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Skyla Dawn Cameron

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

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Mar 29 2017

Hauntings and Finding “The Livi”

[Wherein you’re going to find writery thoughts and a novella announcement (buried at the bottom)…]

I really struggled after finishing Oblivion (a year ago April) to write, well, just about anything.

It wasn’t merely that the book took so damn much from me mentally, emotionally, and even physically (seriously, you think it hurt your heart? I barely have one left). I got a few words in on multiple projects but didn’t finish anything–for-pay writing fell by the wayside entirely, much to the sadness of my bank account–and chronic, debilitating depression made everything damn near impossible.

Depression is not to ever be romanticized for a creator; when you’re having trouble with the very basics of self-care (I don’t eat because I don’t have the spoons for cooking, or washing the dishes piled up to cook in; my hair is a tangled mess; anything outside of caring for my pets just doesn’t happen; every task takes me ten times as long to do), it’s impossible to write. Wanting to not be alive all the time is not conductive to creativity. And as much as I need the time off to clear my head and try to get better, that isn’t happening (newsflash: depression is expensive as fuck, buying pre-prepared meals and work taking longer to do). Writing just hasn’t been happening and publishing is a frustrating nightmare–it is, quite honestly, only my commitment to Patrons of Snark (who buy my monthly meds) that have kept me from deleting all my books from online sellers and nuking my website from existence.

And when writing stops, it’s like breathing stops–I lose my primary coping mechanism, the one thing that keeps me wanting to be alive, and everything becomes that much harder. I did get some revisions done, though–Oblivion came out in August, Solomon’s Seal in September, and Odin’s Spear in February–it was just new projects that were suffering.

Writing Resist in January helped tremendously; although it’s just 6K words, at least it was something I’d started and finished, and had a lot of fun with. Even getting a for-pay book done in February helped too, but the sheer size of a Livi novel (usually 105K-ish) was daunting. I have struggled with her third book for over a year now; it’s presently sitting at 17K, and I know I’ve been missing some component that would let it start flowing, but damned if I could figure out what.

A couple of pieces recently clicked, however, and while I’m not there yet, I think it’ll ultimately help.

The first was me lamenting how my writing productivity changed after being sick three years ago. Being sick meant everything became about illness and the stories went quiet, and while they came back, it hasn’t been quite the same. I am tremendously hard on myself and have a lot of difficulty accepting I’m different now, that I don’t have the same endurance, nor the tolerance for stress that I used to. Bad Horse pointed out that sometimes you have to reframe; writing came become richer, deeper, and you have to budget more mental time and emotional energy before you get to the writing part (which is entirely true–I am not a pantser like I used to be, at least not for most stories, and what I write requires more time to simmer in my head).  Writing Livi #4 (look, I thought it was #3 at the time) a few years ago was one of the best writing experiences I’d had, but then I’d lived with that story arc in my head for years prior. That is not true with the book I’m struggling with now, which I only belatedly realized needed to be in the series and has to be worked into the overall arc.

The second piece came from the Livi novella I just finished, and the Buffy the Vampire Slayer 20th anniversary celebration.

Let me back up for a second.

So as I said, a full Livi novel was incredibly daunting to me. I’d tried (and failed) to write a couple of haunting stories lately, but why not throw a ghost in Livi’s world? After writing Zara’s short Resist, I thought I’d write a short story–maybe 10K or so–as something fun for Patreon supporters.

But Livi doesn’t do “short”, as should be evident by her novels.

The more I got writing, though, the more I felt like I was missing something. And I realized my biggest problem was that I hadn’t found “the Livi” of the piece yet.

This is a writing lesson I picked up from Buffy years ago, and all the recent interviews have brought it to the forefront of my mind again. One of the reason their Monster of the Week stories often worked far better than procedurals typically do is because the core question was always: “What is ‘the Buffy’ of this?” What is the emotional hook with Buffy, how does this reflect and connect with her–that’s the part that resonates with viewers. Those stories were always broken backwards, starting with the emotional moment–“the Buffy” of the piece–and then working from there (which is how I’ve written most of my life as well).

