Dick and Henry: Cover Reveal by Kenneth Buff

Well, it's been a great year. I've released two books, one a collection of dark sci-fi and fantasy short stories, the other, a novel, about a  bullied boy who creates nightmares in hell.  And next year we're going to kick it off here at Polar Bear Books with a new series, Dick and Henry. Dick and Henry: The Space Saga  is a short story collection that features a space pilot and his company assigned robot who travel the galaxy, solving mysteries. This book will lead directly into a full length novel! So start the story at the beginning with Dick and Henry: The Space Saga. 

Coming January 6th.

A Giveaway, A New Book, And Future Titles by Kenneth Buff

All right, all right, all right, 2014 is trucking along, we're in the middle of December, couple more weeks and it'll be January, and then it'll be time for me to release a new book (Dick and Henry: The Space Saga, read a story from the collection HERE). And then a couple months after that it'll be time for me to release Sunbornmy sci-fi epic. I know I've stated previously that it would be released in January, but after some hard thought, I've decided to push back the release so I can get a quality content edit from my peers before I send it off to Jason for the final edit. The cover will be created by Maciej Wojtala, the guys done some great work for me already for Dick and Henry: The Space Saga, and I look forward to revealing that cover to you guys next month.

Well, I guess that's all I really had for this post...wait a minute, I forgot to mention the Goodreads giveaway I'm doing. You can enter HERE to win a print copy of Skeletons, my short story collection of dark sci-fi and horror stories. The giveaway ends January 3rd, so make sure you enter soon before the books are gone!

 

In The Footsteps of Greats by Kenneth Buff

Learning from the past. We all do that, right? No matter what our profession. You could be a teacher, a doctor, an auto mechanic, doesn’t matter. You’re as good as you are because of the people before you. That’s assuming you’re a professional. Maybe you just do this for fun. You like to mess around in the woodshop on weekends, or maybe you just like to tinker under your hood on your nights off, see if you can get more power. But what do you do when you stuck? Youtube? Google? We all study our craft, no matter what it is, no matter how Laissez fair we may be about it. We all learn from the greats. You think those guys you found on a random forum off of google aren’t really greats? They’re just pizza making enthusiast, not Johnny Di Francesco. Maybe you’re right. But who’s to say? Maybe Pete-zza really is one of the best modern chef’s, and he’s choosing to share his knowledge with you. Maybe he’s just a good pizza maker, and not great. Maybe, the whole idea of good and great are just bullshit abstract terms that have no bearing on what is actually good. That one seems like a bit of a stretch, but maybe it’s not really that far from the truth.

My point is, we all learn from what's come before. We build on our own personal greats. For me, for my writing career, the greats of the genres I write in are Asimov, PKD, and Doyle. The working greats who work in my industry are Hugh Howey, Johnny B. Truant, Sean Platt, and Joanna Penn. These are the people I watch and learn from, they’re the greats of my present, I study them as much as I study the greats of the past.

Who are your greats? Who inspires you? What drives you? My inspiration primarily comes from movies and novels. Stories told by other people. They’re what fuel me to be better. Seeing other great art makes me want to improve my own art. Makes me want to shine my writing, improve my prose, cut my bullshit and get to the story, the thing the reader came for. Which leads directly into what drives me. The need for improvement, for the next book to be better than the last, for the next story to be something that someone somewhere will want to read, and will want to read more of. That’s what pushes me to study my craft, to push out my words, and publish them for other eyes to see.

 Who are your greats? Everyone has one. Tell us yours.

2014-2015 Guide To Kenneth's Fiction by Kenneth Buff

So, I know I've been talking a lot about what's coming out in the near future, as far as books and story collections written by me, but I think that with the noise of the internet it probably hasn't rang that clear, so let me present you with the official guide to what's coming out by me in the next few months:

    Bad Dreams- (dark fantasy)

  • Expected Release Date: Between late November and early December. 
  • Plot Summary: Bad Dreams tells the story of Johnathon Clark, a bullied teenager who decides to take his own life. He finds himself in Hell, moving up from the position of mail boy, to the giver of nightmares; the bearer of bad dreams. Now John must decide if he will do the job he's been given, punishing the sinners he's been assigned, or if he will use his dark gift for something more? Will he use it to help a young girl who needs him?
  • Reason For Delay: Had some issues with the cover design, but they've been addressed and the release will be coming very soon. 

    Sunborn- (science fiction)

  • Release Date: January 5th. 
  • Plot Summary: Have you ever felt alone in the world? Daniels feels that way, only it's not just a feeling, it's the simple truth. The planet has died around him, and he's all that's left in a world of ice and water. That is until something brings him to Decropolis: a city made of ice and filled with people—living people. Now Daniels must relearn how to interact with other human beings, and learn a whole new lessons in what mankind is capable of when all the rules have been broken. Can Daniels survive the war that's coming? A war brewing beneath the ground.

    Dick and Henry: The Space Saga-(science fiction)                

  • Release Date: January 5th.

