Matthew Jordan followed Christopher Huang
Christopher Huang
A fan of Golden Age detective fiction. (Check out my second book, "Unnatural Ends"! It’s more intere...
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Christopher Huang liked an update for Ageless

Hey gang. Long time no see...chat...whatever.

If you didn’t know, I enjoy doing this writing thing...like a lot... 

(Did you know Ageless was the first in a trilogy? If you read it, you probably picked up on the fact that there could be more. SPOILER - there is more! Follow Timeless here!)

But, I need your HELP to continue doing this writing thing. (Hint - REVIEW AGELESS on AMAZON and GOODREADS)

I put together the following (very) tentative & (very) ambitious production schedule covering the next few years. See anything you like? I hope so! Let me know what you think. 

@PaulInmanSC on Twitter & Instagram

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    Christopher Huang liked an update for Our Family’s Elephant

    All, thank you for the support. It’s been interesting to see this project’s evolution, and a dream of mine to get this book in the hands of kids nationwide.

    The slow growth of this book has made me doubt that we’re going to be able to sell 190 copies over the course of the next 5 days. Then again, you all might just surprise me, share the project with everyone you can think of, and we might just hit 250 copies to meet the quill goal.

    Nonetheless, I’m going to do my darndest to find a good publisher for this project. 

    Inkshares CEO and I had a quick email exchange, and he informs me that one of Inkshares’s investors is a well known children’s book publisher, and perhaps this would be a great fit for their line of books. 

    Stay tuned and keep sharing!

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      Christopher Huang followed The Titan in the Window
      The Titan in the Window
      The Titan in the Window
      A telepath is kidnapped in 1930s Germany. Forced the new drug, LSD, her twisted dreams are utilized to begin Armageddon.
      Christopher Huang liked an update for Tantalus Depths


      Tantalus Depths has come a long way since this campaign first began. It’s also fallen pretty far here and there, but it’s also come a long way since then.

      The support I’ve seen from all of you has been beyond critical to the success this campaign has seen, but we still have a long way to go. As of today, we need 185 more pre-orders to hit full publication, and we have only about a month to get there.

      I’ve reached out to just about as many people as I can at this point. I’m dependent on you to help bring in new readers; people you know who would like Tantalus Depths who I haven’t had the pleasure of asking about it myself.

      To that end, I’m launching a special promotion from now until the end of my campaign: at the end of my campaign, whoever has referred the most people to buy copies of Tantalus Depths will have a minor planet named after them in the book.

      It won’t be seen, since the entire story takes place on Tantalus 13, and will likely be only a passing reference. However, your planet will become a fixture in Tantalus Depths’ universe; a member world of the Colonial Hegemony, alongside other exotic and mysterious exoplanets such as Showalter, Samrat, Hayden, and Atropos. Your planet will be a part of the canon of this universe, and who knows? We may one day see more of it in future sequels or spinoffs.

      To qualify for this honor, you simply have to be responsible for bringing the largest number of new readers to Tantalus Depths. Your own first order counts as one. If you get a friend to order a copy, that counts as two. A new friend counts as three. It’s that simple.

      If at the end of the campaign there is a tie, the winner will be selected at random from among the top referrers. To prevent abuse of Inkshares’ referral systems, please confirm any new referrals with me via private message.

      Have fun, and get to referring! (especially if you have a cool planet-sounding name.)

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        Christopher Huang followed June R Klein
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        Christopher Huang liked an update for A Beast Requires

        Happy Monday, y’all!


        First off, A Beast Requires is clinging to 10th Place in the Geek & Sundry Fantasy Contest, with 85 backers. Yea, it’s getting to that part of the campaign where every backer matters, so if you haven’t had the opportunity to back A Beast Requires yet, now is definitely the time. At 107 pre-orders, we’re almost halfway to the Quill goal, which is nice.

        So, dragons.

