Matthew Isaac Sobin liked an update for The Traveller’s Cup

Top of the Evening to You, Space Crew!

First, a humungous congratulations to those who won the Nerdist contest. That would be Christopher Leone, Michael Haase, and Patrick Edwards. These guys not only have great-sounding stories, but they put in countless hours of marketing and pitching to get their books where they are today. Please consider supporting them if you haven’t already, because their books will definitely be released in the near future.

Where does that leave us? Let me break it down for you. 

First of all, thank you for being the most amazing space crew that’s ever existed. I hope to get around to thanking each of you personally once I’ve had a bit of time to recover from this chaos, but for every one of you who ordered, who pitched to your friends and family, who gave me encouragement along the way—thank you so much. You just may have been a glimmer of hope on a bad day or one of many reasons to smile on a great one. 

In the end we finished 6th. Which, out of  96 entries isn’t too shabby at all! I was extremely focused on the contest throughout this campaign, so I failed to explain the alternative routes. I’ll do that now. First, let’s feel good about how much we accomplished for a moment.


Now we go back to being regular Inkshares book-funders. Let me try to explain this as simply and eloquently as I can.

All the orders we’ve accumulated are going to stick around until May 5. On that date the total orders will be counted and one of three things will happen:

At 750 total orders (note: these do not have to be unique orders), the book will get the same fabulous treatment as the Nerdist contest would have provided. Full service editing, marketing, publishing, and distribution from Inkshares. This is the dream.

At 250 total orders (we’re extremely close already), we reach the "Quill goal". The book will be published via Inkshares with fewer of these fancy services. 

At less than 250 total orders we won’t be published on Inkshares and you’ll all be refunded. That doesn’t mean it’s the end of the road, but that we’ll need to look at alternate routes to get my writing into your hands. That said, I believe this to be a highly unlikely scenario. 

You can check the progress bar on the book page to see how we’re doing. This is us right now, at 199 total orders:


So what should you expect next? I’m gonna cut back on the daily spam until we get closer to the May deadline. It’s a bit much for me to keep up, and I have some "bigger picture" ideas of how to pull more people into the project. 

In the meantime you can definitely keep sharing The Traveller’s Cup with your friends, since reaching 750 won’t be easy. If you use the recommendation links on the book page you’ll earn Inkshares credits too, which will let you pick up other people’s books.

Our ship hasn’t quite reached its destination yet, but that’s okay. We’re still a crew. And thanks to your support in this contest, we’re several pixels closer to our goal. 

 

Heading into overdrive. Man your stations. And...we’re off!

Your-Inarticulately-Indebted-Space-Captain,
-AC

 

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    Matthew Isaac Sobin liked an update for To Live and Die in Avalon

    Well, the Nerdist contest is over and I’m very happy for those who made it into the top three. Congratulations!

    For the rest of us, the story doesn’t end here. Some have chosen to move on to other publishing options, while many have chosen to stick it out with Inkshares. I, for one, am going to stick it out for the remainder of my campaign and see if I can at least hit my Quill goal, if not more. I keep having this very positive feeling that things are going to move in a very good direction from here on out.

    I have some friends who have their own podcasts and I will be plugging the book on both shows. I have passed out postcards all over Asheville and haven’t even hit the bookstores yet. I’m going to try and reconnect with some of the press outlets I reached out to a while back just to cover all my bases. 

    If you were holding back on supporting me because of the contest (which I totally get), now’s the time to get your pre-order in! It would mean the world to me to at least see the book make it into Quill. It will open so many doors for me and I will be one step closer to realizing my dream of being a full-time writer. 

    But, enough about me, don’t you all want to see how my quirky, retro-sci fi spy story turn out? Avalon, idyllic home of the human race has remained a neutral bastion for alien refugees escaping from across the galaxy. The Sons of Mars want to turn the system into a staging area to wage their own war for dominance. The fate of the galaxy all rests on the shoulders of a badass secret agent, a scientist completely out her element, a blue-skinned tech specialist and a somewhat obnoxious A.I. 

    There’s still time to come along for the ride and make sure the "ride", as it were, becomes a reality for everyone to enjoy!

    THANKS!

    Jason

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      Matthew Isaac Sobin liked an update for The Madness of Mr. Butler
      Composing an appropriate "thank you" to everyone is proving to be more difficult than writing a novel. I am overwhelmed by today. Thank you for your support. i will be posting an appropriately long-winded essay of gratitude in the near future.

      For now, please accept this simple statement of thanks. "The Madness of Mr. Butler" will be edited, marketed, published, and distributed in full. This win means the world to me, and I literally could not have done it without everyone’s support. I came in second, and the third place book sold the exact same number of copies that I did...I just had five more readers, and that’s what put me into second.

      Literally every single one of you counted. Thank you.

      If I have begun to achieve my dream, then I now know that achieving a dream only requires tireless work...

      ...and countless people who believe in you.

      Thank you.
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        Matthew Isaac Sobin liked an update for Orin and the Skyscrapers

        Hey everyone! I apologize for not getting back to some of you as quickly as I had hoped. However, I did want to say Congrats to the winners of the Space Opera contest! Also, I am very thankful for all of your support in pulling me up to 7th place in a two week funding period! I had a blast!

        Just some updates on Orin and the Skyscrapers for y’all: 

        I have split chapter one into three chapters and will move my original chapter two into into four and so on. I am new to writing and would appreciate any structural advice anyone can give. Also, I am working on new artwork for the story. 

