Posts Tagged ‘news’

First Sale!

Posted: April 1, 2011 in Uncategorized
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I’m happy to report that I’ve sold my first novel to one of the big NYC publishers!  (I can’t say which house just yet, and I apologize in advance for waiting this late in the day, but they told me I had to wait until close of business before making an announcement.)

With the popularity of ebooks, there are some changes in publishing these days (which I’ll get into in a moment), but I couldn’t more thrilled that my YA vampire novel, Twit-light, will be seeing the light of day soon (or is that the dark of night?).  It’s based on my short story, “The Rose,” published in Dreams of Decadence a few years back, with Edward, the vampire youth, and his teenaged love interest, Rose Isabel.  A timeless story of love, heartache and betrayal spanning several generations, it will undoubtedly become the gold standard for its field in short order!  So, without further ado, on to the specifics.

Over the past few years, I’ve talked to a lot of writers breaking in, so it was no surprise that the house expected me to do the marketing and publicity.  Times are tough, and along with the standard advance getting halved from just a few years ago, authors are being asked to contribute more to ensure their success.  I’m happy to help (heck, I would have done it anyway), but I admit I was a tad surprised to see it actually spelled out in the contract:

  1. Author agrees to contribute the entire amount of the advance (specified in paragraph 3) to Publisher for the purposes of marketing and publicity.  Publisher agrees to set up an escrow account for this purpose in Author’s name.  Author is encouraged (and may be required upon publication, subject to paragraph 36) to contribute additional funds.

That’s cool.  The more skin in the game, the more likely the success!  It’s great to see my publisher taking this kind of interest in my career.

I’ve heard that cover consultation is a big thing, and I’m happy to report that I got something even better:  I have complete control of the cover!  The publisher has given me a whole week to put together my vision of the cover using whatever sources I’d like to obtain for the purpose, and that’s the cover that will go to press.  Awesome!  Talk about creative control!  I couldn’t be more thrilled.

Speaking of creative control, I’ve heard so many copyediting horror stories (it’s so common that the copyediting term “STET” has become mainstream), that it’s a relief to know I won’t even have to deal with silly copyeditors:

  1. Author agrees that if the services of a professional Copyeditor are required, Author will procure said services.  Publisher agrees to provide a list of suitable candidates.  Publisher also agrees to respect the Author’s creative right to opt out of Copyediting services.

Also, since Borders refuses to pay the publishers and Barnes & Noble is getting their pants sued off by Microsoft, there’s no need for bookstores any more, so my book will be available exclusively on Amazon.  The publisher will be leveraging Amazon’s famed warehousing and distribution network to ensure that my book stays in print for as long as possible.  And all of this comes free from Amazon, which means they’ve got skin in the game, too.  How cool is that?

Of course, it turns out that I’ll pretty much have a steady supply of my books, so I’m not too worried about going out of print:

  1. Author agrees to maintain a reserve of the Book at all times while considered in print by the Publisher, in order to address shortfalls experienced by Amazon.  This supply cannot exceed 85% of the outstanding copies, but must not fall below 50%.  Publisher agrees to make  reasonable effort to ensure copies of the Book are made available to the Author at a 20% retail
    discount for this purpose.  If at any time or for any reason the Author’s reserve
    falls below the contracted amount, Author agrees to provide Print-On-Demand (POD) copies to make up the shortfall within 7 days. 

The only thing I didn’t get any real say in was the price.  The house was quite firm on that, and the prices they set were a little higher than I thought they’d be, but I felt that $19.95 for the paperpack and $29.95 for the ebook was fair with today’s inflated prices, so I didn’t push the issue.  (Besides, that just means higher royalties for me!)

I left out some of the more boring parts of the contract, but that’s the gist of it.  I just sent in the copyright application, so I expect my novel will availabe around Memorial Day weekend.  From my back-of-the-envelope figuring, I figure I’ll need to scrape up about $20K to keep up my end of the contract (it’s all deductible, so that’s cool), and I’ve decided to launch an intensive 3-month publicity tour this summer while the kids are on vacation.  I’ll be flying into all the major cities in the continental US (unfortunately, I won’t be able to make it to Alaska and Hawaii because of the high cost of airline tickets there!) — pretty much a different city every day — and stopping in at each of the airport bookstores and newstands to sign copies of my book (which I’ll have available for sale from my reserve, of course). I’m sure to be a bestseller in no time!

See you at the airport!

Dan Hoyt
April 1, 2011

Astronomy SF Anthology Now Online!

Posted: February 18, 2009 in Uncategorized
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Mike Brotherton‘s eagerly-awaited anthology of astronomy-related SF is now available!  I’m very happy to have a story in this antho, which you can read for free, along with all the others.

Funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation, this is an excellent example of the kinds of things I’d like to see our government spending money on in the sciences, so be sure to let everyone know about the antho.

P.S. Read what John Scalzi had to say about the antho in HIS blog.

Better Off Undead is Now Available!

Posted: November 4, 2008 in Uncategorized
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I’m very pleased to announce the availability of my latest anthology with Martin H. Greenberg, Better Off Undead (DAW).

