Origins 2019 schedule

Hello again! It’s still convention season, and Origins will be my third con in six weeks and the end of my busy period with travel for the summer. I’ll be moderating several panels and speaking on a couple of others, and you can also find me in the Origins Author’s Library section of the exhibit hall much of the rest of the weekend. So if you’re headed to the show, I hope you’ll swing by and say hello!

 

Thursday, June 13:

1pm-2pm: Career Expectations: What can you expect from a writing career? How do you decide if you’re a success or a failure? Mercedes Lackey, Jennifer Brozek, Michael R. Underwood (M), Robyn King

4pm-5pm: Next-level Worldbuilding for Prose or Gaming: Talking about power dynamics in worldbuilding, layering of history, cohesive/coherent worldbuilding that feels like it all connects, etc. Lucy Snyder, Michael R. Underwood (M), Doc Myers

 

Friday, June 14:

2pm-3pm: Pen and Pixels: Lessons from gaming for prose fiction and lessons from prose for gaming. Carlos Hernandez, Michael R. Underwood, Tracy Chowdhury, Gregory A. Wilson (M)

 

Saturday, June 15:

3pm-4pm: Branding & Marketing Yourself and Your Content: Running a podcast, releasing short fiction for free, blogging, Tweeting, etc. All the different ways to identify and bring more attention to your writing and your brand. Larry Dixon, Michael R. Underwood, Robyn King, Cat Rambo, Gregory A. Wilson (M)

 

Sunday, June 16:

1pm-2pm: Using Folktales, Legends, and Myths in Your Storytelling: Learning how to differentiate the different types of folklore and how to incorporate them into your worldbuilding. Mercedes Lackey, Doc Myers, Addie J. King, Michael R. Underwood (M)

Balticon 2019 schedule

It’s BaltiCon time once more! My local con and excuse to hang out with friends while intermittently sitting on panels and talking about writing and business and gaming.

Here’s my schedule for this year. You can see the full details of my schedule here.

Friday, May 24
4pm – Freelancing in the Publishing Industry
Mount Washington, 4pm – 4:55pm
Saturday, May 25
2pm – Cyberpunk Remastered
Room 7029, 2pm – 2:55pm
4pm – Improving Your Pitch
Room 6017, 4pm – 4:55pm
5pm – Readings: Dodge, Underwood, Ward
St. George, 5pm – 5:55pm
Sunday, May 26
10am – RPG Worldbuilding Across Tabletop and LARPs
James, 10am – 10:55am
2pm – Worldbuilding for Fantasy and SF Novels
Kent, 2pm – 2:55pm
3pm – Autographs: Gail Z. Martin and Michael R. Underwood
5th Floor Lobby, 3pm – 3:55pm

Nebula Conference Schedule

Next week I’ll be attending the SFWA Nebula Conference. The Nebulas have grown from a conference mostly focused on the awards ceremony into a full-blown professional conference with amazing programming and lots of opportunities for both networking and professional development.

Here’s my schedule of events. Hope to see you there!

Catalog Copy Dos and Don’ts: copy is not a blurb, learn your d*mn terms!

Thursday May 16th, 2:00pm @ A/B Salon

We spend hours trying to get the perfect cover that will catch our audience – but too often, we lose them with the cover copy.  What are the dos, don’ts, and Tragic Mistakes of cover copy, and how can you nail it?

 

Mass Autographing

Saturday May 18th, 1:30pm @ Grand Ballroom

Come say hello and get books signed by a star-studded array of authors.

 

Structuring a Series

Sunday May 19th, 11:30am @ G/H Salon

We talk about beginning, middles, and ends, but a series contains a multitude of endings. What are the strategies for keeping a reader’s interest, while giving them a satisfying ending? How do you sustain tension across multiple works?

BFGCon Schedule

This weekend, I’m headed to BFGCon, a regional games conference in Frederick, MD. I’m presenting on a few panels, but will otherwise just be hanging out and taking in the gaming goodness.

Friday

1300 – 1400 Turning Games into Art – A panel discussion

Ben Walker
Jess Comstock
Michael R. Underwood
Sarah Zeiter

Saturday

1430 – 1530 Next Level Worldbuilding — A presentation by me with lots of time for Q&A

Michael R. Underwood

Sunday

1300 – 1400 Social Justice Gaming – A panel discussion

Dan Layman-Kennedy
Jess Comstock
Michael R. Underwood
Daniel Laughlin

Genrenauts and the SFWA StoryBundle

 

2019 SFWA Fantasy Storybundle - 12 great authors, 16 magical books!I’m very pleased to share the news that Genrenauts Season One is part of the 2019 SFWA Fantasy Bundle, where you can get 16 books by 12 authors (including me) for one low price!

