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Skyla Dawn Cameron

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

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February 14, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

It’s That Time of Year Again

Happy Valentine’s Day!

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I’m spending the day with my significant other, the muse. All day. No exceptions; I don’t care if you’re bleeding from the head, it’s Me and The Story and nothing else.  I’ll be at the pub having great locally brewed beer and nachos, and sharing the date internationally is my friend Mel, who will be writing at her local pub as well (in theory, except her town is having a “state of emergency” because they ran out of rock salt and can’t just use dirt on the roads because apparently they hate fun and want her to stay home).

photo credit: MikeBehnken via photopin cc
photo credit: MikeBehnken via photopin cc

I’m working on Shiva’s Bow (Livi #3) and having more fun than I have possibly had writing anything ever. Or at least in the past year and a half. It takes place in Nepal and I am just in love with the locale, in love with the characters, in love with EVERYTHING.  I write a little bit every night, trying not to push it, easing back into things. The book is likely not very good at this point (zero draft, hello) because I’ve already fubared the timeline for getting into Jomsom, and I think I need another chapter before the flight. But I feel like me.  Me. I haven’t felt like myself in…longer than I’d care to admit, though technically I just did. I’m 17K into the novel and enjoying every goddamn second of it. I am even looking forward to the middle slog when I traditionally HATE IT, but there will still be, somewhere, that part of me rejoicing because the story has taken shape, it’s in the driver’s seat, and I am doing precisely what I was made for.

To the *counts* three (four, if my mother reads this) people who know these books, and the rest of you who want a lil something for Valentine’s Day, here’s some Livi and West for you. (It’s long. Sorry. BUT I LOVES IT. And this is as close as I get to romance. Also, if there are typos, bite me.)

——–

I set the flashlight on the nightstand between the beds, balancing it on its end so it shone freely up at the ceiling and gave the room enough of a glow that I could see. Puddles of rainwater tracked across the floor, glistening in the low light. I kicked my shoes off, stripped my hoodie off so I could maneuver better. It landed with a wet splotch on the floor.

West was awake, at least, his head moving, lips mumbling, but even with the light I couldn’t make out his features, his face dark with blood.

Assess injuries. Think clearly.

I leaned over him. “West?” My fingers touched his jaw, drawing two lines through the slick blood. I returned to my bag, found the scissors, and sliced through his pullover, then his T-shirt, and pulled the pieces off to cast them on the floor. No blood anywhere else so I left his khakis as-is. My hands moved swiftly over his torso, touching chilled skin that had gone pale, finding no other injuries. I pressed down on his ribs but he didn’t take in a sharp breath, no heat radiated abnormally, and nothing felt broken.

Steps behind me. I shuffled back, awkward in my soaked jeans, water squishing between my toes. Pulaski carted a bucket of water, Thomas had the towels. I wasn’t sure how clean the water would be but West could fight infection—right now I just wanted to see how badly he was hurt.

I took the towels, turned my back to them, knelt at the head of the bed and took the first towel to wipe down his face. Blood came off, dark on white. Pulaski set the bucket next to me, and I soaked another towel, used it to wipe what remained of the blood.

The wound was along his right temple and up, past the hairline. Skin was darkening with a bruise that would be quite colorful in a few days.

Wet towel down. Another clean dry towel in hand, pressed against the wound. I counted the seconds in the silence, my heart beating hard, knocking against my ribcage. The men behind me weren’t breathing, just staring, their focus heavy upon me. I generally thought of West as their employer, but in the tense silence, I realized, then, that he was a friend.

I peeled the towel back. No new blood.

A breath of relief left me and I set aside the towel. “West?” Fingers trailing from his temple to his jaw, turning his head toward the glow of the flashlight on the nightstand. “West?”

His hand suddenly clasped mine, eyes fighting and eventually focusing on my own. “I’m okay,” he croaked.

My shoulders sagged, emotion crashing into me hard enough that I would’ve toppled over if I’d been standing. I sucked air into my lungs but it wasn’t enough, relief more terrifying than actual fear had been.

Laurel cleared her throat. “I’ve got the first aid kit.”

