The latest of my informal chats on YouTube with readers about the Man of War universe went up on YouTube last night. This episode discusses the Union home front during the Krag war and continues to explore the role of women in the Union in the year 2315.
Please, if are so inclined, like the video and subscribe to the channel. I wouldn’t be entirely displeased for some shares as well, but I know that’s asking a lot!
As the more swift-witted if you may be able to deduce from the title, I have just posted a video on YouTube–the first to my channel in more than two years. This one addresses the rule of women in the Man of War universe. Some would say it’s “amateurish.” I prefer the term “informal.”
Here’s the link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-ABq1v_N7M
The video is also accessible directly from my Amazon Author page–in case you are one of those folks who “doesn’t do YouTube” for various reasons, some of which seem quite sensible to me.
Yes, patient readers, it has been a very long time since my last update. Our little family moved in January–only about ten miles down the road, but with our health issues and the amount of stuff that we old people have accumulated, it was tough. Just about every medical issue that I have managed to surface and, working together, they managed to lay me low for months.
I have made a slow but thorough recovery and am almost back to where I was before we started packing back in December. I have made some lifestyle changes, and my doctor and I have made some medication and other changes to how we are handling my many issues. As a result, I am seeing a lot of improvement and I am able to work longer hours and to produce stuff that is of the quality that I insist upon.
Now, having reassured you that I am not at Death’s door, I have news about a number of subjects that I would like to relate to you:
The Next Big Novel
I might as well start with updating you about the follow-on novel to the “Man of War” Trilogy, because–whenever I talk about anything else–the reaction from many fans seems to be “Yeah, yeah, yeah, that’s all somewhat interesting, but you left the crew of the USS Cumberland in life pods and other small vessels floating around deep in Krag space with no apparent hope of rescue and it’s been like that for years so when are we going to get to learn what happened to them?”
I wish I could give you a specific date, but that’s not going to happen until I finish writing the thing, make whatever publication arrangements are going to be made, and then work out a date. Right now, I am still writing. I have had several false starts, mostly occasioned by poor health resulting in poor writing. I’m trying to produce a book that will be a fitting member of the series, and that means not going forward with the product until I’m happy that I’m doing good work. It has taken me a while to get back to where I think my writing is where it needs to be, so I am back at work on the next major novel, To Stations My Lads.
I wrote the short novel, The Hunters of Vermin, published last November, as part of the process of finding my style again and assuring myself as to the quality of my work. These books come from a very special part of my inner self–they are an expression of some very deep emotions and perceptions–and I can’t write if I can’t get my mind and my heart to go to that place.
So, what I can tell you now is that there absolutely will be a next book, and more books after that and that I am making slow steady progress. Please be patient with me. These books and these characters are at least as special to me as they are to you. When all of us journey to the stars together, I want the trip to be a good one.
Convention Appearances
For reasons that elude me, the fans who organize Science Fiction conventions in this part of the country continue to invite me to serve as a panelist at their gatherings. When asked why they would invite someone of my rather limited literary stature, one organizer told me, “You’re an interesting and provocative panelist. If you’re on a panel, we know the discussion isn’t going to lay down on the floor, stick its legs in the air, and die–you’ll keep things lively.” So, I’m “lively.” That’s not even in the top fifty adjectives I would apply to myself, but I suppose we’ll have to go with that.
There are two appearances for which I have firm commitments over the next few months and one likely for early next year.
First, if you are in the Phoenix area this weekend (June 22-24), I will be at LepreCon44, which will be held at the Hilton Doubletree Phoenix North. Here is a link to the convention website. https://leprecon44.org/
I understand that, as of this writing, tickets are still available and there are still rooms available at the convention hotel.
Not only will I be on several panels, my role has somehow morphed into being a member of convention “Staff” as well, such that in addition to the panels in which I am a participant, I will be moderating several others. Here is where being a grizzled old trial lawyer comes in handy.
The folks who run this one have been very nice so far and I’m looking forward to seeing what they have put together.
