Talking covers…

So last time I had been up till silly in the morning making a cover for my next novel (still with the editor.) Having done so I put it out to the wide world of the interweb in search of those things everyone has.

No not arseholes.

The other thing everyone has, opinions.

Opinions which as it turned out were mostly informed, and informative, so I took them on board the airship and played about with the cover again last night. Graphic artists (which I am not) much like writers thrive on a bit of feedback. The fonts needed work, both for the title and the little subtitle. Certain aspects were a tad flat or unclear, but it was more than that. There were things people said they liked, and the vast majority of people were very positive about the cover in general. the changes I’ve made I feel have added to what people liked and not detracted from the overall effect. It also allowed me to play with a couple of little easter eggs in the cover, little bits you would not notice unless you went looking. Things you would not even realise were deliberate unless perhaps you had read the novel itself.

Version 1 is on the left and the revised version on the right, as hopefully, you can tell.

I am sure there will be more faffing on with the cover before I am done. If self-publishing has taught me anything, its that getting the cover of a book right is very important. It doesn’t matter how good, or for that matter bad, your writing is, if people don’t take a second look at the cover. You have to get it in their hands in the bookshop, or in the case of an ebook get them to click on the link. You have to have something which speaks to the potential reader.

Oh the blubs matter, the back cover matters, the way you market it, the way you set up the kindle version and a whole lot of other stuff, but people do and will judge a book by its cover, even unintentionally. Which is why this may or may not be the final cover I go with. All the same, I am very pleased with this one so far and the response it has been getting. Given this is my fourth book, it’s probably a good thing that I am starting to get something right…

Of course, having messed with this some more, I also have considered going back and redoing the covers on a couple of my earlier novels and even tweaking the cover to my novella. Because I have learned a few new tricks and a bit more about how to make a cover work well. I’ll try not to become a cover bore in the process…

adios for now

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A not quite cover reveal…

Bitten by a bout of insomnia, and a need to do something creative to tired my overactive mind I decided to work on a new concept cover for my forthcoming Hannibal Smyth novel, ‘A Spider In the Eye’. At 5:30Am on Sunday morning after several hours of this, I came up with the cover design below.

Of course, my no longer sleep deprived mind, can now see all the little flaws in the, not so final, design, and if I end up going with this one I will have a whole lot of tweaking to do. But still, all things considered, it was a productive few hours. Opinions on the design, as ever, welcome…

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Philosophical notes…

Music features a lot in my novel Passing Place, music and my love of lyrics, which I often find have a certain philosophical leaning. Of course, they were not always written with a philosophical mindset I am sure. But on occasion, one finds little nuggets of philosophy in the strangest of places. Mainly though this list of qazi philosophical utterings started out from a throwaway witticism my twitter account… So if your looking for some fine insights into the human condition, this may not be the list for you, but hey if a couple of these make you smile, well then, like the philosopher Jagger once stated…

You can’t always get what you want

but as he goes on to say…

Sometimes,

if you try real hard,

you might get what you need

: Jagger

Leave the knight of Dartford on one side. According to the American Blue collar philosopher Springsteen…

We are alive

And though our bodies lie alone here in the dark

Our spirits rise

To carry the fire and light the spark

: Springsteen

Make of that what you will…

Meanwhile, worthy of consideration is the work of a trio of philosophers Felder/Henley&Frey:

‘Some dance to remember, some dance to forget’

But as they go on to say

(you/they) ‘just can’t kill the beast’

:Felder/Henley&Frey

While back in the 80’s with vitriolic splendour Peters asked of man’s perspicacity to hide when dark clouds loom…

All cards are marked, all fates will collide

The truth is the truth or the truth is surely a lie

Get back in your shelter if you can’t come down off the fence

:Peters

There may be more of this to come…

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Blind Chance Theory: Amendum

A quick follow up to Blind Chance Theory.

