Shannara Readthrough: The Elves of Cintra

May Books: 3/5 (The Elves of Cintra)

If you recall, squiders, I finished Armageddon’s Children, the first book of the Genesis of Shannara, in March, and decided it ended cliff-hangery enough that I’d better go straight on to the second book. Here we are, two months later, and I powered through 50% of the book in the last four days, which should tell you how this is going to go.

It should not take me two months to get through a fantasy novel. Not even a 500ish page one.

And, just…look. I’m pretty good, when I’m reading, at turning off the author hat and being able to just enjoy the story. I don’t tend to analyze books as I go.

But what is going on here. From a writing standpoint.

This, and Armageddon’s Children, and I assume whatever the third book is (I looked it up, it’s called The Gypsy Morph), follows two distinct group of people, mainly defined by the Knight of the Word with each group. (Okay, at the beginning of Armageddon’s Children, they were more spread out, and they condensed into two distinct groups.) You have Logan Tom with the Ghosts, a street gang from Seattle made up of children, and you have Angel Perez with the elves (and you guys know how I feel about the elves being handled).

(If you missed my elves rant from the last book, feel free to go and read it, but the gist is that they were introduced badly and the whole thing is lazy and a waste.)

In a book with multiple viewpoints, I expect to jump back and forth fairly regularly between groups of people or viewpoint characters. You know, so as not to forget about other viewpoints and what is happening.

But I feel–and it’s possible I’m incorrect, because as I said, this was a slog and I did not read it very consistently–like each of the two groups had swaths of book where the other group was just forgotten. Like 50 pages at a go, at least. Maybe more. I just…from a writing standpoint, why. Were we concerned that switching more often between groups would disrupt the flow? Did one of the groups have less material, and would switching between them more often have made that apparent?

I’m not sure, but it made the flow of the story feel jerky and uneven.

Also, some of the events in this book feel…not important. I’ve learned the hard way, over the years, that things can’t just happen to have things happen. They have to connect to other events, or show characterization or growth, or reveal important worldbuilding information. And it’s possible that some of these things may be connected to events in the third book, but several of them seemed pointless, in retrospect. There’s a whole subplot about a kid from a different street gang that goes nowhere, and the kid ends up getting killed in what really felt like an attempt to get rid of a plot point that wasn’t working.

So, yeah. It was rough, squiders, I’m not going lie. I am disappointed in the worldbuilding aspects especially for the entire trilogy, because the opportunity was there to do something really cool.

Will I keep reading? Yeah. But I wonder if this disappointment will color later books that I remember more fondly.

I will probably pick up The Gypsy Morph sooner rather than later, though I’ve moved on to a different fantasy series for now.

How are you doing? Read anything good lately?

Card Story Part 6 (I think)

(I should never be trusted to keep track of things numerically. Invariably when I go back through my first drafts I have three chapter 12s and no chapter 9.)

May books: 2/5 (A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping and 10 to 25: The Science of Motivating Young People)

How’s your week going, squider? Mine’s been okay–I finished the first of my five short stories (and they’re all outlined, so I just need to write them) and also got three query rejections.

We’re entering into the last few weeks of school, however, which is a madhouse and may hamper progress going forward. Today, for example, we have a honor roll presentation, an orchestra concert, and a Scout chapter meeting. I am at least on top of my teacher things, for the most part, though I still need to get year end gifts.

(I realized as I was typing the above, that the deadline for some of those gift was, in fact, today, so I’ve taken care of those.)

Still not sure what we’re working on for the writing retreat/June alone time. I hope to at least be done with my short stories before the retreat.

Anyway, on to the cards, which continue apace:

~*~*~*~*~

A note reading: I can't even imagine
A note reading: If you don't go home & you don't stay here at school during the day--where do you go?
A note reading: Into the bunker
A note reading: What bunker?
A note reading: The one under the gym?
A note reading: How do you get in?

~*~*~*~*~

That’s it for me for today! See you soon, squider!

