Seeking Recommendations: Books like The Blacklist

Watching The Blacklist yesterday, I was reminded of how much I like the show, and how it hits me right in a crime fiction sweet spot.

To that end, I asked Twitter and Facebook for recommendations of crime novels that would give me the same kinds of cool as NBC’s The Blacklist.

Some recommendations so far:

Ghostman by Roger Hobbs
The Travis McGee series by John D McDonald

Any other recs? I’m reading up on the crime genre to strengthen my fu for Exhibit A, and because it’s fun.

Help me, internet! Add to my already-gigantic To-Be-Read pile! 🙂

15 Writers Meme

Aside

The Rules: list 15 writers/poets who’ve influenced you and will always stick with you. Don’t overthink. List the 15 influences in 15 minutes.

I’m going to skip authors who I met and befriended before knowing their work for this one (namely Marie Brennan, Darja Malcolm-Clarke, Alyc Helms, etc.)

These are roughly in chronological order of my encountering the author’s work.

Madeline L’Engle
Ursula K. LeGuin
Gary Paulsen
Margaret Weis
Tracey Hickman
Mark Rein*Hagen
Phil Bruccato
George R. R. Martin
Joseph Campbell
Chuang Tzu (probably not a real person)
Octavia Butler
China Mieville
Warren Ellis
Judith Butler
Scott Lynch

The Fear (Revision, Critiques, and the Liberation of Doing)

Back in February, my fiance and I moved across town to a new home – and since it was a short-distance move, we broke it down into a number of waves. That had the overall effect of reducing the amount of stress on any one day, but it ended up getting spread across the month, spreading out the stress. I could have managed the schedule better, especially since it was a also a busy time for my fiance at work.

The thing that made the whole process more problematic, no matter what form it takes, is my strong aversion to moving. Something about putting my whole life in boxes, in de-nesting, is really emotionally taxing for me. I moved several times as a kid (IN->TX->NY->NJ->IN) and the stress of moving seems to get an automatic critical for double emotional submission damage.

Not working on writing due to free time going to moving plus the stress of moving meant that when I did get to sit down and look through the critiques from my beta readers for The Younger Gods, it all seemed a bit too much. I got The Fear. The ‘Oh crap this book is garbage I can’t possibly fix it,’ kind of Fear that is totally baseless and is just self-doubt wearing context-specific armor and dual-wielding fatigue and not-having-written anxiousness.

After a day or two of letting The Fear get to me, I decided to just start working. I picked a couple of small changes and fixes to make, and I did them, ignoring what at the time seemed like a huge pile of ‘impossible’ work.

Surprise surprise – once I got started working, The Fear receded. This is something I’ve faced before. If I spend too long not working on something for writing, whatever I’m supposed to be doing seems more and more intimidating. In reality, the day-by-day effort of working on novels, stories, or even promotional admin keeps The Fear at bay.

Put me down as a ‘make sure to always be working on something’ kind of writer. I still sometimes need fallow periods after big pushes, but I think I’m the sort that always needs to be tending to the irons on the fire. Luckily, I have a lot of irons.

Geekomancy and Celebromancy on BoingBoing

Today I woke to the delightful news that Geekomancy and Celebromancy got recommendation shout-outs from Ramez Naam on Gweek, a BoingBoing podcast.

From Russia With Doubt

From Russia With Doubt (Gweek podcast 138)

*pinches self* Yep, that happened.

Huge thanks to Mez, who is a friend, a wickedly smart guy, and an excellent author. His debut science fiction novel Nexus just got nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke Award, you know. If you haven’t checked it out, definitely go do so.

Mind Meld – Epic Geek Debates

Aside

Over at SF Signal, I took part in a Mind Meld about Epic Geek Debates, which is a topic so perfect for me I had a lot of difficulty narrowing my experiences down to just one debate to talk about.

http://www.sfsignal.com/archives/2014/03/mind-meld-epic-geek-debates-rants/

With shout-outs to my Skiffy & Fanty colleagues, and especially Kommandant Shaun Duke.

Contact page and mailing list

Dear all,

I’ve been doing site admin over the last few weeks to prepare for a busy year of releases and promotional activity.

To that end, I’ve created a distinct contact page, and I’ve created a mailing list.

The list will be low-volume, and will mostly include announcements re: new releases and public appearances. If you’re interested in the Ree Reyes series and/or my other upcoming works, please sign up and be guaranteed to catch any major news in all things Michael R. Underwood.

I’ve included the signup widget below:

Subscribe to Michael R. Underwood’s mailing list

* indicates required



View previous campaigns.

I’m using MailChimp, which I assume means that you can expect to see this little friend delivering news to your email box. (No poo, though. I’m going to be very strict about that part).

Chimp Open

Monday Morning Link Salad

A few cool things happened over this last week, so I’ve assembled them here for public consumption:

KristinD at Bitten By Books gave Attack the Geek 4/5 stars

Mick Happy Reviews gave Geekomancy 4/5 stars

godzilla-1954-criterion-cover

The Shoot the WISB team (myself included) discussed the original 1954 Godzilla

And in case you missed it back on March 7th, I announced that there will be a third Ree Reyes novel: Hexomancy, in 2015.

Writing female characters as a male & feminist ally

Aside

Earlier today I linked to this essay about writing female characters:

And so I wanted to say just a bit more about it, especially idea #6 – swapping the gender to make a male character female without changing anything else about the role.

Just today, I turned in the submission draft of The Younger Gods, the first book in a new Urban Fantasy series with Pocket Books.

The book has a substantial cast, but my favorite character in the book might have to be Dorothea, one of The Broadway Knights (a secret society that protects the homeless of New York City from threats mundane and supernatural). And here’s why that’s relevant. When I first created Dorothea, her name was Graham, and she was male.

I wrote Graham for about 15-20K words of the book, then decided the character would be cooler, and the cast more balanced, if Graham were a woman. I wrote the rest of the novel with Dorothea in the role, and when it came time for revisions, I went back to change the pronouns and tweak the physical description of the character. And that was it.

When I re-cast Graham as Dorothea, the character felt more distinct, more compelling, just because I’d re-approached the role, challenged my assumptions, and taken the extra step. I hope readers will approve of the results. And when I write my next novel, I’ll be on the lookout for other characters that I could flip gender-wise or re-interpret as people of color to make sure I’m writing a more diverse, more representative cast.

Attack The Geek Cover Reveal

Dear all,

The fine folks at Pocket Star have arranged a fantastic cover reveal event for Attack the Geek across a number of great blogs and sites. I’ve rounded up the links here so you can partake of the dicebag full of excitement!

Links a go-go:

A Bibliophile’s Reverie

Adventures in Sci-Fi Publishing

Anna’s Book Blog

Fangs Wands, and Fairy Dust

Gizmo’s Reviews

Manga Maniac Cafe

Night Owl Reviews

Talking Supe

 

 

Attack the Geek coverAnd for archival purposes, now that you all have visited those lovely sites, here it is: