Tuesday, 6 August 2013

My Literary Agent Story!

I’ve got HUGE news today, the BIGGEST NEWS yet for my three-year-old writing career. Today, on August 6th of 2013, I’ve got an agent! *double happy dance with an ill-advised attempt at a breakdancing move*

I am now a client of Andrea Hurst& Associates, an awesome and experienced literary agency that I’ve been stalking…ahem, I mean querying for over two years. Well, all the hard work paid off when I accepted Andrea’s offer of representation TODAY!

Andrea Hurst is an amazing author and incredible literary agent with tons of experience finding publishers for her author clients. She’ll be working with me to expand the audience for the combined Dwellers/Country Sagas (all seven books), developmentally revise the books, and land a publisher to take my career to the next level. So first I just want to say THANKYOUTHANKYOUTHANKYOU to Andrea for believing in me enough to take a chance on me and my books.

Next, for those interested, I’d love to tell the story of how I landed my first ever literary agent. Here goes…

It all started on a cold and rainy night many years ago…wait, sorry, wrong story. Bad author habit…

No, it started two and half years ago on a sunny day in Sydney, Australia. I’d recently written my first ever YA trilogy and the first book in my Nikki Powergloves children’s series, and I was full of confidence and energy. I was going to be the next bestselling author! No one could stop me!

So I started querying every last YA literary agent I could find. Surely one of them would like my ideas, my writing, my stories……right? Uh, not exactly. The rejections came in swiftly and knee-deep. Each one was like a stab to the gut, leaving me exhausted and frustrated. Those agents wouldn’t even take the time to write out a personalized rejection! They were form letters!

My confidence waned.

Enter Andrea Hurst, who might just be the female version of Clark Kent. Literary agent by day and superhero by night! She agreed to read Nikki Powergloves and provide me with feedback, even if she was unable to offer me representation for my children’s books. She read my book and loved it! We had a Skype call and she said super nice things about my writing style and the raw talent I had that just needed to be honed (like really really honed). She gave me barrels of tips and advice and sent me on my way.

I soaked her advice up like a sponge, and worked on my craft, churning out a new book every couple of months. I ceaselessly queried and watched as the rejections from literary agents and publishers piled up, climbing well over fifty. I received a couple of full manuscript requests only to have them rejected in the final rounds. My skin grew thicker. I should have been frustrated, but I wasn’t…because Andrea said I had talent; she was the only agent to give me the time of day.

I wrote the Dwellers Saga, then the Country Saga, and after months of giving away free books, promoting the heck out of them, and getting a whole lot of generous and selfless support from my growing group of readers, the series started to sell. Like really sell. TheMoon Dwellers began hitting the top ten on many lists of favorite dystopian books and books to read if you like The Hunger Games. Things were about as good as I could expect them to be without an agent. But they were about to get better.

Three things happened that pushed my books to higher highs:

First, a Buzzfeed article was published that listed 15 Series to Read if you Enjoyed The Hunger Games, and guess what? The Dwellers Saga was number 15! The other 14 were awesome bestselling series by big published YA authors. This did wonders for my sales and visibility.

Second, The Moon Dwellers began consistently being listed on the Kindle bestseller lists for YA dystopian, action and adventure, swords and magic, and science fiction books.

Third, Andrea Hurst was contacted by a film production company who was interested in the film option for The Moon Dwellers and who thought she was my literary agent! Of course, she wasn’t; at least, not yet.

Andrea contacted me to tell me about the inquiry and we restarted a two-year-old dialogue about possible representation. I filled her in on everything I’d been doing, my small successes, how I’d grown my social networking platform and Goodreads Fan Group (shout out to the 1,600+ awesome people I chat with every day!), and she was impressed.

What felt like two seconds later, she offered me full representation for my Dwellers and Country Sagas woot woot! Best. Day. Ever. Adele and I celebrated and laughed and hugged and a lot of silliness ensued, and then, when we’d calmed down, we read through the contract and agreed to it! So now, almost three years and more than 1.1 million words later, I’ve got a literary agent!!

I couldn’t be happier having Andrea and her team as my agents. I have no doubt that together we’re going to create something special. Thank you to everyone who has stood by me and supported me as I’ve grown as an author and person. I consider each and every one of you my friends, and I’m so glad to be sharing this journey with you.

I can’t wait to see what the future holds!

David Estes

Wednesday, 31 July 2013

The Earth Dwellers Cover Reveal!

