Here’s a shot from the far corner of my new digs: my sole bookshelf is on the left (I’m ditching hard copy in a big way, forsaking the fetishization of printed books and buying ebooks almost exclusively now), and my main desk is on the right. The darkened monitor resting on the filing cabinet is for my Mac mini, which I use as the house’s wireless streaming media server.

For curious tech-heads: On the main desk, I’ve got a vertically-mounted MacBook Pro running the show, a 27″ LED Cinema Display, some Bose speakers for audio, and a ScanSnap document scanner.

Another shot of the desk, before I added the speakers and a statue of Thoth, the Egyptian god who invented writing (whose photo follows this one):

Some spiffy bling on the bookcase shelves include my collection of fan-made, hand-crafted “Beta Clone” figurines and my small Transformers collection. (You can take the boy out of the 1980s, but…)

Being surrounded by inspiring artwork always revs my creative engine. Here’s a rundown of some of what’s now on the walls.

First up, a priceless hand-painted portrait of The Spirit by the late Will Eisner, one of history’s most influential comics creators. I wrote a profile about him for The Palm Beach Post in 2000, and he sent me this magnificent piece as a thank you. Eisner was the best.

Next up: a delightful propaganda-style poster supporting the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund — a worthy cause. I bought this guy about 10 years ago, I think. Finally had it framed when I moved to Colorado.

Here’s a exceptionally dramatic and cool print of a Soviet-era propaganda poster. It reads, “We will smite the lazy worker.” It’s placed behind me, and looms like a thundercloud. Whenever I get whiny, I think of the mantra behind my head and keep typing.

More art, on the far walls, include this awesome print of the cover from the June 1957 issue of Amazing Stories. Humans rising up against their robot oppressors? Can’t beat that with a stick, folks. The magazine also has a great story from Harlan Ellison in  it. How would I know?

Some more geeky goodness, including a print of artwork from the uncut edition of The Stand, signed by artist Bernie Wrightson, the original page 22 from Superman: Metropolis, painted and signed by Ted McKeever, and a sublime signed limited edition print of a girl wearing a jetpack. Because girls with jetpacks are, and will always be, awesome.

I still need to acquire a futon for this far side of the office (sleeping accommodations for guests, and a soft place for me to sit), and perhaps an area rug to make some colors “pop” throughout the room, but aside from that, I think I’m all done decorating. :)

Hope you enjoyed the tour. If you have any questions about my setup, give a shout in the comments. I’ll see if I can answer them!

–J.C.