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Skyla Dawn Cameron

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

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January 7, 2022 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

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

A book out in paperback, a new preorder–let’s dive in!

What’s New

No official releases, and this is six months after Yampellec’s Idol came out–believe me, I am feeling the hit (I’ve not sold a single ebook yet in January on Kindle lol). But I don’t like to rush things, and if I bumped up the new book to now, I’d then have that big gap until Charon’s Gold comes out (which definitely won’t move up), so I’ll take the hit now rather than later.

That being said…actually the new book is out early for print readers!

Meet Norah and her cats in paperback or hardcover now!

Amidst the 2020 pandemic, Norah Sloane has been sheltering in place with her ex-boyfriend—the equivalent of three toddlers in a trench coat pretending to be an adult—who abruptly informs her he thinks she needs to move out. Coincidentally, her estranged father has just died and left his family’s home to her, and in a fit of defiant frustration, she packs her bags, her cats, and all the toilet paper, and drives five hours north to the tiny village of Hope Falls to claim her inheritance.

Selling the big, partially renovated old house during a global pandemic is out of the question, but the bills are paid for a few months to give her time to get on her feet. It’s the best solution, all things considered.

So what if it’s haunted?

What’s Upcoming

Dweller on the Threshold is out in ebook on April 5 and you can preorder everywhere: Kindle – Kobo – iBooks – Nook

Charon’s Gold, Livi #6, is also up for preorder, coming October 25: Kindle  –  Kobo  –  iBooks  –  Nook 

Livi Talbot is no longer the woman she once was.

She has suffered great loss. She has been betrayed.

And after failing to stop the greatest villain she has ever faced, she’s determined to never be blindsided again.

Her first priority is to rescue a suffering soul from the underworld itself. Though fellow adventurer Iluka Grantham is at her side to hunt down the gold coins that will allow her to cross the river Styx, entering the underworld through the deadly Pluto’s Gate in Turkey remans solely on her shoulders. Survival in the world of the dead isn’t guaranteed, even for Livi Talbot, and this journey will bring her face to face with her greatest failures, her biggest losses, and her inability to save those she loves.

And if she survives? The next goal is to go after every person responsible for the death that caused magic to bleed back into the human realm.

Even if they’re family.

Summer should see Witch Hunt get a paperback wide release and Hell Fire will start at Patreon. Elis gets arrested for one murder she didn’t commit, there’s some dimension-hopping with her growing misandrist girl gang, and shenanigans ensue.

March 2023 will also see the launch of Waverly Jones Mysteries with The Killing Beach! No preorder yet–those can’t be more than a year in advance–but it’s coming.

What I’m Working On

Hell Fire has to be my priority right now, though I also am working on the third Waverly Jones book, and a bunch of West POV stuff I’m readying for Patreon. I did manage to take most of December off after so many months of crazy productivity and I’m still pretty tired, though sticking to my Wednesdays and Saturday nights is a good way to ease into things.

Because the process of writing a book and publishing it takes so long–generally whatever you read from me I’ve written one to four years in advance–writers constantly have to be looking ahead. Even if a series end is three or more years away, there comes the question of what next? What should be in the pipeline?

So with Livi planning to end, and Elis ending right around the corner after that, I’m looking at what to fill my time with. Release-wise, I can then start scheduling Elis’s novels for ebook release (I decided I won’t consider doing so until the series is totally written), but writing-wise?

Waverly’s series will probably be six or seven books, and I need to stagger releases to have one every six months so I’ll need something to alternate with it. I’ve got a zombie apocalypse novel I want to write, and I might be good enough now to write the Nairobi Spy Trilogy that’s been in my head for several years though it’s also like a futuristic UF. And another post-apocalyptic dystopia thing circling my brain without landing yet.

But also…I kind of want to get out of writing UF?

