Chatting with Ben Eads

As many of you know, I'm the host of the weekly podcast The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour. At its heart, the podcast is intended to be a show that celebrates creative writing, storytelling, publishing, and everything in between.  

That said, I feel like I’m at the height of my powers as a podcaster when I’m chatting with a fellow author. I recently got that opportunity when I chatted with horror author Ben Eads, author of the novella Cracked Sky (Omnium Gatherum, 2015). 

Kealan Patrick Burke, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Turtle Boy, said this about Cracked Sky:

"When a writer's work leaves you angry at yourself that you've never read it before, and filled with the determination to never let that be the case again, it's the highest form of compliment. Ben Eads is one of those writers. With Cracked Sky, I found myself at turns moved and terrified. This guy knows his horror, and pulls off the deft trick of utilizing genre conventions while simultaneously adding his own unique twists to the mix. Get in on the ground floor of Eads' work, folks. His career is destined to be a long one."

That’s some pretty high praise from a highly respected voice in the horror community, which is all the more reason why I was so excited to chat with Ben. If you haven't already listened to my conversation with Ben Eads, just scroll to the top of this post and press play...

HAPPY MARTIN DAY™ (A BIRTHDAY RETROSPECTIVE)! [UPDATED (12/9/14)]

I originally wrote this blog post on December 9, 2011, in recognition of Martin Day™ (which, coincidentally, happens to fall on my birthday). Today, on my 37th birthday, I've updated the post and, in so doing, have accounted for the years 2012 to 2014. Enjoy and have a Happy Martin Day™!    


Every year on December 9, since its inception in 1977, people all over the world have been celebrating Martin Day.  This year will be the 37th celebration of Martin Day and it occurs to me a birthday retrospective is in order. So, for your benefit, I've put together a timeline of milestones in my life. So, without further ado, I present to you The Martin Day™ Birthday Retrospective®. 

Age: 1 Second (1977)

After nine months in my mother's womb, considering the world and my place in it, I decide that a comfortable sac of amniotic fluid simply isn't enough without cable television.

Age: 5 Years (1982)

While attending preschool, I find there is a bitchin' CHiPs tricycle in the playground. Soon thereafter, I learn I'm in the group of children that is too old to ride it. I learn that life isn't always kind.

Age: 8 Years (1985)

On a random Saturday afternoon, as I flip through the channels, I discover professional wrestling. It's love at first sight.

Age: 12 Years (1989)

After one whole long year of agonizing anticipation, Batman, starring Michael Keaton and Jack Nicholson, is released in theaters. As a loyal fan, with my very own $5 dollar weekly allowance, I bought the novelization of the film.

Age: 13 Years (1990)

For Easter, my parents buy me a ticket to watch WrestleMania VII at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. With the Gulf War serving as a backdrop, Hulk Hogan will there defeat Sgt. Slaughter (who lent his loyalties to Saddam Hussein) for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship.

Age: 17 Years (1995)

While working as an ice cream scooper at Thrifty's, I am interrogated for four hours by a couple of loss prevention agents. During the interrogation, I admit to stealing a number of things, including money and ice cream.

Age: 18 Years (1996)

During my first year at Chaffey College, I take English 1A with S. Kay Murphy. For my first assignment, I write an essay about stealing money and ice cream from Thrifty's. Based on that essay, Murphy encourages me to become a writer.

Age: 19 Years and 2 Days (1997)

As a birthday gift, my parents take me to the Great Western Forum for my first Lakers game. The Lakers host Reggie Miller and the Indiana Pacers. Kobe Bryant is a rookie and Shaquille O'Neal is in his first year with the team.  During warmups, I watch rookie Derek Fisher practice free throws.

Age: 21 (1999)

Having gotten a part-time job working at the Virgin Megastore, I meet Chanel Chakko, who is not only my co-worker, but, I would later learn, the coolest gal on the planet.

Age: 23 (2002)

While studying English at California State University, San Bernardino, I take the first of many creative writing classes taught by James Brown (author of The Los Angeles Diaries and This River). In so doing, Brown unwittingly becomes my personal Yoda.

Age: 25 (2003)

I graduate from California State University, San Bernardino, earning my Bachelor's Degree in English/Creative Writing. 

Age: 26 Years (2004)

While a participant at the Cal Poly Creative Writing Conference, I win First Place in Short Fiction for my story "The Night Owl." Later that same year, I will win First Place in the Inland Empire CWC Writing Contest for my short story "The Plan." Finally, in that same year, I will get my first story published ("The Black Curtain") courtesy of The Pacific Review.

Age: 27 Years (2005)

I'm invited to attend The Squaw Valley Community of Writers, a week-long conference that brings aspiring writers together with seasoned professionals. I meet many great writers, including Anne Lamott, Amy Tan, Dorothy Allison, and Mark Childress. I also meet a literary agent who asked to read the novel I was working on called The Wishing Game.

Age: 28 Years (2005)

On the 28th celebration of Martin Day, I receive a rejection letter from the literary agent I met at Squaw Valley. Not since being denied an opportunity to ride a CHiP's tricycle has life felt so cruel.

Age: 28 Years and Several Hours (2005) 

My brother, Greg, takes me to a screening of Match Point, which was followed by a Q & A session with the writer/director, Woody Allen, and the cast.

Age: 28 and 1/2 Years (2006) - Part 1

Once again, I graduate from California State University, San Bernardino, this time earning my Master's Degree in Composition.

Age: 28 and 1/2 Years (2006) - Part 2

I get my first grown-up job as an English Professor at Chaffey College. I have no idea what I'm doing, but choose to keep this information to myself.

Age: 31 Years (2008)

I am waist-deep in the writing of my novel, The Sacrifice of Timber Marlow. Upon later revisions, I would change it's title to The Sustenance of the Flesh.

