Well, life seriously throws curve balls at you. Suddenly find myself having to move soon again. Hope it doesn’t interfere too much with my writing, but it may. I still want my third novel done by the end of Spring.
What I’ve learned in the past couple weeks is to choose who you put your trust in carefully. You don’t want to end up in a situation that sucks with any choice you make due to others. At least I have more trustworthy people back where I’m heading.
I want to at least write two to three blogs a week, and stream about the same. I hope to begin uploading my streams to YouTube and Facebook. This year I plan to be more active in getting myself out there as an author. Cheers to the rest of 2015!
Science Fiction
Steam and Twitch
I’m a writer that loves playing video games. Loads of fantasy and science fiction inspiration can come from playing video games.
I’ve streamed a bit on Twitch, but I hope to stream just about everything I play. I play a lot of single player games and some multiplayer ones. Some games include: Borderlands series, Garry’s Mod, Alan Wake, Don’t Starve Together, The Forest, and more.
Feel free to add me on Steam to follow what I’m playing and check out my library, or follow my Twitch to see when I’m streaming.
Shattered Soul sequel novel now available, including no spoilers to the first novel: Amazon and CreateSpace
Get the first one, Shattered Soul: Elements of Lightning, here: Amazon and CreateSpace
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays
Merry Christmas everyone and happy holidays! Thanks for everyone supporting my first year as an author and with my first two books. I hope to produce more books in 2015, so I hope that you all continue your support!
Have a great new years!
Books in paperback:
Shattered Soul: Elements of Lightning
Shattered Soul: Elements of Blood
My Sequel!
You can now get my second book on Amazon and Createspace! It’s available in paperback for $10 and eBook for $.99!
It’s a sci-fi fantasy novel with a steampunk theme, continuing my Elementalist series from Elements of Lightning.
You do NOT have to read the first book to read this one. This series will be spoiler free so you can hop in at anytime!
Wal-Mart Zombie Apocalypse
I’m not too sure if many other writers/authors have had part time jobs at Wal-Mart like I have. It could be my love for the post-apocalyptic video game series, Fallout, but I think Wal-Mart would make a great tale for such an event.
I do believe anyone with imagination or a love for horror would have thought that Wal-Mart would be a great place to hold up in an apocalypse. Or at least a place to get supplies.
I’ve worked at two Wal-Marts in the span of almost 8 months. My imagination became like a wildfire when I began to explore backrooms and stock different departments. It’s amazing how little people know Wal-Mart has until you stock it yourself.
Just recently, I began to think of a series based on this idea. Now, I probably would never get to it, due to expanding the universe of Elementalists, such as Ace Venx in Shattered Soul: Elements of Lightning.
One of my biggest questions is, if we all think about using the store in an apocalypse, would we read about it?
Editing Sequel
Working on phase one of the editing process of my sequel steampunk novel, Shattered Soul: Elements of Blood.
Following the events of the sci-fi book, Elements of Lightning, readers do not have to read the first one before this book. The Shattered Soul series will all be connected, but will not give any spoilers to other Shattered Soul novels out or to come.
With the release of the sequel, Elements of Lightning will be re-released with a bonus chapter, the prologue of Elements of Blood.
In other news, I should finally be getting an official website soon. A lot of obstacles came up in my life so I wasn’t able to yet, and the free site setups aren’t very appealing. I may be picky, but oh well.
The editing shouldn’t take too long. I hope Elements of Blood will be out before December, or a bit into December. Hey, nothing like a steampunk fantasy novel for a Christmas present, right?
Tron Inspired the Lightning Plane
I’ve been a huge fan of Disney’s Tron for years. The idea of a world inside computers sounds so cool! The Grid was a huge inspiration for the idea of my Lightning Plane.
The Lightning Plane in my novel is accessed only by those of the Lightning Element, like Ace Venx. A Lightning Elementalist must use a source of electricity or something that has electricity running through it, like computers.
I couldn’t pass the chance to homage to my favourite Disney movie(s). The Lightning Plane is a digital frontier with a fast paced environment. Made up of things that look like the inside of a computer, the plane is probably the more unique amongst the other planes that are in the novel or future novels.