I'm extremely pleased and excited to reveal the cover for the 7th and final book in the COMBINED Dwellers and Country Sagas! The book is called The Earth Dwellers and will bring together characters and plotlines from both series!! A HUGE thanks to my incredible cover artist, Tony Wilson at Winki Pop Design, for creating yet another BEAUTIFUL and ARTISTIC cover that perfectly emulates the series. Tony has designed all four covers in the Dwellers Saga, as well as the four covers for my Children's series, Nikki Powergloves. Take a look!

 
 
It's beautiful, right? I hope you all love it as much as I do! Now, for information about the book, The Earth Dwellers. It comes out on September 5th, so just around the corner! For those of you who are wondering what you need to read in order to get ready for the release, I'd STRONGLY advise that you read BOTH the Dwellers Saga (The Moon Dwellers, The Star Dwellers, The Sun Dwellers) and the Country Saga (Fire Country, Ice Country, Water & Storm Country) prior to reading The Earth Dwellers. Otherwise you will be VERY confused :)
 
Here's the synopsis:
 
All your old favorite characters from both the Dwellers and Country Sagas come together in an epic 7th book!

When President Borg Lecter threatens to wipe all four native tribes off the face of the earth, Adele designs a plan that will send her deep into the belly of the beast.

At the same time, Dazz must convince the new ice country consortium to the Unity Alliance, a pact with the Tri-Tribes that may be their only hope of survival.

Meanwhile, Tristan is forced to face his greatest challenge, the unification of the Tri-Realms, in an attempt to garner support against Lecter and the earth dwellers.

Finally, Siena and the Tri-Tribes march on the Glass City in an attempt to take the fight to Lecter and his army of killers.

The entire world, both under and above the earth's surface, sits on the edge of a knife. Will the efforts of Adele, Tristan, Dazz, and Siena be enough to save the ones they love?
_________
 
Thanks SO MUCH for all the incredible support, the last month has been an epic ride for me as The Dwellers Saga has really taken off, getting positive publicity on Buzzfeed as well as reaching the top 100 bestsellers in 4 Amazon Kindle genre bestseller lists! I couldn't have done any of it without ALL OF YOU!
 
Oh, and by the way, I've got some other BIG NEWS coming soon, I can't wait to tell you!! Stay tuned ;)
 
David Estes


Friday, 26 July 2013

The Shattered Stones of Fate: A Dwellers Short Story- A Character Guest Post by Adele Rose from The Dwellers Saga

Hours before The Moon Dwellers...

Sometimes time ticks by at a pace so dismal you can almost see the stones of fate gathering moss before your very eyes. And other times…well, life seems to roar past with the speed of an inter-Realm through-train, whipping your hair around your face and forcing your eyes shut against the airborne debris.

Today starts with the former, but you can never guess which way it’ll end.

Class is heavy and tight on my skull, full of “important” dates and wars and a history that only half sounds real. Did humans really live on the earth’s surface once? It’s hard to believe, and yet everyone says it’s true. And if they did, why did they seem to be constantly in the midst of disagreement and strife?

My grandmother—may she rest in peace—used to say that being outside was like laughter and a warm blanket and the hug of a friend; but of course, those were the same things her mother had told her. No one really knows anymore—all we have are stories from the generations before us. Do I believe them?

Does it matter if I don’t?

I massage a knot in my forehead, the beginning of a sharp headache. Something pokes me from behind. I ignore it.

Poke poke.

“Gannon, you do that again and I’ll break your arm,” I hiss.

“Ms. Rose…something to share?” Mrs. Hill asks, stopping in mid-lecture, her hands on her hips.

“No,” I mumble, writing Gannon on my blank notebook page. When the teacher resumes her monologue about some kind of civil war, I slash through Gannon’s name with a single stroke of my pencil.

Poke poke.

You’ve got to be kidding me. I whirl around, my pencil snapping under the strain of my fingers, which are already curling into fists. My chair falls over with a slam. “Do that I again…” I say, pushing the unfinished threat out into the air.

Gannon’s face is even whiter than usual, his big blue eyes as wide as false moons. “I—I—”

“Yeah, everyone’s sorry,” I say, feeling bad seeing Gannon look so scared. After all, he’s one of the few people who are ever nice to me anymore. But my breathing is heavy, my blood running hot and angry through my veins. An overreaction. Something my father has always warned me against.

I try to swallow it down but all I get is a lump in my throat.

“Ms. Rose…”


Suddenly I’m aware of the many eyes on me, staring, some with open mouths of shock and others with smirks of amusement. I cringe and turn to face Mrs. Hill, who’s placed her lesson plan on the table in front of her. Never a good sign.

I know I should apologize but the lump gets in the way. So I just stare at her, feeling my face redden.

“I’ll not have students threatened in my classroom,” the teacher says. I’m already grabbing my pack and pushing for the door when she says, “Detention. Now.”