Age: 33 Years (2010)

Having completed my novel, The Sustenance of the Flesh, I decide to change the title to Inside the Outside.

Age: 33 Years, 7 Months, and 3 Days (2011)

I publish my debut novel Inside the Outside.

Age: 33 Years, 364 Days, and 18 Hours (2011)

The Lakers agree to trade Lamar Odom and Paul Gasol to the New Orleans Hornets for Chris Paul. I regard this as an early-Martin Day miracle.

Age: 33 Years, 364 Days, and 20 Hours (2011)

The NBA, which owns the New Orleans Hornets, blocks the trade of Odom and Gasol for Paul. I regard this as the worst early-Martin Day™ miracle ever.

Age: 34 Years (2011)

For my 34th birthday, I post a silly - yet poignant - article called "Happy Martin Day (A Birthday Retrospective)!"

Age: 34 Years, 4 months, 3 weeks, and 3 days (2012)

Inside the Outside is awarded the Grand Prize in the Paris Book Festival.

Age: 35 Years (2013)

On April 5, I'm heartbroken at the news that my favorite film critic, Roger Ebert, has passed away.  

Age: 36 Years (2014)

I launch The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour with "Episode One: Origin Story."

Age: 36 Years, 1 month, 1 week, and 6 days (2014)

Inside the Outside officially becomes a #1 Bestseller on Amazon

Age: 36 Years, 10 months, 4 weeks, and 1 day (2014)

On November 7, I marry my best friend and favorite person in the whole goddamned world, Chanel Chakko.

Age: 37 Years (2014)

For my 37th birthday, I update a silly - yet poignant - article called "Happy Martin Day (A Birthday Retrospective)!"

Chatting with Joanna Penn

When I published Inside the Outside in 2011, I was full of energy and ambition. I wanted to bum rush the publishing world and make my presence known. The only problem was I didn’t quite know how to do it.

 The first thing I did was start this website, which, at the time of it's inception in 2011, was called Inside Martin (no sexual innuendo intended). Traffic, I was finding, was hard to come by. I hadn’t yet started a Twitter account and my Facebook author page had about 20 likes or soif that.

I spent hours and hours scouring the Internet, attempting to network with authors and bloggers, hoping to gain some traction for my debut novel. Somewhere along the way I discovered The Creative Penn, which is a website for authors and publishers run by bestselling author Joanna Penn.

The Creative Penn was voted one of the Top 10 Blogs for Writers three years running and one of the Top 10 Blogs for Self-Publishers. Like me, Joanna is an independent publisher, so you can only imagine how inspiring it was to see how successful she’d been with her books and website.

Her website alone has been recognized by various mainstream media outlets, such as Forbes, The Guardian, BBC News, The Huffington Post, Writer’s Digest, The Independent, and Wired. But, as a novelist, Joanna has also enjoyed significant success. She’s sold over 100,000 books and has been on both the New York Times and USA Today Bestsellers list.

So, back in 2011, when I was still toiling away at getting my own publishing career off the ground, I wrote a blog post called “5 Blogs Every Indie Writer Should Bookmark.” I included Joanna’s website, The Creative Penn, in the article (and I also mentioned something about her adorable “About Me” video).

Soon thereafter, Joanna sent me a short message, offering her appreciation. I most certainly didn’t expect to hear from her, so it was a pleasant surprise. About seven months later, I received an email from Joanna telling me she’d read Inside the Outside and how much she loved it. She then asked if I’d be interested in writing a guest blog for The Creative Penn. Of course, I jumped at the opportunity. She wanted me to write an article that gave my perspective on writing dark fiction. The article I wrote was called “Violence, Brutality, and Death: Dark Fiction and Why I love It.”

Over the years, Joanna has championed Inside the Outside and, while there’s no way to quantify such generosity, I have no doubt that the success I’ve enjoyed in my writing and publishing career is due in large part to her kindness and generosity.

A few months ago, upon discovering my podcast, The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour, Joanna reached out to me and asked if I’d be interested in having her on as a guest. Are you kidding me?! Of course I wanted her as a guest! In turn, she offered to have me on as a guest on her YouTube channel.

And so, I couldn’t be more thrilled that my guest this week on the podcast is Joanna Penn. Joanna and I had a wonderful conversation where we talked about her diverse international background, the effect religion has had on her life and her writing, and how important NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) was when she began writing her first novel. I hope you carve out some time to check it out, as I'm certain you'll enjoy it.

Author Interviews

So, The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour has been chugging along in 2014 and so far it's been as fun and rewarding as I'd hoped it would be when I first decided to do it. When I first began developing the show, one of the main features I hoped to have was author interviews. And, as the podcast is rapidly approaching it's one-year anniversary, I'm thrilled at both the number and quality of author interviews I've been able to do. Below are all of the author interviews I've done on the podcast up to now, so scroll down and take a listen...


Episode 37: Jake Aurelian

Jake Aurelian is the award-winning author of The Life & Mimes (& Zombie Apocalypse) of Ripper the Clown: The Autobiography of an Unconventional Zombie.  During the interview he chats about doing stand-up comedy, writing, and being a crazy clown.


Episode 35: Hal Bodner

Hal Bodner is the author of the vampire novel Bite Club. During the interview Hal chats about his days as an entertainment lawyer, how he managed to amuse drug dealers in the barrio with his peacock, and why you should never write a book on a bet.


Episode 31: Terry M. West

Terry M. West is the author of Heroin in the Magic Now. During the interview Terry talks about his early influences, the undervalued world of independent publishing, and his struggle with substance abuse.


Episode 28: Janet Joyce Holden

Janet Joyce Holden is the author of the dark fantasy novel CarouselDuring the interview Janet talks about how she got her first book deal, the importance of character development in storytelling, and dealing with negative reviews. 


