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Skyla Dawn Cameron

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

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October 19, 2016 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

Become a Patron of Snark!

I’ve wanted to redo some of my patreon things for a few months now and finally had a few days to work on it. It’s like anything else, seeing what works and what does, and how best to maximize what people get for their troubles. I’ve had nearly two years on the service now, and it has meant guaranteed money for my medication every month–there are no words for how much that has helped my stress level, knowing I won’t ever have to go without pills.

In addition to ARCs and signed print books, here are currently some things available for Patrons of Snark:

  • Ch 1 – 2 of Solace, Demons of Oblivion #6 (all patrons)
  • short story Tales from Alchemy Red: Prey (all patrons)
  • Ch 1 of Devour, sequel to Soulless (all patrons)
  • Ch 1 – 5 of In Darkness Waits (unpublished apocalyptic UF) (all patrons)
  • Tales from Alchemy Red: Dial V for Vampire ($5+ patrons)
  • Odin’s Spear excerpt (all patrons)

There were also previews of Oblivion not seen by anyone else months in advance. As well, this is where you’ll find the Zara Lain serial Amends, which is set between Bloodlines and Hunter. I’m hopefully going to have another bundle of chapters up next month and the damn thing finished next year.

Also next year I’m looking at doing a Livi adventure as a postcard story–every month a postcard from Livi will arrive in your mailbox with another piece of the story. Still working out the story part, but I’m excited.

patreon-odinsspear

And no matter what you give, you’ll get kudos when Odin’s Spear is released–every patron gets my public thanks when the new book releases, sort of like the credits at the end of the movie with all the amazing folks who made it happen. Deadline is December 31 to pledge!

If you can’t participate, that’s cool–I still think you’re aces. But if you’d like to chip in as little as $2/month, here you go.

 

***Just a quick website note: I’ve having some issues with a plugin and I’m not sure what. Everything else should still be working at the moment but the online shop will be down for a bit.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: patreon

February 27, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 3 Comments

The Thing They Don’t Tell You

Yesterday I got excellent news from Dr. M, my specialist. My MRI showed no active disease and I’m not that badly damaged yet, I don’t yet require surgery, and I seem to be tolerating the medication well. I can cut down on my visits to her AND my frequent bloodwork.

I sort of sat there and blinked for a few moments, because I wasn’t prepared for that.

I prepare for worst case scenario, always, because bad news always hurts that much more when you have hope. At least for me. So I was quite prepared for something dire and had trouble adjusting to the idea that, for a little while, I’m okay. It’s that “for a little while” that is key, however. It’s not permanent. It’s never permanent; this can’t be cured. Oddly, it’s a little like mental illness that way. Periods of wellness in between periods of, “Oh, fuck”. There are all kinds of instructions on how to deal with bad news, but the thing they don’t tell you about is the good.

For a brief moment, sitting there with my doctor, I nearly stumbled over words (thank GOD she seems to find me coherent and like me as a patient, at least I’m generally educated on things) and the question flared in my head, “What now?” A different sort of panic than I’m used to, the good news triggering another shuffling of the ground beneath me. I’d mentally prepared me for one path and yet here is another, brighter one.

I recovered quickly, of course. Because the answer to that question is, well, carry on.Maximize this time of wellness, do all the things you comfortably can, and enjoy the hell out of it. Don’t ever squander it.

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Anyway, this should mean we’re back to our regularly scheduled bloggage about books and such.

So I came home yesterday to the internet losing its damn mind (I still don’t even know wtf) AND the wonderful surprise of Patreon meeting its first milestone(!). This means that not only is my monthly medication paid for, but the Alchemy Red short, Prey, will soon be posted (one scene to finish and then a proofread on my end) for patrons. It’s a lot of fun and contains several familiar faces even if that’s not initially apparent from the description.

rebellion-kindleMarch also continues to be a busy month as things are on track to release the novella Rebellion. This is the first time I’ve revisited the River Wolfe world with new content as a writer since 2008 and for readers (when Wolfe was actually publisher), 2009. I am reasonably certain I am the only one excited for this novella (other than the friend who is currently reading it for coherency for me), but I don’t care: I’m tremendously pleased and I hope River Wolfe readers who catch it enjoy it.