You, the reader, get to take a look at the titles we’ve chosen and then decide how much you’d like to pay for the bundle. You set the price that you pay ($5 min) for the primary titles or kick in a little extra and reap the bonanza with all the books! You also get the chance to assign a portion of the proceeds to support the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, which does amazing work to support SFF writers through resources, advocacy, and more. I’ve been a member for over five years and have been very pleased by what the organization has done and continues to do.

This bundle only lasts for a limited time, so make sure you don’t miss out on the action!

These books come with the basic bundle:

Blade & Rose by Miranda Honfleur:
 A perfect blend of fantastic action, menacing intrigue, and riveting romance.

Amaskan’s Blood by Raven Oak: Two sisters. Two loyalties. One path together.

The Twenty-Sided Sorceress, Books 1-3 by Annie Bellet: Gamer. Nerd. Sorceress. After twenty-five years fleeing from a powerful sorcerer, a mostly-human woman is finally safe – if she can resist using her magic. Or can she?

<Editor’s note – A definite winner for Geekomancy fans.>

Ashwin by Kit Rocha: Can a genetically manipulated soldier be a hero? A healer finds a way to love a man without feelings—and fight for brightness in a dark world.

and, of course:

Genrenauts, Complete Season One by Michael R. Underwood: A kickass extra-dimensional adventure through the stories we love.

And the Bonus Books included for larger contributions ($15 or above):

The Arrows of the Heart by Jeffe Kennedy: What do you do when your boyfriend is an animal? Really. An animal.

The Dragon Blood Chronicles by Lindsay Buroker: A dashing Pilot, a comely Sorcerous and smart-mouthed Soulsword all come together in a world intent on killing them.

Radiance by Grace Draven: A marriage between alien kingdoms – and two “spares” who find beauty in each other, and that heroism comes in many forms.

The Raven and the Reindeer by Ursula Vernon: A enthralling remix of a classic fairy tale, with a practical heroine who follows her heart to a very different ending.

Catching Echoes by Meghan Ciana Doidge: What could go wrong when a no-nonsense witch with family issues is forced to work alongside a powerful and obnoxious vampire to solve a murder?

Al-Kabar by Lee French: A young woman is chosen by powerful supernatural forces to bring justice to a desert land of oasis kingdoms.

The Glass Gargoyle by Marie Andreas: A spate of dead patrons forces archeologist Taryn St. Giles to become a bounty hunter. Needless to say, things don’t go well.

Head to StoryBundle to grab your bundle today!


Become a Patron!

Confusion 2019 schedule

It’s time for another ConFusion! This has become one of my favorite cons and I think I’m up to about 5 or 6 years of attending in a row. It’s a great chance to kick off the year with some programming, catching up and talking shop with friends and colleagues, and eating some Detroit Style Pizza.

 

This year, here’s where you can find me as far as official programming at the con! Apart from these, I’ll be hanging out and catching up with friends in the common spaces, so please feel free to say hello!

Friday 1:00 PM Erie – The Business of Episodic Storytelling
Serialized fiction has experienced a renaissance in the age of the internet. Our panelists discuss the business side of episodic storytelling– What are the trade-offs between self-publishing and going with a publisher like Serial Box? If going through a publisher, how do you pitch serialized projects? If self-publishing, which platform is best for your work and audience? Pablo Defendini (M), Michael R. Underwood, Mackenzie Flohr, E.D.E. Bell (Emily), Christian Klaver

Friday 3:00 PM Erie – A Pro Writer’s Guide To Consultants
There are a wealth of consulting services available to professional writers these days, including paid editing, sensitivity reading, marketing and social media consulting, and career coaching. What can these consulting services offer to trad and indie authors? When are they a good investment, and how do you vet and choose providers? Cat Rambo (M), Richard Shealy, Dan Stout, Michael R. Underwood, Dan Wells

