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Skyla Dawn Cameron

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

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July 16, 2022 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

“When’s That Book Coming?” Summer 2022 Edition

As I said last week, Summer Revision Madness is underway here at Chez Skyla. Charon’s Gold is off for copyedits, and I finished a round on Witch Hunt last night, so that’ll be off when she’s ready for it. I’m diving into Soul Spell next, to get it cleaned up a bit and the last bundles of chapters scheduled for patrons.

What’s New

All new at Patreon.

Soul Spell started at Patreon in June. There have also been two new vignettes/shorts at Patreon: one was Future Days from Zara’s POV (set during a Witch Hunt flashback) and the most recent Livi’s Choice about the abortion she had a few years prior to Solomon’s Seal.

I finally made up a Demons of Oblivion/Elis O’Connor series reading order in PDF, current as of July 2022, so if that’s your thing, download here.

Oblivion-Elis-Reading-OrderDownload

What’s Upcoming

Unless the copyeditor thinks it’s going to need a huge amount of work (which is possible!), Charon’s Gold should still be coming out October 25.

Preorder links: Kindle | Kobo | iBooks | Nook (paperback coming in October)

Witch Hunt will come out in paperback as well in the coming months. Scheduling is a little messed up due to factors outside my control and I don’t want to toss a bunch of things at the copyeditor at once, so that’ll wait to go out until sometime next month.

Watcher of the Woods is still on track for February 14 2023–it’s on my revision schedule for August.

Preorder links: Kindle – Kobo – iBooks – Nook (there’ll also be hardcover and paperback upon release)

Remember, there’s some crossover with Dweller on the Threshold as they exist in the same world, but you should be fine to jump in without it (though seriously, Dweller is super fun, please go buy it!).

Also in 2023…

The first two Waverly Jones Mysteries have their release dates set for next year, late spring and late fall.

The Killing Beach is up first on May 30 2023.

Preorder links: Kindle – Kobo – iBooks – Nook (there’ll also be hardcover and paperback upon release)

A Wild Kind of Darkness is out after that on November 7, 2023. Currently the only place you’ll find the preorder is at Kobo but the rest will be up in November.

Alone at Night will be a 2024 release, though I’m not sure where to slot it yet.

Summer 2023 will involve serializing Hell Fire (Elis #4), which I haven’t started yet.

Considering I try to space releases out, yes, this means the final Livi book will not be a 2023 release–I could miraculously finish the mostly un-started zero draft by the end of fall, but it seems unlikely, and even if it happened, I always need a lot of time for revisions and edits (and probably extra time with this one). So the very earliest will be spring 2024, probably.

If Elis is the six books I’m expecting it to be, the sixth and final will serialize at Patreon in 2025, so Livi 8 will start there probably 2026 if I’ve got my math right.

What I’m Working On

Thus far this year, I’ve written Alone at Night (Waverly 3) and Soul Spell (Elis 3). I’ve been in revision mode, but I really want to finish the next Waverly book I’ve already started (which…okay so I realized I’m writing them out of order, so it’ll later be book six rather than four). I miss writing new things regularly, working on vignettes for Patreon notwithstanding, and I’m hoping to clear all these revisions off my plate by fall so I can write Waverly 4 (the new one) and 5 by the end of the year.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Demons of Oblivion, elis o'connor, livi talbot, state of the union, update, waverly jones

July 10, 2022 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

Summer Revision Madness

Hey, remember the three books I finished and three new ones I wrote in the back half of last year?

Yeah, that was wild. I’m so glad I did that. I actually felt like a writer again, and I was able to get books scheduled for publication two years out.

Writing a book is not the end of the story, though–especially mine, as I leave helpful notes like [fix this]. It usually takes a couple more drafts to get things in workable shape to then go to editors to help make it pretty. Especially with the frantic pace I kept up last year–like the 200K I wrote in like five weeks the end of Oct through November–the books after that initial draft need a lot of work.