So that’s it for me today. Errands to run, a flat to clean, some naughty assassins to get into trouble with some of your favourite characters, editing to do…

And possibly some nachos. Remission feels good.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Demons of Oblivion, health, life, patreon, personal, rebellion, river wolfe

January 12, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 5 Comments

Crowdfunding, Patrons, & Thoughts

ICYMI, a YA author was kickstarting the costs to write and produce the sequel to a book publishers passed on, and this included her living expenses while writing. The internet exploded, what could’ve been a nuanced discussion about crowdfunding and the burden of costs in publishing turned into The Sharks vs The Jets (as everything on the internet is wont to do), the author was doxxed, and everything is terrible.

Then there’s me, sitting over here having just launched a Patreon to, in part, possibly cover living expenses and stuff, going “Hmmm.”

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(I’m not linking to that stuff because I just want to talk about me and my POV for a minute and I’m a narcissist. )

I really, really hesitated last year before launching the Resurrecting River campaign for a number of reasons.

  1. I wasn’t sure I *wanted* to resurrect the book. That was a big one.
  2. I felt that if I was putting something out myself, the burden should fall on my shoulders.
  3. If I know a project isn’t financially viable (as re-releasing River was) and can’t shoulder that burden, I shouldn’t bother with it, because asking for help means I’ve FAILED AT EVERYTHING.
  4. The trend toward expecting readers to do everything (like marketing–do not even get me started on “street teams”–and now funding up front the editing/production) really bothers me. I didn’t want to be part of that trend. I felt that if you were going to go it alone rather than with a commercial publisher, generally you should be paying for that shit yourself.

I ended up running the Indiegogo thing anyway because readers wanted the book. I was frequently asked if River and Wolfe would be in print again, so I finally said, well, here’s your chance to see it happen. Otherwise probably not because I have other stuff to work on. And it did extremely well. Because I know generous people and have very kind readers who wanted those books.

The trouble, as I saw it, was that it wasn’t a sustainable business model for me. My books are not financially viable after the fact, so I have no money to invest in producing them, therefore I’d have to keep crowdfunding all the time, and that thought just makes me ill. I don’t want to be That Person. I dislike asking for money and I LOATHE asking for help of any kind. So crowdfund the first time, great, with the expectation that I’ll make enough money to cover the costs of future ones and won’t have to do it again. If I have to keep dipping back into the pool of readers and friends every time I want to publish a book, that’s gonna get old pretty damn fast.

Patreon, too, was something I looked at, but for it to be worth my time, I’d have to already be a fairly popular writer, I thought. Like 2% of readers might donate, and at $2-$5 on average, well…I’d need a much larger readerbase than I have now for it to make a dent.

I can do my own covers, I have friends who are copyeditors I exchange deals with (given that I edit and design myself), I format my own ebooks and do my own print interiors. I can produce a very nice book at little cost to me, unlike a lot of writers.

What I need is money to pay my rent while I write the damn thing. And one of the things I kept telling people, primarily with Oblivion and why it’s not written/published yet, is that it wasn’t the production cost that concerned me. It was taking the time off to write it.

The outrage around a writer asking for living expenses to be paid while writing a book is sort of understandable, given how many of us write books while working 2-3 jobs and taking care of families. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve looked at someone and said “Bitch, please” when I look at how much I juggle and still manage to get shit done without asking for help. Writers should be taking some risks with their work. That’s part of self-publishing–taking a risk yourself instead of the publisher taking the risk.

However…the point that seems to be lost is that things are VERY different when you’re already making a living as a writer.

When I was a housewife, I had lots of time to write and experiment and not worry whether my art was financially viable.

When I juggled a couple of jobs, as a tutor and as an employee for a publisher, my bills were being paid so I could write/publish what I wanted and not worry whether my art was financially viable.