The Livi books have all had me know right off the bat what “the Livi” is in them. Solomon’s Seal doesn’t work without her need for financial freedom and desire to return to what she once had, which is parallel to the villain’s need for freedom in many ways. Odin’s Spear doesn’t work without the contrast of Oliver Talbot’s treatment of his daughter and Amy Gordon’s devotion to her son, nor Livi’s war with the complicated emotions she enters the novel with and Reed Gordon’s submission to what he feels is humanity’s true nature. (Shiva’s Bow, #4, is about trust; #5 is about the consequences of betrayal–and it goes on from there).

I am not the type of writer who can just write something fun and throwaway; characters need to grow and change in everything, there has to be meaning to what I write. Likewise Livi is not the type of character who can be in a story she’s not emotionally connected to (girl is busy; she ain’t got time for that).

The Livi novella I was writing finally had its “click” moment when I realized what emotional hook I needed for Livi–what her story there was once everything plot-wise was stripped away, what ghosts were truly haunting her below the surface story.  Once I had that, the story took over, and I wrote 10K in a day last week to finish it off (for about 37K total–see, I don’t do short stories).

Now, I grant that afterward I could literally feel the holes in my brain, and it took two days of eating really carb-heavy foods before my brain felt repaired. But for the first time in months, I felt fantastic. I slept better, my mood was better, I got some basic household chores done. Again, it was like I was breathing after a lengthy period being stuck underwater.

Of course now my lungs feel like they’re going to burst again, so I’ve pulled out Livi #3. I know several of the tent pole moments, I know some of “the Livi”, but clearly this piece needs a bit more time simmering, and I have to give myself permission to do that, to accept that just because I’m not physically writing doesn’t mean I’m not laying the groundwork for the later writing. I have no idea when it’ll get written–hopefully by the end of the year, and btw buy my books or join Patreon so I can hopefully ease back on freelance a bit, ‘kay?–but Jeebus, I hope I’m finally on the path to it.

What does this all mean for readers?

A new Livi novella is coming soon!

It’s nearly 35% the length of one of her books, so a substantial chunk of reading material. I’m doing a dual novella release with my friend Dina James–our two different takes on hauntings–late spring/early summer, and then it’ll be available as a single release in the fall. Given the length, I’m going to also serialize it for all Patrons of Snark over three months or so once I have it back from my beta.

Here’s the rough jacket copy:

Four months ago, Livi Talbot successfully killed the afreet who abducted her family and tried to murder her. Then she took over his villa and made it her base of operations/home, as any respectable treasure hunter in need of better digs is wont to do.

But this house is haunted, and she’s starting to think the ancient murderer she used the Seal of Solomon to destroy might not be entirely dead after all. Deep in the bowels of her home, something dark is dwelling, gathering strength by the day, threatening not only Livi’s safety but possibly her very sanity.

It takes place a few months after Odin’s Spear (and a couple week’s prior to Zheng’s Tomb, Livi #3), so it’s officially Livi #2.5. I’ve posted an excerpt for Patrons of Snark, and little teasers at Alchemy Red. I’m hoping to have pre-order figured out and a cover reveal next month sometime.

So I go back to freelancing for the day and let the book simmer (of course, it’s Livi #9 in my head at the moment–not a typo, I’ve warned you it’s a ten-book series), and quietly hope to go visiting the Qin Shi Huang’s tomb and battle terracotta soldiers brought to life soon.

(Also, FYI, I’ll probably leave Solomon’s Seal freebie sample on instaFreebie for another month, so if you want to try before you buy, now’s the time to grab it.)

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog · Tagged: livi talbot, writing

Feb 20 2017

Meet Livi Talbot on instaFreebie

Here’s the thing: I think you’d really like Solomon’s Seal. Readers tend to when they, y’know, read it. But this is a brand new series, different from my previous books, so I’m offering a ten-chapter free download through instaFreebie so you can meet Livi. That’s 1/3 of the book to give you a taste.

EX-DEBUTANTE. SINGLE MOTHER. TREASURE HUNTER.

Disowned and left penniless for getting pregnant as a teen, former celebutante Olivia Talbot was willing to do whatever it took to provide for her daughter…including become a treasure hunter. Since the Pulse hit, activating relics of legend, there are plenty of artifacts to be had—not to mention wealthy clients willing to pay top dollar for them.

