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Skyla Dawn Cameron

My characters kill people so I don't have to.

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Nov 25 2022

Stocking Up, or Trying Not To

Not gonna lie, all the Black Friday/Cyber Monday sales are stressful because I’m outta cash–I’ve got gifts on my credit card I need to pay off (along with groceries; one store is late paying this month)–though I was very, very tempted a few times. “Look, this thing I use regularly is on sale! I’m going to need it in a few months anyway!” Okay yes, Skyla, but you’ll just have to wait. At the moment it’s still a want, not a need.

My natural inclination is to stock up. On everything. And keep backups. Because I’ve trudged through the snow for an hour every day to work in running shoes with holes in them and unable to afford new ones, so I keep backup running shoes. I loathe ramen because it reminds me of being poor, but I still stock up on packages and fill the pantry when I see them at 50% off, because I’ve been to bed hungry too many times. I download free Kindle books in genres I never read just in case I miraculously have time to get through the hundreds on my TBR and can’t afford something new to read.

I can’t explain why I stock up on first aid supplies, though, other than general zombie preparedness. Plus I live in Ontario, I’m better off treating wounds and factures at home.

Experiences leave long-lasting affects on the brain, and while I’ve read enough to know you can make new neuropathways, I don’t know how effective that would be for me given the overall instability of my life. I am, admittedly, in a slightly better position than I have been previously, but it is not security and I still worry monthly about making rent.

Anyway. Sales!

Solomon’s Seal is 99c at Kobo this weekend. It’s been six years and I assume anyone reading this already has it, but maybe you know someone who might want to check it out.

The Twitter implosion concerns me as that’s where 95% of my premade cover sales have come from. Even regular clients who’ve picked them up remember to check the selection when I post them on Twitter. I may try to add one or two more on Monday, if I’ve got a few minutes. Already I notice views ticking down from where they used to be as a lot of people who used to share the sales have left the bird app, so when it’s gone completely, that’ll probably no longer be an income stream for me (which makes me nervous but, well, here we are).

Black Friday Sale on premade covers. Coupon code MYHEARTWILLGOON at checkout. Excluding sale items.

The MYHEARTWILLGOON coupon code also works at Payhip, should anyone need to flesh out their collection.

Watcher of the Woods is almost ready to go, I’ve got it formatted for print and to go to the proofer shortly. Then I’ve got a few minutes of breathing room to write some new things before doing some more passes on next year’s three releases (final version of Soul Spell, then the first two Waverly books). While I feel like I’m accomplishing next to nothing right now, I keep reminding myself that Hell Fire is the only thing I really have to finish writing in the next six months; worst-case scenario, I can slot the third Waverly book into spring 2024.

But much like hoarding old pairs of running shoes in case I run out, I’m doing the same with manuscripts; last year after Yampellec’s Idol was out and I had nothing else scheduled, I got my-career-is-over level terrified (this is why nagging me is not helpful; I am already in a panic all the fucking time).

So anyway, Watcher. In it, the heroine is reading a book by Norah from Dweller on the Threshold, and in the paperback version there’s the actual pages. Because I’m a nerd and those things make me happy.

Dweller in paperback and hardcover had all kinds of little details, like the notes and scribbles Norah finds are right in the book, and I wanted to do something similar here. I don’t really sell a lot in print, but it’s a nice detail for those into that. I think I’ll be able to put together some cool Etsy packages when it’s out in February.

I’ve got a couple of books to read for work so I’m not reading anything for pleasure right now, but I did watch Wednesday on Netflix. While it’s a fairly standard teen-magic-school-predictable-mystery fare, it’s done well, with great performances across the board, and if you’ve ever wondered what a conversation with my friend Dina James is like, look no further than the titular character.

Gif of Wednesday Addams saying I do like stabbing

I also finished A Plague Tale: Requiem, and I both hope there’s a third and also hope that Amicia retires.

I like seeing story-based video games tackle the consequences of all the long-term murder these characters do, but it does mean I reach a point where I’m like “Please leave these poor girls alone and give them some therapy.” (While I don’t play exclusively female-led games, it’s what I veer toward, so I can’t say if there’s the same pattern in male-led games. But Ellie, Lara, and Amicia all need some group therapy together.)

(I love photo mode.)

