Erin S. Evan liked an update for Deus Hex Machina

I’ve been here before, sitting in the quiet before the end, wondering what lies on the other side of the storm. I am the crazy person who has entered four contests on Inkshares, one of which I won with a group of amazing talents much larger than mine.  Four contests in a year. I can mark them like seasons in my life on Inkshares.

The first contest was my introduction to Inkshares as a whole. The Nerdist contest came along at a time when I was waiting for my final edit to return on Shadow of the Owl, when I had already written a book, created a cover, bought my ISBNs and prepared to self-publish. I hit submit assuming many things, not the least of which was that it would easy (not unlike self-publishing on its own).

Next I tossed Deus Hex Machina into the Sword & Laser the Sequel contest, largely because I already had a funding campaign for Shadow of the Panther up on the site and didn’t want to resubmit. I’m glad I made that choice, because while I didn’t win that contest, I did get far enough to grab interest in the project from outside and even eventually get the book a light publishing contract. The outside interest ended up pushing me to write a book while I was funding it (something I highly suggest no one ever do), writing a book I originally thought would never see the light of day. It was at this point that I promised I would never do another contest, by the way.

When the Nerdist Video Game contest came along, I was at the right place at the right time with a group of writing colleagues who wanted to try something crazy -- submit an anthology. The result was a first place win for Too Many Controllers, to which I submitted a story I had been working on for years that is currently titled "Final Boss." I am incredibly proud of that story, mostly because it represents my overcoming a huge fear of short fiction that’s hounded me since I let fear push me out of the fiction side  of my creative writing degree at USC. 

And now, The List 2016 is drawing to a close. In little under six hours I will be ending my first year with Inkshares the way I began it: Watching a contest end. I  find myself introspective (obviously) rather than dejected at the results of this contest. Sitting seventh in a contest that I was invited into is a rather big honor. I have a finished manuscript waiting until the contest closes today, one that I firmly believe is the best writing I’ve ever done.  No matter what result happens from this contest, I will be able to look back at this year with Inkshares and smile. I have one book published, two more in production once I send in DHM, and many more projects. I have found a community of disparate writers from around the world, and a strange and wonderful company that links them all together in this crazy publishing fever dream. 

What’s next up for me in 2017? I am about to write another couple of short stories in the Shadow of the Owl universe. Once I have those done and published I’ll be planning out the sequel to DHM and then hammering out the next (and final) version of Shadow of the Panther. That book needs to be finished -- it’s been restarted so many times at this point that it must assume I don’t love it. Luckily I have the outline complete on what it’s going to look like, and I think I’ve settled on a premise that will fit the fantasy of the series while still innovating within it.

Two stories, two books, zero contests: that sounds like a great year to me. If 2016 was the year of funding books, I think 2017 will be the year of writing books, and maybe even publishing a couple too.  That sounds pretty great to me.






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    Erin S. Evan followed Where the Sun Sets
    Where the Sun Sets
    In his quest for redemption, a heartbroken man embarks on a harrowing journey across a time-stopped world to fulfill his dying wife’s only wish.
    Erin S. Evan followed How to Make and Kill the Perfect Man
    How to Make and Kill the Perfect Man
    What do you do when you’re a brilliant robotics engineer but all your mom cares about is that you’re single? You build the perfect boyfriend to get her off your back! And then you fall in love with him! And then you’re screwed.
    Erin S. Evan sent an update for The Pirates of Montana

    What’s up Pirates!!

    First and foremost, a meme because today marks the last Wednesday of 2016:

    It’s been a long time since my last update! To be honest, the last few months have been a whirlwind of working on the manuscript, various supporting documents, etc, to get this book into production. Every time I started to write an update, something amazing happened that made me think, "I’ll finish this later so I can tell them more." As a new novel writer, it’s something I’ve never experienced before, but I’m very thankful for the Inkshares team’s support and encouragement. The Pirates of Montana is going to be amazing, and I’m really excited for you to read it!

    I submitted my second rewrite just a few days ago, and I’ll be working over next 6 to 8 weeks to really tighten the manuscript. It’s already much stronger than what I originally worked on last May, and I’m very excited for where its going. I’ll be posting my new 1st and 2nd chapters very soon, so stay tuned!

    As it stood on Christmas Eve, when I emailed this monster to Inkshares (their request, they are a hardworking bunch!), this is what I submitted:

    88,796 total words and (although you can’t see it on the above graphic) 23 total chapters. That means that when printed, I guesstimate the book will be around ~350 pages long. Writing this document was a mixture of stress, joy, and excitement. I’m happy that the next big step has been taken! So is my family, who got really used to tiptoeing around me after 7 pm when I’d finally have time to work.

    As it stands, the book will be published by September 2017. Yay! I’ve been proofing my back copy and bio, and we should have those finished in early January.  

    Inkshares wrote a wonderful blog post about crowdfunding books. Please read it, as it explains the writing/editing/publishing process, including their timelines for authors (a.k.a ’Why is it taking a year to get my book?’): 

    http://blog.inkshares.com/post/154475375840/a-note-on-pub-dates-from-the-inkshares-production

    2016 wasn’t easy for a lot of people, myself included, but I KNOW that 2017 will be AMAZING, and it’s all thanks to you: your support, your encouragement, and your indefatigable tolerance of my dinosaur memes. 

    Cheers to a wonderful 2017!

    Erin

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      Erin S. Evan followed John Dennehy
      John Dennehy
      Author of ILLEGAL, a memoir about crossing borders.
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      Thomas J. Arnold
      A bumbling madman in an unholy relationship with the written language. Author of Exile, Magus; Exi...
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      Erin S. Evan liked the forum thread, Allowing more than one genre per book
      Thank you, @Elena Stofle!I also think one of the things that really sets Inkshares apart from other publishers is the diversity of the stories we have here. Some of the books in this community are so unique, so original, that a lot of traditional publishers would overlook them in favor of clones of whatever book is currently the most popular on the market. A lot of Inkshares books are really groundbreaking in their own right, exploring ideas and themes you’re just not likely to find anywhere else. I think that’s something the entire Inkshares community should be really proud of, and eager to show off to the world. :)

      like · liked by K.L. and 5 others

      People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, Allowing more than one genre per book

        Erin S. Evan liked the forum thread, Allowing more than one genre per book
        I’ll definitely second this. Especially considering that some of the genres we have available are actually subgenres. Tantalus Depths is listed under Hard Sci-Fi, for example, but I don’t think it would currently show up if you were just searching under "sci-fi." The same would go for the Space Opera subgenre, or for the Fairy Tale subgenre of the Fantasy genre.
        Not to mention that fantasy, sci-fi, realistic fiction, historical fiction, biography, etc. could all, depending on the nature of the story, also fit under the genre of humor, adventure, thriller, etc.
        Almost every book on this site could potentially be considered two or more different genres.

        like · liked by Robert and 4 others

        People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, Allowing more than one genre per book

          Erin S. Evan liked the forum thread, Allowing more than one genre per book
          Hi @Jane-Holly Meissner Thank you for this idea, I will add it to the queue of topics for us to look into. We appreciate your feedback! 
          like · liked by Robert and 5 others

          People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, Allowing more than one genre per book

            Erin S. Evan followed Superkid
            Superkid
            Superkid
            Being a big brother is hard. But it’s worse when your baby sister has superpowers.
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