Tuesday 4 February 2014

Bloggers, Join the Fire Country BDay Bash and get a FREE book!

Calling all Bloggers!

I want to invite you to the first Book Birthday Party for my popular YA dystopian novel, Fire Country, which will take place between FEB 24th - 27th, 2014. In the 1 year since Fire Country was born, so much has happened (signed with an agent, sold more than 10,000 books, wrote 5 books and published 3) that I knew I just had to celebrate and I’d love for you to be a part of it!
I owe so much of my support to the blogger community, and I want you all to have the first chance to be a part of the Fire Country Birthday Bash. So what's in it for you?
  • First off, I want you and your members to get the chance to read Fire Country FOR FREE, if you haven't read it already! A code will be provided so that you and your members can download Fire Country for free in your preferred format on Smashwords.com.
  • Only for the participating bloggers, if you've already read Fire Country, you can choose another David Estes ebook of your choice, and you'll get it for FREE! All I ask in return is that those who enjoy the book they choose post a review on Amazon.com.
  • Randomly selected bloggers will have the opportunity to do an interview with David Estes, receive a Guest Post from David Estes, or get an exclusive excerpt from Fire Country. Spots are limited, so get in early to guarantee your exclusive!

  • The Book Birthday will include a giveaway that you can post on your blog with prizes such as an Amazon giftcard, signed David Estes paperbacks, eBooks and more!
If you decide to participate in the Fire Country Book Birthday Party, you will receive a complete media pack with everything you require to prepare your post, a HTML post that you can simply copy and paste, buttons for your sidebar and the code for your FREE eCopy of Fire Country (or the alternate book you choose), that you can share. If you would like to attend, please contact davidestesstreetteam@gmail.com


Thank you so much for all your support and for everything you do for us Indie authors, and keep on reading and blogging!

 

Monday 3 February 2014

How I name my books

Another question I often get in interviews and from readers is: How do you name your books?

First of all, what’s in a name? Well, for books, EVERYTHING is in a name, especially for Indie authors, like me. The name of the book defines it, becomes its legend, or possibly its downfall. The name garners interest or makes a potential reader say, “Eh, doesn’t sound that interesting.” But you haven’t even read the synopsis yet! Unfortunately, that’s the truth of the world we live in. There are A LOT of books and A LOT of authors, all trying to catch readers’ eyes. So that’s what I’m thinking about when naming my books. Is it appropriate for the genre I’m writing in? Is it attention-grabbing? Will it work with any other books planned for the series? Are there any other well-known books out there with the same name?

So how did I name my books? I’ll focus on The Dwellers Saga and The Country Saga, because they’re my two newest series and happen to be sister series, the stories of which are inexplicably intertwined when they crash together in The Earth Dwellers.

1) My YA dystopian series, The Dwellers Saga: The first book is always the hardest! Why? Because the names of the sequels will flow from that, or at least they usually will. A good example is Delirium by Lauren Oliver. By setting the tone with ending in the letter M, Oliver decided to continue with that theme for the series. Pandemonium and Requiem are the sequels. Another popular dystopian series, Divergent by Veronica Roth, has a sequel called Insurgent, again following a theme with the endings of the titles being similar. This allowed a lot of speculation as to what the title of the third book would be, some noteworthy guesses being Convergent or Resurgent. The author even joked that it would be called Detergent. In the end, the title turned out to be Allegiant, a fitting final title.

So back to the Dwellers! I ended up naming the books after the three disproportionate classes that make up the underground society. The middle class are called The Moon Dwellers, which became the title of the first book. The sequels followed with The Star Dwellers (the lower class) and The Sun Dwellers (the upper class). But more importantly, how did I name the classes? Dwellers was easy. The people live in underground caves, or dwellings, so the name flowed from that. But why moon, sun, and stars? The answer is twofold: First, it immediately makes the potential reader wonder why the book is called that. Do the characters live on the moon, in space? The cover adds to the mystery because it shows nothing of the moon or space. By making people want to know what it means, it increases the chances they’ll try reading what’s inside. Secondly, the deeper you go underground, the further you are from the outside light. The sun dwellers are at the top, and are comparable to the brightness of the sun, then the moon dwellers, as bright as the moon, and finally the star dwellers, the dimmest of the bunch. It adds a bit of mythology to the naming of the classes, from the time when they excavated deep beneath the earth and began living there.

