My dear Machiners,
Where do I begin? I will start by saying that I have now had over 48 hours to decompress. I took some extra time before writing my post-Sword & Laser update. I just didn’t quite feel that I was coherent enough to write the update I wanted in the immediate aftermath. At this point, the fact that I can call myself a “soon to be published author” has not fully sunk in. That this story, which I poured myself into, will be in print and on a bookstore shelf is still hard to believe. When I do see it on that shelf, it will be serious reality check time.
For now I must say Thank YOU. Thank you with all my heart. I cannot thank everybody enough. I want to stress and stress some more that this was an unbelievable team effort. I wrote the story but bringing it to a wider audience through crowdfunding on Inkshares was undeniably a group effort. And a tremendous one at that. Many, many people went above and beyond the call to bring new readers to our cause.
To illustrate this unbelievable outreach, we can break the campaign into two chunks. There were the first 4.5 weeks of the campaign: We brought in 170 readers and this was phenomenal. We were in a strong 2nd place position and hoped it would be enough to stay in the top 3. Then there was the final 1.5 weeks of the contest - and we brought in 180 readers! In my wildest dreams I would never have expected to more than double what we did in over a month in just 10 days. Thank you for the incredible support to finish this race. I feel honored and humbled. I want all of you to feel that you had a hand in making this happen. Because it’s true. The eBook or paperback you receive is yours as much as it is mine, and far beyond the money you contributed.
I must give a hearty salute to my co-winners Joseph Asphahani author of The Animal in Man and Craig Munro the author of The Bones of the Past. It was an absolute pleasure to compete against them. An experience that was full of camaraderie and goodwill. Their books are awesome and I look forward to receiving my copy of both. It is well worth your time to go check them out, and also the other excellent work by talented authors in the top 10 in the Sword & Laser contest. The contest was filled with wonderful creative work - those outside the top 10 also deserve your consideration. Here is the rest of the top 10:
Adam Greven and Matt Deller’s The Knight Proper
Byron Gillian’s The Children of the Forest
Amanda Ornekc’s Deus Hex Machina
Andre Brun’s Lies and Deception
Michael Sebby’s The Inhabitants: An Unremembered Life
Alexander Barnes’s The Amaranth Chronicles: Deviant Rising
Edmond J. Wedge’s Ocean Black: The Noble Exiles
The journey is just beginning for The Last Machine in the Solar System. There will be future updates as we continue down the road toward publication. This is all new and exciting for me and I am sure I will learn something each day. I look forward to sharing that with you, my benefactors. Without you I would not be here, and neither would this story.
Until next time,
-Matthew
Now that the Sword and Laser Contest is over, I've done what any person would do without a lick of sense when it comes to marketing: updated my book's cover and provided more information about it in the form of a synopsis.
Would it have helped generate more interest in Transilience during the contest? Maybe. I dunno. The past is the past. Insert more platitudes.
What matters most is that the earnest belief these additions will generate interest and enthusiasm about Transilience for the remainder of its funding campaign. I need to convince a whole lot of people to part with their money in the next 49 days. Money well spent. That much is certain. Nonetheless, this is the powerball and therefore requires a tad more persuading.
Here is the cover in a much larger format.
Okay...that was really big! I can't seem to resize the image either. Are you still here???
Good!
The blurb in the top righthand corner may seem out of place when compared to what else you may have read with regards to Transilience. Rest assured, it fits perfectly. The idea of legacies forms the central theme of the novel. It is what ties the two cases together and ultimately allows the reader to assess the values and morals of the characters, and perhaps even the world in which we inhabit.
One final thing before I sign off.
I would like to thank my buddies, Mike and He-who-shall-not-be-named, for the generosity in supporting Transilience. I have known these guys for a very long time and shared in some pretty astounding adventures in real life and fictive/virtual world. Simply uttering the word "Shar" will bring back a flood of memories about a D&D session that was simultaneously some of the worst story-telling I ever subjected anyone to, and the most memorable. And it was in the unforgiving jungles of Chult with Mike that I experienced my one and only TPK. I am very happy and proud to have your names listed in Transilience.
Cheers!
Kevin
Ah the penultimate day of the Sword and Laser Contest!
Barring some sort of late surge by a dark horse candidate, it looks like the Top Three places are set. I congratulate Joseph, Mathew and Craig. It is good to see such excellent work acknowledge.
A Top Ten finish for my novel could happen with seven more preorders (at the time I am writing this). It'd be pretty awesome to poach that tenth spot as the contest comes to a close. So why not make an excellent day even better? Support Transilience and be a part of something great!
Speaking of supporting Transilience, I offer a hearty thank you to Murdstone for his Super Reader pre-order. Many a battle have we shared in the hostile world of Dungeon and Dragons Online. Many a fine ale have we brewed in the bitter cold, the biting rain and the occasional bout of sunshine. Aside: Never ever ever let someone convince you to travel to Sweden for the weather. Unless you are a polar bear. And many a scheme have we hatched in pursuit of a mutual goal to add "Purveyors of Fine Ales and Delicious Food" to our resumes. I am glad your name will be contained within the pages of my novel.
By all accounts a rather short entry for me. I guess I can be succinct when I want to be. :)
Cheers!
Kev