I have now read the limited edition excerpt of C G Hatton’s ‘Arunday’s Convergence’. Book 2 of Thieves’ Guild: Bhenykhn Wars. A little one chapter bookette that C.G. had made for MCM Comic Con. Which for reason best known to herself she was kind enough to send me, as I mentioned in the last post. So I think I should say a few words about it. The words that spring to mind are as follows…

“Damn you C.G.Hatton!”

Why ‘Damn you C.G.Hatton’ you ask? Because I am going to have to wait until April next year before I get to read the rest of it. As ever it is fast, breakneck sci-fi written to be read, written to be enjoyed for the love of the thing, and written with a passion for her story, universe and characters that is hard to match.

One chapter in and Hil is in a world of trouble, wounded, running for his life, while what few allies he has are falling around him. Hil isn’t paranoid about this, he knows that almost everyone is out to get him. Everything has gone wrong on his tab, and the only chance he has is to make for the extraction point, leaving the last of his allies in his wake.

Oh, I would not have missed reading this for the world and that little ‘damn you’ is tongue in cheek. But C.G.Hatton’s work never disappoints. If you haven’t read any yet (and why not), then your missing out on a universe of joyous abandon. It’s not out and out hard sci-fi, but it’s not pulp either. It is in a class of its own, it’s just fun, fast, thrilling rollercoaster fun sci-fi, on one level at least. And god knows there is nothing wrong with that… I defy anyone to read Residual Belligerence and not come away exhausted, and utterly entertained at the same time.

Its also smart intelligent sci-fi, the characters, worlds, and ideas behind the rollercoaster reflect more than just pulp figures. The characters have depth, as do the stories. They have humanity and realism to them, which is what makes the novels stand out for me. Read Kheris Burning and tell me you don’t come back with a better understanding of fringes of our own world you may not otherwise have put much thought into.

So when I tell you I am looking forward to reading the whole of Arunday’s Convergence, you can take me at my word. My appetite for the next Thieve’s Guild novel is all the more ravenous for this sneak peek of what is to come. So yer…

“Damn you C.G.Hatton!”

And bless yer little cotton socks too…

 

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Blind Chance Theory

Occasionally things happen. No one knows why this is the case.

Personally, I favour a little-known variant of Chaos Theory, BCT or Blind Chance Theory. Blind Chance Theory, which states that in an infinite universe, given an infinite amount of time, some stuff is bound, at some point, to happen. Therefore you should not be surprised when things do happen.

Of course, Blind Chance Theory, a theory which explains everything at the end of the day, is somewhat flawed as a concept for two reasons:

  • Firstly the universe is not actually infinite, it can’t be because it is expanding. Infinity can not get bigger, by definition.
  • Secondly, time has a starting point and in the eventual heat death of the universe an endpoint. Ergo it too is not infinite.

But still, despite these somewhat fundamental flaws in Blind Chance Theory, occasionally things still happen, no one is entirely sure why this is the case, no matter what they tell you to the contrary.

Disclaimer: Some theologians may disagree with the above statement and state that they are entirely sure why things occasional happen, and use a three letter word that acts as a catch-all to there own prefered theory of existence.

Disclaimer, on the disclaimer: If theologians are actually entirely sure about the existence of god then they negate the need for faith. As the need for faith is the precept of all religion using the word ‘Because God’ to explain everything does not constitute being entirely sure why thing happen. Ergo we are back to BCT…

What always seems remarkable to me, however, is not that things happen. It’s that occasionally things happen for a reason. Once in a while, things happen for a good reason. Once in a while life seems a little bit brighter and more cheerful. Like when you’re waiting for some mail to arrive, you really don’t want. A bill, or a parking ticket or some other such irritation of modern life. When instead of that you get something in the mail that makes you smile, and for no reason that will make sense to anyone but you, makes the universe seem a little less of a cold expansive near infinite space filled mostly with nothing, where things occasionally happen.

