Guest Post: A Message from Author Bill DeSmedt

Hey, everybody! During my new media travels over the past five years, I’ve met a lot of terrifically talented and kindhearted folk … but few are as classy and clever as author Bill DeSmedt. I’ve known him since 2006, when we were both releasing our science fiction novels as free serialized audiobooks over at Podiobooks.com.

Bill has some terrific news to share about his book Singularity, and I’ve given him the stage to tell you all about it. I hope you’re as delighted by this news as I am. Take it away, Bill!

–J.C.

~ ~ ~

Thanks very much, Hutch, for the virtual soapbox. And thanks as well to all you Beta-clones for lending a virtual ear to what I hope is some exciting news.

But first, perhaps an introduction is in order — an introduction not to me, but to my book. Some of you who first encountered Hutch’s 7th Son on the Podiobooks website may have lingered to give a listen to the podcast of Singularity by yours truly. But in case you missed it there, Singularity is an award-winning science thriller that kicks off with the most violent cosmic collision in recorded history — and keeps right on building suspense with what Kevin J. Anderson calls “convincing research and locomotive pacing.”

The collision in question was the Tunguska Event of 1908 — a multi-megaton explosion that flash-incinerated a swath of Siberian forest twice the size of Greater New York in a blast felt a thousand miles away, yet left behind no crater, no fragments, not a shred of hard evidence as to what might have caused it.

Of all the explanations offered in the century or so since the Event, surely one of the weirdest is that the culprit was a submicroscopic primordial black hole — smaller than an atom, heavier than a mountain, older than the stars.

Cool, no? But there’s just one little hitch: A black hole that small and that dense should have cut through the solid body of the earth like the sun through morning mist and rocketed out the other side of the globe, wreaking as much devastation on leaving as it did on arrival. The failure to find any sign of such an “exit event” tolled a death knell for the black hole impact theory…

…or did it? What if the damned thing went in — and never came out? What if that fantastic object is still down there, hurtling round and round through the Earth’s mantle, slowly consuming the planet itself? What if you could capture it, and harness its awesome continuum-warping power to transform the world — or end it?

That’s how Singularity starts out. As to finding out where it all ends up, that’s where the good news I mentioned at the outset comes in.

Because as of today Singularity is available as an ebook, right here.

I hope you’ll take a moment to check out what Larry Niven has called “a wonderful, intricate story, wonderfully well told.”

–Bill

How Are You Enjoying The Mescaline?

The funniest thing I’ve seen in weeks. Reminds me of a similar scene in Go.

Original post is here. See more from the “Animals Talking In All Caps” site here.

Get This Book: Julien Smith’s “The Flinch”

Ah. You’re here! Awesome. Make yourself at home. Take a load off. Put your feet up on my digital coffee table. Fire up the XBox. Hell, drink straight from the milk carton. Mi casa es su casa, right?

Get really comfy, at least for a few paragraphs. Enjoy it while you can. Because the mind-wracking anxiety and discomfort will come soon enough … and trust me: that’s a good thing.

I want you to meet somebody I appreciate and admire. Dude’s name is Julien Smith. I’ve followed his work for years. He updates his blog in hurricane bursts of creativity, intensity and razor-sharp insight — often writing about how this titanic Internet thing affects how we perceive and interact with the world. He’s co-host (with other whip-smart folk) on a podcast that, at its core, explores the topic of how we communicate online. Well beyond the social media nerdsphere, he’s best known as the New York Times bestselling co-author of Trust Agents, the most resonant book about online relationship-building I’ve ever read.

But Julien’s no Social Media Douchebag™. He’s always been smarter, and always soared higher, than those buzzword-squawking parrots. Julien seems to strive for authenticity in nearly everything he does. This is a man who has no patience for excuses, and even less for bullshit. He’s not an angry man. He’s honest — honest in a way that slices through the blubbery, blubbering excuses so many of us use to rationalize the fundamental dissatisfaction in our lives.

Which brings me to mind-wracking anxiety and discomfort … and The Flinch.

The Flinch is Julien’s new ebook. It was released today over at Amazon. The Flinch is a brisk read; you’ll tear through it in an hour or so. And it’s FREE, and always will be. Go to Amazon and get your copy right now.

I know you didn’t click that link. You’re still here. That’s cool. But know that what I say next, I say with absolute certainty:

You need to read this book.

