Janet A Chambers liked an update for Slim and The Beast: A Novel

Hello Inkshares Family, 

It has been a long time since we last spoke, and if I am writing to you today, it’s because I’m proud to share the first single that my band, Slim & The Beast, released a few weeks ago. My twin brother Aaron and my close friend Aurelien make up our folk-rock trio, and it was only fitting that it be named after a novel about brotherhood and the pursuit of passion. 

Here is the video for an acoustic version of "Close to You," which we performed live with a string quartet in Paris (where I still live, now with my brother): 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0hDoESJlSs

If you enjoy the song, please consider giving it a thumbs up, a comment, and to share it far and wide! In the age of digital distribtuion, every single view and thumbs up counts. Also, for anyone interested in reaching out, please don’t hesitate to send me an email at slopezba@gmail.com for a more proper catch up.

Thank you once again for believing in Slim and The Beast way back when they were nothing more than fictional characters, and for supporting and inspiring me to believe in the pursuit of passion and the artistic life. 

All love,

Samuél

PS here is a link to the album version, which is now available on all major streaming platforms. 

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    Janet A Chambers followed Guns in the Hands of Artists
    Guns in the Hands of Artists
    A book of art and essays on guns and gun violence in America. An illustrated conversation through the lens of art, art as means for new dialogue and, possibly, change.
    Janet A Chambers followed Villeglé and the Streets of Paris
    Jacques Villeglé and the Streets of Paris
    A book inspired by Jacques Villeglé, a 93-year-old French artist who has changed art history by tearing posters off the walls of Paris and calling them paintings.
    Janet A Chambers followed The Body of Chris
    The Body of Chris
    Finalist in both Spirituality and Religious Non-Fiction for the 2016 Next Generation Indie Book Awards. Inspired by the delusion that I was the Second Coming of Christ, this is my story of mental illness, spiritual awakening, and lasting recovery.
    Janet A Chambers followed Slim and The Beast: A Novel
    Slim and The Beast: A Novel
    Two best friends, a country bar, a famous burger and a bloodstained floor.
    Janet A Chambers liked an update for Slim and The Beast: A Novel

    Hey Folks,

    Just a quick reminder for all of you in Paris (and those who want an excuse to spend an exorbitant amount of money to fly to Baguette Land for the night) that the next reading is TOMORROW, APRIL 9 AT 7PM at the glorious SHAKESPEARE AND COMPANY, Kilometer Zero, Paris.

    It is a major honor to speak at my favorite bookstore in the world ... yet another example of how far you guys have brought Slim and The Beast. I'll be speaking/reading/sipping a glass of wine with Yann Rousselot, a great friend and fellow Inkshares writer. His Dawn of the Algorithm  is a beautiful poetry collection complete with illustrations from around the world, including work from my girlfriend and twin brother.

    NB: Speaking of Aaron, he is currently in an international music competition (Toyota is sponsoring it) and has a chance to be flown to New Zealand to spread his musical love. He needs virtual credits (no real money is spent), so if you are a fan of his music,"voting" takes about 15 seconds and could very well change his life. (In case that hyperlink didn't work, here's the original source: http://feelingthestreet.com/profile/aaron-lopez-barrantes)

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      Janet A Chambers liked an update for Slim and The Beast: A Novel

      Dear Backers,

      One year ago (almost to the day), I began the Inkshares journey. Today, March 6, 2015, I received an email with this:After two trips to the US in a four-week span, a weekend in Spain complete with a Slim and The Beast cake (thanks Adriana!), and plenty of general life things to keep me busy in between, I’m back at home and can settle into the next novel. The book tour was special. I’ll try to put into words what exactly that means.

      How Humanity (Not a Book Tour) Changed My Life

      Maybe the best way to describe it is “like one of those daydreams”: you’re not fully asleep; you can still hear silverware clinking; you can see what’s around you and you know what it’s supposed to mean, but all you can do is stay asleep and keep dreaming.

       “You know, you’re really lucky to be here,” a lady with a badge told me with an air of incredulity. “This is the American Booksellers Association…the Winter Institute…you should be excited! This is it!”

