Where Greyhart Press leads, Random House and Penguin follow

Some Kindle short fiction, yesterday.

Okay, so the big publishers are probably not keeping a nervous eye specifically on our little outfit, but I felt pretty smug reading the current edition of The Bookseller, to find out that, in the UK, the Big Six are indeed following our lead.

Random House are launching a short fiction brand called StoryCuts, priced from 99p-£3.99. Random House’s digital editor, Dan Franklin, said: “It’s that principle that is intuitive at the moment, taking short stories and selling them outside of collections.” That’s pretty much exactly what I wrote in the Greyhart Press launch publicity back in May.

Meanwhile, over at Penguin, a new series of Penguin Shorts are being launched, priced £1.99. Penguin US will follow next year. Viking publishing director Venetia Butterfield (what a cool publishing-type name) said: “They are explicitly designed to be read anywhere, on any device, in a small space of time-and fill a genuine gap in the market.” Again, that’s what I said back in May.

I welcome these new entrants to our field. Come on in, the water’s warm and there’s plenty of space. Having been a manager in a large corporation for many years, I relish the advantage I have as a sole proprietor in being able to quickly steer Greyhart Press in exciting new directions. It’s not quite so easy at the larger corporations, as I know very well. But the idea of short fiction married to eReaders, tablets and smartphones is such a compelling and exciting one that I’ve guest posted about this before: Are you ready for novellas? Three reasons why they’re coming your way.

Click on the link to read more about Random House Storycuts and Penguin Shorts

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Win Neil Gaiman and join The Darkleian Revolution

While we’re busy in the Greyhart Garret working on books due out in the New Year, I thought I’d spread some news from other contributors to the world of independent speculative fiction.

NewCon Press are giving away a hardback edition, signed by all the authors, of a book they launched at Easter called Fables from the Fountain. I’ve read it and heartily recommend. As a reviewer on Amazon said, there isn’t enough pub-based science fiction. Quite right! Fables is a collection of short stories. These are loosely-linked tall tales told by a (semi-) fictional group of scientists and science fiction fans and authors. It’s very much inspired by Arthur C. Clarke’s Tales from the White Hart. In fact, the book is a fundraiser for the Arthur C. Clarke Award.

NewCon Press have a knack of attracting absolutely top talent (For example, the current Arthur C. Clarke Award winner, Lauren Beukes, was in the other book NewCon launched this Easter. Strewth!) But the idea of putting together a fundraiser and tribute to Arthur C. Clarke attracted a very impressive array of authors indeed. Neil Gaiman is one. He’s kind of popular, but my preferred story was from Stephen Baxter… who is also kind of popular. In fact there are a bunch of Hugo, Nebula, BSFA and all sorts of other award winners too.

Well, I’ve done enough waffling about it now. It’s a book. It’s got very good stories in and most of them involve pubs and real ale (I guess that translates to craft beer in some locales). And you can enter a contest to win one signed by all the authors if you friend the NewCon page on Facebook by December 18th. Oh, and it’s available from Amazon and all those places (though postage is expensive outside of the UK). There’s an eBook edition in the Kindle Store and hopefully will be out soon for Nook and iPads and all those kind of things.

So if you win Neil Gaiman and his friends, where to go next? Try new community blog The Darkleian. It bills itself as a community portal for writers and readers of all things speculative fiction. I’ve taken a look and recommend this. It’s honest, informative, doesn’t waffle, and isn’t based upon the idea of selling you just one publisher’s/ author’s books. So kind of the opposite of the Greyhart Press blog, I suppose. Although it does have a special focus for independent publishers, a commendable perspective.

Tim

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Why I publish poetry

When I started Greyhart Press, I didn’t expect to publish poetry. Mind you, I didn’t expect to publish other authors either, so I don’t have a good track record for precognition! Gill Shutt’s manuscript for The Legends of Light changed that. If you want to know why, I blogged about that recently on my personal blog.

Back to Greyhart matters, I’m hoping to bring you some more from Gill in the new year, and have been talking to another author about an exciting project. If you like free Kindle books from Amazon, check our free books page, as I expect some more free books to appear in a couple of weeks.

And, finally, good luck to all the NaNoWriMo authors this month. I think it’s a brilliant idea.

Tim C. Taylor —  Publisher.

Update Dec 9th

I’ve now published a second ‘poetic narrative’ by our first Canadian author, Elaine Stirling. It reads to me like a short story but in verse. It’s called The Mexican Saga.

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Two high fantasy eBook launches today!

We’re launching two books today: The Legends of Light (a six-poem saga for adults and young adults, crafted to be enjoyed by those who would not normally read poetry), and The Quest for Elena the Fair. The latter is the complete first poem from the full saga, and is designed as a sampler because it is free.

Talking of free, all these books can be earned for free in our READ! REVIEW! REPEAT! promotion. Be sneaky! Start with the free books and earn yourself the full-priced ones…

 

Here’s a little more about The Legends of Light.