He looked over my shoulder at her, his voice clearer this time. “I’ll take it.”

When his eyes swung back my way, I looked to the side, wiggled my fingers from his. Fell back onto my ass and scrambled onto my feet, soaked socks and the hems of my jeans dragging. He was fine, at least for the moment until I could check for a concussion. I needed to get cleaned up.

Thomas and Pulaski moved past me to speak to him, Laurel started over with the first aid kit but paused as I grabbed a fist of clothes from my overnight bag. Her hand gently clasped my arm, dark eyes met mine, one brow raised in question and her voice low. “You okay?”

I didn’t trust my voice, instead nodding and ducking past her for the attached bathroom.

Belatedly I realized I’d left the flashlight behind, but they needed it more than I did. I partially shut the door, let my eyes adjust with the vague light from the window. It had to be, what, no earlier than nine in the morning, but the sky was black, the rain blurring the landscape into layers of slate gray. This monsoon wasn’t normal and I longed to ask West what the hell was up.

West.

It slammed into me, then, everything I’d put on hold while autopilot took over. I’d been in enough situations now that it was a natural reaction, the hyperawareness and immediate action of an emergency. I didn’t really think about his body there in the street, about all the blood, about the terror of being in a moment knowing the world was on the verge of tipping sideways and nothing would ever be okay again.

But now the emergency was taken care of, and he was okay, and tears rose because I wasn’t.

I held my breath, blinked against the burning in my eyes. The voices in the other room were white noise, steady like the rain beating the windows and roof above. I stripped off my wet T-shirt, jeans. Left them hanging over the tub. Dried off swiftly, tried to soak up rainwater from the long rope of my braid that swung heavily against my back.

But I was shaking. Badly. The starch left my legs and I sank onto the closed lid of the toilet, holding the towel over my face as my chest shook with sobs I failed to hold back.

Pru’s voice from last week repeated in my head: If it’s not going anywhere, just tell him that.

I could not make that claim any longer.

The voices in the other room continued, shadows moving across the floor through the ajar door as they stepped in front of the flashlight. I breathed in the stink of rainwater, scrubbed at my face until it was hot and raw but my eyes were no longer crying. A long breath through my nose sounded like a sniffle, loud in the bathroom but likely unheard by the others. I’d grabbed dark yoga pants and a tank top, and I slipped both on.

Laurel was gone when I returned to the bedroom. Thomas and Pulaski were on the way out with the bloody towels and bucket of water; the former met my gaze and nodded, the latter thrust his thumb over his shoulder at West with a, “Watch him,” warning.

They shut the door. I took a deep breath and turned back to West.

The flashlight was shifted on the nightstand to make room for the open first aid kit. His pants hung over the end of the bed, shoes were gone, and remaining towels were over the sheets now with one cutting over his lower half; any repeated jokes about his perpetual pantslessness died before they could form, though. He held a gauze-covered cold pack his temple, lying flat still on the bed. Some of his coloring had come back, his skin not the usual healthy bronze but not quite as pallid, and his black hair was partially dry, sticking up in all directions. His pale blue eyes started up at the ceiling, chest rose and fell with calm steady breaths.

I lowered myself wearily onto the bed opposite his, the small room pressing down on my shoulders as I struggled to find something to say.

West solved that problem for me. “You’re an idiot.”

I blinked at him. “Excuse me?”

“Do you have some mental deficiency that makes you do the opposite when I tell you to get to safety?”

“You got hit with a roof.”

“I’ll live.”

“Yes, because I came back for you. You got hit with a roof.”

“Because I was busy buying you time to get to safety.”

photo credit: patries71 via photopin cc
photo credit: patries71 via photopin cc

I chewed savagely at the inside of my mouth, already calculating the distance to my guns before I realized it. Jesus Christ, it took seconds to remember why I usually wanted to shoot him in the face. “Let’s talk about that. What, you control wind now, tiger-boy?”

Nothing.

“You need to start talking to me. What the hell are you, West?”