So while last year was The Year of the Zero Drafts, this summer is going to be Revision Madness.

(if it was a song, it would be to the tune of Reefer Madness)

Charon’s Gold went from 108K words to the 135K draft I sent for copyedits last night, to give an idea of how things change draft to draft. It’s a lot of work. (Already, TKB is up to 90K and AWKoD is 100K; Watcher will easily hit 95K.)

And I’ve got a lot of books to fix.

So last year I wrote Witch Hunt, Dweller on the Threshold, The Killing Beach, Charon’s Gold, Watcher of the Woods, and A Wild Kind of Darkness.

Dweller is already available, Charon is off for copyedits. July is devoted to another round on Witch Hunt (I did a quickie in May for patrons) and Soul Spell (Elis #3, in progress at Patreon). August is for Watcher of the Woods, and September is All Waverly All the Time with The Killing Beach out in May and Darkness out six months later next year.

All that should give me the breathing room to go back to writing some raw first drafts for a few months in between copyedits, but we’ll see. I’ve already written two this year (Alone at Night, which is Waverly 3, and Soul Spell, which is Elis 3) but I am not one to rest on my laurels. At least NaNoWriMo in November (I’d like to write a new Waverly book then).

I had big plans to dive into Witch Hunt today, but it’ll have to wait until tomorrow night after work I think, as I should probably rest. I finished Charon’s Gold revisions last night at 4:30 and didn’t actually fall asleep until after 6, so I don’t think my head’s on straight. I also discovered I had enough points to get a free pizza today, so after I pick that up in half an hour I’ll try lounging in bed reading or watching TV for the rest of the day (hopefully).

Then Revision Madness shall continue!

Charon’s Gold is now up for preorder everywhere, as is Watcher of the Woods, and The Killing Beach. Elis’s books are available on Patreon.

And as usual, a big shoutout to Patreon supporters, particularly those from last year who bought me the time to write an extra one day a week–that was a huge boosts to getting so much done in 2021.

Filed Under: blog

June 23, 2022 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

Nothing Is New Here, or: Why I Don’t Use “S.D. Cameron”

In my childhood, there were a few jobs I wanted when I grew up. When I was seven, an FBI agent (I didn’t know that wasn’t a thing in Canada) or homicide detective. A cryptozoologist when I was nine. But I’d always written stories, and by the time I was 12-13 and winning poetry contests, I wanted to be a writer.

Specifically, a horror writer.

I carried The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe around in my backpack. I wrote slasher novels. My teacher read one of my monster horror stories to the class (it was called The Claw, about some teens who didn’t believe the urban legend about a monster in this neighbourhood tunnel and then all get killed). I genuinely thought I would be a horror writer.

I was told flat-out then, quite seriously, by both adults in my life and from experts in pro writer magazines I was reading, that I would have to use a pen name. That I should write under S.D. Cameron to obscure the fact that I was a girl, because people wouldn’t read horror by a woman.

People wouldn’t read horror by a woman.

This was in 1994.

I bring this up apropos of two conversations I’ve seen over the past two days.

One is on Twitter, reminding anyone under thirty that they have no idea precisely how bad things used to be for the queer community (specifically in North America). With more LGBTQ+ characters in our media and as public figures, it’s easy to forget how fucking hard the battles to reach that level of representation actually were. Young people now might find more acceptance coming out, but were literally, routinely, beaten to death for being even perceived as gay or trans back in the day (and a reminder that trans women in particular, but also trans people in general, are still at a very high risk of being victims of hate crimes that the general public doesn’t seem to care about). Those lucky to have grownup where same-sex marriage is the norm might not realize how fucking recent it is.

The second is part of a conversation on a post a friend started on Reddit and how someone brought up “culture wars” online as if it was something new. Like this fight over who is and isn’t human suddenly began in the past five years. My friend pointed out she grew up with the phrase “glass ceiling” and she’s forty-seven–like, no, none of this is new.