Card Story Part 5

May Books: 0/5

How are you, squider? I’ve been relatively productive from a writing standpoint this week (obviously not a reading one, ha), so that’s lovely.

We had a snow day on Wednesday and I couldn’t get to the cards, so we’re running a bit late. (Also I took the pics at, like, 10pm last night so apologies on the weird lighting.)

~*~*~*~*~

A note reading: The forest that surrounds the school?
A note reading: There's not a forest around the school ??
A note reading: Then how do they keep you inside?
A note reading: They don't? Are you saying you don't go home after school?
A note reading: No, seriously, you can just leave? Whenever you want?
A note reading: I mean, you're not supposed to, but I guess you could, yeah

~*~*~*~*~

See you next week!

Card Story Part 4 (and Random Musings)

April books: 3/4 (The Hum and the Shiver)

We’ll do 5 books for May, cuz why not.

It’s come to my attention that I will have 12 days in June to myself. Like, yes, I have to work and all that jazz, but the rest of the family will be off on various adventures and I will be by myself. For the first time in years and years and honestly maybe ever.

(Actually, no, I take that back, there were periods right after college where my spouse would be gone for weeks at a time for work.)

My instinct is to overplan the heck out of those days. That class on music theory I’ve been thinking about taking? A brand new exercise routine? A SCIENCE FICTION SERIES?

Alternately, I’m terrified that I will fall into my worst habits on my own. As I’ve gotten older it’s become more and more apparent that I am probably some flavor of neurodivergent that got missed because I got straight As in school, and I often joke that my family is my executive functioning, but it’s not wrong. My spouse makes sure I go to bed at a reasonable time, and chores and cooking and whatnot have to be done to make sure my children have a functional childhood. On my own I tend to slip into weird hyperfixations and bad sleeping patterns (case in point: my spouse and oldest are away on a campout this weekend, and youngest and I were up until 2 am).

(God, I am so tired. Also I meant to do this blog post on Wednesday.)

But there has to be a happy medium where I don’t get sucked into some hyperfixation for eight hours a day and can do some things I’ve been meaning to get around to. Just got to figure out how to do it.

I’m also going to a writing retreat May 28-30 (it goes through the 31st, but I have concert tickets on the night of the 30th and will have to duck out early). New location, so I don’t know exactly how it will go. But I could in theory do set-up for a big project I start those weeks in June.

Here are possibilities that I have come up with for June, thus far:

  • Take said music theory class
  • Spend more time working out (with, like, more of a plan than I’m doing right now)
  • Eat things that the rest of the family won’t
  • Start (and maybe complete?) a writing project of some sort

I feel like I had more but I’ve forgotten them at this point. Oh well.

The hope is, though, if I plan out my time, I shall stick-ish to the plan.

Anyway, on to the story. No planning has gone into this either:

~*~*~*~*~

A drawing of twisted trees
A note reading: What is with you & plants?
A note reading: Oh, so you're talking to me again?
A note reading: What can I say, I'm a sucker for a creepy ass forest
A note reading: ...do they let you in the forest?
A note reading: What forest?

~*~*~*~

I’m vaguely reminded of a podcast I used to listen to called Tanis. Each episode was full of creepy and occult story bits, but when you stepped out of the episode and thought about it, it didn’t make any sense. Not in a “things are mysterious and aren’t supposed to be perceived by humanity” sort of way, but more of a “we’re making this up as we go and have no internal consistency” sort of way.

So maybe at some point I should figure out where I’m going, but that time has yet to come.

(Also, I listened to four seasons of Tanis, so obviously it worked well enough.)

See you next week, squiders!

Card Story Part 3

April books: Still 2/4 (in the middle of like five books, why do I do this)

Edited that science fiction short I wrote earlier in the year and sent it out to a market, and have been outlining the short stories from my class. But on to whatever these shenanigans are going to turn out to be:

A note that says: What? Cross over from where?
A note that says: Never mind
A note that says: I don't understand
A note that says: Hello?
A note that says: Fine! Be that way >=(

(imagine time passing here)

A drawing of several trees

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Hm, I wonder if I should include the sketches for this in my art goals.