Silence ticked on. He wouldn’t look at me, and as tension mounted and throttled the air, I expected a hasty exit on his part before he opened his mouth.

Then: “I don’t know.”

That knocked my anger sideways and I simply stared at him. “You…don’t know.”

He set the cold pack aside, continued starting upward which presented me with only his profile and no view of the wound. “I watched my brother executed when I was eight—and you need to stop looking at me like that while I’m saying this.”

I blinked, closed my mouth. My expression was likely one of abject terror, brain adjusting to this causal mention of a relative’s death. I licked my dry lips, swallowed a lump in my throat, and tried to remain composed.

Silence stretched for a moment. There was a delay, now, between the thunder and lightning, but the rain didn’t cease.

“And that was when the change first happened. After Dong-yul was shot, we were to stone his corpse. I reached for a rock and my hand was a tiger’s paw.” His voice was smooth and steady, speaking of this horrific thing with the casualness I’d use for talking about grocery shopping. “It didn’t exactly come with a manual, and since I had to hide what I was or be killed for it, there was no one I could ask.”

It was the most he’d ever said about Korea—and the prison camp where I knew he’d been born—in the ten months I’d known him. And my normal curiosity was silent, brain knowing full well that I did not want more details.

West said nothing more. He didn’t need to.

I blinked, my eyes dry and itchy. Stood, my body screaming with each movement as the strains and bruises sustained from escaping the monsoon came to life. I rifled through the first aid kit. “Do you need stitches?”

“No.”

Whether that was “No, for real” or “No, I’m a manly man and I don’t need your silly sutures”, I had no idea and didn’t ask. If he wants to risk it opening and bleeding to death, he’d welcome to.

Even the thought felt like a lie, though.

I snapped closed the box’s lid, sat on the edge of the bed, and reached for the flashlight. “I’m going to check for a concussion.”

He caught my hand before it made contact with the flashlight, drew it back to my side. And didn’t let go. “I don’t have a concussion.”

“I know you have a thick skull but you were hit by a roof.”

“Half of one, I remember that much.” Blue eyes found mine, sharp and awake, the lucidity a relief but terrifying as I couldn’t escape him. “I’ve had concussions. This isn’t one.”

“That is the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.”

“Stupider than not going to the fucking hotel when I told you to?”

I sighed. And didn’t dislodge my hand, still grateful to feel his warm, strong grip after not being certain I ever would again. “What was the first thing you learned about me in Ethiopia?”

“That you’re a pain in the ass.”

“Besides that.” I waited but he said nothing. The tension in the air had shifted, not quite so oppressive now but crackling with electricity. “No one on my team is expendable and I don’t leave people behind.”

“We’re a team now?”

We’re something, I just don’t know what to call it yet. “Apparently, since I can’t get rid of you.”

“You’re not trying very hard.”

I ignored him with an annoyed purse of my lips, leaned over with the elbow of my free hand gently braced on his chest, and tilted his face to the side so I could get a good look at the wound. The ugly dark gash hadn’t reopened. Swelling wasn’t bad, though mottled bruises had bloomed on his flesh.  He’d heal quickly. Not super magical fast, but swifter than me. I dragged my fingers gently over the damaged skin, my other hand still locked in his.

“You could’ve left me to drown,” I reminded him, heart hammering hard as I met his eyes. “Me injured, one air tank, collapsing cave. Anyone else would’ve left me to drown.”

“If you were anyone else, Olivia, I would’ve.”

The air seemed sucked right from the room, like I couldn’t breathe if I tried. He reached up, trailed his calloused fingertips from my temple to my jaw, watching me with a look that brought sudden gooseflesh to my bare arms.

And while the very rational part of my brain—that just days ago had discussed for the millionth time with my best friend how I couldn’t trust West—still existed, it grew quiet, and want rose in its place. Stupid, irresponsible, throw-caution-to-the-wind, holy-fuck-the-landing’s-gonna-hurt want.

But even when every fiber of my being wanted to take a leap of faith, instinct forced a retreat.

