Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Dracula v. Hitler

Hello all! Very excited to send another update out, we hit 300 pre-orders this weekend. As momentum going into the final 40 day stretch, this is great news. Another chapter went up today, and if you find it appealing, give a thought to ordering if you haven't, and/or share enthusiasm for the project on your socials. I would be very grateful, hitting 750 preorders is a big step that will improve the quality and reach of the project immensely.

As incentive/thanks, I will be sending updates out with "How-To" screenplay writing tips for the next several weeks. Hopefully they will be useful to aspiring writers, or experienced ones alike. Screenwriting is a unique beast, and one I've specialized in over the years, and I'm excited to share my methods and advice. If you're not a writer, maybe the tips may spark interest in other creative outlets for readers. 

I have more bonus incentives to come as well. Stay tuned for those, and again, thank you for the orders. Dracula will fight one day soon for all of us.

Pat

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    Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for The Last Machine in the Solar System

    Dear Machiners! 

     I only have time for a very quick update today because the Sword & Laser is in full sprint to the finish mode and I feel like a politician out amongst the people shaking hands on election day. 

    This is my only campaign. Almost guaranteed I will not run another crowdfunding campaign, at least one like this, which leverages my extended network to such a great extent. So failure is not an option, especially at this late stage when we have tasted so much success. 

    As we know though, nothing is won until the contest is officially over. So I must implore you, if you follow this project and have not yet pre-ordered, please do so. 

    At the moment, we may or may not still be in 2nd place. This amazing story has held 2nd place for the last four and a half weeks! To be quite honest, I am a little too competitive to feel very good if we slipped to third at the end. I know getting published is getting published and I will certainly do a dance and feel amazing. But for a moment, I’ll be disappointed about the way the campaign lost steam at the end and was overtaken. 

    So let’s not let that happen! 

    This is a 2nd place campaign, and it has felt that way for several weeks. The Animal in Man has dominated the competition and my congratulations to the fantastic Joe Asphahani! Craig Munro also has a wonderful project, and I enjoyed learning more about it last night on the Sword & Laser podcast with Tom and Veronica. If you haven't watched the interview yet, you can check it out right here:

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6BT-qJERU_s 

    Oh, and if you are a fellow Inkshares author following along but haven't pre-ordered, I almost invariably order back. Always happy to swap pre-orders to support my fellow authors! 

    On to the finish!

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      Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Women Like Us

      Hey!  Happy Hump Day everybody!  With much needed snow blanketing the Sierras lately my thoughts turn to skiing, and while I plot a trip to the mountains, maybe you'd enjoy a little bit of plot about skiing from "Women Like Us"!  About 90 pre-orders to go by Mid-February so if you are following and haven't ordered, why not jump in?  If you're a fellow inkshares author, I'll reciprocate with a pre-order if you jump in now too.  

      So on to a small passage about skiing from the mind of Edith Vale as she drives her grandson and his friend up north. This passage includes a tip about how to de-stress Edith Style.  You might want to try it!

      Ski Excerpt

      Of course the place was gone. All the good things went away, thought Edith Vale, as her old turbodiesel chugged north and passed the spot on Interstate 5 where, for years, there was that funky little diner they’d stop at when she, Frank and Andrew drove from Pasadena to Tahoe for their annual winter vacation. Now some massive gas station and truck stop had taken its place, vulgar and ugly like everything else new. She always looked forward to the diner, which had a giant neon sign in the Googie style that shot up into the sky like a starburst and could be seen like a beacon from miles away, the halfway point of the journey. There they’d fortify themselves with warm white toast slathered in good sweet butter and slipped into wax bags, along with cups of steamy hot chocolate, which they’d take back to the big Pontiac wagon Edie drove in those days and nibble on and sip after hitting the road again, as Frank never wanted to lose any time on the slopes by actually sitting down inside the diner for the snack. The trip to Tahoe was always the longer of the ski trips they’d make through the winter. Smaller ones were made to local mountains – Big Bear or even better, Waterman, in the San Gabriels and barely an hour north of Pasadena, albeit on a road full of frighteningly treacherous curves. Sometimes Edie would go on those day trips with Andrew and Frank, but sometimes she’d let the boys go alone and stay home so she could catch up on her magazines. She loved that quiet time, made even better with a warm bubble bath, a daiquiri and a couple of Miltowns. Indeed those days were like mini-vacations, the house so peaceful, and she didn’t need to sit down and make plans and lists or even pack a thing.