Episode 22 & 23: Eric J. Guignard

Eric J. Guignard is an author and editor. He won the 2013 Bram Stoker Award for his anthology After Death. During this two-part interview Eric chats about about his early struggles in independent publishing, the craft of short story writing, and the surreal experience of winning the Bram Stoker Award.


Episode 4 & 5: S. Kay Murphy

S. Kay Murphy is the author of Tainted Legacy: The Story of Alleged Serial Killer Bertha GiffordDuring the this two-part interview Kay chats about writing and publishing, dealing with negative book reviews, and the story of her great-grandmother, Bertha Gifford...who may or may not have been a serial killer.

Horror Book Festival 2014

I'm going to be the featured presenter this Saturday, October 4, at the 2014 Horror Book Festival in Apple Valley, CA.  I'll be talking about vampires in popular culture in a presentation titled, "Vampires Don't Suck!"

Listen the radio spot below:

Here is an article about the Horror Book Festival in the Victorville Daily Press:

And finally, here's the flyer for the Horror Book Festival:

The Buffy Chronicles

On Episode 30 of The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour, Chanel and I debuted a new series on the show called "The Buffy Chronicles."

Those of you who listened already know what it is, but if you missed Episode 30 (or simply haven’t listened to it), it’s essentially an audio commentary series where Chanel and I will watch every single episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and give our thoughts as we watch it…or, in Chanel’s case, she’ll make dirty jokes and not-so-subtle sexual innuendos about Buffy and the gang. We started with Episode 1 of Buffy, "Welcome to the Hellmouth," which ended on a cliffhanger as Buffy was in a horrible position and about to be killed by a vampire named Luke.

There are so many reasons I love Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but one of the big ones is how it uses the genres of horror, fantasy, and science fiction as a means of articulating social issues. A prime example of this occurs in Episode 18 of Season Three, “Earshot,” written by Jane Espenson.

In the episode, Buffy fights two mysterious, mouthless demons. During the scuffle, one of the mouthless demons manages to escape—Buffy is able to kill the other one, however.  In killing him, Buffy is unaware that some of the demon’s blood has gotten on her skin.

After a little research, Giles, Buffy’s watcher, tells her that she might be infected with an "aspect of the demon." Later on as she goes through her day, Buffy realizes she's hearing people's thoughts—and this is the aspect she has been infected with, as the demons are telepathic. As a result of being able to hear everyone’s thoughts—Buffy becomes acutely aware of fellow students and their various problems, anxieties, and insecurities. And, in so doing, she realizes that she’s not so different from them.

The climax of the episode finds Buffy inside of the high school clock tower where she confronts a student who is wielding a rifle. Buffy is under the impression that he is going to try to murder other students, but learns that he intended to kill himself. He’s not one of the cool kids and ultimately he was just tired of being ignored and disregarded by his peers.

Because of her recent experience with hearing other’s thoughts, Buffy tells him that the reason everybody ignores him is that they have their own problems to deal with, letting him know that, regardless of appearances, they’re all feeling the same things and are more alike than he realizes.

Ultimately, the theme of the episode revolves around the angst and insecurities that all teenagers feel and how many teens feel like it’s just them and nobody can relate. It’s an often visited theme in film and television and it resonates with us because its so true. What the Buffy writers were able to do was use the conventions of horror and fantasy to illustrate this theme in an extremely poignant manner.

Interestingly enough, the Columbine High School massacre occurred one week before this episode was originally scheduled to air, on April 20 1999. The WB ended up pulling the episode and not showing it until September of 1999, two weeks before the premiere of Season Four.  

Anyway, if you love Buffy the Vampire Slayer as much as I do, I hope you'll check out "The Buffy Chronicles."

Comics on Comics

I was recently a guest on Comics on Comics, which is a terrific podcast that is produced by the Sideshow Network. It's the show where the greatest comic minds meet the greatest minds in comics!

You can listen to my episode by pressing play below: 

I was invited to be on the show by co-host Vito Lapiccola. Vito, along with his co-host, Juan-Manuel Rocha, pits comedians and comic book creators in nerd debates, essentially breaking everything down from the creative process to the business end of comics books, movies, video games and pop culture. 

While I'm neither a comedian nor a comic book creator, I like to think I'm at least occasionally funny and I enjoy reading comic books, which I imgagine worked in my favor. I suspect that hosting my own podcast, The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour, also played a part in my invitation. 

In the photo below, that's me (left), Juan-Manuel Rocha (center) and Vito Lapiccola (right).

ComicsOnComics_Fotor_Fotor_Collage.jpg

The general format of the show involves Vito and Juan having two guests on the show, engaging them in a panel discussion on various comic book, movie, and general pop culture topics. The second guest who was on this particular episode was Mark Rahner. Mark is comic book writer, talk-radio host, and podcaster based in Seattle. He joined the show via Skype, so I didn't have the opportunity to meet him in person.

During the episode, we discussed the following topics:

I had a great time on the show and look forward to having an opportunity to do it again. As a podcaster myself, it was cool being on another show to see how other podcasters go about their business.  I hope you have an opportunity to listen to the episode and if you like I'd encourage you to listen to more episodes of Comics on Comics.

I also look forward to having Vito and Juan on my podcast, so you can look forward to that sometime in the near future!

Chatting With Screenwriters

Wow, did we get all the way through May without a blog entry? It appears June nearly slipped through our fingers as well. So as not to let too much time pass, here's a quick one for you about screenwriting. I don't have much to say about screenwriting myself, but a couple of my recent guests on The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour do!

I recently spoke with Katarina Leigh Waters (Episode 16) and David Congalton (Episode 20) on the show. 