More are the come in the next books, so keep an eye out for Elements of Blood soon!
Get Elements of Lightning at these two sites!
http://www.amazon.com/Shattered-Soul-Elements-Lightning-1/dp/1494814633/
https://www.createspace.com/4591145
Follow me on Facebook and Twitter!
https://www.facebook.com/brandan.chapman.1?ref=hl
Why Fiction, Why Fantasy? (Story of how I decided to become an author)
I feel like I am asked these two questions a lot. Why fiction? Why fantasy? Why not write, what people consider, “real books or stories?” I won’t forget the looks I get when I describe writing science fiction and fantasy, or the idea of being an author for a career. It took time for me to discover wanting to be a writer with the passion that I have today.
When I had gotten into reading and writing was, in fact, when I learned how to read and write in kindergarten and earlier. My older brothers both dabbled in drawing and writing stories. With very poor attempts at drawing like my brothers, I decided to try writing stories. It instantly clicked. I loved creating stories and basing characters off of my friends. My first short story consisted of Bionicles from the LEGO universe that were all based on my friends. This was even before I was big into reading. But soon enough, I was falling in love with reading. Escaping from reality, from school, into the fantastic universes of books; it was brilliant. My parents witnessed me having to be forced to read, or where they would read along with me, but it didn’t take long until they saw me reading on my own, for fun nonetheless!
As I got further into grade school, reading became more of a chore. I found almost every text uninteresting, tedious to read, and irrelevant to me. This was before I could appreciate books like I do today. As a middle school student, the books were boring and, dare I say, stupid. I continued to write my short stories all throughout school, nonetheless. I remember a time in middle school when a substitute teacher was there for one of my classes. “What would you like to be when you all grow up?” She had spoken to us. After a few students said the typical “Scientist,” “Lawyer,” “Doctor,” I decided to chime in and say, “An author.” I will never forget the response the substitute gave me. “Well, have fun being homeless and penniless.” As a kid, I took that to heart.
I continued to write every day, and thought nothing of it. My English teachers would always compliment any piece I turned in whether it be poetry or just an essay, and still I didn’t even think anything about becoming a writer. The idea had literally been killed in my mind with the sharp daggers that the substitute spat at me. Soon enough, senior year of high school approached, and I was preparing to go into college for some sort of video game designing.
As the year progressed, we started to read the book Tuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom. Before we read it in class I was extremely put off by the idea of the book. I still had a passion for the fantasy worlds of science fiction, but then I started to read the book. Albom’s writing really hit me. I loved how words on a page could move someone so much. I wanted to do that. My teacher had gotten me into many writers that year. It was that year I began reading Chaucer and started falling in love with Shakespeare. I felt like I was flying.
Senior year was flying by and I was actually considering being a writer. The thought of seeing my book on a shelf was inspiring. Graduation came right around the corner and then my first semester of college. Turns out my community college didn’t have a major for any graphic designing or English. I mean seriously? Not even English?
So I ended up with a general major of Universal Studies. Woo! My college life had begun. I started my basics with little enthusiasm. Having to take math and science was not appealing. I still dread the thought of those classes.
It was sometime in my first semester I discovered my brother Ryan was going to try to pursue game designing. He showed me several of the things that game designing includes. “I’ve always been handy with doing my art on the computer,” he explained to me, “So getting these programs would just increase my creative output.” As I stared at all the art he had about his room, that’s when I realized something from my childhood; I can’t even make simple drawings, so what makes me think I could make complex worlds or characters on a computer? “Sounds perfect for you, being a hardcore gamer and artist.” I simply replied as my gaming love wasn’t strong enough to make me want to practice art.
Not long after my first semester, I had gotten a part time job that would be ideal to any writer. I got to work around books. At least, I thought I was going to. I had applied for a Book Associate position at Hastings Entertainment. When I got the call that I was getting an interview, I was stoked. A week later I realized I was being put on the cash register. The books department loomed at the other side of the store, with the department sign always in my vision like it was just out of reach.