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        Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Deus Hex Machina

        Gah I was mentioned on the Sword & Laser podcast!  Deus Hex Machina is officially FAMOUS! If you haven't watched the latest episode, they interview the current top three Inkshares finalists, and then mention my book at the end.  Very exciting stuff.  I loved Craig's story about his wife and how he started writing.

        We are currently at 94 orders, and the incomparable A.C. Weston has graciously decided to run a little contest in support of DHM. If we get ten more people ordering, up to 104, then she will raffle off an original inked panel she's creating from the DHM graphic novel to one of those ten people.  So awesome, I cannot handle it!  Check out just one of the awesome panels here:

        She's just so good, isn't she? I was so honored when she said she wanted to try her hand at a page from the old script. This sort of makes me want to update the script with the changes from the novel and get the whole thing drawn...but novel first! Focus Mandie!

        Anyway, if you want a chance be one of the next ten people to order the DHM!  

        Lastly, we are halfway to my next novel giveaway raffle, and only 65 orders away from 5th place. I know it seems like a long way to go, but we have a lot of followers so maybe these two contests will pull some lurkers out of the woodwork. I would love nothing more than to end this contest in 5th and maybe even 4th place. I think it's important to have a woman in the top five, don't you?

        Alright, I hope I get the chance to do a raffle drawing today, so I'll say see ya later rather than goodbye.  Cheers!


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          Thomas J. Arnold sent an update for Exile, Magus

          Tuesday update time!  Except its Wednesday because I forgot until late last night that yesterday was Tuesday...  The hecticness has done a number on my ability to remember days apparently.

          Only 9 days left to get Exile, Magus into Quill and your hands!  We have continued to make progress with daily sales in the low numbers as well as daily follower gains, but ultimately the sales are not coming in as quickly as they need to be considering the short time remaining.  I'm continuing to push hard, but if we're going to get Exile, Magus out with this campaign then I really need all of you who have followed but haven't ordered yet to please order now.  We're currently at 84 sold between 76 readers, and with 280 followers that means if the 204 of you who haven't ordered were to order then we would be at 288 preorders which is well above the Quill goal.  Help me get this book published and into your hands!

          Unfortunately I haven't finished the narrative blog post concerning the Melexi and Thirosians, mainly due to helping some friends move over the weekend and thus having my weekend writing time pretty well gutted.  I'm still at work on it, though the work week doesn't leave me a lot of time to write either.  That means it will take me until at least this weekend and possibly until next week to get that finished and posted.  I apologize for this.  

          That's all I've got for today, so remember to order your copy and recommend to others.  Thanks for your time, support, and always keep reading and enjoying!
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            Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Lies and Deception

            Good morning 

            quick update this morning, promotional video is now live :)

            credits goes to Yicheng Liu author of : The remains of civilisation.

            have a great day fellow backers and followers :)

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              Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Transilience

              I promised an update yesterday and here it is today. A day late but hopefully you won't feel short-changed.

              First off, my thanks to A.C. Weston for supporting Transilience and for allowing me to wax on at length about the role of females in the novel. I encourage everyone to check out her Author page and her book, She is the End, which has cleared the eBook publishing milestone.

              Now...

              Why Mars? Why set my novel on the Red Planet?

              I know right? Mars Mars Marsity Mars Mars

              Lots of news about Mars. How we are going to go there. How we are going to get there. How we are going to live there. How we are going to science the shit out of it and make it the next hot spot travel destination. It makes sense to capitalize on the fervor, right??

              Ah yes...if only I possessed that level of cleverness, or foresight, when I sat down to write Transilience. Because I fear my reasons are far more pedestrian than a keen insight into these sort of things.

              Deep breath. Release slowly. And deliver the sad truth....

              I chose to set Transilience on Mars because I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that I could not convincingly set the novel in an existing city. It's been nearly a decade since I lived in a major metropolitan area. A decade!

