Monday, April 27, 2015

I’m in Nebraska

I am currently in Nebraska, and appearing at several venues.  This last weekend I appeared at The Bookworm in Omaha, at the R Bar in Homer, where Two Gun worked, and in Sioux City, where Al had a branch of his operations and where Two Gun also operated.  This weekend I’ll be at A Novel Idea on Saturday, and the Walt Branch Library on Sunday.  I’ll also stick around one more week because the following Sunday is Mother’s Day, and I should hang out with her, and probably spend time with friends.


I was going to stay a whole month because I was going to fly into San Francisco to do a tour there.  However, though several bookstores told me they were interested in talking to me about appearing at their stores, not one ever got back to me about actually doing it.  Also, no news sources showed any interest, so it was quickly turning into a wasted trip.  At the same time, things have been heating up back in Burbank where I need to get a lot done, including Command Combat Battle Reports, which is a whole different story.

Monday, April 20, 2015

30 Years Since Ryan Died

Today marks the 30th year that my childhood friend died, marking my push into adulthood.  In many ways, that was when I began everything I’ve become: a writer, a filmmaker, etc.  Up until April 20, 1985 I spent most of my time with him.  We hung out together at school, and spent most weekends together at either his place or mine playing with our action figures, which we called Star Wars and Adventure People, or SWAP.

This was where I developed my fondness for storytelling.  The way it all began was when Ryan, after being diagnosed with cancer for the first time at the age of six, was given a land speeder and the figures for Chewbacca and Han Solo.  I got Luke Skywalker and the X-Wing.  We began the story then with these figures initially representing us.  As we got more figures, they became more characters in our world, and the storyline continued every time we got together on the weekends.  My personal character changed from Luke to a fireman.  Ryan’s changed almost every time.  He had a strange enjoyment of secrecy.

We purchased buildings as well, and soon we were able to build entire communities in my basement or his loft.  The one coming over would bring a small team of characters, and the one hosting built the community and the characters and situations in each building.  The story continued weekend after weekend, month after month, year after year.

He was only expected to live six months, but he survived for seven years.  But in the end, the cancer caught up with him, and he died after one of his lungs collapsed.


The story with him was incomplete, and will remain so.  But every character, situation, town, ship, storyline, and crisis, they all appear inside my stories today.  I feel as though I owe it to him, and the stories we created, to do the best with them that I can.

Friday, April 17, 2015

Going to Los Angeles Times Festival of Books

I will be at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books tomorrow at USC.  I’ll be selling and signing copies of Two Gun Hart and The Great Heist.  I’ll also have a couple copies of Pro Bono since that book is, in many ways, the third book in that symbolic trilogy.

My primary goal at most festivals is to give out as many flyers as possible so they can see who I am and what my work is like.  But this time I’m actually hoping to sell a number of books because of the subject matter.  I have always believed, and still believe, that the simple fact that Al Capone had a long-lost brother who was a Prohibition officer is enough to turn heads and attract people enough to purchase it.  To lure people in, I have made 8 ½ X 11 sheets of the cover, and of the various articles with the headlines in large bold letters declaring the fact of the relation, and Two Gun’s profession.  Just in case this is not enough to get people to buy, I’ve also printed numerous copies of the prologue of the book, which is the introduction Harry always gives when he talks about his father.

Below is the link to the festival, and a sheet I’m going to post along with the headlines and articles.




Monday, April 13, 2015

Coming to Nebraska

I'll be coming to Nebraska for several events at the end of this month and the beginning of next month. I'll be signing copies of Two Gun Hart and talking about the story. Harry Hart, son of "Two Gun" Hart, will be with me at the events in Homer and Sioux City, as well as the Walt Branch Library. Here are the dates:
Saturday, April 25, 1-4 pm: The Bookworm in Omaha
Sunday, April 26, 11 am - 1 pm: The R Bar in Homer
Sunday, April 26, 2-4 pm: Sioux City Museum in Sioux City
Saturday, May 2, 10-11 am: Chapters Books in Seward
Saturday, May 2, 1:30-3 pm: A Novel Idea in Lincoln
Sunday, May 3, 2-4 pm pm: Walt Branch Library in Lincoln

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Using Conventions to Sell Books

I went to Wondercon last weekend, and will be going to the LA Times Festival of Books this weekend.  I have a space at the Greater Los Angeles Writers Society booth where I sell books alongside two or three other authors.  Conventions are an important tool for the independent author/publisher, but it’s an often misunderstood one.  I certainly had difficulty with it for a while.