I have absolute confidence making that proclamation because I needed to read this book. See, I am haunted and held captive by something Julien calls “the flinch” — the self-preserving flight instinct in the famous fight or flight equation. Here’s the rub: You’re haunted by the flinch, too. Julien explains:

The flinch is your real opponent, and information won’t help you fight it. It’s behind every unhappy marriage, every hidden vice, and every unfulfilled life. Behind the flinch is pain avoidance, and dealing with pain demands strength you may not think you have. … Behind every act you’re unable to do, fear of the flinch is there, like a puppet master, steering you off course.

Everyone is haunted by the flinch. “It’s a reaction that brings up old memories and haunts you with them,” Julien writes. “It tightens your chest and makes you want to run. It does whatever it must do to prevent you from moving forward. … Whatever form it takes, the flinch is there to support the status quo.”

Can you accurately count the times in your life when that chest-tightening fear overpowered your desire to change — to surge beyond the doldrums of Status Quo? I can’t. Hell, I can’t accurately count those instances in my current daily life. Oh, all the things I pine to do! Oh, all the things I postpone because I know exactly what to tell myself to rationalize my fear-soaked cowardice. When I stop squinting and honestly examine my life, I see that I’m surrounded by the flinch.

I bet when you stop squinting, you’ll see the flinch everywhere too.

Julien’s thoughtful, zero-bullshit, examination of this fear is well worth the download and read. The very fact he was able to give such a powerful force an instantly-recognizable name is worthy of your peepers, too. But let’s not kid ourselves: Naming a fear makes it easier to identify and discuss … but calling something “the flinch” doesn’t provide much backbone in overcoming it.

Thankfully, that’s what the rest of Julien’s ebook is about.

I dare not reveal the steps Julien suggests to address and rise above the primal fear of the flinch … or the simple yet revelatory “homework” assignments he gives readers. That stuff, you can easily discover on your own. However, I will promise that by reading The Flinch, you’ll learn something about yourself … and you might see that you have far more gumption than you ever imagined.

The Flinch isn’t a brutal book, but it does challenge you to toughen up, glare at the opponent inside you, and step into a boxing ring to take care of some serious fucking business. As Julien writes:

In a fight, there is a fundamental difference between boxers and everyone else. The guys who have trained are different. If you hit them, they don’t flinch. It takes practice to get there, but if you want to fight, you have no choice. It’s the only way to win.

Which is why you must get brave, and acknowledge the mind-wracking anxiety and discomfort — the flinch. It’s why you need to read this book.

–J.C.

Liner Notes: 7th Son – The Soundtrack

Yesterday, I released 7th Son: The Soundtrack, nearly 30 minutes of classical music inspired by my 7th Son technothriller trilogy. If you haven’t already, you oughta take a listen.

The terrific music was composed by University of Rhode Island student Brandon Winrich, a talented young man who’s set his eyes on someday creating musical scores for films, TV shows and video games. If his 7th Son music is any indication, Brandon won’t have a problem finding work after graduation.

In addition to providing a recording of that evening’s performance, Brandon gave me some incredible liner notes, packed with comments and artistic insights about the creation of 7th Son: The Soundtrack, all written by him. He was keen to share his creative commentary with my audience. I was happy to oblige, and designed a downloadable PDF for you.

A link to these liner notes is below. If you’ve ever wanted a behind-the-scenes peek at a composer’s creative process, you should check it out.

–J.C.

Music: 7th Son – The Soundtrack

Early last month, I traveled from my Denver home to Rhode Island to meet Brandon Winrich, a music composition major at the University of Rhode Island. It was the conclusion of a remarkable artistic journey for him, and was a life-changing day for me — a day three years in the making.

In 2008, Brandon contacted me, asking for permission to compose orchestral music inspired by my 7th Son sci-fi thriller novel trilogy. As a lifelong fan of classical music, I was humbled and delighted … and I gave Brandon the green light without reservation.

The following year, Brandon composed and helped perform Movement 1: Descenta 6:45 song inspired by the events in the first 7th Son novel. This was part of a project for his musical studies. In 2010, he paid similar homage to Deceit with another public performance. But this year, for his third and final 7th Son-inspired composition (and senior recital), Brandon emailed and asked if I might personally attend the live performance of movements 1 and 2 … and a first-ever performance of Movement 3: Destruction. The trilogy of songs would be played by 10 musicians, and conducted by a URI graduate.

I booked the flight that night.

The audio file at the end of this post is a recording of that live performance. Click play, and you’ll hear the work of a talented young man embarking on what can only be an incredibly successful artistic career. I am deeply touched and honored that anyone would be so inspired by my work to create something so compelling. I’m grateful Brandon allowed me to freely share this recording with you.

Here is a guide of the 7th Son Trilogy scenes Brandon re-created in this 25-minute performance. Note that movements — each named after 7th Son novels — are introduced by a long note played by horns … the very hmmmmm ”scene change” sound heard in the 7th Son podcast novels.