Friday 6:00 PM Dearborn – The Future of Masculinity
Masculinity and “manliness” are social constructs, and like all social constructs, they evolve and change over time. How will our definitions of masculinity evolve over time? How can we portray positive visions of masculinity in speculative fiction? Jason Sanford (M), Pablo Defendini, Michael R. Underwood, John Chu, David Anthony Durham

Saturday 2:00 PM Rotunda Reading
Michael R. Underwood, Ferrett Steinmetz, Patrick S. Tomlinson

Saturday 3:00 PM Erie Autograph Session (3pm)
Meet your favorite authors and get your books signed! Limit 3 items per person, please. Ada Palmer, Angus Watson, Anthony W. Eichenlaub, Cat Rambo, Diana Rowland, Dyrk Ashton, Jason Sanford, Joe R. Lansdale, Josef Matulich, Keith Hughes, Lucy A. Snyder, Mackenzie Flohr, Mark Oshiro, Michael R. Underwood, Mur Lafferty, Stacey Filak, Tracy Townsend

Saturday 7:00 PM Erie Sleeping In Light: A Look Back At Babylon 5
Babylon 5 has been off the air for twenty years. Come join us to reminisce about the best parts, reconsider the parts that haven’t aged so well, and cook up theories of what B5 could look like for a modern audience. Annalee Flower Horne (M), Michael R. Underwood, Scott H. Andrews, Natalie Luhrs

Some of Mike’s Favorite Things of 2018

2018 was a hell of a year that was somehow also lasted a decade? I finished and submitted a novel, left the job I’d been in for over five years, and so on. The political hellscape was especially loud, so I found myself diving deep into media for respite.

Here are a few things that brought me joy or at least blissful distraction during 2018:

Games

  • Blades in the Dark – I got in on Blades early but only finally got to playing it this year, when I ran a game for Speculate. I explain the game in the podcast episodes, so just head over if you’re interested in hearing my thoughts.
  • D&D 5th edition – I played more D&D this year than I have in probably a decade or more. 5th edition is for sure my favorite edition even though I still have some problems with it. We’re two games into a three-game miniseries on Speculate. Shout-outs to Dave, the DM of the ongoing game where I play my good good boy Faelar the Windwalker, Bard With Change-the-World Political Aspirations
  • Slay the Spire – A rogue-like deck-builder dungeon-crawler game. Great to play in 20-40 minute chunks as a break from the world.
  • Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild – as good as advertised, even if I didn’t enjoy it as much as some. Never finished b/c the two times I tried to enter the endgame, I got frustratingly stuck.
  • Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle – this is too zany to work, but it does. Mario meets the Rabbids in an X-Com-style cover shooter with strong movement mechanics.
  • Destiny 2: Forsaken — this got me back into Destiny and playing with friends. I haven’t played as many different games this fall into winter because Forsaken had enough material to keep us going.
  • Hollow Knight – Soulslikes and Metroidvanias aren’t really my bag, but the art direction and gameplay design on this is so strong it carried me through (also b/c I was playing the game alongside some of my favorite games journalists, which meant a lot)
  • Battletech – I’ve enjoyed most of the different versions of this universe, including the Clix game, the CCG, and the cartoon, so it was no surprise that I got into Harebrained Scheme’s revitalization of the property as a campaign-driven tactical RPG. I need to finish the campaign at least, and am interested in the Flashpoints expansion’s Campaign Mode for a second play-through.
  • Marvel’s Spider-Man – I just got this for the holidays but am loving the version of Peter Parker/Spider-Man it provides. The swinging feels *so good*.
  • Mysterium – I’ve only played it twice but I’m already in love with the great art, the strong thematic design, and the collaborative play style.
  • The Banner Saga 3 (though I replayed 1 and 2 also this year) – Very dark, but in the “keep fighting because every life saved is worth it” style that I can appreciate in The Current Era (TM).

