Fiction and Non-Fiction

Category: Publishing (Page 4 of 4)

A Busy Few Weeks

It’s funny how often after a long stretch of nothing apparently happening, everything seems to coalesce together and there’s a flurry of frenetic activity.

That’s how it’s been this past week, and probably how it will continue into the coming week.

Firstly, two of my stories were selected for the 2024 issues of Thrill Ride Magazine so there were edits and proofing copy in preparation for the upcoming kickstarter which starts on Tuesday 30th – Thrill Ride – the magazine (Year Two) by M. L. “Matt” Buchman — Kickstarter. There are some excellent writers in this year’s magazine, as there were in Year One, and I’m grateful to be included alongside them.

Secondly, I finally finished the editing and formatting of Death at a Wedding and got everything published, along with the reformatting of the cover for Thieves in the Temple. Both books now look like they belong together. Check out Death at a Wedding here: Death at a Wedding

And finally, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine confirmed my Jacob story The Cleansing of Abel will be in the May/June issue available in April.

It’s been a great start to the year and I can’t wait to see what comes in February.

An Update on AI Audio

AI is the current hot topic in many areas of our lives at the moment – from an AI engine being the first level of customer support, or those incessant robo-calls, to “creating” stories or images.

I have been following the various legal cases that are currently in flight, but that isn’t the focus this week. Instead I want to talk a little about AI audio which in the past two years has gone from almost pariah to an accepted medium.

As I mentioned in the posting of October 2022, I ran my novel Thieves in the Temple through the free Google Audio converter and played around a little with the various voice options. I didn’t do much more than that, and made it available on Google Play for the same price as the paperback. At the time, Google Play was the only place to make it available.

Fast forward to today, and those options have grown dramatically. The AI audio files from Google Play can now be made available on Kobo, Draft to Digital, and Book Funnel to name a few.

The feedback I had on the audio sales showed me there are still some tweaks I need to make to the text so the AI can interpret the words more easily. Those tweaks are on my schedule for the first quarter of 2024 so by the second quarter, the audio of Thieves in the Temple and the sequel novel Death at a Wedding will be available more widely.

Stay tuned for updates.

Planning for 2023

When I began jotting my thoughts down for 2023, one of the things that struck me was how similar the list was for 2022, and that made me pause.

A lot of the personal items were house maintenance projects, like replacing air-conditioning units. In 2022, they fell into the “nice to get to” category. For 2023, they’ve mostly moved into the “need to schedule” category.

From a writing perspective, that took a little more thought. As I mentioned my word count fell off a cliff in July and derailed my goals. There was also another factor in that the initial plan was to write mostly long fiction – more Jacob and Miriam stories, and a trilogy I’ve had rolling around in my head for a long time. Instead, I got distracted into short fiction, and short fiction I found hard. With the benefits of hindsight, I should have reviewed everything in the middle of the year, and reset. Easy to make these decision after the event.

Those thoughts coalesced around the same time I was reading some of Mark McGuinness’s work on being a 21st Century Creative, where he talks about a project focus rather than something more granular. The more I read, it became obvious I’ve let myself become too focused on the number of words written instead of the end product – a short story, novella, or novel. In 2023, I’m going to shift the emphasis. The writing plan, including keeping a more regular schedule with this blog, is to complete six projects in 2023. I’ll still track word count, and if I succeed, it will be about double the actual words for this year, and end up about 60% of what I planned for 2022.

And the projects? I know the first one, and have already made a start. There are placeholders for the rest, but they aren’t cast in stone.

I’ll let you know how it goes , and in the meantime, I hope everyone has a safe and prosperous New Year.

Thoughts on AI Audio

The use of an artificial intelligence voice to produce an audio version of a work of fiction or non-fiction has been around for quite a while now. Early versions were clearly early versions. The voices were monotone and robotic sounding and not really suited to the nuances and inflexions of a fiction story.

Time has passed, and the quality and ability of the AI voice to sound more human has improved in leaps and bounds. Joanna Penn provides regular updates on her podcasts (The Creative Penn Podcast: Writing, Publishing, Book Marketing, Making A Living With Your Writing | The Creative Penn), and earlier in the summer, she spoke about a new, and currently free, service on Google Play that takes your text manuscript and converts it to audio, with the option to select one of several AI voices.

As an experiment, in June, I put Thieves in the Temple through the process and added it to my Google Catalog along with the eBooks (Thieves in the Temple by Richard Freeborn – Audiobooks on Google Play). The quality wasn’t bad, so I priced the audio the same as the paperback, and added a notation it’s AI narrated. I intended to put a proper cover on it, like the eBook and paperback versions, but something bright and shiny distracted me, and I never got around to it.

And I’ve sold copies! That surprised me as I’ve done no marketing or promotion, just added it to the catalog and left it there. It’s now my top seller on Google!

Who knew?

First Thoughts on 2022

We’re just over a week into the year, and so far it’s a bit of a mixed bag. In terms of word count, I’m several thousand words below target for the tenth of the month. From a production perspective, I’ve completed two short stories, and have a third in flight.

If I’m going to hit the rest of my targets for January, I need to increase my word count, and two things happened this past week that were like a bat over the head. I mentioned Dean Wes’y Smith’s writing challenge last time. What I didn’t mention is the planning he did to set himself up for success.