Katarina Leigh Waters is a former WWE Diva and TNA Knockouts Champion. She's currently transitioning into acting, directing, and screenwriting. During our conversation, Katarina and I talk about her career in the WWE, as well as her screenplay Scavengers in Mourning. Just so you know what an amazing athlete/daredevil she is, check out this video of Katarina diving from a balcony during a match in the UK:

David Congalton is a screenwriter and his latest film is Authors Anonymous, which stars Kaley Cuoco (The Big Bang Theory) and Chris Klein (American Pie). David and I talk about screenwriting, mockumentaries, and why it took seven years to get his screenplay produced. Check out the preview for Authors Anonymous:

Anyway, that's what I've been up to. Well, that and finishing up my upcoming vampire trilogy. While you wait for that, be sure to listen to The Martin Lasrapes Show Podcast Hour. You can listen on the official website or you can subscribe on iTunes. There's a new episode every week!

 

The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour

So, you may have noticed that my blog has been sort of light on blogs the last few weeks.

Or months.

Perhaps longer than that.

The truth is, I've been devoting the bulk of my writing energy to my vampire trilogy, which, if I've calculated my efforts correctly, will kick off with Book One in 2014. But, I haven't only been writing. I also started a podcast.

Chanel and I discuss all nine movies nominated for Best Picture in 2014 Academy Awards.

Chanel and I discuss all nine movies nominated for Best Picture in 2014 Academy Awards.

It's called The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour. It's the show that may or may not be an hour long depending on your perception of time and how much I've got to say! I officially launched the show January of 2014 and it's been steadily building an audience ever since. I'm really proud of the show, as I've had great conversations with writers, such as S. Kay Murphy, and writer/directors, such as Tim Chizmar. When I don't have a guest on the show, I'm usually talking with my (occasional) co-host, Chanel Chakko.

Most recently (as of this writing), I posted a great conversation with Academy Award-winning visual effects artist, Jeryd Pojawa. We talk about his film career, which includes movies such as Terminator 2: Judgment Day and Godzilla. We also talked about some of the directors he's worked with, such as James Cameron and Tim Burton.

Jeryd Pojawa presenting me with Godzilla egg.

Jeryd even gave me a Godzilla egg which was used in the actual movie! I've had a great time doing the show, so if you haven't already checked it out, then don't let another hour pass you by without listening to The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour!

Writing Process Blog Tour

Well I'm thrilled to be taking part in the Writing Process Blog Tour! I was invited to take part by Marissa de Luna, author of Goa Traffic. You can check out her contribution to the Writing Process Blog Tour on her website The Coffee Stained Manuscript


1) What am I working on?

Currently, I'm working on a vampire trilogy. Book One is called The Vampire, the Hunter, and the Girl and it will be published in 2014. All three books are complete, so what I'm doing now is going through and polishing them, making sure everything is as good as I can make it.

2) How does my work differ from others of its genre?

Well, I suppose it's probably the first vampire novel set in the Inland Empire. As far as vampire novels go, most authors tend to pay homage to the traditional vampire tropes, while also innovating their own wrinkles. That's how I've approached this project. I love vampire stories, so I've stayed true to classic elements, such as sunlight being a lethal threat. I've also added some wrinkles of my own, but I'll keep those secret until the books are published.

3) Why do I write what I do?

I'm most happy when I'm being creative, whether it's writing a novel or working on my podcast, The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour. But, more than that, I love telling stories and writing is the medium I most enjoy doing it in.

4) How does your writing process work?

When writing a novel, I tend to start with an idea that I find interesting. I might try writing a chapter or two, feeling it out, seeing if there appears to be enough fertile material to turn into a novel. Once I'm convinced the potential is there, I'll start brainstorming the story, which ultimately manifests itself into an outline. I'll outline every chapter, before starting the first draft in earnest. The outline is pliable, of course, so I will change and revise as the story and its characters evolve. 


NEXT WEEK:

Will Entrekin

Will is a Pittsburgh-based writer. He's also the founder and creative director of Exciting Press, an independent publisher of digital literature.

You can see his writing process here:

WillEntrekin.com

 

 

 

 

Keynote Address | Indie Authors Fair 2014

I was very honored to give the keynote address at the Indie Authors Fair on March 8, 2014. The invitation came from Cati Porter, Executive Director of the Inlandia Institute. I gave my speech without notes, however I'd written down what I wanted to say the day before in order to organize my thoughts. Check out the written version of my keynote address below...


Hello and welcome to the 2014 Indie Authors Fair. My name is Martin Lastrapes and it’s a terrific honor for me to be here this afternoon talking to you as a representative of the indie author community. I’m very proud to be an indie author and, by extension, an independent publisher. But, there was a time in my life where being an indie author was absolutely the last thing I ever wanted to be.

Hanging out before my Keynote Address.

When I was coming up as an aspiring author in college, the predominant ethos was that “real” authors didn’t go the route of independent publishing. In order for your work to be taken seriously, you had to be published traditionally. Traditional publishing, as I suspect many of you already know, starts with procuring the services of a literary agent. That agent will then shop your work around to publishers—in particular the Big Five publishing houses in New York—until they secure you a book deal.

For me and every other writer I knew, this was the dream. And in 2005, I came face-to-face with my dream when I had the opportunity to meet an actual literary agent in the flesh. You have to realize, for me that was sort of like meeting Santa Claus or Batman. I met him at the Squaw Valley Community of Writers. He was leading a workshop I’d taken part in. Afterwards, he asked to speak to me. 

He told me he really liked what I’d had to say during the workshop and then he asked if I was working on anything. I let him know I was in the middle of writing my first novel and then I proceeded to give what I imagine was the worst pitch in the whole history of pitches. Even I wouldn’t have read this book and I was writing it. The agent was very nice and he could tell I was nervous, so he told me that when the book was done he’d love to read it.