Just as her daughter’s private school tuition cheque bounces, Livi gets an offer that could be the break she needs to return to some semblance of her former life. A potential new client wants her to travel to Ethiopia and retrieve the Seal of Solomon—a mythical ring said to control demons and djinn—and this bounty comes with one hell of a financial pay off.

The deadline: a week. The team: unreliable. The competition: her world-renowned archaeologist older brother. Nothing Livi can’t handle… Except the danger goes beyond a few subterranean serpent-dragons she might encounter or tangling with her employer’s deadly second-in-command. This client isn’t all he seems, and handing him the ring might be worse than what he’ll do to her—and her daughter—if she doesn’t.

Ready to go adventuring with a badass mom and her found family (and meet the delicious sometimes-tiger named West)? Head here to download ten chapters in your choice of ebook formats.

—–

Okay, so I’m also down to the wire this month awaiting payments from clients. Due to the rather crippling depression I went through last year (and am still in), I went several months without finishing any for-pay projects and I’m severely paying for it now (and despite releasing three Skyla books in the past six months, those royalties don’t even make a dent in my grocery bills). I have a sick cat, rent due, and a lot of panic attacks, so in case you or someone you know would like to finish your Skyla Dawn Cameron book collection, I’m offering a 25% off coupon on Payhip. Payhip is buying direct from me; I get payments immediately instead of two to three months from now as with third party sellers.  Just head here and use the coupon code CATS25. The same coupon works for Aunt Judy’s books if romance and HEAs is more your thing. Coupon is good until the end of the month.

ETA: I forgot, I also have print books for sale. Of mine, which can be signed, I have the full Demons of Oblivion series, River, Rebellion, Solomon’s Seal, and I think a copy of Soulless. $10ea + shipping ($7 for Rebellion). Shipping a single book in Canada is about $7 and in the US is about $10. Combined shipping is less. If you want some books, contact me and you can buy them first, and pay shipping after I calculate it. If you don’t mind waiting until next month, I can also include a swag pack.

I also have a bunch of unsigned copies of Judy Bagshaw’s out of print books, including Through All Eternity, Leading Ladies (anthology), Teacher’s Pet, Love by the Pound, At Long Last Love, and I *think* a few copies of Lady Blue. $5 ea plus shipping. Again, contact me.

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog · Tagged: free download, livi talbot, solomon's seal

Feb 08 2017

The Myth of the “Writing Police”

So FYI: there are no writing police. There are readers. And if you want their time and money (and, like, actually care about people, but let’s try to play on your sense of career-preservation), you have to make an effort to not harm them with what you write.

That’s the short version. The long version is that as people (rightly) grow more vocal about the way they are portrayed in books, you’d better start caring more about what you put out in the world. If representation furthers stereotypes, that is actively harmful to groups as a whole. You probably should not harm people, I am pretty sure that’s Humaning 101. So what does a writer do when she wants to be accurate in what she writes? She hires an expert. In this case, they are often called “sensitivity readers”, but make no mistake, you are paying for expertise.

Now, I am addressing this post specifically to white women writers because a. I am one of you, so maybe you’ll listen to me, and b. I am continually fucking baffled by how this is such a difficult concept for us.

White women writers: you have read a book by a male writer who couldn’t write female characters. All of you have at some point in your life. Female characters with no nuance, who were either a virgin or a whore, who had no agency, no complexity, and existed solely as props. Or an entirely male cast with women completely erased from existence. Every. Single. Woman. Has. You read those books and you didn’t understand how that male writer could get it so wrong. You didn’t understand how he saw women that way. You saw how that portrayal echoed how women were seen outside of fiction as well, which threw so many more barriers in front of you. You silently seethed and said, “My god, if he’d just found a woman to read his fucking book that could’ve been corrected before it even got to the reader!”

Congratulations: you just wished that male writer had a sensitivity reader. Or an editor who had the sense to point out the misogyny or sexism in the book. Or that the male writer had actually spent time around women, listening to women, and attempted to understand their perspective.

If you have any area in your life where your experience is considered “other”, where you are marginalized or outside of the default perspective, you should understand this concept.