2) My YA dystopian series (a sister series to The Dwellers Saga), The Country Saga: There are three books, Fire Country, Ice Country, and Water & Storm Country.

So again, you can see I stuck with keeping the second part of the name consistent throughout the series, Country, which breaks up the dystopian world I’ve created into distinct areas with very different climates and tribes. Fire Country was easy to name, as I wanted a hot, desert climate with cactuses (which the tribes call pricklers). Everything about the climate and arid desert makes you think of heat and burning and fire. Following that logic, Ice Country was also pretty simple. I knew the second country I would write about would be up in the mountains in a cold, snowy place. Snow Country? Nah, too soft. Cold Country? Didn’t sound quite right. Ice Country? Perfect! On to the third book, Water & Storm Country, which you’ll notice is the only one with two countries being mentioned. The first two books are set in a single country, with a single point of view. The third book, however, is set with half the chapters in two different, warring countries, each with a different main character’s point of view. Thus, the slightly different title. One of the tribes sails around on the ocean like pirates in large ships. Again, I had some options, Ocean Country, Sea Country, Fish Country (I’m sort of joking with that one!), but Water Country just sounded the best to me. And the “pirates” enemies live on shore on flat plains where great storms rage most of the time, which made that half of the book title really easy: Storm Country. Water & Storm Country was born!

So that’s it, I hope you enjoyed a bit of an inside look into the inner workings of my strange and random brain as I came up with the names for my two newest YA dystopian series! Even more so, I hope you enjoy (or have enjoyed) reading the books behind the names!

HAPPY READING!

Extras!

In case anyone is wondering about the titles for my other series, here’s a quick rundown. My debut YA paranormal novel, Angel Evolution, was originally going to be named Angels, with the sequel as Demons and the second sequel Archangels. Well, as I got closer to publication, my wife, Adele, and I both agreed it was too generic and bland. So Adele threw out the idea of incorporating Evolution into the title, as that’s a major theme in the books. You see, my angels and demons and archangels aren’t spiritual figures, they’re evolved from humans. The titles Angel Evolution, Demon Evolution, and Archangel Evolution were born!

My children’s series, The Adventures of Nikki Powergloves, were really fun to name. It’s all based off of the name of the main character, a young girl named Nikki. She discovers magical gloves that give her powers, named powergloves by her best friend and sidekick, Spencer. Nikki Powergloves is born! Each of the four books in the series carries her superhero name, Nikki Powergloves, as well as a subtitle. Book 1- A Hero is Born (a pretty obvious choice), Book 2- The Power Council (Nikki meets other superhero kids), Book 3- The Power Trappers (Nikki faces a secret organization trying to trap the kids with powers, and Book 4- The Great Adventure (Nikki competes in an amazing around-the-world adventure against the other kids with powers).
 
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Thursday 30 January 2014

Where NOT to write

Originally posted on the Promiscuous Diva

Readers ask me quite frequently where I do my writing. At a desk? On the couch? On the floor? Where? Well, because of my somewhat unique circumstances, this is quite a complicated question!

 
 (My office on Waikiki Beach, Hawaii)

You see, while I feed my fledgling full time writing career snack crackers and corn chips, I’m in the midst of a two-year trip around the world with my beautiful and supportive wife, Adele. So on any given day, I’m usually writing in a completely different place. But before I get into MY ALL TIME FAVORITEST PLACE TO WRITE, I want to tell you about some of the many places I’ve written my books, as well as tell you about a place I probably should NOT have been writing.