 

A high fantasy saga in six poems. For adults and young adults. Crafted to be enjoyed by readers who do not normally read poetry, but do enjoy fantasies such as EragonThe Lord of the Rings, and the sagas of Norse legend.

 

Each poem builds upon the last to weave a tapestry of magic, dark creatures, and romance. If printed in paperback, this would be about 80 pages.

The author is Gill Shutt who is new to Greyhart Press, but this won’t be the last you hear of her. We’ll give you more about Gill and our other authors soon.

Finally, these launches are the first in our new range for young adults. We won’t publish children-only books but we will be publishing more that are aimed at older children and adults alike. Think of The Hobbit, or Harry Potter, and that’s what we’re aiming at. We will clearly label the YA-suitable books on our website with this label.

 

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Harry Potter, Halloween Horror for the Nook, and Thogron’s Apple

Mark West’s horror eBooks have just popped up on the Barnes & Noble Nook store. If grief and coughing ghosts is your idea of a good Halloween read, try The Mill, originally from the BFS award-nominated anthology We Fade to Grey, published by Pendragon Press. The Mill is a novelette, so you can read through in one sitting while waiting for the trick-or-treaters to knock on your door. For a longer and edgier read, try In the Rain with the Dead, which a

Last Man Through the Gate

Last Man Through the Gate

Why Harry Potter, though? Has Mark West been writing Potter-ish fan fiction? Quite possibly but he hasn’t mentioned it to me. No, Harry Potter came up in an interview I gave yesterday to historical romance author Lynn Hubbard. I was supposed to be talking about my new novella, Last Man Through the Gate, but spent more time contrasting ‘world-building’ approaches to writing fiction. Historical and fantastic settings both have their challenges. One of the writing tips I gave for crafting fantastic worlds is to steal from historical ones, just as JK Rowling did with Harry Potter.

So now you know. Expecto Patronum!

Click for larger image

While we’re at it, madcap space-barbarian short story, The Meandering Mayhem of Thogron Throatbiter,  recently gained a fresh coast of green paint and stripes From today (for a little while) is free to download from Apple iTunes and I expect will be free from the Nook store and Amazon before long. Find out more here.

But that’s all about old books. We published those weeks ago! Far more exciting is what we’re publishing next. As soon as I’ve finished this post, I’ll be working on starting the final edits and formatting for an illustrated book of linked-poems called ‘The Legends of Light’. It’s styled on Anglo-Saxon or Norse sagas and is written to be something children and adults who don’t normally read poetry can try, and enjoy.

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Sneak Peak: The First Last Robot

Here’s a draft cover for a forthcoming short story. The story reminded me of ‘Golden Age’ Asimov, and so that was the effect I wanted in the cover. What do you reckon? BTW: it might look as if there should be a comma in the title betwen ‘first’ and ‘last’. There shouldn’t (subtle wordplay).

Click for a much larger image

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Fantastic Fall Update: The Legends of Light

Here’s a sneak peak of our next book, high fantasy poetry from Gill Shutt.

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READ REVIEW REPEAT for non-tweeps

Read Review RepeatOur READ… REVIEW… REPEAT…! promotion is designed to reward you with free eBooks if you tell the world what you think of our range. Read a book… review it… and we’ll send you the next one for free. Simple! More details on our Read… Review… Repeat…! page.

But what if you like the idea of reading books for the price of a review but you aren’t on Twitter? One solution is to get yourself a Twitter account and start tweeting. See towards the bottom of the main Read Review Repeat page for more information.

SignalsBut if you really don’t want to tweet, we have today opened the promotion up to everyone else. If you don’t tweet, there are two things you will need to do differently.

1. We prefer it if you still let people know what you think. For example, if you blog, put a copy of your review on your blog as well as on Amazon, B&N or whatever. Tell us the link so that we can link back to you (which could increase your traffic). If you don’t blog, FB or do anything with social media, then that’s okay; we won’t hold it against you.

2. You must tell us that you’ve made a review and then tell us what book you would like next. You can either do this as a comment on the Read Review Repeat page, or send an email to editors@greyhartpress.com To get you your book, you need to tell us whether you want Kindle or ePUB format, and what email address to send to.

If you are unsure about how to write a review, see our page giving some help.

That’s it.

Happy Reading!

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October promotion: read The Cookie Tin for free

Our author, Nigel Edwards, has been winning himself some good reviews and comments in recent months. Find out why… for free.

What if you possessed a device that allowed others to feel your emotions? What would you do with it? What would IT do to you?

Find out by using this code YK48M at the Smashwords checkout to buy The Cookie Tin, a contemporary fantasy novelette, for free.

Why not use this opportunity to start our READ… REVIEW… REPEAT…!  promotion? If you’re quick, you could win all our books for free.

==Offer expires at the end of October==

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Three reasons why novellas are going mainstream

We love novellas at Greyhart Press. I’ve posted about this before and today I wrote an article on this subject for Mike Cooley’s blog. Take a peek and comment, because you’ll be seeing more of novellas over the next few years.

Greyhart Press has only published one novella so far (Last Man Through the Gate) but there are more on their way…

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