Talking of things just happening, I started this post knowing where I was going to end it, I had no idea how I was going to get there, or what I would talk about along the way. If all of this makes sense to you, feel free to drop me a postcard explaining what you think I am talking about, because sometimes I leave the writing of a post down to blind chance as well…

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Got this little collectable gem in the post this morning. (a collectable free preview chapter of the next thief’s guild novel made for MCM ComicCon in London by C.G.Hatton) One of the joys of being a writer, remarkably, or otherwise, is getting to know other writers, and finding they are wonderfully generous of spirit and generous with both their time and their friendship. So this put a little joy into a wet Monday morning as I piled out of the door to the day job, late as usual. I have evangelised about C.G’s work before on more than one occasion. If I have not convinced you to try her books yet, then you haven’t been paying attention. Suffice to say you should.

Besides which, even on cold October mornings, when you’re running late…

Occasionally things happen. Sometimes these things are good.

 

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Insidious horizons: Hacked Future

‘The future’s bright… Utopian in fact… No, really it is…”

Erm… or then again, maybe it’s not as bright as it seemed in December last year when that jolly little quote above was the opening lines of a blog/review of K R Baucherel’s first novel ‘Bitcoin Hurricane’. Reading her second novel ‘Hacked future’ I noticed a darker tinge to the horizon. A future that may seem bright, but has some insidious elements to it. Elements that made me itch a little in uncomfortable ways, because in common with the previous outing of her SimCavalier, white hat hacker protagonist, the future is one that is real and all too possible.

Cameron Silvera’s world is one that has faced the challenges we face today and come out the other side. Burgundy grapes are grown on the south facing slopes of the North Yorkshire Moors, English summers are no longer a slightly less wet weekend in July, Esports have become as big a draw as real sports, and air travel has become a rarity, while private cars have been replaced by fleets of driverless vehicles, and everyone has an id-chip in their hand, e-wallets of bitcoins, smart fridges, and the sky is full of delivery drones… And all this is only twenty or so years in the future… Which would sound farfetched to someone who had not been born in the seventies and followed the technology wave all the way up for the last few decades.

Image result for Insidious horizons: Hacked Future

It’s not a far-fetched world, its a world we are marching towards. Baucherel is a futurist, not a fantasist, and while this may not be the shape of the world in another couple of decades, I would not want to bet against it being something that closely resembles it. Indeed that’s one of the main strengths of both novels, this is a future you can see, you can feel in the wind, this is the shape of things to come and feels very real because of it. But it is also a little bit darker than it first seems if you look at it a little closer…

It’s an insidious thing this future, not least because of the way Baucherel writes it. On face value, everything seems bright, everything seems good. The world has coped with the problems of global warming and new technology well. Things are on the face of it all bright and shiny, and the author manages to make it feel that way, most of the time. But once in a while, there is something else. A little niggle, something unsettling, a little itch you can’t quite scratch. There is something about this future that is not altogether as wholesome as Baucherel make it seem on the surface. And that is a neat trick, one that is hard to pull off. Anyone can do that in a dystopia if the world is grim enough and dark enough. But to do that in what on the surface is a utopian vision and do it with a subtle touch. That’s something else entirely.

Take those chips I mentioned. Little bio-tagged chips under the skin, giving you access to your accounts, opening your doors. Tracking you, logging information about you, information uploaded to insurance agencies who set premiums based on data, what you eat, how much exercise you get, what vaccinations you have had…  Household cupboards restrict access to cookies if you’ve had too much junk food, so as not to void your insurance… Health insurance based on real-time information, so no cookie for you unless you sign a waiver to increase your premiums…

Who would agree to a chip like that… Yet if access to everything you can imagine is tied to your chip, why kids will get there first chips fitted at school, particularly if the school’s security systems are keyed to chips rather than access cards… And once you have one, well you’re in the system, but at least there are plenty of apps for it, and all your friends have one… Besides who would miss-use data like that…

Insidious isn’t it…

As I say, what makes these novels fun and interesting is the very real future they envision. Baucherel really is a futurist, working with new technologies and the new tech community. So while this is science fiction, it is not far from science fact, merely an extension of technology today into the future.