Here’s an example from my own experience: some years ago I read a well-praised book that had a bipolar secondary character that was wrong on just about every level I could think of. The writer got the medication wrong. She got the symptoms wrong. She treated this character–whose illness is a real thing that kills 15% of the people like me who have it–as a prop for the plot, victimized and brutally cast aside at the end.

There’s this notion that if something “offends” you, the problem is you, and you should get over it, but the problem is that it ignores what “offends” really means, and that is: harms. That book harmed me by furthering stereotypes and the stigmatization of my illness. It told non-bipolar readers that people like me are irrational, clingy, violent, and hurt others. Every bipolar person who read that book was reminded that it’s that much harder to speak up about their illness, to let friends and family know what it’s like for them, and encouraged them to see themselves as damaged, useless props in someone else’s story.

That writer could’ve reached out to people with the disorder and psychologists. Or even quietly read the blogs and forum posts of others to get a sense of what stereotypes are out there and avoid them. The editor could’ve said, “Maybe you should double check your research here.” But no one did, and that book made it into my hands, and I was sickened by it.

If you can understand that, if you can understand the frustration when you’ve read books by male writers with shit female characters, then it shouldn’t be a stretch for you to understand what people of colour, trans people, gay/lesbian and bisexual people, disabled people, fat people, are all saying. No one is policing anyone else’s writing. But when you write a book that misrepresents or entirely erases people (and yes, erase is just as political as inclusion), your readers–your audience, your customers, the people you expect to pay your bills–are going to speak up about that. And all anyone is asking for is for you to do your fucking research. (And if you think THIS is policing your writing? My god, try writing about guns and watch out when a gun nut reads your book.)

When you are writing outside your experience, and someone with that lived experience reads it, they are going to probably say things that make you uncomfortable, and you want to avoid that discomfort. I get that–most of us like to avoid discomfort. But that discomfort pales in comparison to actually being harmed. It also sucks when we get edits back and find out the plot jumped the shark, the grammar is an assault on the English language, and the main character’s name changes three times, but as writers who want to put out the best book possible, we swallow our pride and go to work fixing that stuff. You pay experts to help you see and fill in your blindspots–they’re not the fucking police, whether they’re a content editor, a Latin expert, or POC checking your rep of African Americans.

Do you want to be like that oblivious male writer who thinks he knows everything but actually wrote a shit book filled with shoddy characterization? No? Then do the things you wish he’d done to improve the representation of people like you in his book.

And maybe start by realizing you are not actually the victim here.

No one is going to arrest you because you wrote harmful stereotypes and lazy cliches about real people, however, there are consequences for it. That is not the same as policing you; it’s your audience exercising their rights to both have an opinion and express it as well as potentially not buy your book.

You have a hell of a lot of power as a writer. So what are you going to chose to do with it?

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

Feb 07 2017

Dive into Adventure with ODIN’S SPEAR

Livi’s back today with Odin’s Spear, available wherever books are sold: Kindle US | Kindle UK | Kindle CA | Kobo | Nook | iBookstore | Smashwords | GooglePlay | Payhip | Print

ALL’S FAIR IN SIBLING RIVALRY AND WAR.

After nearly losing her family and her life, Olivia Talbot is trying to leave the world of artifact hunting behind. But an adrenaline junkie unsuited for a 9 to 5 job can’t hide herself forever, especially when deadly operative Dale West comes knocking with off-book work for his covert organization.

It’ll be “easy”, West says—just a trip to the museum. But a deranged former soldier is seeking to reunite the pieces of Gungnir—spear of the Norse god Odin—which is capable of starting war, and this job is much bigger than anyone has let on.

Followed by the dogged son of a tabloid mogul, competing with her archaeologist older brother, and still struggling to trust West against her better judgement, Livi will venture into an ancient underwater city in the Mediterranean to stop the dawn of a new war. But the spear of a god has plans for them all, and power not even she might be able to withstand.

The previous Soundtrack Sunday features my book playlist, and yesterday I was at Mel’s with a brief guest post and excerpt for Mythological Monday. (Also still relevant: my guest post “DNA of a Hero“.)