              I lived in Detroit. I am from Detroit. Well...that is to say, I grew up in the suburbs, went into the city for baseball and hockey games and then left. However, I did actually live in the city when I went to grad. school. I also lived in Ann Arbor, which is a pretty amazing city for a place that began life as a college town.

              However, my time spent in these places specifically are now nothing more than memories. Places frozen in time. Perhaps they exist currently much in the same way as when I haunted their streets, but I can't say for certain. Doubt is never a good position from which to begin any undertaking.

              To make an attempt to locate my novel in Detroit or any other place on Earth would require the heavy use of the Internet. But how much conviction, how much authenticity can one conjure from Google Maps and web searches? Where ever I chose to set Transilience would've about as much substance as those stage towns in Westerns. Looks good from the outside, just don't poke your head through the doorway. It'll destroy the illusion.

              Chandler's LA, Dickens or Doyle's London, Ian Rankin and Alexander McCall Smith's Edinburgh, Capote's New York, Murakami's Tokyo. Larsson's Stockholm and so on and so forth. All of their novels feature a city that possess a vitality to it. A familiarity that is imparted to the reader by the experiences of the author and how the city has shaped their view of the world. You can't recreate that type of authenticity from a web browser.

              That left me with the decision to create a city on my own. I used my imagination and my memories of the places in which I have lived. And viola! New London came into existence! It is an amalgam of all that I love about some of the greatest places on our little planet.

              I chose Mars because I believe it is the next great frontier for human exploration and settlement. However, I also chose Mars because Lewis's Out of the Silent Planet and Burrough's John Carter of Mars series left an indelible print on my mind. And, I chose Mars because I first watched Total Recall at that age when things stick with you. The same goes for Mars Base Sara, the Mars Staging Grounds and the Mars Orbital Armory floating around the Red Planet (props if you know the references). I chose Mars because it is the birthplace of Spike Spiegel. I think those are all pretty good reasons.

              If I haven't lost you yet, it might be because you're wondering why, if I did choose to place my city and all my characters on Mars, it isn't a bit more exotic. Good question...even if I didn't pose it as a question. 

              I believe that in the expansion of one civilization or civilizations there has been a concerted effort to recreate the familiar. As the Greeks and, then, the Romans pushed the boundaries of the empires outward, they built cities that all contained stuff that made them very Greek, or Roman, right? Amphitheaters, baths, forums, architecture, aqueducts, and so forth. The familiar.

              Once we colonize Mars, I see the same thing happening. I see a nascent city on Mars as a reflection of the people who founded it and populated it. It will contain the familiar. Because it doesn't matter how far into the future we will go, there will always be seedy bars, run down factories, and utilitarian architecture juxtaposed against the outward of expression of wealth and power.

              Oh! And the ending wouldn't work very well on Earth. There's that too.

              Cheers!

              Kev

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                Thomas J. Arnold followed Not Afraid of the Fall
                Not Afraid of the Fall: 114 days through 38 cities in 15 countries.
                Culled from on-the-go daily journal entries across 15 countries and 38 cities comes an exhilarating travel-inspired story, tracing one couple’s quest for true adventure above all else.
                Thomas J. Arnold followed Shadow Incandescent
                Shadow Incandescent
                After global calamity, humanity’s elite retreated underground in a desperate attempt to save the human race. Sixty years later, their youth will discover the dark and bloody secrets underlying their Utopia.
                Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for THE BONES OF THE PAST

                A Quick mid-week update!

                I just finished a hangout with Sword and Laser’s Veronica and Tom, as well as my fellow Inkshares authors Joseph Asphahani - The Animal in Man, and Matthew Sobin - The Last Machine in the Solar System.

                You can watch the interview in full here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6BT-qJERU_s&feature=youtu.be

                The event was a lot of fun and gave all three of us the opportunity to discuss our projects. Joseph even pre-ordered my book just after the event, and I have now reciprocated! (Thanks Joseph!)

                We’re still in 3rd place and that is fantastic! But anything can happen in the time that remains. So for the days, hours, and minutes that remain, we need to keep the momentum going. There are still a lot of people following the project who haven’t clicked that pre-order button – there’s no better time than now to pick up a copy!

                There are now 2 days, 16 hours and 32 minutes left in this contest - yes I have a countdown timer on my desktop :)

                Thank you all again and again for your help and support!!!

                �=

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