Introduction……………………………………….Daniel M. Hoyt

AFTERLIFE
A Grain of Salt……………………………………..Sarah A. Hoyt
The Poet Gnawreate and the Taxman…………Dave Freer
The Infernal Revenant Service……………….Laura Resnick
Mummy Knows Best……………………….Esther M. Friesner

SPIRIT
Genius Loci……………………………..Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Ah, Yehz………………………………………..Alan Dean Foster
Gamma Ray versus Death……………………Carrie Vaughn
Museum Hauntings……………………………..Irene Radford

FLESH
My Tears Have Been My Meat…………Nina Kiriki Hoffman
The Perfect Man……………………………………Fran LaPlaca
Two All Beef Patties…………………………………….Jay Lake
That Saturday……………………………………….Devon Monk
Walking Fossil……………………………………Robert A. Hoyt

UNDEAD
Night Shifted…………………………………………..Kate Paulk
Twelve Stepping in the Dark……………….Rebecca Lickiss
Gooble, Gobble, One of Us………….Charles Edgar Quinn
Bump in the Night…………………………..Amanda S. Green
Separation Anxiety…………………………………S.M. Stirling
 

Better Off Undead Review

Posted: November 2, 2008 in Uncategorized
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The first review of my newest anthology, Better Off Undead, has arrived! Follow the link to read the full review, but my favorite part was this:

"I enjoyed them all."

That’s what editors (and writers) live for 🙂

 

Soul of Fire

Posted: July 29, 2008 in Uncategorized
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And did I mention that Soul of Fire, the second book in Sarah’s Magical British Empire series came out today?  (Cover’s out for #3, too!)
 

Sarah’s gone!

Posted: July 29, 2008 in Uncategorized
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We took Sarah off to the airport this morning, and she’s arrived safely at the RWA conference hotel in San Francisco.  If you live in the area and want to meet Sarah in person, look for her there.

Wireless Woes

Posted: July 28, 2008 in Uncategorized
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Well, I got the new HTPC put together over the weekend — except for wireless.  It doesn’t like my D-Link DWL-G520 for some reason.  No problem with the old D-Link DWL-520+, but it doesn’t support WPA encryption, so I can’t connect to my network.  Fortunately, I have nice neighbors who let me use their connection, so I have internet access, but I don’t have access to my file server.

I shall have to research this more, but later.  Tomorrow Sarah goes to RWA in San Francisco, so it’ll be a busy time.

One more oddity: My Puppy Linux LiveCD takes forever to load into RAM.  We’re talking a number of minutes, rather than the 20-30 seconds on the 3GHz Celeron.  What’s up with that?

HTPC Parts have arrived!

Posted: July 25, 2008 in Uncategorized
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 All the parts to my new HTPC have arrived, and I’ll put it together this weekend.  

In the meantime, I managed to resurrect the failing computer after a couple hours of analysis and a replacement power supply I had lying around.  So I started thinking that maybe I’ll just keep it in service, so I don’t have to pollute the new HTPC with anything that’s not strictly business-related.  Easier for me; better for the IRS.

TV and PC Blues

Posted: July 22, 2008 in Uncategorized
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About 4-5 months ago, our 61″ rear projection TV — the cornerstone of my home theater setup — stopped working for no reason. I don’t know why.

About 10 days ago, my media desktop PC started turning itself off randomly until it wouldn’t turn on at all. I don’t know why.

What I do know is that I’d been talking with Sarah about upgrading the PC for about a month, and the TV for about a year (what with the impending death of analog over-the-air signals in February, 2009). The only thing I can figure is that the TV wanted to go out with some dignity before it was obsoleted b and the lowly Celeron decided a Core 2 Quad would spank it so much that it felt it had to commit suicide.

So, I’ve spent virtually all of my free time for the last 10 days researching replacements. In the end, I decided to combine my two goals of a Home Theater PC and a CA art/music CAD PC (you know, Poser for 3D, Photoshop for 2D, FL Studio for music, etc.). On its way is $800 of:

For the computer literate, I made some concessions to keep the price, noise and heat down, with components that still fit into the case, which is probably the best engineered HTPC case I’ve seen for cooling and acoustics.  C’est la vie.

For the less computer-literate, this is an audio-component-looking case that fits in my stereo rack with the DVD, VCR and tuner that’s connected to my Dolby surround sound speaker setup — only this case has a quad-core PC instead of a stereo. I already have the OS, a DVD burner and external ATSC tuners for digital over-the-air broadcasts that I’ll move into the new unit to complete the setup.

The only thing I’m missing is the monitor/TV, which I’ll order the next time it goes back on sale for $490 (I missed it overnight Sunday), which seems to be every other weekend:

We haven’t really missed the TV that much, and this monitor will not only work as a dandy desktop monitor for the music/art/CAD work, but also as a 1/4-size home theater screen, since the DVD can connect directly to it (and I still get full surround sound through my home theater setup).  I love dual-use.  Triple-use, actually, since we’ve moved exercise equipment into the old home theater room, and my intention was to be able to use the computer from a treadmill with a wireless KB/mouse.  I think that’s doable from 4′ away with a 28″.  We shall see.

Geeks, what do you think?  Bear in mind I’ve already ordered everything but the monitor, so I’m not looking for alternatives at this point.  Does it look like it’ll work, or am I in for disappointment?  (There’s no discrete video or audio cards — although I can put them in later for about $100 combined, if needed — because there’s no gaming going on, just HTPC and CAD, which are far more CPU-intensive than graphics-intensive.)   I’m actually pretty impressed with what I can build for this price.  (I spec’d out a lesser system for about $600, but I really liked the case, so I decided to go with the higher end components instead.)

Oh, yeah, and I gave away the TV in my first CraigsList transaction, saving me $60-70 ($30 to donate it for recycling and $20+gas+taxes, etc for a U-Haul to take it for recycling, since it wouldn’t fit in the Expedition) in the process.

Witch Way to the Mall

Posted: July 9, 2008 in Uncategorized
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One of the more fun things to happen over the last 6 months was that Esther Friesner, know far and wide in F/SF circles as the perpetrator of the Chicks in Chainmail series of anthologies, has started a new fantasy anthology series with Baen … and she bought my short story, “The FairWitch Project!”  Now that’s good news!  I have, of course, updated my website.

Come to think of it, I also sold my short story, “Star Wench,” to David Lee Summers for his Space Pirates anthology.  It’s also on my website, along with the cover art.