         

        I count myself lucky that so many of you following me are writers. We all know The Struggle. It doesn’t matter how many books you’ve written, or what sort of genre you write, all of our work starts with that first glimmer of an idea. We all cultivate that glimmer, scribbling in notebooks or banging away at a keyboard. We draft, and draft again, searching for beta readers, grammar checkers, and if we’re lucky, an editor. 

        While we are all at different places in our writing, we all remember that first book we poured our souls in. Mine was an absolute train wreck of a fantasy adventure, involving a book, a dog, and an angry teenage wizard. I loved it so much, but twenty years later I can look back and say with absolute certainty, it was a complete pile of words. We get better with every story. Hells, we get better with every draft, and we all know the joy that comes from finishing that final edit. But it’s not our final edit, and we all know the frustration and sadness that looms off in the distant horizon.

        I like writers. Actually, I like content creators, but I’m particularly biased towards writers. And cooks, but that’s an entirely different story. It’s why I’m so thankful so many writers follow me on Inkshares, and how I absolutely lose my shit when another writer backs A Beast Requires. We all know how rough it is, especially how rough an Inkshares campaign is, so it comes as a welcoming comfort every time one of likes the thing I struggled for. I will always try to back as many writers as I’m financially able to. Support means everything to a writer, especially when  you’re just starting out. There will always be The Struggle, and there will always be dragons, but none of us are ever truly going through all this alone. 


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          Christopher Huang liked an update for Murder at the Veterans’ Club

          Dear friends and followers,

          It has been a while since my last update. August has been quiet; I admit to having distanced myself somewhat from the campaign. And now I’m just back from spending the last two weeks out west visiting mom.

          This is my mom’s dog, Ernie. Ernie is sad because "Murder at the Veterans’ Club" has not yet hit the magic 750 mark. Poor Ernie.

          So, we’ll be ramping up again over the course of the week and be back in full gear by week’s end. I hope I can count on your support.

          In the meantime, I’d like to draw everybody’s attention to the following projects:

          1) "Tantalus Depths" by Evan Graham. I’ve mentioned this book before, and I’d like to reiterate my support. It’s got horror, intrigue, mysterious outside forces, a feel for the ensemble, and solid prose. Every so often, there’s a book that will please readers who normally dislike the genre, and I think this might be it.

          2) "The Darkest Places" by Byron Gillan. Here’s a book I’ve been excited about for a long time. It’s a classic cosmic horror as Lovecraft did it, and is set in the 1920s to boot. And yet, not derivative: Gillan promises a more thoughtful examination of the concept of "the Other", and that has me excited all over again.

          3) "The Seventh Age: Dystopia" by Richard Heinz. Heinz has been around much longer than I have, and his first book, "The Seventh Age: Dawn", is slated to hit the bookstores in January. "Dawn" dealt with the return of magic to the modern world; "Dystopia" explores the ramifications some years down the road. I’ve worked with Heinz in "Too Many Controllers", and I can tell you he knows how to craft a story and how to tell it. With "Dawn" and "Dystopia", I promise you won’t be disappointed.

          And now, I’d like to leave you with this video of me reading Siegfried Sassoon’s "Aftermath". How do I sound? Not too awful? One day ... one day! ... I shall finally get a book trailer up on my project page. Until then ... have fun! Keep reading!

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            Christopher Huang liked a review for Black Cloud
            THIS. All of it. As an ER nurse, I know the dark and twisted humor that is a necessity to maintain sanity in the world of emergency medicine. I've thought about doing a book like this for years, but now I know I shouldn't. Landon's all over it, and doing it better than I ever could have. This book needs to be fully funded. I salute you, sir. Well done!
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              Christopher Huang liked a review for Black Cloud
              THIS. All of it. As an ER nurse, I know the dark and twisted humor that is a necessity to maintain sanity in the world of emergency medicine. I've thought about doing a book like this for years, but now I know I shouldn't. Landon's all over it, and doing it better than I ever could have. This book needs to be fully funded. I salute you, sir. Well done!
              like · liked by Sharyl and 5 others

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