Hal Spacejock Myspace Blog

Simon Haynes

Last Updated:
May 14, 2008

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 40
City: Perth
State: W.A.
Country: AU

Signup Date: 07/19/06

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Feel free to share ...



Share the mystery around ...

22:22 - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Complete Blank

My publicist just booked me for a radio interview next week, which is great news. Then she chucked me a real poser: "Be prepared to describe a couple of incidents and key stories from within the book."

The problem is, I finished editing the book last October and haven't looked at it since. In the meantime I've written 50,000 words of Hal 5 for NanoWrimo AND come up with half a dozen neato plots for the same book. Hal 5 is a go, and Hal 4 is ancient history! I'm just as likely to go into the interview and describe this really hilarious bit ... from Hal 2.

The other problem is that Hal 4 is a whodunnit/mystery, and any key scenes from later in the book are likely to contain spoilers. I don't even like identifying the characters, because there are some twists there, too.

I have a week until the interview, and before that I have an appearance at a school lit festival. Methinks I'll be re-reading Hal 4 between now and then.

19:37 - 1 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

YA Reading

In my quest to do a year's worth of blogging in a single day (!), I just had word from SFSignal that their latest Mind Meld post is up: Young Adult SF/F Books That Adults Will Like, Too.

If you haven't ventured into the YA section of your local bookstore lately, or at all, this one post contains a bunch of recommendations from a variety of heavyweight industry types. And me.

22:45 - 1 Comments - 2 Kudos - Add Comment

Belonging to Andromeda Spaceways

This is the Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine crew, the team who bring you a new issue of ASIM every two months.

Some folk think we're all nuts, paying $100 a year to be a member of the Andromeda Spaceways co-op. What are the benefits, and why is being a member of the team so important to me?

First off, the price includes a subscription ($49), so we're only paying $51 a year.

Second, we're publishing new and established writers, and we're an important market for both.

Third, I can attend any convention in Australia, and there's guaranteed to be at least one other ASIM member there. Important connections.

Fourth, the slush process. Electronic Brilliance.

Fifth, it's a big group (15 or 16 members at the moment.) That means individual members can afford to slack off when real life intrudes.

Sixth, we have a rotating editor policy. It's hard to burn out when you get one issue to edit every 2-3 years. (Quite a few of our past members have gone on to edit their own mags & ezines.)

Seventh and beyond .. the magazine is great reading, and I'm proud to be part of it.

22:38 - 4 Comments - 2 Kudos - Add Comment

Yippee!

I just heard the board of directors at Fremantle Press has approved my radical publicity idea for the Hal Spacejock series.

Unfortunately, I can't tell you what it is yet, although I can say that it doesn't involve public nudity or bungie jumping off famous buildings.

Excited, I am.

21:06 - 8 Comments - 8 Kudos - Add Comment

Hal 4 Launch Invite

I used something like this for the Hal 3 launch last year, but many of you wouldn't have seen it. (I used mine for my contacts, while Fremantle Press put together an official-looking invite for the media and Dymocks.)

This year when I sent my effort to the publisher, to let them know what I was up to, they wrote back and said they wanted to use it.

Here's a thumbnail, and if you click the image you'll get the full 800kb PDF. If you live in Perth and want to help publicise the launch (and the Hal series!) feel free to run off a few copies. Schools, libraries, workplaces .. there are more SF nuts around than you think.



Any and all help with this is much appreciated!

19:54 - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Interview with Jeri Smith-Ready

BIO

Jeri Smith-Ready (http://www.jerismithready.com) has been writing fiction since the night she had her first double espresso. She holds a master's degree in environmental policy and lives in Maryland with her husband, cat, and the world's goofiest greyhound. Jeri fosters shelter dogs with Tails of Hope Sanctuary (http://www.tails-of-hope.org). As of this writing, she has hosted twenty dogs at her home, all of whom have found loving adopters.

Jeri's latest release is WICKED GAME (http://www.jerismithready.com/wicked-game) (May 13, 2008, Pocket Books), an urban fantasy about a cadre of vampire DJs and the con artist trying to save their 'lives.'



What was your inspiration for writing WICKED GAME?

A song, of course. Not the song "Wicked Game" by Chris Isaak—that came much later. Almost three years ago to the day, I was driving down the road flipping the dial and came to a classic rock station playing "Bad Company" by the band of the same name. I thought, Hmm, "Bad Company" would be a perfect title for a paranormal book with a shady main character.

