- Brad’s novel The Winds of Khalakovo hit the Boswell Books bestseller list last week, and was chosen by the YetiStomper book blog as the Debut of the Month.
- Martha’s novel The Cloud Roads got a four star review from SF Signal.
- Martha, Katy, and Stina were featured in an article in the Austin American Statesman
- The Cascadia Subduction Zone did an excellent literary critique of Stina’s novel Of Blood and Honey in their latest issue
- Martha is doing a book signing for The Cloud Roads today, April 30, at Murder by the Book in Houston, Texas at 4:30pm.
- John and Stina are both at the World Horror Convention in Austin, Texas this weekend, so go say hi if you’re attending!
Join us next week as we discuss writing in other media (screenplays, comics, games, etc), starting tomorrow with a post from our resident guest blogger Martha Wells on her experience writing tie-in novels.
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When I was a kid everyone I knew had posters of rock stars on their walls. Not me. Authors were my rock stars. I met Ray Bradbury once when I randomly walked into BookPeople. He was having a signing. I located a copy of Something Wicked This Way Comes and jumped into the line. Of course, being shy, I did everything wrong. Which means I gaped at him like he was some sort of visiting deity and mumbled something about how much he’d influenced me. (It’s possible I drooled.) He, in turn, looked at me as if I were some sort of maniac. I was mortified and decided then and there that I’d never again approach one of my heros. I was fine worshipping from afar. I never wanted my heros to look at me as Ray Bradbury had.
I love meeting my favorite authors, but from a nice, safe remove – like, sitting in the audience of a convention panel, or watching a filmed interview. Better that way for both of us, really. Many introverts retreat into silence when nervous in a social setting. Alas, I am not that kind of introvert. When I’m nervous talking to someone, I blurt out whatever random thoughts enter my head, no matter how idiotic I sound.
Will McIntosh is a Hugo award winner and Nebula finalist whose short stories have appeared in Asimov’s (where he won the 2010 Reader’s Award for short story), Strange Horizons, Science Fiction and Fantasy: Best of the Year, and others. His debut novel, 