  • Plot Summary: Dick Shannon is a transport pilot for the interplanetary corporation Micro Grocer. His job is to deliver fresh vegetables from MG harvest planets to MG silo stations. The job is interesting enough, it pays the bills, and leaves him with enough cash left over to save for the dream home back on planet Earth. The only problem is the company is damn cheap and refuses to hire outside help. Every time something goes wrong on a station or a harvest planet Dick seems to be in the neighborhood, and he and his harvest bot, HN-R3—who he refers to as Henry—are required to investigate the issue. Whether it be missing employees, a fallen tower, or a mysterious robot wedding, Dick and Henry are always there, and they're always doing their best to solve the case.

So that's what I have planned for the next few months. All of the above titles are written, and you can get a sample reading of one of Dick and Henry's adventures HERE. But just because I have several titles completed, doesn't mean I'm slowing production. I'm currently working on the sequel to Sunborn, and when finished with Sunborn II (actual title to be announced after the release of Sunborn) I will begin work on a Dick and Henry novel, to which the short story collection will lead directly into.

Feel free to sound off in the comments below, let me know which story sounds the most exciting to you, and what type of fiction you'd like to see me write in the future.


The War of Art: Review by Kenneth Buff

It took me awhile to jump on the War of Art band wagon. I first heard about it when I was reading Johnny B. Truant and Sean Platt's how to be a self publisher book, Write.Publish.Repeat. In that book they mention Steven Pressfield's book quite a few times, so I thought, "maybe I'll get around to reading it." It wasn't until I saw Hugh Howey's post (the author of the best selling Wool series) that I decided I needed to read this thing. I have to say, I ended up liking it, if only after a week or two from when I finished it.

So let me start off by saying that I as I was reading The War of Art, I felt like I disagreed with a lot of what Pressfield was saying, or at least I felt that it wasn't really worth saying. Who care's if if the muse we get our ideas from are angels or if it's just a predisposed genetic trait that perhaps some of us have and others don't? (I disagree with both of these theories, instead believing all humans are capable of being story tellers, it's just practice that makes one good at it). The book is filled with philosophical debates like this, but I think most artists, or craftsman for that matter, don't worry about where their gift came from, they just use it and sharpen it to a point as they perfect their art. So that's the background noise that fills the book, but the front stuff, the stuff that's most important, is the parts of the book that talk about what Pressfield calls "resistance." Now this is the part of the book that later made me realize that I actually liked it. Here he's not blabbering about what is or isn't, he's referring to something every person on Earth has felt before. It's that feeling you get when you want to start your own business, but a voice in your head tells you, "That would never work." It's the voice that says, "You don't have enough self control to exercise regularly, don't even bother looking into the price of a gym membership." In short, resistance is the voice in everyone's head that tells them they're a failure, and that risk you're considering is never worth taking.

Resistance is an asshole, and this book tells you to not only ignore it, but to defy it. To trust that everyone feels this way, that every great before you, every person who ever lived their life the way they wanted to; they felt the same way. Oddly enough, these simple facts that seem self evident, when read from somebody elses voice, they sure do feel comforting. Especially when you're navigating the scary and often times lonely world of self publishing. I say lonely, even though I've had the great fortune of having many supportive friends and family who've assisted me on my path to self publishing, writing is still a solitary craft, and it doesn't take much for you to begin questioning if every word you've written in the last month has been a complete waste of your time, and even worse, if that's what everything you write will be from now on. These thoughts are just resistance, Pressfield knows this, and because of his book, The War of Art, now so do we. So if you're a writer, an illustrator, an athlete, or if your someone who's just looking to try something new, something that's scary and you're not sure you can talk yourself into it, pick up this book, it could be the thing that sparks your will, and overturns that voice of resistance growing in your head.

Skeletons and Kindle Select by Kenneth Buff

I'm trying it out. For those of you who don't know, Kindle Select is an option Amazon gives it's contributors, where the contributor agrees to sell their book exclusively on Amazon for a period of 90 days. In exchange for exclusivity the author is given 5 days where he or she can offer their book for free and they offer a sales system, that they call Kindle Countdown Deals, where the author can lower the price of their book which features a timer letting the shopper know how long the book will be available for the reduced price. They also offer your book to Kindle Prime members as part of their library they can borrow from, which the author receives a royalty for.

Of course going Select has its pros and its cons. The pros being that these benefits are actually pretty good marketing tools when combined with outside ads, or marketing pushes. The cons are that your book is not available to the customers who only shop on Barnes and Noble, Kobo, or ibooks. The majority of sales on most authors titles do happen on Amazon, but not all sales happen there, and there have of course been cases of some authors books exploding on other sites, such as Barnes and Noble, while their sales have stayed stagnant on Amazon, that's not the norm, but it can happen.

These are the things I took into consideration when deciding to go select with my short story collection Skeletons. I believe, that for me, the benefits of Select out weigh the potential sales of other retailers. The reason I say this is simply because I am a new author on the scene, I'm still building credibility through sales and reviews, so not having my work on every platform doesn't hurt me the way it would hurt someone who already has an established audience, one that may include readers who only shop on retailers outside of Amazon. All future novels, at least for now, will be available on all platforms, but for now Skeletons will only be available on Amazon. 

Skeletons can be found for sale on Amazon by clicking HERE