Second semester of college came and I decided to take a short story class. In between part time job and school, I began to have little time to write or read. I had hoped this class would be enjoyable. I mean reading short stories for homework sounds amazing, right? It was! We went over several authors. I began to fall into a whole new world of stories. I connected well because my stories at the time were only short stories. We went over people like Faulkner, Poe, Joyce, and many others. I had already loved Edgar Allan Poe, but having a class go over it was thrilling.
My second year of college came around and I was completely in love with literature. I took the class introduction to literature to have credits towards some sort of English degree, hoping I’d eventually be able to branch off into a writing degree. It was at some point in the semester that clicked with me the most. We came across a particular author. I read the syllabus and saw the pages to go to. I turned to the pages and see the words Hills Like White Elephants. Ernest Hemingway. We had gone over him in my short story class. This story was the one that made me realize that my type of writing actually has a style. I thought back to the words of my short story teacher and he said that Hemingway loved to use dialogue over description. Whether it was important to the story or not, that’s how he wrote. I write like that. I lovedialogue! I love developing characters and events through people speaking rather than just bluntly describing it, but I still described things as much as possible. It wasn’t much detail compared to that of most authors, but it reminded me highly of how Hemingway wrote in that minimalism style. I had a real style.
Finally I was moved over to the books department in Hastings. I was in love. It’s like hiring an alcoholic as a bartender. It felt magical. I wanted to read everything there was. The wall at the far end of the book department was my favourite. Science Fiction. I began to read more and more of my genre. It was the fantasy worlds I had longed for.
My first month into working the books department, I happened upon a book called The Guide to Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction by Philip Athans. The thing that made this an impulse buy was that the forward was by R.A. Salvatore. I had heard so much about Salvatore from my cousin and I saw his Drizzt series that takes place in the world of Dungeons and Dragons. I quickly began to read the guide and it became my bible. R.A. Salvatore forwarded the guide with his journey to becoming a writer. He started college a math/computer science major. Then one winter, he was snowed in and read a book he had received as a gift. When he received it, he thought nothing of it, besides that he wanted money and not a book. It was The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien. Reading this, I loved how a book changed his major completely. Similar to me almost, with how Tuesdays With Morrie opened my mind more to writing. Tolkien had always been an interest of mine, but reading that made me love the Lord of the Rings universe more and more. I soon began to read Salvatore’s series and wanted to be a writer like him.
This is when things began to finally fall into place for me as a writer. Surrounded by my future career at work, and at my last semester of community college, I began to take a newly started Creative Writing class. I was excited. To be around people who love books and wanted to write books just like me. Writing in that class gave me the means to begin writing more often. I soon started to put my short stories into a novel.
Then I was introduced to an author that the book manager at my work really enjoyed. He showed me the book American Gods by Neil Gaiman. My response at the time was, “Oh the writer for those episodes of Doctor Who!” Little did I know that Neil Gaiman would become my favourite author after just one book. Neil Gaiman and R.A. Salvatore have been the two authors that have given me the most inspiration to keep going as a writer.
So why fiction? Why fantasy? To put it simply, it’s because that’s how it has been, since my first short story to every story that followed. It’s home to me.
The Real History of Science Fiction: Robots
BBC America’s Real History of Science Fiction has blown my mind in the first part about robots. To think there is three more episodes of it is amazing. For any sci-fi writers or lovers, like myself in both cases, I highly recommend it. It is inspiring to see directors, screenwriters, authors, and actors who all love science fiction.
The first part, being about robots, transitioned from robot servants to humanity’s possible enslavement by robots. I loved hearing the unique perspectives of the people on the show, and I especially loved the recordings of Isaac Asimov.
I really recommend this miniseries to anyone who can watch it who loves history, science fiction, or even perhaps Mark Gatiss as the narrator.
New cover for my first novel!
I decided a while back that my book needed more of a fantasy look. So now my book is available with new art from the artist Cassandra. She can be found on DeviantArt and Tumblr as C-dra.
I’m quite happy with the new cover. Featuring the main character, Ace Venx, and the main bad guy, it has a much more fantasy feel to it.
You can buy it at CreateSpace or Amazon!