I do not consider these books standalone at all. While each has an adventure/arc that’s complete, they’re written to be read in order. You’ll find Solomon’s Seal available all the places Odin’s Spear is as well.

Finally…

5 Spoilers about Odin’s Spear

  1. This book picks up about a week after the previous book left off, at a funeral. The emotional cliffhanger from Solomon’s Seal will carry through Odin’s Spear, and has its own arc and conclusion. I’m not interested in writing stories where characters don’t change from book to book, and this one’s no exception. Livi’s had a lot more put on her shoulders, and it shows. The fallout from the previous book, and how it affected her relationships, is also carried through.
  2. This book expands the mythology a bit more in that it raises more questions for Livi now that she knows the Pulse from four years ago wasn’t the first one. The things readers are wondering, Livi is wondering as well, and she’ll start uncovering answers. (I said START! There are many layers to go.)
  3. So something particularly awful happens. It will have far-reaching consequences throughout the next few books–you’ll know what I’m talking about when you get to it, and please remember I don’t do these things lightly (reminder: while not everything of mine requires a trigger warning, it’s a good idea to assume nothing is off the table for me as a storyteller). There’s a domino effect at play.
  4. The mythology and influences in the book come from all over the place. One thing I’d like to point out: if you’re unfamiliar with the Lycian Tombs, which are referenced in the book, head here. It’s one of those visuals that was so difficult to get through in the text–they’re stunning.
  5. Like Solomon’s Seal, I picked the artifact Livi was hunting before picking the location. I settled on the Mediterranean because of the number of viking ships that went through, and Livi’s aversion to diving. The need for wreck-diving when she’s terrified of it was chosen deliberately. I also read a lot about diving accidents while writing the book and they gave me nightmares; I will never, ever go in the water ever.
  6. Bonus spoiler: WEST PURRS.

Thank you to everyone who reads the blog and picks up the books–it means a lot to me and I am lucky to have great readers. I hope you dig this new book. I will be over here in the corner drinking merlot for breakfast.

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog · Tagged: livi talbot, new release, odin's spear

Feb 05 2017

Soundtrack Sunday – ODIN’S SPEAR Edition

A lot of Livi’s themes from Solomon’s Seal apply here too.

 

Ana Johnsson – “We Are“
Odin’s Spear book theme.

 

Jen Titus – “O’Death”
Opening funeral.

 

Odds – “I Would Be Your Man“
At the vet office: “On occasion.” “Watch it, Buttons.”
Is it gonna hurt if we try?//Is this the calm before the flood?//Well, we may skip like stones//Or you could pull me from the mud

 

Ed Sheeran – “Kiss Me”
“Periodically I forget you’re human. I’m sorry for that.” “I won’t let the apology go to my head, don’t worry.”
I was made to keep your body warm//But I’m cold as the wind blows so hold me in your arms

 

Bobby Tahouri – “The Deathless Prophet“
Exploring under the water.

 

Radiohead – “Creep (Acoustic)“
West.
Whatever makes you happy//Whatever you want   What the hell am I doing here//I don’t belong here//I don’t belong here

 

Jason Graves – “The Mask of Krati“

 

The Flamingos – “I Only Have Eyes For You”
“Mr. Dark Triad doesn’t bite?” “Not unless it benefits me, obviously.”

 

OneRepublic – “Something I Need“
“You fall, I fall.”
But you’re like the net under the ledge//when I go flying off the edge//you go flying off as well

 

Jason Graves – “Alone”
Chapter 35: Bigger Than a Breadbox

 

Madonna – “Die Another Day“
Chapter 37: War

 

Cranberries – “Zombie“
Also Ch 37.

 

Florence + The Machine – “Shake It Out”
This was my alternative for the epilogue theme.
Regrets collect like old friends//here to relive your darkest moments

 

Mumford & Sons – “After the Fall“
Epilogue theme.
Because death is just so full and man so small//Well I’m scared of what’s behind and what’s before//And there will come a time, you’ll see, with no more tears//And love will not break your heart, but dismiss your fears

 

The book is out on Tuesday! I hope you get it and enjoy it.

Written by Skyla Dawn Cameron · Categorized: blog · Tagged: livi talbot, soundtrack sunday

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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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