1994. 1994. I was told, as a child, to use a pen name that obscured my gender.

Not “You can be anything you want to be, Skyla”. It was “You will not be successful if readers know you’re a woman.”

1994.

And you know what? It’s still true.

I know my name is a detriment with what I write. It’s obviously girly. It’s literally been called too fancy by readers. It’s why my books are immediately slotted into PNR instead of UF (or into YA), so I’m in this ridiculous cycle of the folks who would like my books not picking them up and the folks who do pick them up often not liking them. To this day, I am still told I should be publishing under S.D. Cameron, because people won’t read my books under my “fancy” name.

When I was a child, in 1994, with dreams of being a horror writer, and I was told I’d have to use a pen name, I considered it. I tried putting S.D. Cameron on things. This is what the adults in my life, the authorities on the subject, said was necessary.

But it felt wrong. It felt wrong then, when I couldn’t articulate why, and it feels wrong now when I’m asked if I’ll use a pen for the other genres I plan to write in.

We sacrifice pieces of ourselves to live in a world with huge systemic problems out of our control. We shave off our edges and curves to fit in spaces where we’re told we don’t belong. We do this because to not fit in somehow we risk not being able to survive in this late-stage capitalist hellscape.

But my name, though…my name. I was made fun of a lot as a kid for it. It became a part of me, a marker of who I am, something I cannot divorce myself from. I am Skyla Dawn Cameron–take me or leave me, but do not ask me to change who I am.

My name–my obvious feminine name, that apparently made it clear I would never be welcome in certain writing spaces among certain readers–seems like it should be the easiest thing to change. But even trying to use S.D. Cameron as a child, it felt like a betrayal. It felt like one too many sharp edges I was trying to file away, to fit in spaces that didn’t want me anyway.

So I started using Skyla Dawn Cameron. And I have always used Skyla Dawn Cameron.

Because I am not the one who needs to change.

1994.

“Culture Wars” are not new for those marginalized due to their gender, their sexuality, their ethnicity, their religion. There have always been people recognizing they are not wanted in certain spaces but refusing to shrink themselves to fit, like there have always been people getting vocal the moment there’s someone at the table who doesn’t look like them. I had a lot of experiences at a very young age that taught me this, and by comparison my name seems like such in inconsequential thing to get bent out of shape over. But I held onto it–I hold onto it, still–as symbolic of something bigger.

For everything that challenges the white supremacist patriarchy that you see accepted now, there are literally bodies that paved the way. None of the current “wars” over human rights is new, but twenty years from now there will be a new generation who feels like theirs is the first one to experience the fights over who does and doesn’t deserve a seat at the table.

What we fight for now has been fought for before, again and again, twenty years ago, thirty, sixty, one hundred, one thousand.

1994.

2022.

It will never be won in my lifetime, but still…I will never file myself down to S.D. Cameron to make myself fit into the spaces that never wanted me anyway.

Filed Under: blog

June 19, 2022 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

Soundtrack Sunday – “Wicked Game”

Reminder: this is a pro-Iluka space because I love all my imaginary friends, and bitching about him to me will get your comments blocked. 🙂

So “Wicked Game” was one of the songs around the fire in Yampellec’s Idol–I linked when I did that soundtrack post, but here was the cover of this song for that book.

That’s pretty close to how I hear Iluka’s voice, though his is a bit rougher.

I never dreamed that I’d meet somebody like you

And I never dreamed that I’d lose somebody like you

Iluka loves his old rock ballads, and he’s musically inclined as you’ll recall from books where he’s a regular. I always kind of heard “Crazy” as his song for Livi, right up until I heard that above cover of “Wicked Game” and I was like Oh. Oh yes, that’s the one.

The world was on fire and no one could save me but you

There are a million fantastic covers out there–it’s a very versatile song, and that’s my favourite kind for a recurring theme song for characters (Livi and West is “Something I Need“, which I have a bazillion covers of and I would’ve posted at length about later on, were the series not ending prematurely). Of course the original is fantastic, but I listened to a lot of acoustic covers for the books.