I’ve spent so much time with the genre and I truly love it but, as a writer, it’s getting really frustrating how urban fantasy is conflated with paranormal romance. I have no problem with PNR! But it’s not what I write and I do not follow the genre conventions. I never will. Especially writing female protagonists and having a girly name like Skyla, I get put in that box no matter how careful I am to never label my books as that.

Some people sometimes getting involved and kissing does not equal genre Romance and HEAs. I want the freedom to write women who date but end up single. I want to kill off love interests. And I get tired of accusations and hatemail that I’ve misled romance readers when I’ve never advertised to them in the first place.

Tack onto that the issue with readers of self-pub books expecting all series to be swiftly churned out back to back and the amount of pressure that places on me–even knowing I can never be that kind of writer with the books I write–and I really don’t feel like this is the genre for me anymore.

I refuse to use a pen name (because fuck misogyny, that’s why). So I’m left wondering how things might go moving into other genres. I love domestic thrillers, mysteries, and horror–these are all things I’d enjoy writing more of. I’m curious how Waverly’s books will do and what the reception will be, and what genre expectations mystery readers will bring to the books. More standalones like The Silent Places or mysteries might definitely be in my future. And horror. Lots of horror.

I haven’t decided anything yet, but that’s where my thoughts are right now!

I hope y’all are staying safe and taking care out there.

This little monster is recovering nicely after having nine teeth removed two weeks ago! The surgery cost a little less than expected so there’s a chunk of money ready for his next emergency in “his” bank account. We have to stay on top of the dental stuff and he might need more out next year or the year after. Still got those big fangs, though, which he’s happy to bite me with.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: dweller on the threshold, elis o'connor, livi talbot, news, state of the union, update

August 25, 2020 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

At Least Fall Is Almost Here

I hate summer. I have always hated summer. The heat is too much for me and I break into hives in the sun.

Summer in 2020, This Year of Our Collective Demise, especially is unpleasant, even with the shades down and a/c on. I’ve had two back-to-back veterinary emergencies (three, technically, although the third was an injury that has not yet called for a vet). I slept a combined ten hours last week as Shawn required eye drops every 2-3 hours round the clock–which is a lot like hand-raising him was, except without the constant terror he was about to die. Still, it meant I was useless for work, losing a week just as I was getting caught up.

At least I didn’t fracture any more bones?

I’m not as in as bad shape as I was a few months ago, but it’s still a lot of added pressure. But regardless, I’m taking a couple of weeks off next month–actual planned time off, instead of enforced by illness or injury–with no expectations on myself except to get some house cleaning/purging done. I would love to get some writing done–and prior to the last couple of weeks I was super productive as well–but at this point any kind of plan for anything sends me into a panic attack.

Speaking of, I hope to have some news about projects in the fall. I have three zero drafts in progress, and one of them is a standalone–I keep wondering if somehow I can shift my brain to something like that over series.

My brain is not wired for standalone–even if only one book comes out, like Soulless, there are still more in my head–but it might be the best way to continue. I constantly feel like I’m disappointing people when I have series in progress but long periods of time between releases, which makes it even harder to write. Add onto that the piracy and, well…

Yeah, the piracy. So I talked about Dawning and the one person who preordered who then uploaded the file the day of release. That book has been illegally downloaded more than three times the number that has been bought.

Then last week Blood Ties went up. Blood Ties, btw, has been out for two and a half months, and I’ve made less than two hundred dollars* on it.

I was actually pleased with that because it’s a new series and something I wrote for fun, so I wasn’t anticipating anyone buying it…but it’s hard to be pleased with it when it goes weeks without selling and then is being pirated. I spent a year on that book, between multiple drafts and editors, bought boutique stock for it, and…yeah.

Witch Hunt is coming because it’s already started and I already paid for the stock, but at this point I’m only planning to have it serialize on Patreon and then come out publicly in paperback for die-hard fans. If there’s an ebook release, it’ll be far down the road–like a year after initial release. I am truly sorry for that, but it’s the only way I can work on the sequel–I have to close the door to it ever being stolen, otherwise it’ll never get written.