      This was it, indeed. That’s what everyone kept telling me.

      One hundred Slim and The Beasts were stacked to my left. Next to me sat a woman who’d written a book about multi-tasking and its dangers. The massive, carpeted room was filled with dozens of tables: those lining the walls for the authors, the center tables for food and drink.

      During such fanciful affairs, I’m more used to serving hors d’oeuvres than being referred to as “sir”—I have catered just as long as I’ve written novels, all seven years worth. To calm the nerves, I talked to the bartender for a while about IPA beer (he said its hoppiness—what I call bad-tastiness—is due to mouldy cargo holds in creaky ships). I gave him the Wi-Fi password (apparently he wasn’t allowed to have it) and returned to my “author table” to begin greeting booksellers from across the country.  

      This was the seminal moment. I was a published man with a public image. I picked up a pen, ready to sign. It exploded in my hand immediately. And then hundreds of booksellers flooded through the doors, trying to get their hands on the next big thing. Whoever was at the table next to me had a long, slithering line of signature-seekers. T.C. Boyle was out there somewhere. According to the brochure, this certainly felt like “it.”

      I never had a line, but many people came up to me and almost invariably asked about the ink stain. “You know you have ink all over your hand.” “What can I say … I’m new at this.” Stripped of prestige, slightly tipsy, I met and spoke to dozens of kind booksellers for the next two hours. I made some great connections there, but these connections were necessarily fleeting: at an event like this, it’s all about eye contact and the handshake. And so this is what I remember most about the ABA Winter Institute—not so much the book signing or mention of potential screenplays, but the kind bus driver with a jolly face who now has a copy of Slim and The Beast; a beautiful dinner with Ingram Distribution representatives, one of whom announced her retirement over tapas and beer; and discussing feminism and race relations with a Floridian bookseller in a bumbling shuttle bus. I woke up at 6am to drive from Asheville, NC down to Chapel Hill, the hometown of Slim and The Beast. I saw the sun rise in the Appalachians. The Winter Institute was indeed a memorable experience.   

      Although the ABA event was the “highest profile” of them all, McNally Jackson Books in New York City was equally exciting. I felt at ease reading and discussing the book in front of friends and their acquaintances, and was helped by some fantastic questions from a red-dressed lady in the audience. But what I remember most is the importance of community: I drank wine with family friends from the French village where I was born; with my twin brother and my mom; with my girlfriend from Paris; with my best friends from childhood; with a great friend from Seattle who was at the inception of Slim and The Beast; with virtually all of my college friends … the list goes on and on. The event at Molasses Books in Brooklyn also felt more like an apartment party than a “book event,” which is how it is supposed to be.

      I don't feel like the book tour was about me, really. It was about an idea that began three years ago. It was about all of you, the backers, and about a celebration of community.  I am incredibly fortunate to have found Inkshares when I did, and still have trouble believing I am a “published author,” which probably has to do with the distinct feeling that I haven't done anything special. People write and publish books all the time. Hundreds of thousands of writers, many more talented than me, will never see the published page. If I have done anything special, it’s about the way I went about publishing, and therein lies the paradox: the entire point of Inkshares is that it's at least as much about community as it is about me. To that extent, I feel like all of you should be front and center. I can take the role of representative, maybe; but the thought that it was MY party, MY book tour, seems to miss the point entirely. “In an ideal world we’d all be sitting in a circle,” I should’ve said at my events. And maybe that's my hippy free love background talking, but I really do mean it: the notion that I should be elevated because I’m now published is ignorant at best, and flat-out wrong at worst. If I’m here, writing this backer update, it has to do with the backers, not “me.” There’s nothing special about writing a book, but there is in finding the book’s community.  