See you next week, squiders!

My Class is Live! (And Other Shenanigans)

April books: 2/4 (The Bookshop of Second Chances)

I finished my interconnected short stories class! It’s live on SkillShare here: https://skl.sh/48HfbY3

Hooray! It’s done! That said, I see SkillShare has, yet again, messed with teacher payments. It used to be that you got a share based on the number of minutes watched per month, but now apparently you have to have at least 75 minutes watched a month before you get anything. So, like, in February I only had 73 minutes watched, and so I got nothing. This seems…scammy. Like, they’re getting my content for free without paying me for it if I don’t meet some arbitrary limit?

This is on top of some shenanigans from a couple of years ago where if you’re not getting enough engagement with a class (people posting comments, projects) they hide the class from new people searching. As I always say, you can’t control other people, so now you’ve got the double whammy of not getting paid because you’re not getting the minutes, and not being able to get found to be watched because they’ve hidden your class.

(At least they stopped deleting classes, as far as I can tell.)

I don’t spend a ton of time on the SkillShare stuff. It’s supposed to be a background thing, a bit of extra income on the side, and I don’t have a huge desire to use up my writing time on marketing it. That’s on me, for sure, choices and all that, but it does feel like it’s purposefully hard to make the platform work if you’re not dedicated to being a top performer. And I wonder if top performers are still making the money they were a few years ago, or if their income has also gone down due to corporate shenanigans.

(Every so often I consider taking my classes to another platform, but none of them work quite the same, and it is easy on the backend on SkillShare. But I spend time on my classes and not getting paid when they’re making money off of them is all kinds of BS, so I shall have to look again and make some decisions. Not right now, though. Summer, probably.)

In other corporate shenanigans, Draft2Digital has announced that they’re going to start charging $12 a year maintenance fees for any author not earning at least $100/annually on the platform. D2D bought out Smashwords and is an indie book distribution system that almost everyone uses. In theory they’re doing it to try and limit the amount of AI slop being put out through them, but once again it’s really only going to hurt indie authors who are already not doing well. I’m not sure I make $100 a year through them. The majority of my sales come through Amazon, and most of D2D’s markets are tiny without much of a user base. Most of the sales I do make through there are to various library systems.

I’ve done some math because why not. If an ebook costs $2.99, you’d have to sell ~56 of them through D2D to hit the minimum threshold to not have to pay the fee. A quick search tells me 90% of indie books sell less than 100 copies. (That may include the AI slop books. I’m not sure.) And I suspect most other indie authors also sell 99% of their books through Amazon, so essentially everyone except those people doing extremely well or those purposefully marketing outside Amazon (and doing extremely well) is going to have to pay this maintenance fee.

Smashwords was completely free aside from their cut of the sales for, like, fifteen years, just saying.

And I know the AI slop is a problem, and I don’t know what the solution to it is, but it does seem like penalizing those not doing well isn’t going to help it.

Whew. That was a lot of Thoughts.

In other good news, I had a story accepted by an anthology! I turned in the contract and edits yesterday and I’m looking forward to seeing the final product.

Next steps moving forward is to actually write the short stories I outlined for my class. I also had some writing friends read the scifi short I wrote at the beginning of the year and provide feedback, so I’m going to do a few edits on that and then send it out as well.

Not a lot of the querying front (I also haven’t sent out queries in a few months due to the Scouting drama) but I have been talking to my SFWA mentor, who has been lovely and very helpful to talk to. If nothing else, it’s good to bounce my feelings off of someone who knows what they’re doing.

Anyway, hope you’re doing well, squider, and I’ll see you later in the week!

