Tag Archives: anthologies

A blogging spree in 2020?

So, how has the new year treated you so far? If you’re like me, you’re happy to see 2019 in the rearview mirror. It’s not that the year was terrible; I’ve had much worse. But when it comes to blogging, yeah 2019 can easily be beat.

But what should I be blogging about? I’m not a negative person.

During 2019, a favorite pet died (our at-least-24-year-old tortoise-shell rescue tabby cat), a favorite website died (the much beloved AgentQuery Connect), and frankly a lot of my energy was depleted before last winter was over.  

I’m not the type to wallow in despair, and even though my household began 2020 with a challenging health situation, I found myself practically jogging to work the other day. And I hadn’t even had any coffee yet!

I still had that energy when I was heading home and reading a book about how to improve as an independent publisher. After all, it’s that return commute when I am most able to focus on Elephant’s Bookshelf Press.

blogging

And it’s that energy that I’m hoping to bring to blogging in the new year, as well as to publishing.

Those of you who’ve read my blogs over the years probably recognize my seemingly annual “I’m going to blog more consistently this year” resolution. Yeah, I make that resolution a lot.

Of course, if I were blogging more consistently, I wouldn’t have to have the same resolution year after year.

But one reason I think it will be accomplished is because I’ve been thinking about you.

Yes, you! You know who you are.

You’re the one who reads these blog posts. You even send an email occasionally, when I ask a question (which I should do more often).

Let’s face it, we’re writers! We like to write emails. Even pithy ones that are short on words but long on witticism. I love those!

From my perspective, 2019 was also a year of new beginnings. I began to write a new novel, for example. I’m excited about it, and I’ll share more with you as things progress. I began 2020 with more than 22,000 words on the manuscript, so I’m not even halfway through it.

I might have had more words written, but I also re-established EBP’s focus on short story anthologies. I love short stories. I always have.

In Flight, I also got to explore my love of science fiction.

Mind you, anthologies are hard to market and sell. And science fiction is a highly competitive genre. But if you believe the stories and the authors deserve an audience, then there’s not any excuse. Publish the damn things!

That’s going to be a recurring theme in 2020, too, as we’re preparing to publish R.S. Mellette’s next novel, Dark Star Warrior: The Morian Treasure. So far, the few people who’ve received a sneak peek have loved it. We have more announcements about DSW to come, too.

In 2019, I also helped launch a new website for writers: QueryConnection. It was established in October by another fellow AQCer, C.M. Fick, and I’m going to have things to share there about what’s going on there, too. In fact, I should have another post in the next couple days about a new online event we’re pushing. (There’ll even be a raffle involved!)

If you’re a writer who wants to learn how to turn your ideas into publishable works, we’d love to have you join us. It doesn’t cost anything.

Like AQC before it (and for that matter, like From the Write Angle, one of my other late, beloved writing homes), what you put into it is your perspective and willingness to share and learn from your peers – and perhaps a few folks who’ve been around the authorial block.

So, like I said at the beginning, I’m happy to see 2019 in the rearview mirror. Because 2020 looks like it’s going to be a heck of a ride!

Talk to you all soon!

PS: What is your favorite science fiction book or series and why?

The Genesis of the Elephant

In the six years since I created Elephant’s Bookshelf Press, I’ve seen my personal writing time winnow down to a dribble.

I’m not making excuses. I chose to focus my creative time on publishing.

This year, however, that has changed. I’ve been working on two different writing projects and one major edit/revamp effort, too. In a sense, I have spawned a similar problem. Once again, I have taken large bites and tried to chew too quickly.

So, with the second quarter of the year a little past midway, I’m slowing things down a little. On the bright side, you’ll probably see more of me on the blog this way.

I want to talk about our genesis. Think of it as a “why we exist” post.

In the beginning was the word… and the word was “elephant.”

When I was a small child, I fell in love with elephants. When I learned to talk, and people asked my name, I would say, “Elephant.” I didn’t have a big nose. I was possibly small for my age, but the name wasn’t intentionally ironic.

I simply loved elephants.

As the son of a scientist who worked at perhaps the premier research laboratory of its day, I grew up among books and learning and smart-ass older brothers. Eventually a smart-ass sister would enter the mix, too. I enjoyed educational experiences that I only learned to fully appreciate years later.

And there were lots of elephants. Stuffed. On the pages of books. (I had a wonderful collection of Babar books, and many of the volumes are in my attic.)

My grandfather bought me a Dumbo that I played with so much his felt wore off, and he eventually wore a baseball-playing elephant shirt that I’d outgrown. My mother even created an elephant pillow that my daughter now sleeps on or cuddles depending on where her dreams take her in the night.

I grew up among loving parents and loving extended family members. We played together (lots of Wiffleball), prayed together, and stayed together. When sad or bad things happened, we got closer. Still do.