      For too long, in my opinion, writers have been revered for the wrong reasons. When considering the writer as something almost mythical, it seems the harder to interview, the harder to read, the harder to analyze, the larger the myth. In short, the less connected the writer is with her community, the more renowned she becomes. There is a bizarre dance that occurs between writer and reader, in which the writer (and the writer’s ego) seeks to put herself higher than the rest, while the reader (and his desire to create the “writer myth”) pushes the writer away. But great writing isn’t about genius and deference, but patience and humility. More than anything else, it’s about humanity and the book’s community. So if the Inkshares model has proven (and continues to prove) anything, it’s that “having what it takes” isn’t about some misplaced sense of accomplishment or belonging to a “higher plane,” but about having faith in humanity, which in turn had faith in me. Belief in the goodness of people can also become one of its main causes; so if this entire experience has taught me anything, it is a firm belief in daring to dream.

      A while ago I wrote a piece, “How Humanity (Not a Literary Agent) Changed My Life.” After reaching the1000 books mark, I can only change the title and reiterate the same feeling. Since I can now speak from “book-tour experience,” I know that the book tour isn’t “it,” at least not in the narrow sense of book sales and fame. I have a foot in the door, which is more than anything I could have imagined, but “it” isn’t about 1000 books or a 2nd print edition; “it” is about talking to my editor about my next novel; eating a breakfast burrito in a roadside diner with my fantastic colleague, Thad Woodman, and my Parisian girlfriend; sitting in a Lower East Side apartment talking about Batman, psychedelics and heart surgery; and drinking with a published, well-reviewed Columbia MFA candidate who struggles to find an audience, just like me. My life has changed for the better, but it has also remained the same: I have a few more Twitter followers, a few more dollars in my bank account, and more than a few beautiful memories that will remain with me; but I still live in my 15m2 apartment, I still do part-time work I’m not necessarily proud of, I’m working on a new, totally different novel, and I still struggle to write every day.

      This is “it.” This is how it’s supposed to be. One year later, after crowdfunding, editing, choosing the book cover, learning about marketing, book sales and book tours and editing a 2nd edition, I’m back at square one, and couldn’t be happier. Whatever the future holds, Slim and The Beast has been a success, and that's only because you believed in me.

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        Janet A Chambers liked an update for Slim and The Beast: A Novel

        It’s been a bit of time since I last wrote you, and thetimes they are a changing, indeed.  

         After two major edits, a seriously necessary but nit-picky copy-editingprocess (note to self: maintain consistent use of apostrophe direction i.e. ‘vs. ’), a two-step proofing process involving multiple readers (including thiscomment from an Inkshares intern, which is everything for me: “I have to say,I’m really enjoying this novel.”), an aesthetic conundrum of choosing the bookcover (if you check out the Inkshares page,or Amazonor Barnes& Noble, you can see the final choice), the relief of being done with Itand the subsequent terror of realizing there may still be a typo, and finally letting go, knowing that It’s out of myhands and that you’ll receive the book before Christmas, but that the officialrelease date is February 3, 2015,well [take a deep breath] I can finally return to the only thing that reallymatters: get back to writing. The third novel is underway, and it’s anotherdoozy altogether. But for now I’ll keep that under wraps, except to reveal thethree protagonists’ names: Viktor, Carl, and Elsa.

        If you had said one year ago that I’d be doing a panel at Shakespeare & Company for Slim and The Beast, I would have toldyou to shut your mouth, how dare you, it’s a terrible joke, GET OUT! Butthe Shakespeare & Company panel wasa true honor, and I met some really interesting writers and drank beer withthem well into the night. Highlights include debating the future of publishingwith friends and the Shakespeare crowd,and a flustered Soviet woman who used her “question” to rant for seven minutesbecause didn’t understand why no one wants to buy her book of poetry, eventhough it’s beautiful-on-the-inside-you-just-have-to-take-a-chance-and-open-it-alright?

         In other news, I was featured in an article in Writer’s Digest (unfortunately only inprint—the November/December 2014 issue) that spoke about Inkshares as well asmy reasons for choosing them. The woman who wrote the article is a literaryagent who has been incredibly supportive/helpful as I approach the marketing,and has gone so far as to get me some great contacts in the industry.