Hacked Future picks up where the previous novel ended, and flows neatly into a new story as involving and interesting as the last. It will keep you guessing, and you’ll probably be wrong. My own guesses as to where things might go were scarier perhaps than where this story takes you, but I suspect that is because I was seeing insidious things that are yet to come in the next novel, and the next… Because the future for Cameron Silvera has only just got started, which is good, as I am looking forward to the next instalment already, as that bright future starts to look a little darker all the time… While remaining so real, so ground in the possible, and so well written that it is easy to forget your reading about a future that has not happened yet, it feels like a contemporary thriller, while all the time it is slipping further under your skin, till you look up at 4 in the morning and wonder if you have been reading a vision of the future at all, or just the world your going to wake up into sometime soon… Now that is the sign of a good writer…

Anyway, read the opening few pages yourself and see where the future takes you, its closer than you think…

 

I also interviewed K R Baucherel a few weeks ago if you want further insights into her novels and writing in general. LINK TO INTERVIEW 

A final note, a question that is mildly irreverent I know. But one that this novel also inspired on a dark insomnia beset four in the morning a few nights ago.

Do grasshoppers breath?

If you want that explained, why you’ll have to read the novel yourself… won’t you

 

Mark

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New Rules…

From time to time I feel that we ( humanity in general, and writers specifically) need some new rules to live by. (yer okay I am totally borrowing this concept from elsewhere). Occasionally I just need to get them out of my system as well…

Here are some recent ‘new rules’ that have occurred to me…

New Rule#1. The Bush Rule. War’s are no longer to be conducted against verbs, if you are declaring a war, it has to be against a noun…

New Rule#2. The May Rule. Leaders of political parties must never be seen dancing, including but not exclusively, up to the podium before making a speech…

New Rule#3. The Hipster Rule. No one is allowed Chinese character tattoos unless they have verified first what the characters mean with someone who actually speaks Chinese:

New Rule#4. The Specific Case I Know Of Rule.  Having ‘Beef noodle soup’ tattooed on your back (in Chinese characters) is not an expression of your spirituality.

New Rule#5. The Hemmingway Rule. If you would never use the word as part of your normal vocabulary, don’t use it when you write.

WiseWordsWriters1

New Rule#6. The EL James Rule. If you don’t actually have a vocabulary don’t write till you develop one.

New Rule#6. The Dan Brown Rule. When the villain shows up a third of the way into a novel don’t hang a  large sound around ethre neck saying ‘I am the villain, look at me’, and expect people not to notice.

New Rule#7. The Megan Harry Rule. A woman getting pregnant to her husband six months after they got married does not constitute a major international news story.

New Rule#8. The Internet Reviewer Rule. No opinions on the quality or worth of a movie should be expressed in any way until it has actually been released.

New Rule#9. The Ghostbusters rule. Remaking a movie classic with a new twist is not destroying your childhood, get over yourselves.

New Rule#10. The Doctor Rule. Two hearted Aliens from another world who travel throughout time and space and periodically regenerate into occasionally older, more Scottish, version of themselves, can also regenerate as a female alien with a Yorkshire accent. again get over yourselves.

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New Rule#11. Your Opinion Rule. You’re entitled to have one at odds to my own, but I am entitled to mock it, if its is rediclous…

New Rule#12. The New Rule, Rule. All new rules are subject to revision, the rules can and will change, except the ones about Doctor Who as Jodie Whittaker’s doctor has been frankly awesome so far…

 

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Pickman’s Model: TCL #49

Whatever your opinion on the literary merits of the tentacle loving stenographer of old Providence town, it is hard to ignore the sheer influence his works have had on the wider fictional and creative world. That influence is not restricted to his more famous works alone. It’s not all Cthulhu and elder gods, mansions of madness, a fair chunk of Stephen King novels and stranger things… His less well-known works have had influences far beyond what you would by rights expect for a writer who in his own time was little known and published in periodicals and often only the amateur press.