As genesis stories go, it’s not much. Just another happy kid from a privileged upbringing with lots of books in an unfair world.

My biggest challenges growing up, I realize now, were related to ambitions. All I wanted to do was write or play baseball.

As hard as I tried, I simply didn’t have the skills to reach the major leagues as a ballplayer. The writing came more naturally.

I’m fortunate that in my adulthood, my ambitions of making a living as a writer never left me, and I should feel proud that I’ve been living my dream of being paid to write. I do. But…

But like most dreams, they’re not quite what you expect. The nightmares are rarely as harrowing as they seem at the time. And the “normal” dreams carry more portent and potential than we might recognize.

Back to Elephant’s Bookshelf Press…

Assuming some of the readers here are friends I’ve made at AgentQuery Connect, you’ve probably heard this before, but I’ll share it anyway.

EBP arose out of e-conversations between several of my fellow moderators at AQC. We decided in 2011 that we wanted to find out what the whole e-publishing revolution was about. And while some of us had gained agents, many of us were finding the reception to our queries not so encouraging.

I couldn’t tell you when I last sent a query to an agent. Struggling with perfectionism, I was still plugging in the electrodes on my moribund manuscript waiting for lightning to strike so I could cry out, “It’s alive! Alive!”

So, I was happy to volunteer to lead the effort that became Spring Fevers, the first anthology from Elephant’s Bookshelf Press.

Initially, it was to be an e-book only, but we decided a few weeks after initially publishing that it would be fun to have a paperback.

I can’t remember which came first, the decision to publish a paperback or the decision to publish a second title, The Fall. Either way, I’d bought myself several ISBNs because I had already decided that mine would not be a one-book adventure.

Unbeknownst to me, I was developing new ambitions.

You see, Elephant’s Bookshelf Press was borne from a desire to help other writers. We wanted a way to share our stories, literally and figuratively. I built a platform, and initially I wasn’t fully aware of what that would mean.

Starting in 2015, but especially last year, I’ve spent a lot more time developing systems for EBP and determining what new products we can create. I’ve looked to develop new services for writers, not just to help them as writers, but also because it’s abundantly clear to me that being a writer in the twenty-first century is not simply about writing.

It’s about creating.

Creating books, sure. Creating websites. Creating blogs. Creating courses, perhaps. Creating partnerships. Creating relationships with readers.

Creating an audience.

Sharing and amplifying a voice.

It has been slow going. Mostly because I haven’t always understood what EBP is really about.

I know what we do: we publish books.

But why?

At Elephant’s Bookshelf Press, we love stories. We love telling them. We love hearing them. We love sharing them.

Stories are as old as humanity.

In the beginning, God snapped a finger and blessed a walking ape with an extra sense of self and a new level of curiosity. That ape started thinking in stories.

Language evolved.

Soon, that imaginative ape attracted a similarly gifted mate, and so sparked humanity.

We’re attracted to authors who tell interesting stories and tell them in an engaging manner.

Like elephants, we tend to travel in herds; at EBP, we call them anthologies. We haven’t published an anthology in a couple years now, but we will in time.

Because Elephant’s Bookshelf Press isn’t just about selling books; it’s about helping authors meet and mingle with their audiences.

Not the end.

Novelists, Meet Filmmakers. Filmmakers, Novelists

By R.S. Mellette

Right now, there seem to be two schools of production in Hollywood – those companies that make movies based on short stories or novels, and those that don’t. I haven’t run the numbers, but I’ll bet dollars to doughnuts that the first group is doing a lot better than the second.

The companies making films based on published properties tend to be either major studios or mid- to upper-end independents. A few of these companies started as uber-indies and were smart enough to acquire published work, and are now playing in the big leagues. Temple Hill with the Twilight series comes to mind.

But most uber-indie production companies don’t mess with published works. I know this because I’ve been a screener and/or programmer for the Dances With Films Festival in Los Angeles since 2001. I can’t tell you the number of submissions I’ve screened where I think, why did the filmmakers decide to tell THIS story?

I’m also a novelist. I have novelist friends all over the world who have wonderful stories they’ve told on paper. They would love to see these works made into films, but they’re completely baffled by the filmmaking community.

This article is intended to help both sides bridge the gap, meet each other, and hopefully work together on mutually beneficial projects.

I’ll start with the filmmakers:

Ladies and gentlemen, I’d like you to think long and hard about why you chose filmmaking as a career. Deep down in your soul, is the answer to that question, “I want to make movies,” or “I want to tell stories?”

Don’t cheat. If you had to choose between just making movies and just telling stories, which would it be?

Knowing thousands of filmmakers, I have a feeling that most would never give up the set. They love the sweat, pressure, art, camaraderie, adrenaline, thrill, and insanity of making movies. Creating the story on the blank page is secondary to making the story come to life, and that’s fine. That’s why you’re filmmakers.