OK, here goes! Well, my burgeoning career started none other than on the Manly Ferry in Sydney, Australia. Yep, Aussies, that’s right! My wife is Australian, though I am not, and we were living in Australia, working glorious 9-5 jobs in the city, while living at Manly Beach. Every day we rode the Manly Ferry to the city, and that’s where I would write. Half an hour there, half an hour back, rolling on the waves, catching an occasional glimpse of a dolphin or two out the window. All in all, not too bad, eh? Squeeze in an hour at a cafĂ© at lunch in the city, and I was churning out about two hours a day, perhaps 2,500 words. That’s how it all started. That was definitely fun, but in the scheme of things, neither the ferry nor the cafes were my favorite places to write.

Fast forward a year and a half. Four books published and it’s time to quit our jobs and do this full time, yeah! We decided that if I was going to write fulltime, we might as well make an experience out of it, travel the world for two years, meet people, live life to the fullest. So we took the show on the road, quitting our jobs, selling, giving away, or storing almost all of our belongings, getting plugged with more vaccinations than I knew existed. First stop: Hawaii!

Hmm, who wants to stay cooped up writing all day when you’re in sunny Waikiki, or on the North Shore of Oahu? Not me! Well, I thought, I’ve got a tiny laptop that can easily fit in the beach bag with everything else, so I might as well take advantage. That’s when I started writing on the beach. We bought a couple of cheap beach chairs and I would write while Adele would read and take photos. If I got hot, I took a dip. I was churning out LOTS of words now, somewhere in the 4-5 thousand mark per day, writing full time, publishing a new book every 2-3 months. Living the dream! Only…laptops aren’t really meant to be in the sun. Duh! We were on the beach and I’d just finished the sequel to The Moon Dwellers, and ZAP! FRY! BZZ! (Yeah, the above pictures are EXACTLY where it happened.) My laptop goes black. Like blank-screen black. Like pressing-all-the-buttons-won’t-get-it-to-do-anything black. NOOOOO!!! Yeah, I freaked. Not my best day. I’d saved a zillion times, of course, and even backed up parts on an external hard drive, but there was LOTS that was ONLY on the laptop’s hard drive, and if it was fried I was completely ready to shamelessly break down in tears in a public place. Enter my hero: Adele! She made some calls to a friend, who called a friend. A computer whiz friend. So I trustingly handed over my computer, and two days later, voila! Dead computer with SAVED hard drive. Woot woot! Lesson learned, right? Well, sort of. I continued writing on the beach, but first we bought a nice beach umbrella. Ahhh shade! How obvious was that? Apparently not obvious enough for my pint-sized brain. In any case, I borrowed Adele’s computer to write the rest of the time we were in Hawaii, until I had a chance to buy a new one. OK, so was the beach my favorite place to write? Notwithstanding the fried computer incident (which, from this day forward we shall never speak of again), the beach was still NOT my favorite place to write. Too much sand trying to get into the keyboard, concerns about sudden rainstorms, lots of wind, distractions, etc.

Get to the point already! Where do you like to write? The pub? The library? A big, comfy chair somewhere in Morocco? A hammock in Mexico? Nope, nope, nope, and nope. Believe it or not, despite having travelled (so far!) for about a year to four continents, my ALLTIME FAVORITEST PLACE TO WRITE continues to be...drumroll…IN BED! That’s right, for me nothing beats waking up and getting right to it. And Adele is super supportive of this, uh, let’s call it a “creative choice” (because it sounds better than “lazy choice”). She brings me breakfast, coffee, and sometimes even lunch in bed when I’m working on a project. It’s comfortable, warm, and there are generally zero distractions. On a typical day I churn out 4-5 thousand words before lunch. Then Adele and I go out and enjoy the day in whatever city we happen to be in.

All in all, it’s an absolute dream come true, one that NEVER would have come close to coming true without the remarkable and selfless support of the bloggers, fan group members, beta readers, street team members, family, and friends who have supported and helped me along the way. So, from the bottom of my heart, thank you thank you thank you, and HAPPY READING!
 
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