It’s a subject I have wondered across before in this vainglorious quest to read his collected works. Sweet Ermengarde, for example, is not just a little known ‘comedy’ but is also where a German goth metal band ( currently touring the UK as it happens) got its name. (they are quite good too, and if I get chance I plan to get tickets for one of their northern gigs ). That’s only one of several musical diversions inspired by Lovecraft’s fiction. There is plenty of other stuff out there. And so we come to Pickman’s Model…

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In the case of this little tale however what it has influenced is a  little on the odd side. Because this tale, of an artist who has a passion for the macabre and who takes his work a tad too far, influences a whole subquest line in the extremely popular Fall Out 4. Indeed this tale set, like fall out 4, in Boston, led to the design of a house of horrors, the macabre portraits of bloody corpses drawn from ‘life’ after the artist hacked up bodies to pose for him in his old townhouse in the dark streets of northern Boston. If anything the Fall Out team took things further than are hinted at in the tale itself, and the blood-soaked rooms in the game are only hinted at in the tale. While Pickman himself, or at least his actions, can be found throughout the game world, in the notes he has left on the mutilated remains his would-be models. The artist come, serial killer, is one of the most viscerally repellant characters in a game set in a post-nuclear future. Not bad for a character in a run of the mill little tale that never quite pulls off what I suspect Lovecraft was trying to achieve. you can also decorate your own buildings (in game) with his artwork, if you appreciate his aesthetic. Though if you do, well your taste is questionable…

But to the story itself that inspired the Fall Out 4 fun and games… Follows a slightly different path, but one which is no less horrific in its inception. Lovecraft’s Pickman is not a serial killer painting his crimes but a man who has sought out the dwellers in the darkness. His paintings of ghoulish grotesquery are painted form life. And in the end, having stared into the abyss as it were…  Well, Nietzsche has something to say on that subject.

This isn’t the strongest piece of Lovecraft fiction, but at the same time it is far from the weakest either, at the end of the day it’s a middling little tale. Like much of Lovecraft, what it has inspired is so much more than the subject of that inspiration. So it’s a steady three tentacles, read it, don’t read it, its hard to recommend or not.

3out 6

Further Lovecraftian witterings as ever can be found here

On the other hand, stalking Pickman through the cellars of his house and trying not to look too closely at the twisted piles of bodies he has arranged as art installations in Fall Out 4 I can highly recommend…

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Cider Lane at a Sale price on Kindle for the week…

As the title says. My first novel, which was published way back in the dim dark days of 2015, is on at a promotional price on Kindle this week of only 99c/99p.

It’s a novel about bullying, self-harm, coping mechanisms, withdrawal from the world, tragedy, and finding a way back from the brink of the void. It’s also about love, companionship, truth and joy. It’s complex, different and derived in part from personal experience. It is probably the most straightforwardly honest thing I will ever write, it is also nothing like anything else I have ever written. I am extremely proud of this odd little difficult to place book. More proud that so many people have managed to find their own truths within it, for people have taken things from the novel I never intended, but everyone who has read it seemed to have taken something from it. Some have laughed at the funny bits, some have wept at the sad bits, some have sent me messages telling me the ending upset them, or shocked them or just how much they enjoyed it.

So, right now is the perfect opportunity for you to try it yourself, or if you have already read it, to nudge someone else towards giving it a go.

CLsale

I don’t put my books on promotion prices with Kindle that often, so if your willing to take a chance on it, do so while you can.

Its a novel of the lost and the broken. Of sharing the silences, talking to the stars, and the importance of tin openers.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cider-Lane-silences-contemporar…/…/

https://www.amazon.com/Cider-Lane-silences-contemporary-…/…/

I never ask people to like and share, it feels like cheating…

Please like and share 🙂

 

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What’s in a name…

When I first began writing I had an aim in mind. Well I say that now, in truth many years have passed so this statement is a tad spurious, but certainly, as long as I prepared to remember I had a definite aim in mind. It was a simple enough aim. I wanted to see my name on the spine of a novel on a bookshop shelf. On the cover as well, but mostly the spine, because that is where you see most authors names. The exceptional ones, the famous ones, you’ll see their names on the cover when you look at a bookshop shelf. As one or two of there books will face front. But my dreams were never that ambitious. I would be happy to see my name on the spines of books on bookshop shelves.