By the time I reached my destination, I had a fully formed idea for vampire DJs who were psychologically and culturally 'stuck' in the era in which they were turned. I also knew the heroine would be "bad" in some way. (The punch line is that even though it all began with "Bad Company," the publisher ultimately asked me to change the title.)


Who are your favorite authors and books now and when you were growing up?

I tend to read widely rather than deeply and rarely follow series for more than a book or two, regardless of how much I enjoy them. I'm the opposite of an addictive personality. I'm pretty sure I'd be the world's first casual crack smoker.

I was completely different as a kid, of course. I read EVERYTHING, especially books by Marguerite Henry, Walter Farley, and Jim Kjelgaard, who each wrote continuing series about animals (and not talking animals, either—usually just plain old horses and dogs). I also loved the Trixie Belden mysteries. Trixie was like Nancy Drew, but with an actual personality.

My all-time favorite book was DOGSBODY by Diana Wynne Jones. It combined my love of animals with my passions for astronomy and mythology. Because of that book, Sirius became my favorite star (not to mention my eventual choice in satellite radio).

My current favorite authors tend to write stand-alone novels or loosely connected series: Neil Gaiman, PC Cast, Charles de Lint, Christopher Moore, James Morrow, Caprice Crane, and John Irving, to name a few. They also tend to be funny.


What is it about fantasy/science fiction that attracts you?

To me, speculative fiction at its core is about what it means to be human. Often it does this by juxtaposing humans with other races or species (like elves or vampires or aliens), or by putting ordinary people in extraordinary settings. I also like the genre's tendency to push the boundaries of humanity itself.


Why did you decide to make Ciara a con artist?

From the beginning I knew that the main character would have a shady past. Her current job is in sales and marketing (S&M, as she calls it), which is really just a legal form of con artistry. It sounds like a cheap joke, but the two pursuits both require an understanding of human nature and how to manipulate people's emotions to make them cheerfully act against their own best interests.

Ciara tries to save the radio station from corporate takeover by branding it as "WVMP: The Lifeblood of Rock 'n' Roll," essentially hiding the vampires' nature in plain sight. She disguises the truth as a marketing gimmick. I loved playing with notions of truth and lies, and I loved watching Ciara's moral acrobatics in justifying her actions. Con artists are sociopaths with little notion of right and wrong; however, Ciara's parents gave her a religious upbringing, which she's rejected, but only on the intellectual level. She still feels guilt.


What (besides writing) do you do for fun?

I'm an avid pro football fan. It's the only thing in my life that has nothing whatsoever to do with writing, and I guard my time with it like a starving dog with a bone. I also follow politics, but that's not fun—more like a form of sado-masochistic torture.


What sort of research did you do to write WICKED GAME?

For the musical aspects, the research came by osmosis over the course of months and years. I'd think of a band and then run to Allmusic.com (and more recently Pandora.com) to learn all about them. Then I'd surf the links to understand the connections among that band and its forerunners and followers.

And of course I read books. One of my favorites was THE ROCK SNOB'S DICTIONARY by David Kamp and Steven Daly. Entertaining, informative, and an incisive look inside the mind of the cooler-than-thou rock snob.

To learn about radio stations, I interviewed DJs and had them 'vet' the manuscript when it was in near-final form, to make sure I didn't have any major mistakes. A highlight of my life was getting a cover quote from Weasel, who used to DJ at the legendary Washington, DC, alternative station WHFS. He said that, disturbingly, he could relate very well to my characters.


Shane McAllister (the 90s grunge DJ vamp) loves Nirvana. Is that your favorite band, too?

Yep, though I was only a casual fan during the band's actual existence. I was sad but not devastated when Kurt Cobain died in 1995. However, as the years go by and I've learned to appreciate the band's incredible talent, I grieve his loss more intensely.

I suppose the creation of Shane is my small way of honoring Cobain's life and work and the impact it's had (and continues to have) on my psyche. I feel a spiritual kinship with them both and wonder if but for the grace of good fortune I'd be in as bad a shape as they were in their lives.


What are you writing now?

I'm working on the second draft of WICKED GAME's sequel, BAD TO THE BONE (May 2009). That's due to my editor in a few days, which explains the bags under my eyes. And probably the hallucinations.


