sábado, 15 de abril de 2017

A new writing project

I'm quite the oddball writer indeed.

While the normal person can take years to write their debut novel (and I'm merely talking about the 2% of aspiring authors that start to write a book that actually finish their draft), I wrote an absurd 6 books in 2 years.

And if writing the books in an odd order wasn't enough (I wrote the 4th book first and the 2nd last), I am yet doing another strange thing.

I garner more writing inspiration when I am under a huge degree of emotional stress and my current job is indeed supplying me with a new wave of ideas (too bad it doesn't come with more free time to write). I had a dream the other day that has a potential writing plot idea for a novella. I'm thinking of linking the plot with some themes from An Ominous Book without it being a sequel as such. Kind of like how Rogue One is sorta related to Star Wars without being directly related to the main plot. I still have to refine what I'll do with the story, so many possibilities.

It's well-known that I have an unfinished 7th novel. I have around 70% of the novel written and the ending, but I haven't touched the epic battle. I have a broad idea what I want to do, but I can't seem to glue the individual scenes together in my head. Hopefully I will tackle that huge problem someday and publish the 7th novel Harlequins.

Getting to sweeter topics, I have written the first 2000 words today of a sort of related prequel novel starring Damantin. My best friend urged me to write more about him and I have finally started the project. I don't know how long it will take because of time constraints but I will try to make an effort to write at least 500 words a week. That amount seems to be doable.

As commemoration to celebrate the first baby step to more novels, I made two drawings.



Evil Nelida was to appease my eager friend because he loves her, but the Damantin drawing is a treat because he is the protagonist to this short novel. I'm ecstatic that Tioja gets to appear in the initial scene. I loved writing his character in the 5th and 6th novel and having a chance to get back into his head once again even if it's from Damantin's POV is exhilliarating to say the least.

The fact that Froylan and Spaulding are unfortunately absent from this novel means I both have the time and a need to focus on other characters.

A story that occurs in Almjarhad 180 years before Damantin sets foot in the Elf Kingdom, it's the brief story of how his birth city is attacked by a Hataraji batallion and how he and the other grey elves that can summon demonic beasts manage to liberate their city.

Many characters from the clan reappear in this story (Damantin, Tioja, Jurhim, Rumirum and Adinjandanir) along with other grey elves that can summon demonic beasts. This part will be the hardest for me to make because I simply haven't thought about these new characters and their special abilities yet.

Lest to say, I'll try to write a reasonable 500 words a week. My aim is to hit around the 40,000 word mark at the most. If you wish to be an ARC reader, please reply to this post or join my mailing list!

Cheers!

jueves, 13 de abril de 2017

My blog is getting a lot of visits lately from Slovakia

I'm going to make this post super quick. For the past 2 or 3 weeks, my blog has been getting quite a lot of visits from a most unexpected country: Slovakia.

I usually get visits from the USA and the occasional visit from a handful of other countries that have large communities of english speakers so it has been sort of strange that the small blog to feature my fantasy book series is suddenly getting a lot of traffic. I initially presumed it was just one person that looked at a handful of entries out of curiosity, but this has been going for almost 3 weeks.

I really don't know why. Could a prominent book blogger that is writing in Slovak be promoting my blog? It's quite a mystery.

I did get a very interesting review of An Ominous Book on Smashwords a few days ago, but the reviewer lives in Romania. Could a small fan following be quietly brewing in Eastern Europe?

At any rate, it's quite interesting nonetheless.

If you were curious to see the review, visit the link HERE.

Cheers everyone.

martes, 4 de abril de 2017

The prolific reader, a repository of free books

There are several websites that offer free ebooks, the Prolific Reader is a website that offers hundreds of books divided by genre for the long haul. I admit I have downloaded a few books from this website to be added to my TBR list.

All of the offered books are on instafreebie which means that most of them can be downloaded as long as you subscribe to the author's newsletter. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

My first book of An Ominous Book Series has just been added to the database. Why not take a look at the website and see if something interests you?

Visit the Prolific Reader HERE.

lunes, 3 de abril de 2017

Free thriller books

Here is another heap of free books for the avid reader! I'm unfortunately too straddled with homework (graduate school, nuff said), but maybe some of you have some free time and want to read an exciting novel.

Enjoy!


Click HERE.

sábado, 1 de abril de 2017

Which Hunter x Hunter version is better?

It will probably not take very long for people to realize that I like to watch anime. I grew up in the 1990's when public Mexican tv showed quite a lot of uncensored anime with great dubs and when computers weren't powerful enough and the internet fast enough to make it feasible to watch high definition anime on the internet.

I still remember my first few comic conventions where I spent lavish amounts of cash to get really awful quality Chinese bootlegs of the Sailor Moon movies that hadn't been dubbed to spanish yet. In those days, if you were sick to the stomach of the censorship or wanted to see a seinen anime, you had to rely on fansubs. And I am not talking crunchyroll type streaming services (remember that the internet speeds 20 years ago were gawdawful right?), I mean you had to go to the official website of a fansub group, send a check over the mail and a few years later when the service was launched, a much more convenient paypal invoice, and around 6-8 weeks later a 120 USD vhs tape arrived in the mail hopefully undamaged from the long trip and customs searches containing a whopping 90 minutes of fansubbed anime. Of course, just because a fansub cost you that sort of cash doesn't mean the sub was always good. There are many horror stories out there of subs that were hideously translated and no yelp websites to warn consumers about the ripoff.