Now I’m a freelance designer and full time writer. Now I have to choose what I work on very, very carefully. I can’t spend sixteen hours a day at the computer, several hours on editing/design, several hours on for-pay writing projects, and then several hours on urban fantasy. Just can’t physically or mentally do it. My primary writing time has to go to projects that will pay my rent. Oblivion? Isn’t going to pay my rent. I’ll be lucky if it pays my internet for a month. To make that book a priority, I would have to find some other way to cover my living expenses while I wrote it part time. I have no way of doing that.

shakespeare-got-to-get-paidSo what does a writer do in this circumstance, when it comes to writing a book fans want when it’s not a financially smart decision? Go out and get another job (on top of the full time writing, and this is even assuming one can just magically find an extra job when so many are out of work) JUST to cover the two months it takes to write this one extra book? Take money away from saving for something really important (like a house, or a holiday, or babies, etc) to cover that time to write the book and not see a return on that investment when it’s published? Or just not write the book and continue writing the other ones that *do* pay the bills?

I don’t know, honestly. There is no universal right or wrong answer here.

There’s just whatever the writer decides to do. It’s just one of many options, and options are good. And if people want to support that, great. If they don’t, that’s cool too. I know that I stubbornly swore I would do everything on my own in the future and if books didn’t do well, they’d be abandoned, and if Skyla books didn’t pick up, Skyla just wouldn’t publish anymore.

Then I got sick. Really sick. The unfixable kind.

I spent six months pretty sure I was dying only to find out no, not dying, but my body is attacking itself and won’t stop.

Then I had my Fuck It™ Moment in Taco Bell.

And this is what it came down to for me:

I will use any and all resources available to me to make a living at writing.

This means…

  • I will continue writing for-pay projects I hate that pay the bills.
  • I will crowdfund to resurrect an old book*.
  • I will open a Patreon page for monthly support.
  • And I will try whatever else comes along until the day I don’t have to.

tumblr_m3zddgC5b11rt2r0xo1_500I will do this because Fuck It, there ARE different resources for writers now, and why shouldn’t I give them a shot? Because I’m afraid I’ll feel judged or like I’ve failed or something? FUCK THAT.

I will do this because I am not holding a gun to anyone’s head and I know I am not entitled to make a living in the arts; I offer books for sale, I offer ways to help see them written, and if in either of those instances readers decide not to offer support, that’s okay.

I will do this because I have learned there are people who want to help if given the opportunity. I may not have enough of a readership yet to pay my bills after a book is released, but a handful of the the ones I have want to help out, so voila, here are ways to do so. Others would rather not and wait and buy a book after it’s published, and that is cool too.

I will do this because I dislike poverty more than I care about other people’s opinions on how I pay my bills.

And I will do this because life is too short to worry about the politics of all this. If something turns out to be right for me, my work, and my readers who like the option, then good for us.

Otherwise the reality is that not utilizing these various options available to me means far fewer Skyla books will be published, which sucks not just for me but the people who enjoy them. It also means the only people self-publishing will be those with higher incomes, and that pretty much sucks–lower income people have voices worth hearing too.

If me using Patreon offends (the proverbial) you and leaves a bad taste in your mouth, that’s fine–I understand. Having to choose between medication and paying my hydro bill in winter** leaves a bad taste in mine. I will pull income from all kinds of different streams to lessen the odds of me having to make those choices whenever I’m able to.

rPZVW7i

So this is why I think there’s no right or wrong answer to crowdfunding, it’s something personal for artists to figure out on their own if they want to use it AND for readers/audiences to figure out on their own if they want to support them, and I am happily giving Patreon a shot in case it works for me for the reasons above.

Happy Monday.

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* I will likely not use IGG or KS to fund producing a book again for a variety of reasons, not the least of which was the stress of it, but I’ve promised myself I will never ever take one of these options off the table either.