Card Story Part 2 (And a Class Update)

April books: 1/4 (nothing new)

Well, squiders, I have finished recording and editing my videos for my SkillShare class. This proved more annoying than necessary as I’ve been using ClipChamp for editing, and apparently it decided to eat the last 20-30 seconds of each of my videos, meaning I had to re-record whole sections in some cases. So now I just need to get the class ready to go in SkillShare and make it live (and hope SkillShare doesn’t find something to be grumpy about) and then the class part is done, and I can focus on writing the stories and doing what I will. It will be nice to see the other end of the videos, which are always the worst part.

I also had a story accepted to an anthology, so that’s fun!

I’m also starting to think ahead. I’ve got my writing retreat at the end of May, and then I’ll have a few weeks all to myself in June as the rest of my family will be at various summer camps. So, in theory, I will have a large block of potential writing time to perhaps start (and get through) a new project. The gears, they are a-turning.

Did more of my card story. Do I know where it is going? I do not.

~*~*~*~*~*~

A note that says "What?"
A note that says "It is a school, but not everyone is there during the day"
A note that says, "So, what, you're like the janitor? Going thru student's desks? EW"
A note that says "It's my desk too"
A note that says "Your desk? What? It's just my stuff inside"
A note that says "Well, things don't always cross over"

See you next week, squiders!

Is This Anything? (Card Story, Part 1)

April Books: 1/4 (The Late Mrs. Willoughby)

As I mentioned…recently…at work I was donated a stack of weird yellow cards with a hole in the bottom. (I did ask various peoples, and the older woman who helps me on Tuesdays told me they were most likely rolodex dividers, as normal rolodex cards would have lines on them for the information.)

(I then realized that my kids probably had no idea what a rolodex even was, as even I have only seen like, two, in my whole life, and they were near the beginning. And I did ask, and yes, they had no idea.)

ANYWAY, I had this idea that maybe I would use said cards in some sort of story, and this week, I’ve started. Except I realized that it would be weird for everyone in the story to be using the same weird, archaic possibly-rolodex divider cards. In the same bag, I was also given purple index cards that are the size of normal index cards, were they cut in half.

So, without further adieu, whatever this is going to end up being:

A drawing of four houseplants
A note which says "Nice drawing"
A note which says "Nice drawing" larger
A note that says "Do I know you?" with "I'm sorry" scratched out above
A note that says "I doubt it - you're here during the day, right?"
A note that says "Of course-everyone's here during the day. It's a school"
A note that says "Well, you're right about one of those things"

~*~*~*~*~

So I guess we’ll see where this goes.

Have a good weekend, squiders, and I’ll see you next week.

Foiled By My Laptop Again

Evening, squiders.

I had grand plans to get my videos for my class edited over the past two days. Part of the issue is still ongoing drama and mental burnout, but some of it is technology related.

When I was younger, most notably when I was in college, I carried my laptop everywhere with me, and I would break it out whenever I could to get some writing done. On the bus, in my fraternity’s offices between classes, at the local tea shop, sometimes even if I got to class early. A lot of authors–especially ones in busy times of life–swear by doing a little whenever you can, stealing ten minutes here, fifteen minutes here.

I don’t operate that way as much nowadays, but I would like to do it more. Twenty minutes between the end of work and when I need to pick up the first child from school, fifteen minutes while dinner is in the oven, ten minutes while I wait for my youngest to get dressed in the morning.

It’s a nice idea, but I run into complications, and it seems to be timed both to when I’m trying to steal a few minutes, or when I, in theory, have several hours in which to work.

And all these complications are technology based.

My laptop of twenty years ago at college was great. Open it, turn it on, off you go. But it feels like modern technology has somehow made things worse.