I felt like I’d just won the lottery. I just knew it was only a matter of time before I saw my novel on bookshelves and went on a national book tour and did interviews on Good Morning America and spent time on the New York Times Best Seller list and attended the Academy Awards where I accepted the award for Best Adapted Screenplay because the studio who optioned my book insisted I write the script.

I finished the book two weeks later and shipped it off to New York. And then I waited for what felt like forever to get a reply. In reality, I only waited two months, but it was the longest two months I’d ever experience. Then the letter finally arrived. And it didn’t arrive on just any day—it arrived on my birthday. My birthday! Even before I opened the letter, I knew this was a good omen. I decided that I wanted to open the letter in private, so I didn’t tell anybody I’d received it.

2014 Indie Authors Fair

I got in my car and went to a nearby gas station. I sat in my car in the gas station parking lot with the letter in hand, knowing that as soon as I opened it my whole life would never be the same. In the letter, the literary agent said some very nice things about my writing and my book, before ultimately telling me that he would not be taking me on as a client. I was heartbroken and I don’t mind telling you that I shed more than a few tears as I sat alone in my car in that gas station parking lot. 

Soon enough, despite the disappointment, I decided to move forward and contact more literary agents. And, in the process, I collected more rejection letters. Many…many… rejection letters. After about a year-and-a-half of getting rejections, I decided maybe it just wasn’t a good enough novel, so I started writing a new novel.  And, after spending a few years writing it, I began querying agents. And this new novel, which I was terribly proud of, also received rejection letters. Many…many…rejection letters. 

It could’ve been that I simply wasn’t a good writer and didn’t deserve to be published…but, even if that was true, it wasn’t something I was willing to accept. But, at the rate I was collecting rejections, I couldn’t imagine ever being published...and that was another reality I couldn’t accept. The only other reasonable option seemed to be independent publishing…and that was yet another reality I wasn’t willing to accept. Of course, of those three options, the latter was the only one that offered me a guaranteed path to publication. But, I was still holding onto that fear that my work would be stigmatized, that it wouldn’t be taken seriously if it wasn’t published traditionally.

I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to do and, consequently, I found myself at a crossroads.

The event that changed everything for me occurred on a Wednesday night in the summer of 2009. I went to see a stage production of the play Hedwig and the Angry Inch. It was s small production that took place in a small theater in Santa Ana. It was hardly even a theater, so much as a small concrete room with enough seats for about 30 or 40 audience members.  And there wasn’t so much a stage, as there was a designated corner of the concrete room where the players performed the play.

Giving my Keynote Address

The star of the play was an actor who’s name, unfortunately, I don’t remember. But, he was absolutely fantastic. He put on a world-class performance. I would put his performance up against anybody who’s ever won an Academy Award or an Emmy Award or a Tony Award. He was just that amazing. And, more than that, his performance affected me deeply. It was one of those truly transcendent experiences you get when you see a brilliant artist exercising their craft. But, he wasn’t preforming in Hollywood or on Broadway, he wasn’t in movie theaters or television screens. He was in a small concrete theater in the middle of Santa Ana on a Wednesday night performing for about 30 people. 

But, none of that made his performance any less brilliant. And more importantly, it didn’t make my enjoyment of it any less. I realized that night that all those fantasies I'd had about book tours and Oscars and Good Morning America had nothing to do with why I ever wanted to be a writer in first place. I wanted to be a writer because I love telling stories and all I really wanted was an audience for that. I decided that when I felt my novel was ready, I'd publish it myself. I realized that it didn’t matter how my book entered the world, just so long as it got there. And even if only one reader ever discovered it—and was affected the same way I was affected by that actor's performance—then it'd have to be worth it.

It'd have to be.

Two years later, in the summer of 2011, I officially published my first novel, Inside the Outside. Within about a week of its publication, it was on Amazon’s Best Seller list. The reviews that came in from readers and critics were overwhelmingly positive. By 2012, Inside the Outside began winning awards, including the Grand Prize in the Paris Book Festival. I saw my picture in the newspaper and I started getting invited to speak at high schools and universities and libraries and even prisons. Readers all over the world began discovering my book and today some of my most enthusiastic fans are in Canada and France and Italy and England and Ireland and Australia.   

Meeting new friends after Keynote Address

Just this past January, Inside the Outside officially became a #1 Best Seller on Amazon. It was also #1 on Barnes and Nobles' horror list and it was #2 in horror in the iTunes Book Store—Stephen King was #1 there, so I can live with that. I remember looking at the list and seeing Stephen King at #1 and me at #2 and I had this fantasy where he was looking at the same list and wondering, “Who the hell is Martin Lastrapes?”

Even being here today and having the wonderful honor of being able to speak to you all was made possible because I decided to become an indie author. It was without question the best decision I ever made and I’ve never spent one moment regretting it. And the true beauty of independent publishing is there is no reason that anybody in this room can’t do the same thing I did. Because of independent publishing, these opportunities are available to all of us.

I want to thank you all so much for listening to my story and, from the bottom of my heart, I want to wish you all nothing but the best of luck with your writing careers.  Thank you.

Inlandia Literary Journeys: Interview (VIDEO)

Inlandia Literary Journeys is a video series produced by the Inlandia Institute and The Press-Enterprise. Watch the interview below, then go a little bit below-er and read how it came about.

HIGHLIGHTS:

@ 3:29 I discuss independent publishing

@7:40 I discuss the genesis of Inside the Outside

@ 14:49 I read Chapter 18 of Inside the Outside: "The Inland Empire"

In 2006, Heyday Books of Berkeley published Inlandia: a Literary Journey Through California’s Inland Empire, which is a wonderful anthology that showcases poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and other literature about the Inland Empire. I picked up a copy of the book in 2007, while I was working on the first draft of Inside the Outside. As a lifelong resident of the Inland Empire, I was overwhelmed and inspired by the rich literary history of the community. I decided that I also wanted to contribute to the history of Inland Empire literature, so I wrote "Inland Empire," which became Chapter 18 of Inside the Outside.