Yes, kids these days have access to an endless encyclopedia of high def anime at their fingertips. Too bad I'm too busy with my current job to enjoy it.

Endless rant aside, it will come as little wonder I grew up watching a lot of shounen anime and added some battle elements to An Ominous Book. While Seiran is a strong female supporting character that appears in most of the novels at least for a brief scene or two, there aren't a lot of important female characters that get into battles. I guess it's just how I as the author imagined my story would be. I wanted to write my story however I felt like without adding token characters for the sake of it. Besides, if I ever start to hear the lack of super powerful female characters, just remember that Nelida who isn't even 13 years old pretty much destroys everything with her magic. A little girl left Lord Froylan trembling in fear for his life. And as for the Äimite Guard, we get to see Lord Eiram kick some butt in the final battle of the 5th novel.

Getting back to the topic of this rant, there is an anime that was shown on the defunct Locomotion station called Hunter x Hunter (also known by its spanish dubbed title Cazador X). The anime was dubbed in Chile and it took ages for it to be viewable in Mexico. Lest to say, I loved the first arc. There is action, an intruiging story, amazing power that is very subtle at the beginning and a huge tint of grimness of the plausibility of certain death that isn't seen in other anime.

The dub is great and with each passing episode, the show was getting better and better. The best episodes for me occur in the Genei Ryodan arc. Kurapika might hate their butt for good reason, but those characters are indeed awesome and have a strong sense of comaderie. I think I got a lot of inspiration of the brotherhood of the Äimite Guard from this anime.

And then... the show sort of sizzled.

What happened?

Well, the author Yoshihiro Togashi who initially began to write this manga for his son for some random reason would simply leave it on hiatus over and over again. Usually when a really successful manga becomes turned into an anime, they will eventually reach the end of the manga and end up in a conundrum about what to do next.

* Saint Seiya created fully isolated anime-only arcs such as the Asgard saga to fill episodes (and quite honestly, the Asgard saga kicks butt and has become cherished by die-hard SS fans for decades that it's practically canon).
* Other anime such as Inuyasha decided to "stop" the anime and wait a few years for the manga to finally pick up and release them. To this day, I haven't really finished Inuyasha. Even though the first 50 episodes were super awesome with a hint of horror added in, the endless super power of Naraku and repetitive Tetsusaiga sword powerups that were still insufficient to defeat the bad guy were getting old after a while. Sesshomaru's character seemed to get stuck in the mud halfway into the series. Sure, he is kind to Rin and tolerates his zombie frog friend, but he's still the same badass yet nasty character from the start of the story. I think I copied some personality traits of Lord Froylan from him.
* Naruto is famous for its endless filler episodes. To this day, I think I have only watched around 30 episodes of this anime because I simply got lost with the plot.
* Invent their own finale and then a few years later to please the purist manga fans and make more $$$, release a remake that is 100% true to the manga. Fullmetal Alchemist is the prime example of this.

Hunter x Hunter sort of falls into the second and fourth example. It sort of stopped at the end of the Greed Island arc with insanely plastic looking CGI animation and then they launched in 2011 a full remake of the anime from scratch.

In a way, I'm sort of iffy about the 2011 version. In some ways it's great with quality animation (can't expect less from Madhouse) and yet I liked the 1999 version because it's a bit darker.



While the 2011 Chrollo character design is closer to the manga, I sort of prefer how they drew him in the 1999 version. I kind of liked the Kurapika/Uvogin battle in the 1999 a bit more than the 2011 one. It's not like the 2011 one is bad or anything, it's just that the 1999 version kicked so much more butt.

I didn't like how anticlimatic Pakunoda's death became in the 2011 version. Oops, she's dead, boo hoo. In the 1999 version, they showed the soft side of her when she grew up in a slum and Chrollo decided to found the gang. I loved it when Kurapika faints in the 1999 version after he placed a curse on Chrollo. Leorio was taking care of him for days whereas they downplayed his illness from excessive Nen usage combined from emotional distress in the 2011 version.



I do prefer the 2011 Greed Island over the original OVAS. They explained the expanded reality game much better and the animation is suberb.

Now here comes the final test, the long awaited Chimera Ant arc. I have a sort of love/hate with it because the fans were waiting for this arc to be animated for so long that the expectations were very high. The animation director wanted to be as close to the manga as possible, but I think he went overboard.

What went wrong with the Chimera Arc?

My qualm with the arc is that the director was trying so hard to be 100% close to the manga that he filled it with a tireless tirade of narration. Okay, so Killua likes to play darts in his free time, cool. However, why waste 10 minutes explaining ad nauseum the rules of the game to the viewers? A manga can add narration, but in a fast paced medium like tv, you don't want to slow down the action.

This is the issue I have with the Chimera Ant arc. The animation is great, but the battles are hindered by the narration that alters the flow of the plot. Okay, so an ant remembers his past life as a human and experiences a guilt trip. Does the narrator have to yap a 15 minute sob story tirade during a battle?