         The BIG NEWS is I’ll be doing a book tour in February (NCand NY, watch out!). It’s surreal for now, hence my lack of words to describeit. In addition to all of this, including close collaboration with book design (mytwin brother Aaron did chapter illustrations), Inkshares has helped me start awebsite (I’m building it now), has secured a high-profile interview for me, andwithout going into specifics, will be sending dozens of reviewers and a fewestablished authors an ARC (Advanced Reader Copy) in hopes of creating a buzzbefore the February release. Needless to say, Inkshares is a legitimatepublishing house. I’m lucky to be on board.

         On a not-wholly unrelated tangent before I wrap this up, inthe publishing industry there’s this thing called a Tip Sheet (I learned whatit meant about one month ago), which is essentially a one-page document thatserves as a resumé for your novel. My distributor sends this to bookstores, andif bookstores are interested, they pre-order copies (a random bookstore inSouth Carolina did this, which is both baffling and exciting). Inkshares and Iworked on this Tip Sheet, and I’ll have a copy of it by next week. If any ofyou—wherever you may be in the world—are interested in keeping a distinctivegrass-roots twinge to Slim and The Beast,I’d be honored to send you the Tip Sheet and hear about your experience walkinginto an independent bookstore and saying, “Good morning. [Bell above doorrings] I know this is a bit strange, but I know this guy, see? And there’s thiscompany, see? It’s called Inkshares […] Would I like to sit down? Why thankyou.” It’s a bold move to just walk into a bookstore like that, but I did ithere in Paris at WH Smith and it worked. The smug Madame said, “We only workwith the biggest distributor in America, Ingram, and I doubt you are associatedwith them. Good luck with your—what was it, a short story? Bonne journee.” When I said, “Oh, no problem. Interesting youmention it, though … in fact I work directly with Ingram,” she immediatelychanged her tone and made up for it by giving me the director’s contact. Boldmoves move mountains, and you made the boldest move of all backing me whenpublishing was a far-off reality.  

         Which brings me to the most important part of this update: arenewed thank you for all of your support. Book tours, interviews,Shakespearian panels  … the onlyreason any of this is happening is because there are 232 of you. Whatever happens once the book comes out—whether itsells 5 or 5,000 copies—I’ll no longer have to dream about what it would be like to publish a novel. Success or failure willbe based on the novel’s merit or lack thereof. I’m ashamed/relieved to say it: Imay or may not be secretly terrified that in fact the novel is shit. “What wereyou thinking?” an evil voice might say. “You’re an idiot and a fraud.” But thenI’m reminded that you believe(d) in me. Whatever happens, there will be luckand marketing strategy and all the rest of it, too, but one thing is for sure: Slim and The Beast will be “out there”soon, on a dusty bookshelf in Australia, or on a Parisian coffee table, or in abookstore in Springfield, Wherever, USA, and that is only because of you.

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          Janet A Chambers liked an update for Slim and The Beast: A Novel

          It’s just past sunrise. The sculptor wakes to the sound of a large truck pulling into his driveway. Standing at the front door — screen door propped open with his foot, a bowl of a mug of steaming coffee in both hands — he squints at burly men with burlier beards as they remove a piece of marble from the moving truck. They ask where they can put it. He says in the garage. A man slides off the blue tarp from the nascent sculpture, says good luck and drives away.

          First he stares at the block of stone, anywhere from a few seconds to a few hours. Then, with mallet in hand, he begins to lop off the chunks.

          In the beginning it seems random. He’s trying to uncover what’s trapped. As the floor becomes covered in marble powder, the sculptor exchanges his hammer for tools more precise. He chisels away at an arm or a leg. A nose appears somewhere within the head. He’s already thinking about the wrinkles and the lips, but first he must tend to all the rest.

          As the months pass he focuses on toenails, abdominal muscles, wrinkles on the forehead. From the ground up a body begins to emerge from what once part of a cave. Here is the most important and most delicate task. The soul of the sculpture is in the eyes, someone once said. The sculptor can envision what they look like, but the sculpture remains faceless. With metallic tools rarely seen outside the orthodontist office, he begins to chisel away.