(I should probably take my own advice there and get poor Livi some therapy. She is climbing her way back up again, though, I promise.)

I was going to talk about my Xmas gift to myself, my little countertop expresso bar, but this is long and I’m tired and I have to work. Today I’m subsisting almost entirely on a Bailey’s latte, and I do prefer my mocha frapp to the store-bought one because it’s a little less sweet.

But Shawn likes it very much, despite all the noises it makes.

Final reminder, in case I don’t blog until late next week: this month is the last chance to get Witch Hunt in ebook for all patrons. December it bumps up to $5+ patrons going forward. Print is at Amazon for everyone, at least.

ETA: The Painscreek Killings is like $5 on Steam right now for the weekend sale–this is well worth grabbing, as it’s a good little mystery walking simulator.

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog · Tagged: life, sales, writing

Nov 20 2022

Plagues, Sales, and a Break

I had grand plans for the weekend–Watcher of the Woods to finish another pass on, Silent All These Years to make some significant word count on, and I’ve started Hell Fire (next year’s Elis serial at Patreon). I did get December’s Patreon vignette done–set during Livi’s Christmas after Charon’s Gold–but I woke Saturday with a headache and it was hours before I could function, so that put an end to that.

Not meds this time–I think it’s lack of sleep, eye strain, and stress. But I popped my electronics on Do Not Disturb and slept, and I’m much better today.

Black Friday sales are popping up early, so I broke down and got A Plague Tale: Requiem, which I’ve really been looking forward to. Innocence was such a great little gem I bought on a whim years ago (give me a female main character and I’m about 60% sold already) and was quite pleased with it.

It wears its TLoU influence on its sleeve while managing to be its own thing, and I replayed that this weekend in preparation for the sequel. Still mad about the dog (I skip that cutscene when replaying). Still mad about the pig (I don’t even look back at that). Still mad about Rodric (the only side character I truly loved). But it’s still a great game, and I’m going to play Requiem for a few hours today, prepared to have my heart broken.

Playing plague games during a plague is apparently a thing for me.

Speaking of Black Friday sales, I started mine early due to the Twitterpocalypse–without Twitter, I basically wouldn’t sell any premade covers. Since I’m still on the boat–or, rather, floating on debris above the frigid water at this point–the coupon this time is MYHEARTWILLGOON and you can get 30% off them until the end of the month.

If I’ve got time (ahaha), I’ve got stock to use up so there might be a few additional ones added in another week or so. All sales are helping to pad Shawn’s dental surgery fund. And possibly helping to buy me games for my PS5 that I’m excited about.

That code also works at Payhip for 30% off all my ebooks (though if you’re on Patreon, that discount code is better–got get discounts with that).

I’m going to finish some chores and play my new game and try to continue to rest with some silence here at Chez Skyla for a bit–and attempt to not feel guilty for not getting enough writing done. The downside of finishing three WIPs and writing three new ones last year is that anything less than feels like I’m slacking (though, of course, half of what I’m doing right now is revising the hot messes I created last year, so I guess it all evens out).

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog

Nov 16 2022

Horror for Valentine’s Day

Last night the editor got Watcher of the Woods back to me–I’ve worked her like mad the last few months, she’s a superhero and deserves a long break before I hit her with Soul Spell and The Killing Beach–so I’ve got those I’m working on today with another read-through before I format it for print for the proofer to review.

She feels it’s even better than Dweller, which is hard for me because it was a tricky book to write and I’m still not sure I like it myself. But she loves it and found it scary, and said these books are definitely my jam and I should write more.

Which is the plan.

I turned forty almost two months ago and while age is just a number, I realize any differences in outlook I have right now is the culmination of the past few years–it’s just something about forty tips one over the other side. Your life being half over (or more than that–I’m doubtful I’ll make it to sixty) makes you realize your life is never going to be what you wanted it to be. I joke about younger photos of myself with, “Aw, look at her, so full of hopes and dreams”, but there is something to that; and before you start with “you can still achieve your dreams after forty!” remember that is not the case for all things. Some things, you simply cannot have anymore.

I grieve for that, but I cannot change it. I have a lot of thinky thoughts about that feeling of running out of sand, that will probably make it into a character’s arc in Waverly’s books.