7th Son, Movement 1: Descent is comprised of 8 sections:

  1. “The president of the United States is dead.  He was murdered in the morning sunlight by a four-year-old boy.”
  2. A Former Life
  3. Send in the Clones
  4. Descent / The Womb
  5. Contacting the Outside
  6. Following Alpha’s Trail / “I Comply” / Hacking the CDC
  7. Showdown at Folie à Deux
  8. “It’s Never Over”

7th Son, Movement 2: Deceit is comprised of 8 sections:

  1. John Alpha(s) and Special(k)
  2. Homecoming / To the Fallen
  3. Alert Status 1: Lockdown
  4. The Proto Womb
  5. Hack Back
  6. Prime Time
  7. Escape from Prophecy, Texas
  8. Wild Card / Tanker Chase / The Fifth Wheel

7th Son, Movement 3: Destruction is comprised of 12 sections:

  1. Killjoy
  2. 760 United Nations Plaza
  3. The Cavalry Arrives
  4. Catalyst
  5. A Fateful Ride
  6. Obsidian
  7. The Life and Times of Kilroy 2.0
  8. Return to the 7th Son Facility
  9. Commotion in the Common Room / The Madman’s March
  10. The Final Battle
  11. Aftermath
  12. Epilogue – 6 months later

Tomorrow, I’ll post a PDF of incredible liner notes, packed with comments and artistic insights written by Brandon himself. He was keen to share his creative commentary with you, and I am delighted to oblige.

Before I present the recording, I want to introduce you to the 10 musical performers of 7th Son: The Soundtrack. The musicians are URI students. The conductor is a URI alum. All are supremely talented.

  • Geri Muller — Flute, Piccolo
  • Theresa Procopio — Oboe, English Horn
  • Brandon Winrich — Clarinet
  • Charles Larson — Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone
  • Chelsea Anderson — Trumpet
  • Erin Dawson & Michael Rayner — Trombone
  • Benjamin Boisclair, Zachary Friedland & Christopher Vinciguerra — Percussion
  • Stephen Grueb — Conductor

I hope you are as dazzled by this three-movement performance as I was. It’s further proof that 7th Son fans remain the greatest fans in the world.

–J.C.

What You Said: Your Three Favorite Podcasts

Today, I posted on Twitter, Facebook and Google+:

Yo, I need YOUR help! I’m sniffing around for new things to listen to. What are your THREE FAVORITE podcasts? Hit me!

Here’s what you said. Thanks for all the wonderful suggestions!

On Twitter…

Guest Post: A Message from Author Jeremy Robinson

Hey, everybody — J.C. Hutchins here. Not long ago, I allowed my pal and fellow new media author Seth Harwood to commandeer this here blog to tell you about some exciting things he was working on. Today, I’m doing the same for the supremely-talented Jeremy Robinson, a storyteller who excels at telling tales in many genres.

Jeremy wants to introduce himself to you fine peeps — and I thought be best-possible way to do that was to let him choose any three topics he wanted, and share his thoughts about them with you. Along the way, he’ll share some cool news about his latest novel The Sentinel and tell you about an opportunity to win a free Amazon Kindle e-reader. Two Kindles are up for grabs, so it’s worth your while to learn about Jeremy’s work … and how you might become a lucky winner.

So long from me — the rest of this post is all Jeremy!

Welcome to Jeremy Robinson’s Great Kindle Giveaway and Blog Tour…

“Hurray for free Kindles!” you say, but who the hell is Jeremy Robinson? Allow me to introduce myself. I’m the author of 11 mixed genre novels, published in 10 languages, including the popular fantasy YA series The Last Hunter, and the fast-paced Jack Sigler series (also known as Chess Team — not nearly as nerdy as it sounds), Pulse, Instinct and Threshold from Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin’s Press. I’m the co-author of an expanding series of novellas deemed the Chesspocalypse, which take place in the Chess Team universe. If that doesn’t wet your whistle, I’m also known as Jeremy Bishop, the #1 Amazon.com horror author of The Sentinel and the controversial novel, Torment. For more about me, or my books, visit my website.

J.C. told me I could tackle any three topics I wanted in my guest post — so I did just that. My three topics are below. I hope you enjoy them.

Also know that there are rewards for sloughing through the questions and answers. I’ll be giving away two Kindles to two randomly selected readers who sign up for my newsletter. Details on the giveaway can be found below. On to the Q&A!

You published two novels, Beneath and Kronos as free podcasts novels a few years back. What was your podcast experience like, and why haven’t you released another podcast novel since?