This was an aim from way back. From the days where the place you went for books was always a bookshop. But it is an aim I still have, such a simple aim don’t you think.

Sure I want to write good books, even great books if I have any say in it, but having written them, I want to see my name on them. I want to hand a copy to my mum, (and there goes the image of the hard-boiled cynic.) with my name on it. The name she gave me when I was born, and while I am still waiting on the day, I walk into Waterstones and see my name on the spines that grave their shelves, that simple idea of handing my mum and dad a copy of a novel I have written was achieved some time ago now. And hey, you know what, that was a great day, (even though my sister had already bought my mum a copy before I got down to see her and ruined the surprise utterly… ) Such is the way with dreams…

My parents gifted me with two names, unlike my sister, and my brother I have no middle name. Just Mark Hayes, and a file name that might be. Mark is derived from the Roman Marcus, and means of mars, the Roman version of Ares, god of war. While my surname Hayes is derived from the Irish pantheon and means descendant of Aed god of fire. So it’s a fine name, a name derived from the gods themselves… Which may explain its annoying popularity…

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Therein lays the problem. As I have no middle name, as I am just plain Mark Hayes, and as I don’t have any desire to use a pen name, all my books are listed as written by Mark Hayes, my author’s page on Amazon is the author’s pages of Mark Hayes. Where you can find all my work,… But if you search Amazon by my name you don’t get a link to my author’s page, what you get is twenty pages of results.

  • There are the works of Mark Hayes, the writer of church organ music.
  • Mark Hayes, the arranger of gospel music ( who may be the same one)
  • The works of Mark Hayes, the Irish guy who lives in LA and writes books about being dumb, with Robbie Williams
  • The Mark Hayes who wrote a book about the Ideology of fascism and the far right in Britain

And several others. All of which are not this Mark Hayes. You see the problem?

Mark Hayes, the novelist, is my brand. It is who I am, and whom I want people to read. With due respect to all the other writers called Mark Hayes, I don’t want my brand, such that is is, confused with thiers. Even the Irish guy whom books look fun, ( really must get around to buying one just to satisfy my curiosity there.). The guy writing about the far right may not be of that inclination himself ( I sort of hope he is not) but I don’t want to be associated with his books either. I don’t want people looking for their books buying mine by mistake, or vice versa, I don’t want to infringe on their brands any more than I want them infringing on mine. (though I am sure the lovers of church organ music are unlikely to buy Cider Lane by mistake, mildly hilarious through that may be given some aspects of that novel.)

I started this saying I had an aim in mind when I started writing all those years ago, and certainly, it was true when I finished my first novel back in 2015. So it never occurred to me at the time to check if my name was already common parlance. It never occurred to me I should perhaps consider a pen name, and I suspect it never occurred to Patricia and John Hayes back in the grim dark days of March 1970 to give their son a middle name on the off chance he published his first novel 45 years later. So I don’t even have a simple option of using my middle initial… Like good old Phil K Dick ( the K stands for Kindred btw.. strange but true)  If I want to stand out, or more to the point want to differentiate myself from my fellow writers I will just have to make one up…

So at some point, I suspect I will, and Mark Hayes will become Mark D Hayes ( D for danger, as “Danger is my middle name”. because, why not?)  or Mark F Hayes because well Mark F-wording Hayes appeals to the 70’s child rebel in me. Or Mark (insert letter here) Hayes, because the letter doesn’t matter.

But that’s the problem, no matter what middle letter I chose, no matter what reasoning I use to come up with one. It won’t be my name on those books any more, not the name I was given back in the day days of 1970. When life was simpler, and google didn’t exist…

21st centuries problems and all that…

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