Books

  • The Refrigerator Monologues by Catherynne M. Valente – An angry feminist analog to something like Kurt Busiek’s Astro City, The Refrigerator Monologues lays bare the epidemic of misogyny and erasure that superhero comics have perpetuated over the decades through a series of sharply-written first-person accounts from women in a superhero world. Highly recommended for anyone wanting to think critically about the supers genre and especially anyone that wants to write in the genre.
  • A Hidden Hope by Laura Ambrose – Delightfully fluffy F/F starring two writers in a Reunited Exes structure, set at a SFF convention.
  • A Conspiracy of Whispers by Ada Harper – An excellent dystopian SF romance that delivers excellence in SF plotting and romance character arcs.
  • Wanted & Wired by Vivien Jackson – Like A Conspiracy of Whispers, this one impressed me both as SF and as romance. This one is set on earth in a grimy climate decline future, between a post-human fixer and an augmented cyborg cyberpunk runner. Very steamy in terms of the sex scenes.
  • The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal – This alt-history opens with a blockbuster movie-grade sequence and just gets better from there, though it slows down into an exciting but also thoughtful story of a woman involved in an accelerated space race to allow humanity to escape climate disaster caused by a massive meteorite’s impact in 1952.
  • Exiles: Test of Time by Saladin Ahmed, Javier Rodriguez, et al. – I liked the old Exiles, and this new series is the same kind of fun, with a great art style and fun characters. I’m sorry the series won’t be running for dozens of issues, but I look forward to reading the rest.

Music

Movies

  • Black Panther – my take on this movie isn’t important. But I loved it and am so glad it’s in the world.
  • Into the Spider-Verse – Do not sleep on this movie. It’s probably the most stylish superhero movie I’ve ever seen, and absolutely makes great use of the animated medium.
  • Avengers: Infinity War – An incredible feat of cinematic storytelling that I have big problems with even after several viewings.
  • Dumplin’ – adapted from the Julie Murphy novel. Delivers a positive message with strong performances.
  • Thor: Ragnarok (yes it came out in 2017 but I watched it a bunch this year and love it) – Exactly my kind of ridiculousness and an inspiration for the direction I took the space opera novel in later revisions. I heart this movie forever.

2018 Eligibility Post

Hi folks! It’s December, which means Award Eligibility Season(TM), among many other things.

This year has had a lot of big life changes for me with leaving Angry Robot, putting out my shingle for consulting work, and more.

Fiction

Fiction-wise, I’ve been working on new stuff that is still not quite ready to announce (the publishing life!), but for 2018, here’s what I did:

 

Born to the Blade S1 cover art - by Will Staehle

I’m the creator and lead writer on the epic fantasy series Born to the Blade, working with the amazing team of Malka Older, Marie Brennan, and Cassandra Khaw. Every episode is a novelette, and the series as a whole would be eligible for awards for Best Serialized Fiction or the like.

I wrote three episodes of the series myself:

Episode 1 – “Arrivals”
Episode 4 – “The Gauntlet”
Episode 11 – “All The Nations of the Sky”

but they’re all awesome and I hope you’ll check out the whole series if you haven’t.

I also published a Genrenauts short story (starring team logistician and all-around badass Shirin Tehrani) called “The Unlikely Turncoat” in the Outland Entertainment anthology Hath No Fury.

 

Podcasts

I’m also a co-host on two podcasts, which are eligible for the Best Fancast Hugo among other podcast awards.

Speculate

This year, Greg and I re-booted Speculate into becoming an Actual Play RPGcast with a rotation group of SF/F professionals. It’s been an utter blast, and I hope you’ll check it out. We have two complete sessions up now and more coming.

The Skiffy and Fanty Show

I’ve also done some episodes of The Skiffy and Fanty Show, though not as many this year as I was focusing on my writing, etc.

Join Me on Patreon

Since going full-time as a writer, I’ve been wanting to find other ways to give back and to create an online community away from Twitter and Facebook to be able to talk about writing, publishing, gaming, and so on with friends, colleagues, readers, and so on.

That led me back to Patreon, which I’ve seen other authors use, and am involved with for Skiffy and Fanty and Speculate.

On my Patreon, I’m sharing essays on the craft of writing, the business of publishing, and the ins-and-outs of tabletop RPGs and talking about those topics with my patrons. I’m covering topics like using the D&D stats as an analogy for evaluating and exploiting your greatest craft skills as a writer, how to create a religious system for your world that feels lived-in and realistic, and how to make your query, synopsis, and manuscript all work together when querying agents and editors. I’m also sharing excerpts of works-in-progress and more pictures of Oreo. I’ve got some big ideas to pursue down the road, like producing videos about writing/gaming/publishing, bringing my stories to new formats (comics, games, etc.), and more.

Here’s my short introductory video:

And there’s more information at the page itself. If you’ve enjoyed my writing on any of these topics or my stories/novels/novellas, I hope you’ll join me as I continue my adventures in the world of storytelling.