I started to sit up, gaze darting away, but his strong hands tugged me forward again. My head hit his chest and his arms came over me. Warm. Powerful. Safe. And I let them. Because it was scarily natural, secure no matter how that little voice rose up and said it wasn’t, and he was alive. I was probably still in shock, but I didn’t care, instead resting my ear over his heart and letting him hold me.

“You fall, I fall,” I whispered, repeating his words to me from months ago. “So don’t leap if you don’t want me to come after you.”

West said nothing, and we listened to the continuing beat of rain as the rest of the morning wore on.

(It’s one of the THEME songs.)

——–

Whether you read it or skipped it, have a lovely day. I hope you have someone you would throw your pie for.

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Filed Under: blog Tagged With: excerpt, livi talbot, west is best, writing

February 6, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

The Shop Launch and Writing Joy

ICD_buttonSo I moved my design site over here. It’s using Genesis and a portfolio child theme, with an integrated shop, and I adore it.

Whether or not the shop actually works remains to be seen. But for the month of February, you can save 10% on all down payments (currently booking March clients) and pre-made cover by entering the code lauch10 at checkout, and if you do, let me know how it goes for you. I might experiment with other coupons and try something for the pre-made romance covers around February 14 (if I remember). Speaking of, there are a couple of new pre-mades here.

If the kinks seem to be worked out, I’ll probably integrate a shop at my main site as well and start selling eBooks directly here. Not that I get a lot of traffic but another sales option is always a good thing.

Work is going well–nearly all caught up after my week spent in bed (let’s not do that again, okay, brain?), and there’s enough to keep me quite busy this month. I’ve been repeating the mantra, “One thing at a time” all week and step by step, the to-do list is getting shorter. Speaking of, if you’ve sent me an email about something and I’ve not replied in a few weeks, poke me because it might’ve been lost in the pile here.

Yesterday was…not a good day.

It started when I punched myself in the face waking up. Yes, this is an Actual Thing That Can Happen, at least when you’re me and you’re fumbling for your alarm as it blares Kenyan EDM at you.  Then the dog was sick (still is, but I think she’s getting over it), and the cats were fighting constantly which resulted in me having to break up a fight every half hour.

Then I’ve a friend going through serious health stuff at the moment, and though I’ve found myself surprisingly calm and rational about it, apparently my brain is just starting this cool new thing called DELAYED REACTION TO STRESSORS. So yesterday, brain was all, Oh, you think all is well? Let me tell you something:

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And then I turned into a ball of worry.

Obsessive, downward-spiraling thoughts are kind of a thing with me, so I nipped that in the bud by saying fuck it to everything and eating Doritos and cleaning and taking the dog out every hour, because my focus on anything else was just totally fucked.

Then this rather remarkable thing happened.

I wrote words. Just…there was the book, third in a series I have in progress, and it was talking, and I wasn’t scared it wasn’t going to come out right or hit a wall or anything.

Joy. It was JOY. I haven’t felt this comfortable and joyful and pressure-free since I wrote Exhumed late 2011. I shouldn’t say anything, in case it up and disappears on me again. My natural inclination is to Analyze Everything, and I’m trying not to do that here.

But despite four hours of sleep last night, I feel refreshed today. My mind feels settled. I feel like myself again. The book was on my mind when I woke up and it’s been there all day. And I whipped through a handful of email today and a flyer design because I can’t wait to go back and play in the book after dinner.

I am certain of very, very few things in the universe, except that this feeling of sinking into a world and seeing the people and discovering their lives feels like I’m home.

(Also, there will be KISSING in this book, and by god, I am excited even to write that part.)

(This is their kissing song. Aren’t you jealous of the eventual KISSING I get to write?)

And this is their other song (it’s a Castle/Beckett video, shut up):

(“With broken words I’ve tried to say/Honey don’t you be afraid//If we got nothing we got us“…oh, West. *sigh*)

Later, I get to write PEOPLE DYING and A BATTLE WITH A YETI. OMG I am ecstatic.

I hope it keeps up. Even if it doesn’t, I know it will eventually. That part of me isn’t broken after all.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Books, life, livi talbot, personal, work, writing

Looking for “Free” Books?