The grey-stone halls are empty and hollow, like the feeling I’ve had in my chest ever since the other kids started talking about my father a week ago. I asked Father about it, but he swears everything’s okay, that it’s no big deal, that the rumors and gossip are exaggerations. But his words don’t match his eyes like they usually do. He’s protecting me from the truth: a dangerous world has become infinitely more dangerous.

As I stride down the hall toward the detention room—my fourth such journey in the last week—the playground shouts hit me like bursts of gunfire:

“Your father’s a dead man!”
“Better start looking for a new dad!”
“Complainer!”

I touch a hand to my gut, half-expecting to feel moist holes in it, but all I get is the brittle texture of my school-tunic. Dead man! New dad! Complainer!

Are things really that bad? If they weren’t, would I have broken those three kids’ noses? Would I have two black eyes and fire roaring through my skin?

When I reach the detention room, I glance through the window and see the regulars: Drummer, the heavily pierced kid who can’t seem to stop tapping his fingers on his desk; Gina, the girl with the spiked purple hair and unexplained scars up and down her arms; Chuck, the dude who smells funny and is addicted to pulling bad pranks. Freaks. Am I one of them?

I stride past the room and push through the school doors. Mother will be furious when she finds out I ditched school again, but she’ll just have to deal.

There are a couple of punks on the corner, smoking something that doesn’t smell like normal cigarettes. “Try it,” one of them says as I pass, holding out a joint.

An insane urge to kick him rolls through me, balanced only by a desire to take him up on his offer. I ignore him and run past, wishing my feet had wings—that I could fly: out of subchapter 14 of the Moon Realm. Out of the underground world of caves and rock and disappointment. Excitement shivers down my spine at the thought, making me feel nauseous because of the conflicting emotions, like I’m spinning and spinning.

Turning a corner, I take the next block in stride. It’s only when I reach my neighborhood that I slow to a jog, hoping Mother will be out.

She isn’t.

Worse, she’s standing in front of our house, looking right at me, like she has delinquent-radar or something. I stop, consider turning and running in the other direction, think better of it, and cautiously approach her.

“I know what you’re going to—” I start to say.

“Come inside, I’ll make you something to eat,” Mother says, cutting me off.

She turns and makes her way back to our small stone cube of a house, holding the door for me. I follow her inside, wondering whether this is one of those mom-pretends-to-be-your-friend-as-punishment teaching moments. I hope not—I’d prefer a harsh punishment dealt by a swift hand any day.

“I shouldn’t have left school,” I say, dumping my pack and my words in a heap on the floor. My only hope is to control the conversation.

“No, you shouldn’t have,” Mother says. She doesn’t sound angry. Why?

She starts chopping something with a dull knife. Potatoes. I gawk at her, unable to feel my feet, like I’m floating. Who is this woman?

Before I can consider the possibilities, Father pushes through the back door. “Hi, Adele,” he says, as casually as if school and work are meant to be over.

“Why aren’t you at the mines?” I ask, more sharply than I intended.

“Why aren’t you at school?” he counters, but a smile plays on his lips. His eyes disagree with his mouth, remaining downcast and tired, like he’s just woken up.

“The school called,” Mother says, stirring a pot. “Adele was supposed to go to detention but she left.”

God. Word travels fast. Mrs. Hill must have expected it. “I hate school,” I say. I hate people, I don’t say.

“I know,” Father says, to my surprise. If Mother is a clone, Father is a robot. Where are my real parents?

I stare at him. He stares at me, his smile gone. Mother nonchalantly stirs a pot.

The unanswered question springs back into my head. “Father…why aren’t you in the mines?” I ask again.

He sighs, scratches his head, looks more vulnerable than I’ve ever seen him. “Oh God,” I breathe.

“They let me go,” he blurts out, turning to head back outside.

“They what?” I say, following him onto the back patio, a familiar place where we’ve trained every morning for the past ten years. Now a place so foreign and frightening I barely recognize it. “You lost your job?”

He nods. “I guess I stood up for one too many people,” he says.

“Fix it,” I say, a knot forming in my stomach. People don’t just lose their jobs in the Moon Realm. There are always repercussions, especially when it’s related to a complaint.

“I can’t.”


“You can,” I protest.

“It’s unfixable,” he says, and before I can contradict him, he throws a punch at my head.

I duck, grabbing his arm and swinging a low kick at his legs, which he easily hops over. He lets me try again, this time with a hooking fist, but at the last minute he ducks and my momentum of my wayward punch spins me around. He grabs me from behind, trying to lock my arms, but I manage to twist out of it before his hands can get a good grip.