In Charon’s Gold, I have another version on the soundtrack–a much more epic version I played on repeat for a thank-god-we’re-not-dead love scene with a female vocalist.

No, I don’t wanna fall in love

With you

Lots of heartbreak, and drama, and life or death stakes–it’s perfect for this book, which is all about difficult choices, and when being in love causes more pain than joy.

Charon’s Gold releases October 25! (I’m pretty sure lol) And you can preorder now!

Kindle | Kobo | iBooks | Nook

All of my Soundtrack Sunday posts are now linked on a central page.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: livi talbot, soundtrack sunday

May 30, 2022 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

New Preorder and Cover Reveal

Officially one year from today, the first in my Waverly Jones Mysteries will release. It’s been up on Kobo for a while, but now it’s live everywhere.

Waverly Jones has been called misanthropic. Distant. Obsessive. Manipulative. And that’s without people knowing she talks to the hallucination of her dead sister.

She’s also a private investigator.

After a lengthy absence, she’s returned to Port Milton amidst the biggest homicide investigation her hometown has seen in over a decade. Bodies of middle-aged men have been washing ashore and the police have confirmed foul play but not much else—making it the perfect case for someone like her.

Particularly when she’s the one to find the latest body.

It’s not a coincidence Waverly happened across the newest victim. She’s been combing the beach because these men match the age and appearance of Detective-Sergeant Sebastian Kyle, missing these past eleven years after investigating the now-dormant serial killer who made Waverly’s sister his last victim.

Her familiarity with the murders has left her well-prepared when hired by the wife of one of the dead men, giving her a professional reason to dig deeper into these crimes. Have the police unintentionally fumbled this case in the wrong direction, or does the widow not know as much about her husband as she thought?

Port Milton has always had its secrets, and Waverly will drag every single one into the light to get to the bottom of this mystery. And maybe somewhere along the way, she’ll get another step closer to who killed her sister and what happened to Sebastian Kyle.

Preorder up at the usual places:

Kindle – Kobo – iBooks – Nook

“I’ve already seen that cover,” you say, “and I thought this post had a cover reveal?”

It does! Read on! Because it’ll also be in paperback next fall and in hardcover.

But not just any hardcover.

See, I’ve always loved mysteries. Other than horror, it’s my first love (I didn’t start reading fantasy until I was in my mid-teens, outside of paranormal horror). Everything from Trixie Belden to Hercule Poirot, I devoured mysteries of all kinds.

But of course my very favourite, the very top choice, was always Nancy Drew.

I still love Nancy Drew. I have the more recent movies. The TV show is the only one where I subscribe to the full season on iTunes instead of waiting for streaming or discounts (despite it’s occasional missteps, McMann is a fantastic Nancy). I have all of the HeR Interactive video games (I used to preorder before the company seemed to implode) and play them regularly.

Those old 1950s hardcovers, though. I LOVE them. I’ve been doing a puzzle of the book covers and reflected on how much I love them, and it was a short leap from there to thinking, “What if I did Waverly Jones hardcovers in that style?”

First I thought I’d need to hire an artist for the vintage painting look, but that’s entirely unaffordable. Then I mocked up a version using the existing ebook cover, just tweaked a little to show the town.

But still, I thought…why can’t I mock up something that looks like an old cover? I’ve got skills. I’ve got resources. So I put together some stock photos, played with layers and filters, did some digital painting, and I’m quite pleased with the results (on the main page, click to read more; directly on the page, scroll down).

CLICK TO SEE AND READ MORE!!!

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: waverly jones

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MEET SKYLA DAWN

Writer of urban fantasy, thrillers/mysteries, and horror.
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:

Writing Waverly 8 and revising Waverly 4.

I'm not inclined to resign to maturity.