Hey folks hitting the page (yes, I see you), this note Yampellec’s Idol is about you:

Guess what?
THE LIVI TALBOT SERIES HAS BEEN CANCELED.

It’s ending after book seven. The last five books will not be published.

I cannot even predict when I’ll be able to write the seventh. The series is in limbo. Because of you.

You did this.

All your google search terms like “skyla dawn cameron shiva’s bow epub” and “livi talbot torrent” and “yampellec’s idol free download”. All your requests on piracy forums. Your uploads at Z-library and the mirror sites for celz and on VK. I know about these things. I warned, over and over, that this would happen, and I know in your searches you found this page and knew it was coming. I warned in the author’s notes of my books–in fact, it said right on the copyright page “You will be responsible when there are no future books.”

You were warned and you did it anyway. You did this. You killed another series.

Yes, I mean you, Susan Bontly from NMSU (who is a fucking librarian and should be ashamed of herself). Y’all think you’re anonymous? You aren’t.

If you have downloaded, requested, or uploaded any Demons of Oblivion book, know that you are the reason why the series was cancelled after Oblivion.

I know every time one of you does this. I see you hitting this page after searching google. I see you on piracy forums making requests. You are not anonymous.

You are pirating books I am lucky to sell two or three copies of a year. Illegally distributing my work tells me I shouldn’t publish more. 

You are why that series was cancelled.

I see you making requests and googling where to steal the books.

Yes, I mean you. Right now, you reading this. I see you in my site stats. I know what you’re doing.

I literally live in poverty. I am struggling with vet bills. I am sick with autoimmune problems. After feeding my cats (including sick and elderly ones), paying rent and utilities, paying tax and business expenses, I’m left with about $60 every three weeks for groceries and my extra medication costs. I will probably have to stop publishing in a few years because of how sales are dropping.

You’re not “cool”, you’re not “sticking it to the man”, you’re kicking a human being while she’s down.

People who love books support those who create them.

Try using Scribd, which is like Netflix for books (and even has a free trial): each download of my books there nets me FULL royalties while you pay a small monthly fee. Use Kobo Plus! There are inexpensive ways of supporting writers.

*

Coming here looking for illegal downloads of River/Wolfe?

That series was cancelled due to piracy.

Looking for illegal downloads of Bloodlines, Hunter, Lineage, Exhumed, or Oblivion?

I had to take future books off my plate due to low sales and guaranteed I would never return to it due to piracy.

Did you miss Soulless when it was serialized and want a free version of that?

It is a FUNDRAISER book for my vet bills–wtf is wrong with you?

Going after the Livi Talbot series next with Solomon’s Seal, Odin’s Spear, Emperor’s Tomb, Shiva’s Bow, Charon’s Gold, etc? The Patreon serials like Tiger’s Memory?

This was a twelve-book series. It’s now ending at book seven for the public. I have no idea when I’ll be able to afford the time to even finish the series.

Great job–you’ve killed another series.

How about the Elis O’Connor books?

Any sequels, starting with Witch Hunt, will be going on Patreon and then paperback only. Because I cannot afford to continue them.

How about Waverly Jones? The Killing Beach, A Wild Kind of Darkness, etc?

Do you ever want to know who killed is the Crossroads Butcher? Stop stealing books that are barely selling in the double digits.

I am not joking. They have not cracked triple digits.

My horror books, like Dweller on the Threshold? That book brought back my love of writing. I wrote my beloved Psych Kittens into it, to honor Gus. It SICKENS ME that while I have massive vet bills and expenses that you people are stealing something that meant so much to me, that make it harder for me to provide for Shawn.

You’re attempting to steal from someone CHRONICALLY ILL, living below the poverty level, who has had several deaths in the family, whose elderly pets are sick, and who can’t afford to publish books.

Congratulations: you’re a terrible person.

*

Either you’ve stumbled across this page while poking around my site, or–more likely–you have been directed here because you came looking for Skyla Dawn Cameron torrents, “free” downloads or epub mobi pdf or “read online free Skyla Dawn Cameron”, and the like.

On the author’s own website.