I had no publishing deal in place and wasn't sure if Inside the Outside would ever see the light of day. I liked to imagine, however, that not only would my book one day be published, but the folks behind Inlandia would discover my love letter to the Inland Empire inside of it.

In 2007, the Riverside Public Library and Heyday Books worked together to create the Inlandia Institute, as an offshoot of Inlandia's success. The Inlandia Institute endeavors to recognize, support, and expand literary activity in the Inland Empire with the goal of deepening people’s awareness, understanding, and appreciation of this unique, complex and creatively vibrant area. They envision "an inclusive and collaborative enterprise that promotes writers with a regional voice and that stimulates a greater awareness of the area’s diverse literary, artistic, and cultural heritage."

For the last two and a half years, since publishing Inside the Outside, I've worked very hard to ingrain myself within the literary community of the Inland Empire. A large part of that effort has always been fueled by the initial inspiration I got from Inlandia, so I was thrilled when my friend and fellow author, James Brown, told me that Cati Porter of the Inlandia Institute asked him to put us in touch. Cati is an acclaimed Riverside poet and editor, as well as the Executive Director of the Inlandia Institute.

She told me they were planning a Self-Published Authors Faire and asked if I'd be the keynote speaker. I couldn't say yes fast enough. A few weeks after Cati and I spoke over the phone, we met in person for the first time at an author eventin September 2013 at the Norman F. Feldheym Central Library in San Bernardino. That was the last time we spoke, until about a week ago, when she sent me an email to update me on the progress of the Self-Published Authors Faire, as well as invite me to do an interview for Inlandia Literary Journeys.

So, on Tuesday morning, at around 10:30am, I arrived at The Press-Enterprise headquarters. I was about a half-hour early, so I sat in my car and read a couple of comic books (Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season 8 and Batman: The Court of Owls, if you're curious), until it was time to go inside. Soon thereafter, I found myself sitting down with Cati Porter, John Bender, and  Orlando Ramirez in the Inlandia Literary Journeys studio.

It was such a terrific honor and I look forward to collaborating with the Inlandia Institute for years to come.

10 Questions For... Matthew Rowe

Usually when I write a bio to lead into one of my "10 Questions for..." interviews, I'll request some info from the interview subject, while doing my own research to round things out.  Well, Matthew Rowe is an interesting bird, so I've decided to let him tell you about himself in his own words:

Matthew Rowe is a recently three-dimensional philosopher of space-time with an unhealthy habit of showing strangers his pussy(cat) on the Internet. He likes innuendo, leading people astray and cookies. When he’s not condemning souls to hell for all eternity he enjoys shouting at small children and defending Earth from extremely polite extraterrestrial threats. He escaped from the UK and hid amongst the terrible disasters of Japan, on March 11, 2011, where he feels relatively safe. He hopes mankind can invent cyborg parts before his arms drop off. Behold his glory, puny mortals!

He's also the author of the novel Better off Dead and the short story collection Not All of Them About Zombies. So, without further ado, here are 10 questions for Matthew Rowe...

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1. What would you like readers to know about Better Off Dead?

It’s an antidote to a plague that only got worse while I was making it. It’s also cheap and awesome. You’ll never read another book like it. It’s a motivational guidebook for the slacker generation. It’s an intellectual exploration of how much pressure it takes for a man’s head to pop. It explains why penguins can’t fly. It solves world hunger. It also would make an awesome movie.

2. What drove you to write Better Off Dead?

Vampires. We were on our way to this party, but the dude hosting it got staked by a slayer so we all had to scarper. I was left with an evening of naff all to do, so I wrote a book. That night. A whole book. That's a lie. It was vampires though. I got bored of them always being portrayed as either mindless monsters or lost lonely souls gothing up the place with their emo feelings and scented candles, and this was before sparkling vampires came along! Oh Satan! My book is about vampires who enjoy having superpowers and being free of the mortal coil. Of course, they still have their problems, otherwise I wouldn’t have a book, but if they think, “Hey, you know what would be really cool? Jumping off this building, landing on my face and eating the paramedic that comes along to save me. That would be pretty cool,” they do it, because they can. They don’t write poems about their woman who drowned two hundred years ago while trying to wipe tears with a handkerchief at the thought of a sad kitten and they absolutely do not sparkle. Ever.

3. What would you like readers to know about your short story collection Not All of Them About Zombies?

It's not what you expect. If there is only one thing people will ever say about my work (apart from, “Urgh! What is this shit?”) it’ll be that I play with expectations. The title is not a lie, but it implies a certain something, and each of the stories within plays with your expectations of the main concept. If anyone ever predicts the endings of my stories I’ll buy them a Ferrari…cake.

4. Who are some writers that have affected your storytelling sensibilities?

Douglas Adams taught me straight away that writing should be fun. Is there a single moment in Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy where immense amounts of fun are not being had? I don’t think so. I think that was the first grown up’s novel that I read. I then migrated to Pratchett’s Discworld and learned that stories could be a complex observation of human culture, and I liked watching humans because I was a shy child. I think they shaped upwards of 80% of my sensibilities, those writers. I don’t really write comedy though. I just can’t imagine life without some laughs.

5. What methods and strategies have you employed in order to promote both yourself as an author, as well Better Off Dead?