Gon and Pitou have a long awaited battle and the buildup is awesome. However just like several battles in this arc, the narration gets in the way and instead of having DBZ battle action, we have angsty faces and narration about how sad the character feels.

Waa waaaaa special snowflake alert!!!

And yes, I do have angsty characters in An Ominous Book. Spaulding and Damantin in particular seem to show their softer side quite a lot during their battles. However, if my work ever becomes animated or turned into a movie, I don't need a narration fest for everything. Just make the visual medium flow and if the fan becomes curious to know some extra tidbit, they can either read the books or find a wikipedia page.

In the worst of cases, they could simply send me an tweet or ask me a question on goodreads and I could clarify their doubts.

Cheers everyone!

miércoles, 29 de marzo de 2017

Why do writers love amazon reviews?

Why do writers love an Amazon review?

5 reviews prove to the writer that people have actually read their work.
10 reviews and other readers believe that the book is worth a peek.
20 reviews and the writer now believes in their own work.
50 reviews and both the writer and the readers join up, go down the pub, and drink copious amounts of alcohol.  
100 reviews and the magic flows. The dragons fly in the fan mail every day, the imps open it and deal with all the messages of adoration, and the elves organise the never ending party before promoting their own website called, ‘You call, we answer, we fly anywhere, anytime, 24/7.’

If you want the magic of words to captivate you, please leave a review for all your favourite authors.

Reblogged from the original blog post at: www.rickhayesauthor.com.

I really liked this blog post. My first book An Ominous Book only has two reviews, both of them 4 stars and honest. Some excerpts from the two reviews:

"A highly recommended book, an original and creative story, which demonstrates the great talent of its author. With a story that catches you from start to finish ... and definitely the unexpected ending, it leaves you with a huge desire to read the whole saga."

"This book was a rollicking, fun, good time that is made for kids of all ages to enjoy!

You have elves, castles, magic, sword fights, magical beasts, criminals, danger, laughter, fun and adventure. This would make an exceptional movie series or television show. There is no bullying of the children and the fun tends to outweigh anxious parts, for the most part.

My favorite scene is the rescue of Richard from the criminals. It is brilliant and I read it twice! Just fantastic how the Water Sage used the sword to wipe out the criminals."


If you thought these two reviews are enticing enough but you're not convinced, why not see it in goodreads.com?

viernes, 24 de marzo de 2017

An Ominous Book review by N.N. Light

My book was reviewed by well respected book reviewer N. N. Light who wrote an honest review of the first book of my series. Here is a post of the review:

Title: An Ominous Book (An Ominous Book series, book 1)
Author: Nancy Foster
Genre: Fantasy, Epic Fantasy, Young Adult
My Review:
This book was a rollicking, fun, good time that is made for kids of all ages to enjoy!
You have elves, castles, magic, sword fights, magical beasts, criminals, danger, laughter, fun and adventure.  This would make an exceptional movie series or television show.  There is no bullying of the children and the fun tends to outweigh anxious parts, for the most part.
My favorite scene is the rescue of Richard from the criminals.  It is brilliant and I read it twice!  Just fantastic how the Water Sage used the sword to wipe out the criminals.
I didn’t care for Froylan or King Salman, for the most part.  The end of the book lost me.  I can’t comprehend how ******* (bleeped character name to avoid spoliers) becomes the most powerful witch/warlock and can destroy everything.  I didn’t enjoy the ending and that took this book from 5 stars to 4 stars.  Still, a fun read overall.
My Rating:  4 stars
Original post HERE.

Quite frankly I'm very excited with this review and also surprised that the reviewer enjoyed Richard's rescue so much that he read it a second time.

I'm ecstatic that he detested Salman and Froylan. I wanted both of them to be equally detestable and yet Froylan is a prominent character in each and every one of the 6 published books. He becomes even more detestable in the second book Separation but his path takes a huge turn in the subsequent books. You can say that he *almost* stops being an utterly detestable villain or... misunderstood antihero of sorts.

Salman is detestable in every way (he is even worse in Separation) and the flashback scenes show he was always cunning and cruel. Maybe I'll write a book about his past where he was *slightly* more decent.

As for the totally unexpected conclusion to the book, some people loved it, others will expectedly feel totally confused or frustrated which is something I fully understand. In a way, if you can cause strong emotions to a reader, then perhaps you did something right as an author.

You'd be surprised to know the surprising conclusion of book 1 was the first scene I imagined when I created this massive miniverse and the consequences in Separation were ideas that were floating in my head.

I think the first book has the most surprising finale whereas the ending of each sequel seems to satisfy their specific plotlines but without unsettling the reader.

The reviewer stated his favorite three characters from the book:

#1 Lord Spaulding
#2 Lord Seiran
#3 Richard Earlrose

I decided to make this little drawing as a thank you note. ;) I was busy making a colorized version on Photoshop but I yanked my mouse from its wiring and I think I finally busted it. Damn.


If you are curious to purchase An Ominous Book in order to agree or disagree with this review, click HERE to see it on Amazon.