Second, I have a firm booking over the Labor Day weekend (August 31-September 3) as a panelist at CoKoCon, also in Phoenix, also at the Hilton Doubletree Phoenix North. I’ll know the place like the back of my hand. I understand that there is a Pappadeaux’s restaurant nearby, so maybe I can get some decent shrimp and crawfish while I’m there one time or the other.
Or both!
Here’s the website for CoKoCon. http://www.cokocon.org/
This is a new convention put together by the team that put together last year’s Westercon (July 4 weekend 2017) which was a wonderful convention, except for the trip home. That journey was interrupted when my vehicle came into contact with the rear wheels of an 18 wheeler headed in the opposite direction. We were both driving about 60 MPH so my vehicle was totaled. I was fortunate that my only injuries were bumps, bruises, a million tiny glass cuts, and two broken ribs. Of course, I don’t blame these folks.
Much.
Actually, I was very pleased with how last year’s Westercon ran, so I’m looking forward to more of the same from these organizers. I hope that they are successful in establishing a long-running Con that grows and develops over the years. You should make room for this one on your calendar.
While there is not a firm commitment yet, I expect that I will probably attend CondorCon in San Diego this year. I missed it in January due to health issues, but I am looking forward to going back this year. It will be held February 22-24, 2019 at the Handlery Hotel in Hotel Circle, which is–I hear–the traditional venue for this Con. These folks have a website at: http://www.condorcon.org.
I’ve attended two CondorCons and enjoyed them both immensely. My experience is that this is a well-run, friendly convention with a good atmosphere and interesting guests. I really had fun interacting with the other panelists which doesn’t always happen at these things.
Inclusion in Anthology
A few months ago, Pam Stack, the creative force behind the Authors on the Air Global Radio Network contacted me. I used to host a program on that network called Science Fiction Spotlight Radio but had to relinquish my microphone because of a combination of health issues and frustration with the wretched Internet service at my former residence, which made the technical aspects of hosting the show very challenging.
Pam asked me to contribute a short story to an anthology that a spin-off entity, Authors on the Air Press, is set to publish this October. The anthology has an interesting concept: radio hosts with programs about a range of literary genres submit short stories in their program’s genre, with the twist that all stories must somehow revolve around events at a radio station.
Surprise, surprise, surprise–I took the bait and submitted a story. I don’t know whether the solicitation means that the story WILL be in the anthology, but I will let you know one way or the other.
The story, “Good Morning, Vendiamatrix” is my first serious effort to write in this format. There was a hard limit of 6500 words, which posed a serious challenge for me. I brought the story in at 6499 words, after several rounds of severe pruning. The first draft pushed 8000 words and that was WITH my making an effort throughout to keep to the word limit. I think I may have been trying to use a novella idea as the basis for a short story which my father, who won several short story competitions when he was in graduate school and who was a natural with the format, told me was a common problem. It was an interesting experience, though, and I learned a lot about the short story as a literary form. Compared to the novel, it is a very different kind of animal.
After I get my novel projects a bit further down the road, and if readers respond positively to this story, I might try again, this time with an eye toward submitting it to the mainstream Sci-Fi magazines.
I love the smell of rejection letters in the morning. They smell like . . . experience.
Getting back to the mainstream of this evening’s symposium, the anthology is still untitled and I’m not positive my offering will be included. When I know more, I will certainly update you.
I submitted a long list of prospective titles for the book, and we’ll see if Pam uses any of them. I thought a few were at least moderately clever. Here’s the list. You are certainly free to come to the conclusion that they all suck, just don’t tell me in the comments because I’m not the one making the decision so why ding my ego for no good reason (unless you’re just sadistic, in which case there’s no stopping you, is there?).