I’ve done a lot of different things, but, judging by my bank account, none of them have been successful. I love the writing, I really do, but a writer has to be his own marketing agent nowadays and I am terrible at that – I don’t understand people at all. They behave nothing like characters. However, I’ve got the Twitter account, I’ve got the blog (even though I have struggled with deciding exactly what to do with it, much like a cat might approach an electronic mouse), I did some readings on YouTube, I got features in the local paper and interviewed on the radio. I really don’t know how to do it well though, so don’t go asking me for advice. One thing I am loving recently though is Vine, an app from Twitter where you post six seconds of looping video. I've been experimenting with ways that a writer can use such a thing.

6. Writing a book is such a complex exercise that I imagine no two authors do it exactly the same. Can you summarize your process for me?

Generally, it normally starts while I am watching a movie or something on TV. A plot device or character goes in a completely different direction to what I want him to and so I reach into the TV, pull out the screenwriter and shake him yelling “No! It would have been so much better if you did it like this!” And I keep doing that until he agrees to let me rewrite it for him and all the women love me and all the dogs have fat little puppies and the universe is blissful again. In other words, I usually see some cliche that triggers a "what if" question in my head-mush and I write it down. Usually, it's a character trait or a plot twist. I then brainstorm about what kind of message I can give. This is normally clear as I want to stand against the cliche that annoyed me in the first place, but sometimes deeper messages develop and the story flows from that.

I’ll then make a character for it, asking "Why are they how they are?" and building the world up around this central, initial, unchangeable idea until I have a whole backstory and story arc for them. Then I build up supporting characters as needed and usually these characters change the main plot a little, so I tweak. The tweaking continues as I write, which can happen from any time really, but normally I have a whole novel outline done before I get 10,000 words into the novel. During the actual writing I’ll separate it into chapters – even if I eventually decide the book doesn’t need chapters later – and I choose where I want my characters to be at the start and end of each chapter. Then I just write until I get to that point each time. Also, I go back and edit previous chapters whenever I need more time to think about the current section. So usually I have a very polished beginning, but the end of the novel is usually much rougher! It gets polished eventually.

7. Has living and teaching English in Japan affected your writing?

I’ve not been influenced by the culture, by being an outsider in a strange land, nor do I have to get out all my angst from being stared at by homogeneous peoples by furiously banging at a keyboard. I’ve actually been motivated by my students. I work in public schools, so most students don’t give a flying simian about English. However, a lot of them have been impressed by the fact that I write novels and stories.

Many of them, especially those who like English, and who I adore because obviously they are superior people, have expressed a desire to read my work. In that respect, I’ve felt bad because my novel is so full of slang and my own twisted ways of speaking that non-native speakers would struggle to find any meaning. Plus some of the short stories are a little adult. I don’t mean a dwarf. I mean, I’m not shy about swearing and my birds do my bees all over the page…occasionally.  So, they have motivated me to write something they can read and enjoy, but more generally, seeing how hard some of them try with English makes me feel guilty for being so lazy with my writing. I really want to make stories that my students would be proud to say “my teacher wrote this” without the awkward "… but don’t look at page 52."

8. Where do you see your writing career five years from now?

I think in five years I might have two or even three new novels out, another compilation of shorts and I might even have earned enough in sales to pass Amazon’s limit to actually transfer earnings to my bank account. On that day, I shall buy a new bookcase with my earnings, and then lament at the waste of money as I will only have ebooks and my iPad/Kindle will look pretty lonely there on its own. I’ll have a writing career, but I won’t be successful, because I can’t market myself. Such a thing is as foreign to me as driving a taxi is to a newt with General Anxiety Disorder. I’ll be happy though, because I’ll be writing.

9. What are you currently working on?

I’m just perfecting that ending on my SF comedy No Technobabble Please, We’re Earthlings! which has proved to be as troublesome as Justin Beiber’s singing career is to my eardrums. I hope to get that published first thing next year. I’m also in the late planning, early first draft stages of my next novel, The Damsel. It’s a reverse of the usual "Chosen One" stories. So its a "Bugger off, we didn't want you" story, I suppose. I think its a world first in that respect. When a world of superpowered citizens cries out for a hero, the only normal girl puts on a mask.

10. What advice would you give to an aspiring author who hopes to see their work published one day?

Just do it (sponsored by Nike). You’ve got no excuses anymore. Anyone can publish anything, and it's not damaging to your career if you don’t go the traditional publishing route. That I wouldn’t recommend anyway. I wasted eight years chasing a publishing contract when I should have jumped on the self-publishing wagon as soon as it emerged from its stable like a terrified lamb. What is harmful to your career is if you publish something before it is ready. Make sure your work is the best it can be before you send it out into the world. It’s not like your child. It’s not going to eat all the snack food, get fat, make your basement smell bad and have you labelled as a terrible person by all society if you don’t get it out of your house by a certain age. Write it, edit it, edit it again, edit it some more and then pay some professional people to keep editing it until you are crying from all the pages you’ve had to lose (or whatever best serves the story). I may or may not have made such a mistake in the past. Stop judging me!

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If you’d like to learn more about Matthew Rowe and his work, you can check out his website, Matt Cannot Write. You can also check him out on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.

15 Random Celebrity Novels: PART THREE

PART ONE | PART TWO | PART THREE

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And now, here is the finale of this epic trilogy.  I present to you PART THREE of my list of random celebrity novels, which I present to you in no particular order, as I haven't actually read any of them.

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11. The Overton Window (2010)

by Glenn Beck

Bio:

Glenn Beck is a television and radio host, political commentator, and all around media personality. He formerly hosted the Glenn Beck television program, which ran from January 2006 to October 2008 on HLN and from January 2009 to June 2011 on the Fox News Channel.

Synopsis: 

A plan to destroy America, a hundred years in the making, is about to be unleashed . . . can it be stopped? An unprecedented attack on U.S. soil shakes the country to the core and puts into motion a frightening plan, decades in the making, to transform America and demonize all those who stand in the way. Amidst the chaos, many don’t know the difference between conspiracy theory and conspiracy fact—or, more important, which side to fight for.