** Which is this month’s dilemma; last month’s was pills or rent. Fun times.

 

ETA: Where I got real personal with this (as I tend to do, since I like talking about me) Sir Wendig of the Wise and Bearded went broader and tackled some of the criticisms quite eloquently, and his post is absolutely worth a read. I agree entirely.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Demons of Oblivion, life, oblivion, patreon, personal, writers and readers

January 5, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

Won’t You Be My Patron?

Amends on Patreon

(Just sing the blog subject line to this tune.)

So yeah, this is a thing I am trying. Whee!

The blurb on the site explains it all–why I’m doing it, what the rewards are, and what milestones can be unlocked. In a nutshell, this is one of the things that will let me write more books for you to read instead of the projects that currently pay my bills.

Regarding Amends, the blurb is on the site and its page here–it’s a project I’ve been asked about a few times over the past couple of years, covering some of Zara’s time between Bloodlines and Hunter (and relates to Zombie Fairies from Whiskey Sour). It was originally meant as a freebie. I really debated trying once more to do a free serial, but last time it didn’t get past five chapters and I figured that would happen again. Last time I was exhausted with work and writing and I didn’t have time to keep it up. It’s not a freebie now because I can’t afford to do free serials anymore and cross my fingers for reader donations after the fact, so I’m trying something different.

kaGh5_patreon_name_and_messageI totally understand not being able to contribute. I looked at a lot of Patreon creator pages as I was setting mine up and a lot of people stressed the “$2 a month is less than ONE of your daily coffee” thing, which I get, but honestly it bugs me a little because *I* rarely have that sitting around once a month. My favourite living author set up a Patreon page and I sure as hell couldn’t guarantee I had an extra $5 a month to give, as much as I love her and her work. I know what it’s like to be in a perpetual state of being broke, balancing on nothing.

Also, coffee is really fucking awesome. I like coffee (even though I can no longer have caffeine). A lot of the time, I’d rather have a coffee than whatever less-than-the-price-of-a-coffee thing I’m being offered. I don’t blame you if you like coffee more than me–*I* like coffee more than I like me.

But if you have some extra pennies a month (like…the cost of one cup of coffee) and want to support my ongoing urban fantasy/paranormal efforts, there you go, and there are some fun rewards to go along with it. And if you have more than a few extra pennies, you can get more than a few extras as well.

Solomon'sSealExtras like…shop coupon codes, free books at certain levels both e and print, and for everyone at $5/month and up, you can get an exclusive, five-chapter look at my unpublished urban fantasy adventure novel Solomon’s Seal. Which you might’ve heard me talk about one or ten million times because that series is my favourite. It’s available for download immediately.

Amends launches when we hit $100/month–currently it’s partially written and roughly planned, so when the money is regular, I can take some time each month to polish it up and post it. It will be exclusive to Patreon backers in 2015 (or the next year; I’ve no idea when we’ll hit that milestone). When it’s complete, I’ll consider releasing it for sale, but the initial intention is to keep it just for patrons for a time as a thank you.

Prey-smShort term, at $75 (my monthly medication cost, which currently comes out of grocery money), there’s a short story set in the ‘verse about a pair of assassins who pick the wrong target to hunt. It’s called Prey and I’m about 80% done writing it at the moment, having a blast. It’ll go up for patrons when the milestone is reached.

There are lofty, distant goals beyond that–nothing ventured nothing gained, and I see this as a long term thing so maybe in a few years we’ll get there. I believe you can also contribute any amount you want per month–wherever your $ falls within the reward levels, you get those goodies.

Thank you for considering it and Happy New Year!

 

[As an aside, this was planned and put together like a month before the Doombuggy thing, which is yet another reason I felt awful asking for help, knowing I was about to launch a long term Patreon thing. But there you go.]

 

DevourETA: Patrons at all levels can access the first chapter of Devour, the Soulless-sequel-Skyla-never-finished, which was recently resurrected from my dead computer.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Demons of Oblivion, livi talbot, news, patreon, update, writing, zara lain

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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.