I was very discouraged at the first few conventions I went to.  I had almost no sales at any of them.  I gave away some flyers and bookmarks, but the sales themselves didn’t come anywhere close to the amount I spent just to get there, let alone pay for parking, the booth space, the copies of the books, etc.  I was, quite frankly, angry, and felt ripped off.  I was especially disgusted when I heard the people who sold the most number of books only sold about eight or ten.  When you consider the fact that you’re only making about $5 profit per sale, not even taking tax into account, you can see that you’re not even going to make back the $75 you spent to get the table space, let alone everything else.

But then I stopped and considered my gains.  I had given out tons of information about my books, and I saw the number of visitors to my websites grow.  People were willing to give my free stuff a chance after the convention was done.  I then did a little self-experiment.  I walked around the convention considering what books I would buy.  I found myself falling into the same pattern as everyone else.  I was willing to consider buying the big flashy things, or the books with brands with which I was already familiar, such as Dune.  Independent books made me nervous.  I had enough money to buy just one or two books, and I was afraid to take a chance with new products.

I realized what hypocrite I was being, but then came to accept that everyone is going to feel this way.  There was a time when even Dune was new, and people slowly took a chance on that.  But likely they saw a bit about it somewhere for free.  Most people don’t want to spend money on something with which they’re unfamiliar.  They need samples.  That’s perfectly reasonable.

And so I determined that the conventions have two uses.  First, for the brands that are already familiar to people to sell to them and give them a chance to see the authors and others involved in the projects they love.  Two, to introduce new products to the public for free so they’ll start getting into it.

This makes promoting Relic Worlds relatively easy because it’s a series, but other books, which are more difficult, rather hard.

I’m going to go into more detail about how I’m promoting Relic Worlds on my Relic Worlds blog as there is a LOT to tell about.  But here I’ll basically say I’m branching out into every part of the convention I can, including the game section, cosplay, flyers, a treasure hunt, even the panels.  As for the more tricky one-offs, here’s what I’m doing.

First, at the booth I have something relevant to the book I’m selling.  This year it will be Two Gun Hart and The Great Heist since they’re related to each other.  There were a lot of newspaper articles about these two stories, so I’ll have blown-up versions of them at the booth along with some photographs to attract people’s attention.  Also, to attract attention, I have one sheet that says “Al Capone’s brother was Prohibition Agent.”  I’m hoping that alone brings people over.

I will be giving away bookmarks with Two Gun on one side and a list of all my books on the other side along with the Bandwagon website.  I’ll also have flyers to give out which tells about Two Gun on one side, and The Great Heist on the other.  Each of these will have QR codes on them that lead the reader directly to their pages on the Bandwagon site.  I debated with myself on this one, considering whether to have the QR code go to Amazon, or to the site.  I finally chose the site because all the options of buying the book are there, along with more information than I can tell at the booth.

Even though my assumption is that these are what people will really be picking up, I’ll still have copies of all the books there to sell.  I may also have a sheet with the prologue written as well.  It’s always good to be able to give away a chapter to people.  This can either be done by printing it out, or by giving away a QR code which takes the person to a website with the chapter.  The print-outs are better, but can get very expensive.


I’ll try to report on how it goes, but I’ve not been very good at keeping promises on this blog.

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Holding a treasure hunt at Wondercon

I'm heading out to Wondercon this weekend to promote Relic Worlds.  I know this is a time when I'm supposed to be promoting Two Gun Hart.  After all, it just came out.  But unfortunately I can't change when the convention happens, and this is the biggest one for independent sci fi and fantasy authors.  It draws the numbers, especially those who are really into sci fi and fantasy, though it isn't so mainstream that we independents get cut out.

So I'll be at the Greater Los Angeles Writers Society booth Friday morning, Saturday afternoon, and Sunday late afternoon.  I'll be running a treasure hunt all three days.  People who wish to play follow the clues in the photo below and photograph them.  They then post their pictures to Facebook and Twitter with the hashtag: #relicworldstreasurehunt.


#wondercon2015 #treasurehunt