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Dude, WHY WOULD I HAVE THAT HERE?

No no, hold on a sec. I’m actually glad you’re here. Stay. Read the message below. Because it involves what series have been cancelled, what series are on the verge of cancellation, and my answers to your explanations of why you have to steal from me.

Here’s the truth: piracy kills series. It does. River Wolfe, those books about the wolf-turned-teen girl y’all keep coming looking for? There were two of them. There was going to be a third. I stopped writing it because of how heavily pirated the first two books were. I will never finish writing it and it will never be published.

Bloodlines? Hunter? Lineage? Exhumed? The whole Demons of Oblivion series?

Bloodlines has already been pirated more than it’s been bought. Read that again. More illegal downloads than legal purchases. For a full-length novel that was priced for years at $2.99.

Do you get that, dear pirates? I am not some big time author.

I lost my full-time job in Sept 2013. I have to choose what I work on right now very, very carefully; anything I write must carry a reasonable expectation of being financially viable. If you continue pirating my books, series will be canceled.

Whatever your excuses are? I’ve heard them. I don’t care.

I can’t afford books!

Really? Because you can afford the iPads and laptops and Kindle Fires you’re visiting my site on while you look for illegal downloads of my books.  Books which are full-length novels for the most part and priced at $3 – $6, which is several dollars cheaper than other books in their genre. I understand poverty. I know poverty. 99% of the people visiting my site for torrents are not the downtrodden.

I want it in a different format!

ALL of my books are available in mobi, epub, and pdf. All of them. DRM free so you can convert them yourself to another format you need. What is this magical format you require?

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It’s not available in my country!

Uh, yeah, it is. All of my books are available at dozens of different retailers with no geographical restrictions.

I don’t have a credit card!

Me either! So here’s what you do: get an iTunes gift card and check out my work in the iBookstore. Or do what I do and get a VISA gift card from the store, which is usable online. Or use PayPal.

My country doesn’t allow PayPal!

Then read one of the literally millions of other books out there that are available to you for free!

Information wants to be free!

I’m not selling non-fiction. I’m not publishing a cure for cancer. The secrets of the universe are not found in a book of mine about vampires. These books are entertainment, which you are not automatically entitled to like air and water.

I don’t want to support big publishers and their gold toilets and yachts!

Dude, my books are put out by me. You are hurting me. And those I am responsible for. Also? I’ve worked in publishing. I don’t know anyone with a yacht. I know a hell of a lot of good editors who were laid off because of low profits. And I know a lot of authors who had to cancel series because sales were so low that publishers didn’t want to buy more of their books.

I already bought an ereader, books should be free.

So…you enjoy screwing over the little guy, then? Give your hard-earned cash to Apple and Microsoft and fuck those content creators who work for 50c an hour writing books? We don’t get a cut of those iPad sales, dumbass. Let’s be honest: it comes down to convenience. It is more convenient for you to steal from me than it is to walk your ass to the store and take a tablet off the shelf.

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It’s not stealing, it’s SHARING!

No, actually, it’s copyright infringement: the illegal copying and distribution of work you do not have the rights to. I and others choose to use the word theft for a very specific reason.

Taking my books to read without paying is theft of my labour. Artist’s rights are worker rights. You are a thief of the very worst kind when you take from workers who have very little (probably less than you).

It’s not like I’m SELLING your books illegally.

Yes, but the people who do sell illegally? Where do you think they get ebooks from? Torrents and download sites like you do. They take those books and make money off of them and they don’t give a dime to the authors. I know because I’ve had to send takedown notices to ebay and the like when users sold my book and others without permission and without giving me a cut. Putting ebooks up for illegal distribution means you don’t control how they’re then used. They’re put on CDs or online stores and sold for money; they’re converted to RTFs and have the names changed and then sold as original content.

Guess what! That “archive” site that scrapes all the other sites? They sell our books to companies as LLM training data. LLM = Large Language Model. Aka generative AI. Aka the thing destroying the climate and putting people out of work. Don’t believe me? Check the “LLM Data” link at the bottom of their site. Because of your actions, your support of illegal distribution of my work, my books are now being sold to these garbage companies.