What does a typical writing day look like for you? How long do you write, that sort of thing?

After three years of writing full-time, I've ceased to feel guilty for not writing first thing in the morning. My brain just isn't wit-enabled before 10 or 11 am.


What is easiest/hardest for you as a writer?

Dialogue is by far the easiest. Maybe it's my theatre background, but my first drafts tend to consist of characters arguing in living rooms and coffee shops. I keep forgetting that novels have infinite budgets for location shoots.

First drafts are the hardest by far. It feels like sculpting air. Once I have a rough draft down, no matter how crap-adelic, I can work to make it better. But that initial creation of the story is torment.


This isn't your first book; tell us a little bit about what else is out there?

I also have an epic fantasy series, the Aspect of Crow trilogy, which takes place in a world where everyone has magic bestowed by their Guardian Spirit animal. The first one, EYES OF CROW (Luna Books, 2006), won the Romantic Times Reviewers Choice award for Best Fantasy Novel. The second, VOICE OF CROW, came out last October (a favorite of mine because it was the Book That Almost Killed Me), and the trilogy will conclude this November with THE REAWAKENED.

I also have an older urban fantasy (REQUIEM FOR THE DEVIL, Grand Central Publishing, 2001). It takes place in modern day Washington, DC, and Lucifer masquerades as a political consultant. For the first time in his ten-billion-year existence, he falls in love. It changes everything.


What is the purpose of fantasy/science fiction, if any?

See answer to 3. I can't be that earnest twice in one interview.

More about WICKED GAME: http://www.jerismithready.com/wicked-game

To visit the DJs and listen to a sample of their shows: http://www.wvmpradio.com

Jeri on MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/jerismithready

Ciara on MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/ciarawvmp


Order links

Mysterious Galaxy

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

18:05 - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Monday, May 12, 2008

Great Service

2000 Hal Spacejock fridge magnets just landed on my doorstep with a groan and a hefty thud. (The groan was the postie. Do you realise 2000 fridge magnets weigh nearly 20kg?)

The printing on the magnets is superb, and I can't wait to get them out to the hundreds of people who sent in their details.

(If you missed out, relax. You can still request some)

19:43 - 2 Comments - 2 Kudos - Add Comment

Just Spotted

No, not Hal 4 (bit early for that!)



I've just spotted one of the original Bowman Publishing editions of Hal Spacejock on eBay. There are probably less than 100 of these in the wild, so it's a big surprise to see one.

(This was a short-lived cover. Soon afterwards Hal 1 was released with the original Les Petersen cover, and not long after that Fremantle Press picked the series up and the first book was completely rewritten.)

If you're interested, there's a history of the Hal Spacejock books here

17:38 - 2 Comments - 2 Kudos - Add Comment

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Recap 3

Hal Spacejock Just Desserts (book 3 in the series) was released in January 2007, not much more than a year ago. It's a bit soon to do a recap - much like a 15-year-old publishing their autobiography - but I'll give it a shot.



This was my favourite cover by far. Hal's bemused look of resignation, the glorious reds and yellows, the mercenaries with their OTT guns, the Tastee bars peeking out of Hal's pocket, the crates, the coffee, the racing cars and the crazy dress uniform all relate to plot points and gags in the novel.

The good news started in January ... Hal 3 was a number one bestseller at Fantastic Planet, the first Hal Spacejock novel to hit 1 anywhere.

In July Fantastic Planet posted their all-time top 100 bestselling authors, and I made it into the list at position 34.

Then, in December, Fantastic Planet published their top 50 bestselling books for 2007. (Do these guys love to please their authors or what?) Hal Spacejock Just Desserts was 23 on the list, an amazing achievement when you look at the big names.

During this time there were a number of great reviews for Hal 3, many of them on blogs, and I'd estimate that 85% of the feedback indicated this was the best book yet.

All three books have their fans, each willing to nominate their fave title as the best of the series. The challenge is to write new books they'll enjoy, while remaining fresh AND not coming up with anything so wildly different it's not even Hal Spacejock any more.

Finally, earlier this year Hal 3 was nominated for the WA Science Fiction Foundation awards in the 'Best Long Professional Work' category. Known as the 'Tin Ducks', these awards recognise Western Australians. Much to my surprise, Hal Spacejock Just Desserts won the category.

23:29 - 3 Comments - 4 Kudos - Add Comment


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