          How many months have passed, and does it matter? He stands thirty feet away, then ten feet. He stares into the eyes and clutches the head. His shoes are covered in porcelain dust. He doesn’t own a broom or a dustpan. Is the sculpture finished? Wrong question. It was finished when it first came in. Lopping the chunks off was just as essential to this process. A final flurry of marble dust falls to the floor, revealing the final eyelash.

          The garage is quiet now. The tools are idle. He acknowledges his creation before pushing the sculpture into the corner with all the others.

          That night he sleeps well. In the morning he wakes up to the sound of a truck.

          “Where should we put it?” The deliveryman asks.

          “In the garage.”

          And so it begins once again.

          I just completed the final edit of Slim and The Beast, after cutting/editing/re-inserting/deleting close to 30,000 words over 2.5 years. This is a big day for me, arguably more than the release date, because I’m finally getting back to the purely creative part of writing. New marble to chisel away.

          A lot has changed since my last update. For one, I’m starting a new job in about forty-five minutes: editor in chief is my official title, which sounds a lot fancier than it really is. I’ll be writing articles and editing, as well as a bit of translation for a company that specializes in digital marketing and Internet advertising. I don’t much about those subjects outside of the Inkshares process, but am excited for the opportunity. After three great years teaching English to French professionals, it’s time to move on.

          In other news, I’m honored that Shakespeare & Company (Anglophone bookstore next to Notre Dame) wants to have me on a writer’s panel in October to discuss Slim and The Beast and the Inkshares process. They are going to be stocking my novel, and might even get me there for a reading. WH Smith (a big Anglo bookshop on Rue de Rivoli) is also affiliated with my distributor, so it looks like I may have a reading/signing/tea and crumpets over there. Finally, there are whispers of a book tour in the spring, but that is partly dependent on how big of a splash the novel makes. While I can’t share any details, know that Inkshares has been incredible throughout the process (my editor has been nothing short of amazing), and is working closely with me to make sure the release is all it can be.

          2014 has been a wild year. If, one year ago, a spiritual-seeming man had walked up to me and said that Slim and The Beast would be published by December (December 19th is the projected date), and that I’d be doing book events involving signatures and drinking tea with other “writers,” I’d have looked him the eye and call him a jackass (hopefully this is the last time I’ll reflexively mention that I just used the past perfect + perfect conditional, otherwise known as the Third Conditional).

          The bottom line: the only reason all of this is happening — book store events, new job, probable book tour, and of course publishing — is because of your support. Your belief in me has fueled me since the beginning, and I’ve now reached a point where I can honestly say Slim and The Beast is what I’ve always wanted it to be. It is a good novel, and I feel that it’s great; while it’s not up to me to judge it, I still love it after almost three years of head banging and editing.

          I am staring at the sculpture now. I may need to add an eyelash or two. But in a few weeks Slim and The Beast will find their place in the corner, next to a dusty attempt at a novel previously known as Whistleblower.

          A new sculpture is emerging, a novel that takes place in Lodz, Poland during World War Two. There are three protagonists, much like in Slim and The Beast. Viktor, a university professor who loses his job on September 1, 1939; Carl, a German policeman who is full of ambition and regret; and Elsa, a thoughtful woman whose father was killed during the Night of the Long Knives. Time to drop the chisel for the mallet once again.

          PS: I’ve decided on my author name — Samuel L. Barrantes. The accent is gone, as is the Lopez for a couple of reasons. Marketing strategy: head to your local coffee shop and carry on this conversation, preferably with tea cup in hand, pinky in the air: “Well I’m waiting for the December release of Slim and The Beast. […] Samuel L. Barrantes. […] Oh? You haven’t heard of him? Why, that’s quite peculiar. You simply must check him out. Run along now, darling.”

          PPS: My great friend, Yann Rousselot, has a beautiful collection of poetry currently in the funding stage on Inkshares. It's called "Dawn of the Algorithm." His deadline is mid-October. If it inspires you, jump on board before it's too late.

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