If I like it, I’ll buy it later.

Do you think that’ll work at the grocery store? I can take home a bag of chips, eat them, and come back and pay for them if I DO like them? Really? I mean, should I try? Maybe you can go first and let me know how it works out for you?

I’m going to pirate your stuff anyway because you bitched about it.

You know why you react that way? With that defiant little “I’ll show you!” sneer? Because you know I’m right. So VERY mature–you sure showed that writer standing up for her rights! Your mother must be so proud of you.

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Didn’t you know [insert famous author here] says piracy helps them?

Good for that author. Go and take their work. I would rather take my chance with obscurity than have you take that choice from me. You dig that?

*mumble mumble* Libraries!

Libraries are great. Hey, did you know that in Canada, we have something called Public Lending Rights, which means the government gives us some pennies depending on how many of our books are in libraries? So if you walk your ass down to the library and request a book, they’ll get in copies–then YOU get to read free and *I* not only make a bit of money on the initial sale but, in Canada, make a little extra.

I’m just one person, it doesn’t make a difference if pirate.

Yes it does. You choose to buy, you teach your kids to do things legally, you encourage your friends to do their part, and it all trickles down until we have a culture that supports creators rather than punishes them. You absolutely can make the difference. And literally every sale counts with me. That is how few books I sell.

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Every time you visit one of those piracy forums? See the ads there? How about when you click a link to Rapidgator or DepositFiles or Zippyshare or FileFactory? See those ads that pop up? Your clicks, your pageviews, put money in the pocket of thieves. They make money from your illegal activities. Do you think they give a cut of that to the writer? No.

No book is “free”, even if you didn’t take money out of your wallet to pay for it.

I make money as a writer on a per-purchase basis. No patron or magical rent fairy coming by to hand a cheque to my landlord. Every sale counts.

Piracy has an actual place in the world: in countries under brutal regimes, like North Korea, where everything is so tightly controlled, the only way to change the tide is smuggling illegal content over the border. I’m cool with that. But y’all visiting my site, pirating my books? You’re not from North Korea. You’re primarily from the US, Canada, a few from the UK, Australia, and the odd one from India (oh and Brazil–I haven’t forgotten about you, Andrea, pretending you had no idea where you could get my book legally). All countries where my books can EASILY be legally obtained.

Your inconvenience is not oppression.

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Let me speak very plainly here for a moment: illegally copying and distributing my work violates me.

Psychologically, it makes it more difficult to work; it’s hard enough spending hundreds and hundreds of hours on a manuscript knowing you’ll never make minimum wage on it, but it’s even more difficult when you’re aware of how many motherfuckers are going to hit your website looking for illegal copies the day of release. Financially, it means the books you enjoy reading will be fewer and far between or will disappear all together because most writers already work multiple jobs to pay the bills and they will not continue a series that costs them more to produce than they’ll make on it.  In terms of quality, it means writers will try churning out crap so they can live on quantity rather than quality work, and it means there are fewer editors around to work on the books because of lay-offs. 

Exhumed meant a hell of a lot to me emotionally, and if it ends up pirated, Zara and Nate are DONE. <– I wrote this BEFORE that book was pirated. I’ve left the note intact because I did cancel the series.

I do not need to spend my time writing more Zara books. Nope, I have ideas here lined up around the block and then some–I have TONS of stuff I can work on. Books that might reach a wider audience to make up for the piracy. Or ideas I want to write, just for me, and never publish for my readers. You are hurting yourself by pirating.

If you love books, like you claim to–if you love reading, if you love devouring a new series–you will not leech from the people producing them. Because readers and writers have a symbiotic relationship, and writers cannot do their part if you do not do yours.

Still here? Think I’m alone in my feelings on the subject? Why don’t you read what Patricia Briggs, Dina James, Shiloh Walker, Jeaniene Frost, and Lilith Saintcrow have to say on the subject.

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In Memory of Gus

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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 Elis 5. Also kind of sort of writing Waverly 8.

I'm not inclined to resign to maturity.