I whirl around, my chest heaving, my blood flowing, my adrenaline higher than the dim and rocky cavern ceiling that arcs above us. I charge my father, aiming dual jabs at his chest.

He grabs my arms, pulls me into him. I’m squirming and clawing and bucking…and then I hear it.

A strange sound, low and guttural. A groan. I stop moving, listen to the slightly disturbing noise.

“Adele,” Father says, hugging me, crushing my face into his chest. “It’s going to be okay.” That’s when I realize: the strange sound is me. Grunting and groaning and protesting the truth.

“Nothing’s okay,” I manage to wheeze out, breathless. A hot tear spills down my cheek and I wipe it away angrily. “Nothing.”

Father’s eyes are sad, and this time they match his lips, which couldn’t form a smile if we were suddenly rich and living in the Sun Realm. “Be strong, Adele,” he says. “For your mother, for your sister, for me, for yourself.”
 
“No,” I say, even though I know I will. It’s the only way I can be. It’s the way he’s built me.

“No matter what,” he reminds gently.

I push away and go to bed early, eating my pathetically unfulfilling supper alone in the room I share with my sister and parents, wishing I was oblivious the world that’s about to end.

And times races on and on and on, shattering stone and bones and lives, twisting fate into a blind whirlwind of grief and splintered moments.

I awake to the sound of our front door slamming open.

~~~

The Moon Dwellers is out now on Kindle, Nook, and everywhere ebooks are sold, or in print on Amazon.com! And don’t miss the thrilling sequels, The Star Dwellers and The Sun Dwellers, or the action-packed sister series, The Country Saga (Fire Country, Ice Country, Water & Storm Country) also available! And now,  for those of you who haven't read The Moon Dwellers, a sneak peek at the prologue from the book, which picks up where this short story ended!
 

Prologue
Adele
7 months ago

Hands grope, men shout, boots slap the rock floor.

Clay dishes and pots are smashed to bits as the Enforcers sweep recklessly through our house. There are more bodies in the tiny stone box that I call home than ever before. The walls seem to be closing in.

My mother’s face is stricken with anger, her lips twisted, her eyebrows dark. I’ve never seen her fight like this. I’ve never seen her fight at all.

It takes three bulging Enforcers to subdue her kicking legs, her thrashing arms. For just a moment I am scared of her and not the men. I hate myself for it.

I realize my sister is by my side, watching, like me. I can’t let her see this—can’t let this be her last memory of the ones who raised us. I usher her back into the small room that we share with my parents, and close the door, shutting her inside alone.

When I turn back to the room, my mother is already gone, taken. Undigested beans from our measly supper rise in my throat.

My father is next.

The Enforcers jeer at him, taunt him, spit on him. As he backs his shoulders against the cold, stark, stone wall, five men corner him. Smart. They don’t underestimate him.

He makes eye contact with me; his emerald-green eyes are hard with concentration. Despite the inherent tension in the room, his face is relaxed, calm, the exact opposite of his eyes. Run, he mouths.

My feet are frozen to the floor. My knees lock, stiffen, disobey me and my father. I am ashamed. After all that my father has done for me, when it counts the most, I fail him.

One of the men lifts an arm and a gun. I hold my breath when I hear the shot, a dull thwap! that doesn’t sound like a normal gun. The man moves backwards slightly from the force, but his legs are planted firmly and he maintains his balance.

My father slumps to the floor. I feel my lips trembling, and my hand moves unbidden to my mouth. My frozen feet melt and I try to run to him, but a big body bars my way. I don’t think—just react. I kick him hard, like my father taught me. My heel catches the Enforcer under his chin and his head snaps back. Like most people, he underestimates me.

The next Enforcer doesn’t.

The Taser rips into my neck and tentacles of electricity slam my jaw shut. My teeth nearly snap off my tongue, which is flailing around in my mouth. They don’t take it easy on me just because I’m a kid, or a girl—not after what I did to the first guy. Still stunned by the Taser, I barely feel the thump of their hard boots as they kick me repeatedly in the ribs. My eyes are wet, and through my blurred vision I see the arcing nightstick.

Strangely, it feels like destiny, like it was always going to happen.

I hear my sister’s screams just before I black out.

~~~ 

The Moon Dwellers is out now on Kindle, Nook, and everywhere ebooks are sold, or in print on Amazon.com! And don’t miss the thrilling sequels, The Star Dwellers and The Sun Dwellers, or the action-packed sister series, The Country Saga (Fire Country, Ice Country, Water & Storm Country) also available!

I hope you all enjoyed this Dwellers short story, which I was inspired to write by Martha at Confessions of a Bibliophile, an AWESOME blog!
 
David Estes