So for all intents and purposes, that series (projected 4-6 books) is dead in the water.

I’m really disappointed. I didn’t get to finish the Demons of Oblivion series for the same reason, so Witch Hunt was going to have some flashbacks with Elis’s mother and you would’ve found out how she died. There was so much I wanted to do there, and I’ll still try to do it as a Patreon serial, but I’m heartbroken.

Which is why I’m back to wondering how I can possibly write standalones. If it didn’t take so goddamn long, I’d write two to three in a series first before publishing them, but taking the time to do that while paying the bills gets…challenging.

Anyway, who knows if we’re going to survive the rest of the year, so it might all be a moot point!

I hope the summer has been kinder to you than it has to me, but then again there’s a global pandemic and many of you are in the US so…gonna guess probably not.

We’re not all in the same boat, but we’re in the same storm, and I hope you’re weathering it.


* I hate even bringing up such a number, but that’s the reality of a new book in a new series–readers rarely carry from series to series–as well as the reality of independent publishing when you have no resources to advertise. I did the math on the Livi series recently: Solomon’s Seal has been out for four years and it has sold the best of all the books…and in that time I have made enough to cover six weeks of living expenses.

I spent four years on that book.

If you stumble across this page looking for pirated copies of any of these books, please understand that this is the reality of my income as a writer. I live below the poverty level and I suffer financially to publish these books–that is why I cancel series when you steal them.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: blood ties, elis o'connor, epub, free download, free read, livi talbot, mobi, pdf, skyla dawn cameron, update, witch hunt

August 31, 2019 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

Bits and Bobs

So…the new book is out! It was a hard one to let go of, but it’s out there now. Yay!

Some of y’all read that fast. And came looking for info about the next one. That’s my karma for doing the same thing with every Tomb Raider game, probably, but for those scouring for info: fifth book isn’t done, so I have no news! I’m still recovering from this release.

Yes, the fourth one had what I consider an emotional cliffhanger, much like Solomon’s Seal did, but it’s not a plot one so I think y’all will survive.

You have questions! I will have answers!

But mostly not until the next two books.

The only other hints I will give you is that…yes, there is fallout to explore, and yes, there are some secrets to uncover, and that is not even the half of it in that book–it’s a really big game changer with major plot/world things happening.

This was also the first song on the book’s playlist. If that tells you anything about the, uh, tone of things.

Seriously, thanks y’all for getting into the series and I’m so glad that, thus far, folks are digging the new one so much.

A few new patrons have joined as well, some to read the West prequel Tiger’s Memory. That’s awesome and I hope you enjoy it.

Unfortunately, I also had my first pledge dodger. I’ve always instituted a try-before-you-buy kind of policy, and some folks would pledge for a month, get their stuff, and then cancel–which is cool. But pledging just to get stuff and then deleting before you’re charged?

Captain America is disappointed in you.

Not cool, my dudes. That is not being a motherfucking Ferrari.

Honestly, it hurt. It hurt because Patreon is what’s allowing me to write more Livi books in the first place, and it hurt because these stories are supported by people like you, and it’s not cool for someone to take like that.

So pledge dodgers are blocked permanently, and I have switched to a charge-upfront model, where you get charged when you pledge, and then charged the first of every month afterward. I felt bad doing it, but I can’t continue with the honor system when some folks don’t have, well, honor. This is my livelihood.

Other stuff happening right now!

I did launch a new hobby project, Really Bad Vegans, with Dina James. Because we are. We’re really bad vegans. But we try.

I’m going on holidays for the last two weeks of September, and will be roadtripping with a friend. Other than Christmas when I go away, I basically don’t get, like, vacations or holidays or anything, so I’m pretty excited.

Freelancing is super busy right now (particularly leading up to my holidays, and because I’m still behind in a few things after having strep throat two months ago) and I’m booked into October now…but I can always squeeze in premade covers, so I have a sale going on until September 14th–20% off any and all premade covers. You can also buy now and have it customized later. Coupon code HOLIDAY at checkout.