Sure, some would rather gouge out their eyes than make someone else’s story, but most are just as happy to make any story – as long as it’s good, or the pay is high.

So, filmmakers, don’t feel like you must also be the story creator. You’re a storyteller, for sure. No doubt about it, but you don’t have to tell a story that you created. Better that you should find someone who has the same passion facing the blank page that you have facing an eager cast & crew.

That someone might be a screenwriter, sure, but many screenwriters have the same answer to the “why did you get into this business?” question as you do. So many of them – even some very good ones – want to make movies more than they want to tell stories. If you ever do take a meeting with a screenwriter, tell them you’re not going to make the movie, you’re just going to publish their story. See how they react.

Novelists, on the other hand, are 100 percent pure storytellers. Their passion is what they’ve put on the page. Your turning it into a living, breathing thing is wonderful, mostly because it means more people will be exposed to their story. And, let’s not lie, they’d also be into increased royalties, participation deals, etc.

But their passion is the page, not the stage.

Now to novelists:

Men and women of letters. There is no way around it, filmmaking – as both a business and an art – is a social endeavor. Film sets have been accurately compared to a royal court. Navigating them can be hazardous to your health.

Still, the best way to meet filmmakers is not when they are dressed nice, celebrating the premiere of their film at a festival, but when they are covered in blood, sweat, and tears while working as a Third Assistant Director on someone else’s project.

Why? The filmmaker who has just premiered has two years of trying to sell that movie to the public before they can even think about their next film.

They also have a slew of people who have been pitching them like crazy, and they’ve burned all their favors on that first film. The second one will be ten times more difficult to launch.

Meanwhile, the hardworking crew of that film are owed some favors. If they want to step up to the plate as a producer/director, their chance is next. You just have to hope they didn’t answer “to tell my stories,” to the question of why they got into this business.

But how do you get on the set? How do you get to meet filmmakers when all they do is work on each other’s projects and go to festivals?

That’s easy. Every film needs people. From extras to PAs (Production Assistants), filmmaking is social because it takes so many people make them. And there’s more good news.

Because of the availability of cheap, high-quality, digital cameras, you don’t have to live in Los Angeles or New York to find a filmmaking community. Chances are, there is a filmmaking group in whatever town you live in.

Hit the internet, find them, and join up. If you do live in a filmmaking hub, and you can afford to take a low-paying job, sign up to be an extra. The pay is terrible for non-union (and the work isn’t readily available for union), but you’re usually fed well and it’s a lot of fun.

But what do you do once you’re on the set, or in a meeting of filmmakers at a group? First, don’t try to be what you’re not! The industry is full of those people.

Don’t tell anyone you’re a screenwriter. Everyone is a screenwriter. They need another screenwriter like the Sahara needs more sand.

Just tell the truth. You’re a novelist. You don’t know anything about filmmaking, but you’d like to meet some filmmakers to maybe talk about some projects. I think you’ll find filmmakers think novelists are as mysterious as you think filmmakers are.

Okay, novelists have a way to meet filmmakers, but how do filmmakers meet novelists?
Filmmakers. Novelists write. They also read. If you’re going to reach out to a novelist, you’re going to need to read them.

But your buying all the best sellers and slogging your way through them until you find a writer you like is just like a novelist trying to network with a major filmmaker. The big novelists don’t need your uber-indie eager help with their major works.

So what’s the answer?

Short stories. Anthologies. You can get to know ten to fifteen authors reading an anthology in the time it takes to read one novel. And if you reach out to pretty much any author with, “I read your short story…” you will immediately have their attention.

Short stories are like short films. They are a labor of love. Sure, they might also be a way of testing out an idea, or just getting something done, but just like your short films, they are gems that you never forget.

I often call Elephant’s Bookshelf Press the Sun Records of publishing. Just the way Sam Phillips discovered Elvis, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, etc. Matt Sinclair has published Steven Carman, R.C. Lewis, Mindy McGinnis, and many more.

Are they as big in the writing world as Sam’s discoveries are in music? No. Not yet. If they were, you wouldn’t be able to work with them. But they are just as talented.

Filmmakers, if you’re looking for a story to tell, anthologies are a good place to start. Roller Ball, Running Man, Stand By Me, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Brokeback Mountain, Children of the Corn, and so many more feature films started life as short fiction. Fire up the Kindle app on your phone, download some anhologies, and get reading. EBP is a good place to start. When you find a writer you like, reach out. You never know what beautiful friendship might begin.

R.S. Mellette is the author of Billy Bobble Makes a Magic Wand and Billy Bobble and the Witch Hunt, both from Elephant’s Bookshelf Press. He also has written several short stories that have appeared in EBP anthologies.