Dead Air
Dark Modulations
Alternative Frequencies
Hot Mike
Cue the Writer
Drop Page
Sky Wave
Ethereal Voices
Various Programming
Audiobook Versions of Indie Publications
I’m pleased to announce that, in light of fairly recent new program at Audible dot com that brings together indie authors and audiobook producers and provides for the producers to be paid with a royalty from sales rather than in cash up front, I am making arrangements to produce audiobook versions of my two independently-published works of short fiction, Deadly Nightshade (a novella, approximately 37,000 words in length), and The Hunters of Vermin (a short novel, approximately 62,500 words in length, about as long as Lord of the Flies), both of which are prequels to the “Man of War” series.
There will probably be three products: a version of each of the two works separately and a “combo” consisting of both offered at a slightly lower price than total of the two if bought separately. I am currently going through a surprisingly tall stack of audition recordings from which I will select a Producer/Narrator combination. With all due respect to the eventual Producer and Narrator, I’m not expecting a product that will be on the same level as the 47North books narrated by Ray Chase, but I’m confident that we will be able to offer a solid, professional product that will be worth your hard-earned dollars, pounds, euros, etc.
Look for future announcements regarding these topics on this page. I hope to meet some of you at these conventions.
To Honor You Call Us, my first novel, has just gotten its 800th customer review on Amazon. Considering that I thought it was pretty awesome to get 8 reviews back when the book first came out, 800 is a staggering number to me. What is even more staggering is that average rating is 4.5 on a 5 point scale and that 61% of the reviews are 5 star, with 28% 4 star for a total of 89% of the reviewers being strongly positive.
I have to say, too, that this is a very nice review, from a self-described “old Navy guy.” The old Navy guys and most other folks who identify themselves as current or former military personnel are almost all very positive. I think it’s worth reprinting this one here, as it this reader received the book exactly the way I hoped and prayed readers would receive it. My thanks go to this reviewer and to all the others who took the time to give their impressions. The good reviews are what made this series “go” in the first place.
Thanks to all of you.
The Hunters of Vermin, a short novel about Max Robichaux as a wet-behind-the-ears junior officer, was published yesterday afternoon. It is already in the top 1700 books (out of millions) in the Amazon Kindle Store and is ranked in the top 40 on several of Amazon’s bestseller lists.
I know it’s not the novel that most of my readers are Jonesing for, but it IS the novel that I could write and publish right now. I’m working on getting our people extracted from deep in Krag space . . . it’s just going to take a little while longer as I continue to recover from the health problems I’ve had over the past few years. I am working on it right now and it will be out as soon as I can get it into readers’ hands.
Until then, I hope you enjoy Max’s adventures as a young man. I’m hoping that this shorter work will tide you over.
Here’s a link to the purchase page on Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/Hunters-Vermin-H-Paul-Honsinger-ebook/dp/B077V78N5Y/
Westercon in Tempe, AZ this past weekend was truly wonderful. My update would be more thorough but for almost having died yesterday on the way home. I’m not really sure what happened (you know the thing about short term memory not getting written when interrupted by serious enough trauma) except that I was headed home on AZ 71 when my car was struck by the trailer of an 18 wheeler headed in the opposite direction. The first thing I remember is the sense of my face being burned by the air bag, the windshield coming apart, and a sense that the car was spinning rapidly.
All the side curtain airbags deployed. It took about an hour to pry me out of the vehicle. My only injury–at least that has surfaced thus far–is a cracked/bruised rip and lots of bruises/cuts/sore achy stuff.
I got my first ever (and, I hope, last) ambulance ride, was treated, and released. BTW, at that hospital, released basically means being pitched out the door and being told “there is no taxi here, but the _____ hotel is right up the road, there.”
My eternal thanks to Arizona Department of Public Safety Officer R. Hover, Badge No. 10123 who called me after discharge to find me to return my CPAP machine, found me by the side of the road, and saw that I got to the hotel safely.
More when I am feeling better. Excuse the lack of further updates and convention news until then.
I will be a speaker/panelist at WESTERCON 70, also known as the Western United States Science Fiction and Fantasy Convention, to be held in Tempe, Arizona (a suburb of Phoenix, for those of you unfamiliar with this part of the world) July 1-4, 2017. The convention will be held at the Tempe Mission Palms, 60 E. 5th Street, Tempe, AZ 85281. It’s a rather swanky joint, I understand.