I’ll have some release news for you in October for the usual quarterly state of the union, so stay tuned! August has been hella stressful, but thanks for all you do to support the books and writing of them.

I’m just gonna take a nap now.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: livi talbot, patreon, update

July 27, 2018 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

“When’s That Book Coming?” Summer 2018 Edition

It’s very hard to write books when everything you love is dead. Also hard to do: get up, work, clean, bathe, breathe, not cry, have patience with people who discard their cats like trash. But alas I manage to do most of those things, even if it takes longer and is quite taxing, and last night I finished the fourth draft of the third Livi novel.

There’s still a fifth draft to go. And copyediting. And proofreading. But it’s a big chunk of work done at last, and the book is now up for preorder.

But first…

What’s New

The West prequel novel, Tiger’s Memory, is complete, polished, and available at Patreon for folks $10+.

The prequel novel about West’s first major assignment, his first girlfriend, and how it goes terribly wrong for him on both counts.

Before he was known as brutal operative Dale West, he was Suh Dae-il, a twenty-year-old rising star in the agency who escaped a North Korean prison camp five years earlier.  Charismatic, brilliant, and manipulative, he’s the perfect spy—right up until he’s assigned his first target.

Becoming the person who could convince a girl to flip on her family means submerging himself in another world entirely. If he disappears in this other persona completely, he risks losing his job, his purpose, and the people who gave him a new life after he fled hell; if he remains the operative beneath the surface, he could lose the girl he’s fallen in love with when she learns the truth about his subterfuge.

Either way it may not matter when agency operatives and their targets in the area are killed. Dae-il is in someone’s crosshairs—someone who shares his unique abilities and has no qualms about his girlfriend becoming collateral damage in a mission that will change the magical landscape of the entire world.

That’s about all I finished. The Livi Postcard Story is in progress at Patreon, and I’ve just started Solomon’s Seal from West’s POV.

 

What’s Upcoming

Mark your calendars…

October 16, 2018

Yes, the title changed, but the cover hasn’t.

Preorder: Kindle US | Kindle UK | Kindle CA | Kobo | iBookstore (more coming soon)

This is a big book. Current draft is at 121 525 words (Livi books are normally 106K). That might bump up a bit as the book needs some prettying up–I try (and hopefully succeed) to make Livi’s books very visual and cinematic, but this one was difficult to just get all the pieces in place. Next draft will smooth it out. I’m frightfully insecure about it because it was so difficult, and I know it’s a year behind schedule, but I sincerely hope it’s worth the wait for readers and y’all enjoy it.

This book has…

  • Livi vs a terracotta army!
  • The elixir of immortality!
  • A hot Australian treasure hunter!
  • SEA MONSTERS!
  • A sort-of apology for Certain Things in Oblivion!

I think when I’m done hating it, I will ultimately be very proud of it. It caps off Livi’s character arc nicely–if I ended it here, it would make a solid trilogy of books, I think. There are of course more–I’m writing the fifth right now–but Livi is on life support and can use all the help she can get. Please, during the blood moon/eclipse, sacrifice a virgin or two (I mean, whatever you can find) and at least half a dozen unicorns to whatever deity of your choice and maybe sales will increase.

The countdown is on to be thanked in the acknowledgements of Emperor’s Tomb! Like the producer credits on the movie, Patrons of Snark get thanked for their monthly support in all my books. Join for as little as a buck a month and get added to the acknowledgements.

Then, coming either next month or in September,

The Oblivion bundle will be on Kindle Unlimited for three months before distribution is expanded elsewhere. Here’s the table of contents:

Bloodlines
“Thrall”
Hunter
“Malice”
Lineage
“Sunrise”
“Whiskey Sour”
Exhumed
“Fated”
“Prey”
Oblivion

It does not include 9 Crimes (or “Aftermath”), Damaged, “A Vampire Walked Into a Bar”/”Zombie Faeries”, “Resist“, or Dial V for Vampire.