So having entered my Fuck You Forties (in which I say “fuck you” to everything all the time) I’m finding so much right now is just giving myself the things I always wanted–like Agent Cooper Barbie, and the custom Audrey doll my friend got me to match–because I never stopped being the little girl who wanted those things, and she deserves nice things (another very difficult concept for me, that I deserve nice things–I burst into tears when people say that to me). I’ll decorate how I want. (There is a theme here; I think I’m starting there because that was so formative to me when I was seven/eight years old.) After an ex ruined my credit and the subsequent poverty, I have spent almost three years building it back up again with a shitty Capital One card, and was finally rewarded with actual real credit–I can see how younger people get in trouble with that, as the thought of “I’m an adult, I could buy the thing I want” is extremely seductive, though I manage to not give in. There may be a little $100 espresso machine with a milk frother in my future, though, as gifting myself things is part of adulthood for me.

And this shift means writing the things I want, and I wanted to be a mystery and horror writer when I was a little girl.

This isn’t to say other books haven’t been what I wanted to write–pen name words excepting, every single book has been something I wanted to read. Given that I put my books out myself, I can guarantee that–my tastes may not align with others, but every single book is one of my heart. But I am reconnecting, I think, with who I used to be.

I am probably not going to sell any more books–I’ll probably sell even fewer, as I think Livi was the most commercial thing I’ve ever written and it’s never taken off, and preorders for these other books are lucky to hit double digits. I’m never going to be a bestseller but I’m hoping to squeak by with at least enough money from writing sources to pay the bills and keep the lights on, and I’m content with that as a goal. Writing horror is comfortable to me, like I’m sinking into a blanket from childhood that I’d forgotten but that smells like home.

So I’m going to see what I can get done with Watcher of the Woods today, let the third book in Skyla’s Haunted Pandemic Trilogy of Childhood Trauma percolate (I should probably call that the Hope Falls Trilogy, or Hope Falls Ghosts or something, but the books are all standalone and it doesn’t need an official series title), and continue doing what I want.

And hey, maybe I’ll make a mid-February horror release a thing after this a swell. Sure, October horror releases would be more profitable, but hey, have you met me??!

Since when have I done anything profitable?

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog

Nov 11 2022

Rescheduled Pineapple

Shawn’s vet texted me yesterday morning to say she was really sick and not able to come into work, so we’ve rescheduled his dental surgery for next month (next available slot is right before the holidays, which means I get to spend Christmas being paranoid something will happen while everything is closed–fun times!). While I’ve been squirreling away money for him for the past year–it seems more reliable to just do it myself than pay for insurance and cross my fingers they pay out–a December surgery means anything above and beyond what I’ve saved away will be paid for with Charon’s Gold sales, so if you bought that one (or any book) in October, thank you. (If you bought it any time, thank you as well; it’s just that December’s going to be very tight, so all those October sales will be helping.)

Unfortunately–or fortunately?–I didn’t get the text until a few minutes after I’d given him his initial sedative he needs to be calm at the vet, so he still ended up drugged a few hours later.

I used that time wisely.

He’s almost four and I feel like there are fewer and fewer people who understand this reference, so here you go.

Speaking of sales, I think I’ve figured out what’s going on with all these paperbacks from Amazon I’m not getting paid for. I’m testing one part of the theory and will report back next week.

The bird app is continuing to go down in the most spectacular fashion, with the blue check “verified for $8” fiasco–and this is why I cannot leave until the site is well and truly gone (which will likely be soon). The parody accounts all getting verified and shitposting nonstop has truly been one of the highlights, like when Trump got COVID, or when the fly landed on Pence’s head during the debate.

oop pic.twitter.com/CV3ifuWSmL

— littlebear36 (@littlebear36_) November 11, 2022

We are dying as we lived and it’s glorious.

I still grieve it. This is a place that has connected me with my closest friends; with clients; with readers. Yes, there is plenty of bad, but while it may be a hellsite, it is MY hellsite. It’s chaos, and all the good and the bad that chaos entails (and I am, if nothing else, chaotic). And there is not currently an alternative for all the things I like about it, so when it goes down, I’ll cross my fingers and hope for the best for my career. But while I mourn, I must laugh, because gallows humour is just how I cope.