Here is a rundown of some of issues I have run into over the last few months when I’ve sat down to work:

  • Laptop has forgotten how to turn on and needs a complete refresh (which sometimes takes hours, and then you have to reinstall everything)
  • Laptop has forgotten the pin I use to log into it (today)
  • Laptop cannot figure out how to connect to a wifi network it has connected to hundreds of times
  • Laptop has decided that the menus will not load in Windows itself
  • Laptop has decided to drop network for no apparent reason (as evidenced by other devices continuing to have no problem)
  • Laptop was last connected to the dock and has forgotten how to operate independently
  • Laptop was last not connected to the dock and has forgotten how to connect to the keyboard/mouse and/or monitor
  • Laptop has decided it does not like this particular power supply

Of course, in the old days everything was on the laptop itself and now everything is in the Cloud, which is good in some ways but frustrating as heck if we’re playing “What Internet?”

If I have fifteen minutes to work and I have to spend ten of them fighting with some dumb “our technology has gotten too smart for its own good” problem, then I cannot actually steal ten minutes here, fifteen minutes there.

(Also if the laptop has forgotten how to turn on and needs a reset, then we’re looking at hours of work before the laptop is useable again, so forget it.)

I mean, yes, storing things on the Cloud is nice! I haven’t lost anything to not being backed up in years! But I do wish I could just reliably turn the computer on and get going immediately without any shenanigans. And maybe it is specifically this laptop, and this is all a sign that perhaps I should save up to get a new one. (Please tell me if you are having these same problems.)

All this to say that I had time, and I did not get as far as I wanted.

How are you doing, squiders? Do you have a laptop you like and that works reliably?

Oops, I Waited Too Long

March books: 5/5 (The Deck of Omens)

Happy Wednesday, squiders. I have managed to drag myself away from BTS’s 2.0 music video to write you today’s blog post.

Like many avid readers, I have more books than I may ever be able to read. In addition to that, I maintain two digital TBR (to be read) lists: one on Goodreads, and one on my library system. Periodically I will go through these lists and pick out books, usually once a month or so, because I do try to not be in the middle of too many books, and also not to have more books out from the library than I can actually read in a time period.

(I picked up two books from the library about an hour ago, one from my library TBR and one by my SFWA mentor.)

(It is interesting how it’s easier for me to select a book from a digital TBR and request it from the library instead of looking at my book shelves and choosing books I own to read. I wonder why that is.)

Last month I picked out The Deck of Omens from my Goodreads TBR list. This is the sequel to The Devouring Gray (which I do actually own), which I would classify as YA dark fantasy or perhaps horror. According to Goodreads I read the first book in Sept of 2020 and shelved the sequel.

Squiders, I am not great with series. I read a lot of first books and decide not to move forward. I almost never move directly from one book to the next, even when I am interested in continuing on. (Six of Crows and Crooked Kingdom earlier this year was an exception, as is Armageddon’s Children and The Elves of Cintra, which I have started.) Often with series I am interested in, I shelve the second book and come to it some time later, which is obviously what I did here.

Until last month, when I pulled The Deck of Omens out of my TBR, I’d forgotten that there was a sequel.

Now, obviously, reading series like I do is kind of dumb. But in my defense, I’m generally pretty good about remembering what was happening and being able to jump back into the world and the story.

But almost six years is apparently the limit. The Deck of Omens was well-written and the author left plenty of reminders, but even though I enjoyed the book and the story, I felt like I was missing something the whole way through. (Also I noticed after the fact that one character did not have a viewpoint in this book though I believe he did in the first book. Like, he was still there, but not as a viewpoint character, which was a very interesting choice and kudos for that.)

So don’t be me, squiders. Don’t leave sequels for years and years.

Will I learn a lesson from this?

I mean, probably not. But there’s always a chance.

Have a good week, squiders, and try not to fall for too many April Fools things. (Though I’ve seen, like, none this year?)

Books by Kit Campbell

City of Hope and Ruin cover
AmazonKoboBarnes%20and%20NobleiBookscustom
Shards cover
AmazonKoboSmashwordsBarnes%20and%20NobleiBookscustom
Hidden Worlds cover
AmazonKoboSmashwordsBarnes%20and%20NobleiBookscustom