I wanted to give the series a quick proofread (again) but I haven’t the mental capacity for it, so that’s why I’m being vague on the release right now. So…”soon”.

 

What I’m Working On

Besides more revisions on Livi 3, I have other stuff in progress I’m not ready to talk about yet. When I have details, I’ll share them, I just don’t like to jinx projects in early development.

 

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Demons of Oblivion, life, livi talbot, patreon, preorder, sotu, state of the union, update

December 7, 2017 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 2 Comments

Patreon’s Fee Changes

Old-Fashioned Patronage Makes Things Possible

Remember when I lost 65lbs and couldn’t get out of bed and vomited all day? Yeah that was fun.

In December 2014, I was a month or so into remission after six months of serious, chronic illness that left me bed-ridden until I was finally diagnosed. The diagnosis, while good news in that I could get better, came with a price tag because it meant I’d have to buy medication to take daily for the rest of my life.

In Canada, our doctor and hospital visits are all covered, but not our medication. People typically get that through their job benefits…of which I have none, since I’m a freelancer, and buying private insurance would be more than I was paying for meds. But being a freelancer, my income coming from royalties and editing/design for others, means everything is very unpredictable.

I have months where I am comfortable (like late spring this year) and flush with cash; I have other months (like this past fall) where I am living paycheck to paycheck and have no idea how I’m going to pay bills. I’ve put off buying groceries to stretch money as far as I can; I’ve kept heat off in winter as to not have a huge bill; I’ve made people gifts at Christmas because I don’t have the extra income to buy anything. One thing I have not been able to skip out on is my meds, though, because I am so afraid of getting sick again–if that happens, I am looking at more out-of-town doctors visits, a battery of tests to track the disease’s progress, and potential surgery to stop horrible pain and, well, prevent me from dying.

So this is why I initially set up a Patreon account–I knew if meds were going to cost X amount a month, this could potentially ensure I always had that money. Aunt Judy was my first patron before I even announced it, and while the income it provides has fluctuated over the years, it has (for the most part) continually risen as I’ve learned from my experiences and tweaked my offerings.

Beyond that, it has guaranteed I continue writing urban fantasy.

Before I got sick, I consistently churned out 500K words a year. Three Skyla books, a few for-pay offerings, and experimental work that either I started and didn’t complete or just picked at for fun.

Even with these three years since I’ve been better, I no longer have that stamina physically, emotionally, or mentally. I have done every trick in the book to build myself back up again but I am just not the same person. I can do maybe 350K – 400K a year now, and that’s a whole entire Skyla book or 2-3 for-pay projects that I am no longer able to fit in.* So something is always being sacrificed.

Urban fantasy is not sustainable for me as a writer on its own, but Patreon has made it a little more possible to continue publishing it.

Financially, it’s a guaranteed few thousand a year that contributes to my overall writing income.

Patreon is why I wrote Oblivion (I felt guilty there were these supporters waiting for it).

Patreon is why I wrote a couple of Demons stories (Prey and Resist).

Patreon is why I wrote Ashford’s Ghost as it was originally intended to be a short story reward.

Patreon is why I’ve been revising and polishing Tiger’s Memory and it’s now being read by people other than a couple of friends.

Surprise: more writing sold = more writing in the future!

Mentally and emotionally, it connects me with readers more than anything else has.

Writing is a very solitary task. I’m okay with that because I don’t play well with others, but when something is published and sent off in the void, one rarely hears how it is received. There are faceless, nameless numbers showing sales and money that appears in my bank account (all good!) but I don’t know who those people are, I don’t know what they think of the work–it’s all very abstract.

Patreon gives me names and faces to connect with. It gives me people I directly thank with every release. It makes tangible the people who will be let down if I give into one of my many defeatist depressive episodes and delete my existence and books from the web.

Now, unfortunately, all this is set to change.