The flight to Mastodon for some has been interesting to behold, and I’ve watched a pronounced, mostly racial split among my timeline. This article articulates a lot of what I’ve been watching, in that there’s a certain digital white flight aspect, because the fact is that a lot of the sudden “concerns” about Twitter have always been present for marginalized people–and is present at all social media being touted as alternatives–but now that it’s threatening white people, they’re moving to another platform. And Mastodon is…interesting. I know some folks who have loved it for years, and that’s great for them, but the way any time it’s brought up people get incredibly patronizing if you have trouble with it–if not outright hostile over very valid criticisms (like weaponizing inclusive language and content warnings to prevent discussing things white folks get uncomfortable about)–make it a very unappealing place for many of us (myself included). Mastodon evangelicals are basically the vegans of social media–I’m allowed to make that joke as a mostly vegan vegetarian btw–so understandably many of us have no desire to hang out there if that’s the userbase. There’s also “no ads!” being touted as a good thing, but that means the work of moderating is being done by unpaid labour of volunteers. That makes me deeply uncomfortable, considering my years of volunteer experience.

So yes, I’m going down with the ship.

There was more I was going to post about (my new Audrey doll; mutterings about learning to identify whether you’re the audience for something or not; untangling plot threads with the WIP), but I have chores, and there’s always next week.

Plus I have to watch this Doug Ford verified parody account and laugh before it gets nuked.

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog

Nov 08 2022

Bat-Shawn, and a Preorder

Yes, I got him batwings. I am easily influenced by algorithms.

I wouldn’t say he loves them but he too is easily influenced–by treats, specifically.

He goes for his dental surgery Thursday morning, which is probably about 70% of my mental stress right now. There’s a reason “Future Days” is his song–if I ever were to lose him, I’d surely lose myself. That little monster is one of a kind, and I’m wavering between “go home when you drop him off and wait for them to call you” and “just find a park to sit at for five hours and wait in case there’s an emergency”. Gus went into heart failure literally overnight; I live in perpetual fear that if I look away for even a second, I’ll lose Shawn too.

So that worry is not helping the chronic headaches that have taken up again, which I strongly suspect is a medication side effect with the increased dosage. They’re constant, and wake me when I’m trying to sleep–the only thing that helps is ibuprofen, which I’m not supposed to take. So. Yeah. It’s making everything, including having to look at screens all day, very difficult. My tablets can be halved, so I’m going back a step for a few weeks again before trying to increase it to what it should be.

I was discussing this with a friend, how absolutely wild it is that the world is centered around the expectation that no one working has health problems. People balk at mandating just ten sick days but if you’re diagnosed with a health problem and your medication has a few weeks of side effects? It’s all designed to push people who need the bare minimum of accommodations out of the workforce so everyone can turn around and complain about people on disability or unemployment. Accommodations–be it medical ones, WFH, etc–could keep so many more people working and independent, but we’re in a late-stage capitalistic hellscape, so of course we don’t do that.

I am so, so fortunate to set my own schedule, but I have nothing to fall back on, which means I can’t just sit and wait a few weeks for side effects to subside. So back to baby steps.

Despite knowing what the problems are with the WIP, as mentioned previously, I’m still not sure how to fix it. It might require gutting the whole thing and starting a new book to weave things in properly. Or it might require setting it aside and writing something else (also known as Making the Book Jealous, which I swear does work). Or I might just have to plow through to the end and figure out if I can fix it in the next draft. It’s one of those things where I really wish I could talk issues out with someone, but Shawn is not super helpful with these things.

But, Waverly Jones Mysteries #2, A Wild Kind of Darkness, is officially up for preorder everywhere.

This one is very special to me as it’s based on the murder of my late friend’s aunt, some sixty years ago, which has never been solved. I take the basic crime and what little is known about it now and spin it off wildly different direction that fits into the overall series’ themes. I hope Judy would’ve been pleased with it.

Kindle | Kobo | iBooks | Nook

I’ll probably update on Friday with how Shawnie is doing. Please cross your fingers for my little guy.

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog

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In Memory of Gus

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MEET SKYLA DAWN

Writer of horror, mysteries/thrillers, and urban fantasy.
Fifth-generation crazy cat lady. Bitchy feminist.
So tired all the goddamn time.

My characters kill people so I don’t have to.

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What I’m Working On:

Re-proofing/formatting Livi Talbot 5-6 with the new covers.
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