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12. The Juliette Society (2013)

by Sasha Grey

Bio:

Sasha Grey is a former pornographic actress. Throughout her adult film career, she was profiled by several pop culture magazines and television programs. She won numerous awards between 2007 and 2010, including the AVN Female Performer of the Year Award in 2008.

Synopsis: 

Catherine, a blossoming film student whose sexuality has been recently stirred, finds herself drawn into a secret club where the world's most powerful people meet to explore their deepest, often darkest sexual fantasies. Even as it opens up new avenues to pleasure, it also threatens to destroy everything that Catherine holds dear. From bathroom stalls in dive bars, to private jets over St. Tropez, Catherine takes the reader with her through a sexual awakening and psychological development, unparalleled in contemporary erotica.

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13. The Gun Seller (1998)

by Hugh Laurie

Bio:

Hugh Laurie is an actor, comedian, writer, and musician. From 2004 to 2012, he played Dr. Gregory House, the protagonist of House, for which he received two Golden Globe awards, two Screen Actors Guild awards, and six Emmy nominations.

Synopsis:

Cold-blooded murder just isn't Thomas Lang's cup of tea. Offered a bundle to assassinate an American industrialist, he opts to warn the intended victim instead—a good deed that soon takes a bad turn. Up against rogue CIA agents, wannabe terrorists, and an arms dealer looking to make a high-tech killing, Lang's out to save the leggy lady he has come to love...and prevent an international bloodbath to boot.

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14. Revenge (2011)

by Sharon Osbourne

Bio:

Sharon Osbourne is an television host, media personality, and the wife of heavy metal singer-songwriter Ozzy Osbourne. She first came into public prominence after appearing in The Osbournes, a reality television show that followed her family's daily life. Osbourne later became a talent show judge on shows such as the The X Factor and America's Got Talent.

Synopsis:

Amber and Chelsea Stone are sisters who share the same dream - huge, global fame. As children they were close, but success has pulled them apart. Both have the looks, the talent, and the star quality - but only one has the ruthless ambition to make it to the very top. And she will stop at nothing to get what she wants.

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15. Mirrors (2011)

by James Lipton

Bio:

James Lipton is the executive producer, writer and host of the Bravo cable television series Inside the Actors Studio. He is also dean emeritus of the Actors Studio Drama School at Pace University in New York City.

Synopsis:

Dancer Carin Bradley, after more than a decade of rigorous ballet training, arrives in New York naively expectant and totally unprepared for the fiercely competitive auditions, the backbreaking rehearsals, and the terror of Broadway opening nights.

15 Random Celebrity Novels: PART TWO

PART ONE | PART TWO | PART THREE

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As I mentioned before, I have no qualms with any publisher trying to cash in on a celebrity who has written (or "written") a novel. That said, here is PART TWO of my list of random celebrity novels, which I present to you in no particular order, as I haven't actually read any of them.

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6. Shopgirl (2001)

by Steve Martin

Bio:

Steve Martin is an American actor, comedian, musician, author, playwright, and producer. He first became famous in 1970 as a stand-up comic, before branching off into movies, such as ¡Three Amigos! and The Jerk .

Synopsis: 

Mirabelle Buttersfield is a young, lonely, depressed, Vermont transplant named . She sells expensive evening gloves nobody ever buys at Neiman Marcus in Beverly Hills and spends her evenings watching television with her two cats. She attempts to forge a relationship with middle-aged, womanizing, Seattle millionaire Ray Porter while being pursued by socially inept and unambitious slacker Jeremy.

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7. Modelland (2011)

by Tyra Banks

Bio:

Tyra Banks is an American actress, author, television personality, and former model.

Synopsis: 

Tookie De La Crème, a young, awkward looking girl, is invited to attend the legendary Modelland for the chance to become an Intoxibella. Along the way, she meets a plus-sized girl named Dylan, a 4'7" girl named Shiraz, and an albino girl named Piper. Together they form a strong bond as they face the trials and tribulations of Modelland.

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8. Sock (2004)

by Penn Jillette

Bio:

Penn Jillette is an illusionist, comedian, musician, and actor. He is best known for his work with fellow magician Teller in the team Penn & Teller.

Synopsis: 

Twisting the buddy cop story upside down and inside out, Penn Jillette has created the most distinctive narrator to come along in fiction in many years: a sock monkey called Dickie. The sock monkey belongs to a New York City police diver who discovers the body of an old lover in the murky waters of the Hudson River and sets off with her best friend to find her killer.

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9. L.A. Candy (2010)

by Lauren Conrad

Bio:

Lauren Conrad is a television personality and fashion designer. In 2004, Conrad came to prominence after being cast in the reality television series Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County and later, in 2006, she starred in the spin-off series The Hills.

Synopsis: 

After high school, two best friends move to Los Angeles hoping to start "a new and amazing life," but their existence is anything but glamorous. Jane is an intern for a famous event planner and Scarlett is a freshman at U.S.C. However, things change quickly when a TV producer asks them to be in a new reality series along with Madison and Gaby, following their lives as they try to make it in L.A.

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10. Those Who Trespass (2004)

by Bill O'Reilly

Bio:

Bill O'Reilly is a television host, syndicated columnist, and political commentator. He is the host of the political commentary program The O'Reilly Factor on the Fox News Channel.

Synopsis: 

Tommy O'Malley, a tough New York detective who has his own ideas about how to keep the streets clean, is investigating a string of murders against the major players of Global News Network (GNN) and miscellaneous others involved in the television news industry. His work—and life—is complicated by the persistence of a charming young reporter named Ashley Van Buren. O'Malley looks like a terrific source to her, and he has to admit she looks pretty good herself.