A No Good, Very Bad Decision

Yesterday Patreon announced a new fee system. Previously, when you pledge to me, a portion of that goes to Patreon, but usually I took home about 90% of every dollar. I get hit with some PayPal fees as well, but it’s the cost of doing business. Now they’re promising me 95% but! But! Tacking on an extra fee to every. goddamn. pledge. A fee of 2.9% + $0.35 per pledge.

For a $1 pledge, this is a total of $1.38.

If you’re a patron of ten people for $1 each, that means you are getting that 38c fee x10 even though only one transaction actually goes through on your end (taking $10 out at the start of the month). In that example, that person supporting ten people is now paying an extra $3+ a month than they’d budgeted, so are they likely to then delete three pledges? Probably and I don’t blame them.

Of that $1.38, Patreon is taking home 43c on that transaction while I get 95c, so let’s be clear: this is not about benefiting me, a creator, but about Patreon lining their pockets. I absolutely support people getting paid and covering operating costs, but all this is doing is punishing microtransactions and people already giving all they can.

A glance at their support Twitter page is nothing but “oh, we’ve really carefully considered this and have been experimenting with patrons and creators before implementing it site-wide”. (And you know what? They probably did and decided the sacrifice was worth it.)

Let me be explicit here: I was not consulted. I was not warned. In their months of “careful” consideration, I don’t know a single Patreon creator or patron who was aware of these discussions. Instead it’s hitting right before the holiday when money is already tight and folks are already rethinking their support.

Yes, I have already lost significant patronage and it hasn’t even been twenty-four hours, nor has it been implemented yet. And I do not blame any patrons in the least if they chose to delete their pledges to me or their account on the entire platform–I will have to rethink what I pledge to as well.

What This Means for EVERYONE

To continue to be explicit here: I cannot continue publishing urban fantasy if I lose my Patreon income stream**. It is not sustainable for me.

When I mentioned above the sacrifices I’ve had to make since recovering from being sick, it comes down to what I write: for-pay projects that will at least cover my time and add a little profit, or urban fantasy that does not break even. I cannot maintain both. I cut back for-pay projects last year to write and release Oblivion, Solomon’s Seal, Odin’s Spear, Ashford’s Ghost, and soon Zheng’s Tomb, and although I’ve had a small boost to my Skyla Dawn Cameron-related income, there has been a drastic decrease in my overall income as a result of this shift in focus. With Patreon continually increasing and giving me room to publish more, the expectation was that I’d pick up more readers as I released more books and eventually Livi etc would be sustainable.

Beyond that, the books of mine that you read are not just things I do for money: I bleed on each and every one of those pages. I pour everything into them, and it’s writing these stories that keeps me alive when I really, really don’t want to be. For all these years, I have survived my brain trying to kill me because of writing.

Should Patreon not reverse this decision, or if I don’t find a workable alternative readers will follow me to, I cannot see continuing. My beloved old dog was just diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and she needs an additional medication, putting her meds up to $200/month now. I have to start focusing on writing the things that will allow me to take care of her and my bills.

Please, Patreon, do not do this to creators. It is going to affect the smaller independent ones tremendously.

Patrons, if you chose to delete your pledge, I understand. And you know what? Do so without guilt, because money is the only thing that speaks to large companies, and if they lose your dollars, maybe they’ll change their minds. I also encourage you to drop them a line with your opinion.

I am continuing to investigate alternatives and will post an update if I’m able to move elsewhere. Otherwise, Livi #3 will be out next year and…well.

We’ll see.

 

* I suspect if I wasn’t editing, that might make a difference, but not much I can do about that since it pays the bills.

** Not to add salt to the wound, but I was finally, finally feeling able to go back to Zara after the Exhumed piracy debacle and making it a Patreon reward, and now that definitely isn’t happening.

 

ETA:

So why am I offering these Patreon-exclusive stories to drive up membership at the platform when they’re going to act in ways that negatively impact my income? At least for December, you can read Tales from Alchemy Red: Prey for a buck. I might yet add Resist.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: patreon, update, writing

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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.