Dean spent time in December tracking how he spent his time, and where he could find the hours for writing. The blog is here – My 2022 Challenge. In parallel, I listened to one of Joanna Penn’s podcasts, and she talked about the same thing – tracking your hours and finding time for writing.

And then it hit me.

I’ve listened to both these writers, and others, say much the same thing. I’ve never set myself up to track my time, and wondered why I couldn’t “find” extra minutes to write. I’ll let you know how the tracking goes this week, along with, potentially, two new short stories.

First Thoughts on 2022

I’ve spent a lot of time in the past couple of weeks thinking about writing, publishing, and cash streams during 2022. On the day job front we’ve been fortunate enough to have our contracts extended – in one case all the way to the end of 2022.

A lot of the planning has circled back to my previous thinking about what to write next year. Not so much what to write – I have more ideas than I know what to do with at the moment. It’s which bright shiny object gets priority until it’s finished.

To get close to what I’m thinking, the annual word count I mentioned last time needs to triple or quadruple. it’s not so much making it happen, but making it happen in the time I have available and factoring in day-to-day events and the travel we have planned.

Travel outside of the US looks to be trending toward a lottery again. As I write this, the infection counts are rising once more, both here in the US, and in England, so it’s coming back to the same questions I had earlier this year. Do I book and risk a lockdown and travel restrictions, or do I hold off?

Or flip a coin and go with that answer.

It’s That Time Again

It’s that time of year when we start to look back at the last twelve months, and begin focusing on the next twelve. The line from year to the next, is really an arbitrary one. There’s nothing to say we couldn’t start the reflection in June and implement in July each year. For those of us in the United States, it also aligns with the end of the tax year.

Looking back at 2021, my three main goals were to write more than 300,000 words, renew my project management certification, and publish 52 pieces of IP.

As of early December, my guess is the word count for the year will be just over 150,000 – slightly up on 2020 but not where I wanted it to be. Renewing my project management certification was essential for my day job. I ran it a little too close to the October deadline for my own comfort, but I did make it, and now have to start planning for renewal in 2024, which will be here before we know it.

At the beginning of 2021, I was about two thirds of the way through the Short Story Challenge of writing a story a week for a year. My thought was to take those stories and publish them individually, thus getting to the 52.

Separately, I learned a lot this year about publishing and what it takes to really achieve discoverability. Apart from publishing wide, the consensus seems to be, you need to look at having twenty or more major items available. Major items consist of novels, novellas, or collections. Individual short stories don’t count, so that led me to a slight rethink on the publishing approach for 2021, with the result I published five short story collections this year.

Reaching or getting close to the “magical” twenty number has driven a lot of my thinking around plans for 2022. As of early December 2021, there are fourteen more to go.

I’ll let you know how the planning progresses.

A Quick Update

And then the summer and autumn months flashed by and I realized I haven’t written here since the end of August.

Firstly an update from my previous post A Sad Farewell. We haven’t made a final decision on Jira or a replacement as yet, although we will be letting the cloud instance of Jira terminate later this year when the annual subscription expires. I did renew the server instance,and we are exploring the options around our own private cloud. That may involve becoming more technical than I want to get, or return to, but we’ll see.

A week or so ago, I published another collection, that’s my fifth collection for the year: Christmas at the Puzzle Store is available from all online retailers, and in paperback from Amazon.

Other highlights are that I replaced my office desk a few weeks ago. I’ve had a huge partner’s desk for the last fifteen years or more, and while I’ve enjoyed the space on the physical desktop, the many drawers and storage cabinets had become a magnet for clutter. I filled a trash bag full of papers and obsolete items like RS-232 cables.

Several people have asked about the next Jacob and Miriam novel, and I can report it’s back in the cross hairs of my focus. I have some thoughts on where it’s headed, but nothing specific yet. More on this as I get closer to the end of writing.

Getting up to Date

I checked through my notes last night and realized it’s nearly two months since I posted here. A lot has happened in those eight weeks, although there are no decisions yet on project management software.
I published a science fiction mystery collection Call Me Rhys, and have stories in two anthologies Earth Colonies, and Blurred Timelines, all available at your preferred retailer.
Thanks to Barbara Tarn who put the anthologies together, I also discovered diybookcovers.com. It doesn’t generate a book cover for you. You still have to do that yourself. What it does, is take your cover image and put it into a selected composite image. I did that with Beginnings in Babylon, as you can see below. Beginnings in Babylon is a collection of Jacob and Miriam stories that take place before the events of Thieves in the Temple.
I’m going to use diybookcovers again as more stories come out later this year.

Publishing Updates

This first third of May has been quite busy from a publishing perspective (not so good for writing, but more on that next time).

Firstly, Promise in the Gold was published on May 4th with my story, Searching for Dave included. The Books2Read link will take you to your favorite store, or you can get it direct from WMG Publishing. There are two other anthologies and a novel in the Cave Creek series so far, and you can check them out on the Amazon series page.

On a personal note, my second collection A Frailty of Heroes is available in eBook and paperback. I also worked out what I was doing wrong in Affinity Publisher with the cover for Tales From the Puzzle Store, and that paperback is also available.

I also finally set up Payhip, which ended up being easier than I expected. If you scroll through the other pages on this site, you’ll see a new option to buy my books direct from Payhip. There’s a 25% discount until July 31, 2021 if you use the code Summer21 when checking out.

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