        When I started this project back in 2013 I planned to make a comic book line, graphic novel, audio book, and yes, even a super low budget movie. Graphic novel will be checked off the list soon (50% to Quill). Then it is on to the next! 

        Please help me spread the word about Orin and the Skyscrapers and bring the Indiana Jones of space to life!

        Thank you all!

        Till next time,
        J.H.Trevino
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          Matthew Isaac Sobin followed Nathan Key-carr
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          An avid reader.
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          Erotica author and avid reader. I’m a lady who has a dirty mind, like a lot of women. I just like ...
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          Matthew Isaac Sobin liked an update for Asteroid Made of Dragons

          Hold On, I’m Getting At Something

          The backer copies of Asteroid Made of Dragons have all shipped and the wave is crashing down on the East Coast. By tonight – tomorrow maybe – they will have all arrived. My Facebook profile is awash with pictures – pictures of my friends with their copy, the copy they bought a year ago because I asked them to. Some have one, some have three, or five, or more. A gesture of love, of confidence, of faith and it wrecks me.

          Writing is lonely. Being a human is lonely.

          I don’t do well with moments of connection. Socially, sure. Joking, sure. But a real moment? Something important and true? Not my scene. We’re so unstable, the most unsuitable of symbols. How can I know the things I say are being received in the moment, in the blur of memory and sense and thinking of the next thing to say while half-hearing what you are saying now while also feeling the echoes of other versions of this conversation from before and beyond  on TV, in dreams, from splinter-blinks of fragmented now? I mean, how? Maybe it’s just me.

          Being lonely is writing. A human is.

          Hold On, I’m Getting At Something. This should be my coat of arms. I’ve written three books now (THREE!), and thousands of other words off in the Grand Margins.  And all in the service of this dimly perceived quest of discovery of meaning – of this THING I’m trying to say, but cannot express. Only glimpse the edges of as I travel forward and back in time. It’s hard to connect with humans – but with words, you have a puncher’s chance. This word connects to that, shapes form. Things stay where you put them. Mostly. Rime is Rime and Jonas is Jonas and Xenon loves graham crackers and Linus snores just a little bit. Now, on my desk is a red ball, the color of summer sunset and it is red, red, red. And it will stay red as long as I believe that it is red.

          A lonely human is writing. Being.

          So now – I see these pictures, I see these signs of love and faith. And all I can say is – do you see the ball on my desk? Is it red? Is it summer sunset or is it more of a cranberry? Why are you listening? Why are you picking up the signal? Why are you dreaming with me of the three moons that have no name and the Lost and the stupid, stupid power of friendship that keeps the dark at bay?

          Being human is writing lonely.

          Ah, the simple words. I’ve already said them – but they don’t land right. Thank you. Thank you. You thank, you are thanks. Thanks You. A tic, a nod, a thing we say to strangers and waiters and cats when they heed. An empty thing, not enough, a hollow gourd. A blob of ink at the end of emails and yammering sales pitches. Useless, sere, not enough. I pick up the pieces and slam them together, that’s all that I am, all that I do – all that I can do. With whatever art I have I try to say the Thing.

          Lonely is being. Human is writing.

          Thank you. You thank. You are thanks. Thanks are you.

          Lonely human thanks you. You are writing.

          Writing is you.

          You are thank.

          The ball is red and it is not so lonely. Thank you for coming so far with me.

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            Matthew Isaac Sobin liked an update for Lucky

            Dear Readers,

            TIME IS RUNNING OUT. This is it. The final 24 hours of the Nerdist Space Opera contest is upon us. I am sad to report that LUCKY is still trapped at number 5 and a very solid 75 UNIQUE READERS behind where it needs to be to win the book deal. We’ve had a good run, but I don’t see us making any Hail Mary plays in the next 24 hours to get us across that finish line.

            Chin up, though. I have a plan. If nothing else, we are only 25 copies from our Quill goal of 250. This is damn amazing, if you ask me. Your support and your faith in this novel are heartwarming and have kept me smiling over the past month and a half. 

            If we do not win tomorrow, the funding deadline for LUCKY will most likely be extended until May 2. We will take maybe a day to regroup, drink some more coffee and maybe eat a donut...then it will be 100 miles a minute back on this marketing stuff. Stay tuned for updates as we go along!

            As always, a thousand thank-yous for your support and faith!

            - Webster

            PS: Please forgive any typos...this message is being relayed from a mobile communications platform.  

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              Matthew Isaac Sobin liked an update for The Fairshare Model

              Thank you for the support you have demonstrated for The Fairshare Model via your pre-order. I have good news! 

              If you ordered a Reader or Super Reader, Inkshares will be sending you money on your credit card as a result of a change I just made.

              I changed the print version from hardcover to softcover, which reduces the cost of the physical book by a third, from USD $30 to $20. If you applied the new customer credit that Inkshares issued you, your price for a Reader (e-book + print book) will now be $15! The e-book only version is unchanged.

              Inkshares assured me that the softcover (a/k/a paperback) is durable enough to be in a backpack. As a result, I am happy to go that route because it makes the price appealing to more people. 

              Inkshares has received  just over 10% of the pre-orders it needs before it commits resources to edit and publish the book. This is hard work! But, its is necessary to put The Fairshare Model in that hands of thousands of  people who appreciate ideas as much as you do.

              Of course, you can help accelerate that process by encouraging others to check out the preview chapter and place a pre-order too.

              Thanks again!

              Karl


               

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                I tell myself plenty of stories, some of which since childhood. I like classic sci-fi, P K Dick to ...
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