In general, my experience with releasing the two podcast novels was great. Kronos has been listened to, in full, 19,500 times. Beneath has been listened to 16,600 times. From what I understand, those are very good stats. Maybe not Sigler or Hutchins stats, but respectable. But have that podcast fanbase translated to sales of my other, non-free books (which is the goal when giving something away)? It’s impossible to say for sure, but my guess would be no. In fact, when the podcasts were new and being downloaded in large numbers, there was no noticeable uptick in sales of my non-free books. I suspect this is because there is a glut of free books available now, so why bother paying for something when there are other free options? Continue Reading…

Podcast: Interview with Chuck Wendig, Storyteller

After months away from the podcast feed, J.C. extracts himself from a hearty heap of freelance storytelling to chat with another freelance storyteller, the supremely talented Chuck Wendig. Chuck has professionally written in many media and industries, including gaming, novels, screenplays, transmedia and more. “Versatility” is a topic of great interest in this chat.

During the conversation, J.C. and Chuck discuss a freelancer’s life, the compelling opportunities for writers these days, and Chuck’s remarkable and varied storytelling career. If you’re a working writer, or dreaming of becoming one, you won’t want to miss Chuck’s incredible story, and his approach to telling tales.

  • Visit Chuck’s website Terribleminds, and follow him on Twitter
  • Learn more about (and pre-order!) Chuck’s upcoming novel Double Dead
  • Get your learn-on about Chuck and Lance Weiler’s gobsmackingly awesome transmedia experience, Pandemic
  • Snag copies of Chuck’s nonfiction ebooks (Penmonkey books One and Two, and 250 Things…), which offer insight on the writerly life
  • Read the spectacularly cool transcript of Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Lawrence Kasden as they brainstorm Raiders of the Lost Ark

Guest Post: A Message from Author Seth Harwood

Hey, everybody! I’d like to share some cool stuff concocted by one of my new media author pals, Seth Harwood. Seth’s written a guest post that shares some deets about his recent successes, his incredible new (and free) content, and his plans to make a splash in the Amazon Kindle store with his latest ebook release Jack Palms II: This Is Life.

Seth and I go way back, and I’m honored to share his great news with you.

Take it away, Seth!

–J.C.

~ ~ ~

Hey Beta Clones,

Your boy here, Seth Harwood, dropping a line to let you know I’m back on the podcast scene with a new novel, a new special edition print book of Jack Palms II: This Is Life and a whole series of ebooks springing to life right around the corner.

But first and foremost, let’s get to what’s in it for you: more free crime fiction in the action/thriller genre as I present In Broad Daylight, my first story featuring FBI agent Jess Harding. Here she’s chasing a serial killer of young women across Alaska in a summer of 20-hour days. When she starts to realize that the killer knows as much about her as she does about him, it starts getting messy. Will she find him before he finds her?

I just put up episode six today and you can get them all here with my talk at sethharwood.com or on Podiobooks.com without my big yap. I hope you’ll come on over and give this story a try. If you like thrillers, action movies, police procedurals or stuff by Sigler and Hutch, I think you’ll dig it. Listen as even Nathan Lowell gives it the thumbs up!

Next up I have a Kickstarter project that ends on Saturday at 9am Pacific, Noon eastern. This has been a wonderfully successful way to fund a lot of the projects I have coming up this winter in ebook-land and offers the chance to get special editions of This is Life in hardcover or paperback AND copies of lots more upcoming work. Time is short, so if you want, you must act soon.

And this brings me to my last point: my proposed domination of Amazon’s Kindle bestseller charts. I know, I know, but let’s at least try. This is Life is now available for Kindle at Amazon and B&N’s Nook! Picking one up at $2.99 will really help this podcaster get noticed by more ebook buyers and sell some product! If you want to support and don’t have a Kindle, no problem: you can download a Kindle App here for FREE and buy the book then.

That’s all from me then, clones! Thanks big time to J.C. for letting me post this piece and I hope to see you in your earbuds this fall! In Broad Daylight is waiting!

–Seth

ARGfest Keynote 2011: “Getting To Good”

I had the great honor of presenting the keynote speech at ARGfest 2011 (Aug. 18-21), a convention that celebrates transmedia storytelling and gaming. I was humbled by the transmedia community’s kindness and support.

During my presentation, I shared the important creative and business lessons I’ve learned during my 15 years a professional storyteller, and discussed a critical ingredient in becoming a creative professional — something I call “getting to good.”

Many thanks to Brandie Minchew (@OctoberDreaming on Twitter) and ARGN.com for providing the audio recording from the event. I hope you enjoy it.

–J.C.

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