Here is my tentative event schedule for the convention, in case any folks want to know where they can see/hear/laugh at me.
Note that Room numbers/locations have not been announced. But, this stuff is easy to find at these affairs: there are usually only a few panels going on at a time, and generally in adjacent rooms, all with plain signage.
Saturday, July 1
12:30 PM Military Sci Fi: Getting the details right.
2:00 PM What Made the Golden Age Golden?
3:30 PM The Return of the Space Opera
(I’m gonna be busy Saturday afternoon!)
Sunday, July 2
11:00 AM I will be signing autographs. (Bring your own books or buy at convention).
3:30 PM Reading–Probably the Prologue to To Honor You Call Us.
Monday, July 3
2:00 PM Beyond Gold and Silver: The Dawn of a New Age in Sci Fi
3:30 PM I will be signing more autographs!?!
Tuesday, July 4
11:00 AM Fantasy and Sci Fi World Building
12:30 PM Signing still more autographs?!?!?!?!
I am pleased and surprised that I’m scheduled for a reading. I’m generally regarded as too small a fish to merit that level of prominence. Also, the three autographs sessions puzzle me. I think I signed a total of 10 or 12 autographs at the last convention, but maybe there is a greater demand now. I hope.
There will also be a meet the Authors/Guests event of some sort, but the time is not announced on any of the materials I have. Watch the Con’s web site for that information which I’m sure they will post at some point. Or, you can just email the organizers. Here’s the home page for the con–branch out from there for any information you need.
I hope to see as many of you as possible there. I’d love to meet my fans.
It’s been so long since I’ve posted that you folks would be justified in concluding that I’ve gone to that great Science Fiction Convention in the sky to commune with Isaac Asimov and Robert Heinlein. That, would, in fact, be interesting because I know Asimov didn’t believe in heaven, but I digress.
In any event, I’ve had some horrific health problems, the details of which are too boring and unpleasant to relate here, including a few surgical procedures. Some of the issues–out of control diabetes, sleep apnea, leg infections, narcolepsy, and other stuff–all messed with my brain and made writing difficult or impossible.
I am on the mend, though, and have been getting some writing done. So, here’s the news that people ask me for in virtually every forum in which I appear on line on an almost daily basis–what’s coming from my pen.
What is most asked about is the next Max Robichaux novel, To Stations My Lads. It is a ways out–expect it sometime next year. I am hoping to get it to the publisher before Thanksgiving.
To whet the appetite, there will be a novella soon: “The Hunters of Vermin,” a prequel to the novels and a follow on to my earlier novella, “Deadly Nightshade.” It’s another tale of the young Max Robichaux and his adventures after being kidnapped by the Vaaach and transported 14,000 light years to the Crux-Centaurus arm of the galaxy. I’m trying to get it done in the next few weeks. I may post a sample shortly.
I’ve got convention news, as well, but I’ll put that in a separate post to make things easier for the search engines.
Thank you for your patience. It has been a difficult two years. There were times when I literally thought I was going to lose my toe if not my foot or even my leg. But, it seems that I’m going to get to keep all of my limbs for now. And, those of you who saw me hobbling around at CONDORCON with a cane several months ago will be glad to know that the cane is in the garage gathering dust. I’m walking just fine and, in fact, am walking 45 minutes a day on the treadmill.
See you soon!
My interview with the fabulous and prolific YA Science Fiction author Jennifer Brozek is now available for your listening pleasure. This was the first of my programs without any significant technical issues and was perhaps the best interview so far.
Ms. Brozek not only had some fascinating observations about Science Fiction and writing for younger readers, but also about fiction in general, self publishing versus conventional publishing, mental illness and the relevance of mentally ill characters, and the immortal Isaac Asimov. Guests keep mentioning his name without prompting from me. Really. No joke. Listen for yourself if you don’t believe me.
It was a good show. I hope you give it a listen. Click Here to Listen to the Show!