Welcome everyone to week three of my guest blogger
series. Today we have a real treat. The multi-facet, multi-versatile and multi-talented
Brian K. Morris. Brian is an independent author who has written everything from
Horror, to comedy to pulp heroes and more. His writing is vivid,
well-constructed and highly-entertaining. If you haven’t treated yourself to
some of Brian’s work (which you should) you must read his Skyman Battles the
Master of Steam, and Valcana: Rebirth of the Champion, you’ll be glad you did.
So, without holding this up any longer, take it away Brian…
"O! for a
muse of fire, that would ascend the brightest heaven of invention." William Shakespeare, famous playwright.
Granted,
I used to do just that. I recall sitting at my desk at the campus newspaper one
Friday night, in my college days, as we dutifully assembled the latest weekly
edition. I needed to write my usual column of unpopular opinions, but my
wellspring of good ideas yielded nothing. Even my bad idea well went dry.
I
did the only responsible thing a writer could do … I rested my elbows on the
desk, placed my chin in my hands, and stared into the distance. It wasn't until
someone came back into my office after twenty minutes to loudly announce that
I'd not moved an inch since he left that I realized I needed to find and
install an idea generator.
Sure,
it took a while. I eventually located that generator, but I had to build it
before anything else.
"Most people
wait for the muse to turn up. That's terribly unreliable. I have to sit down
and pursue the muse by attempting to work." – Nick Cave, musician.
The
summer after I graduated from college, I met a comic book writer who was asked
the Eternal Writing Question, "Where do you get all your crazy
ideas?" His reply was, "Everywhere." He read newspapers, watched
the evening news (yeah, before the 24-Hour News Cycle), listened to music … in
short, he filled his head with ideas, facts, concepts, anything that could form
the foundation of a story.
He
said to select an incident in the daily news. Add the hero that would be
perfect to solve the challenge, then give him/her a flaw that must be overcome
to save the day. Change the genre, the setting, whatever … add your own
touches, toss in some plot twists. BINGO!
From
that point on, it became a matter of training my brain to LOOK for story ideas,
then write them down. Soon, I had more ideas than time to write them, given I
had a nine-to-five jay-oh-bee by then. However, I didn't find the time to
write, I MADE the time.
And
fueled with ideas, the writing came to me more quickly. I moved from working
pro bono to actually getting paid for my efforts.
"Sixteen
years as a freelance features journalist taught me that neither the absence of
'the Muse' nor the presence of 'the block' should be allowed to hinder the
orderly progress of a book" – Jim
Crace, novelist.
Eventually,
I built up a sideline as a playwright, copy writer, and pop culture reporter. I
figured out the ways to network and forge relationships with my interviewees,
my employers, and my peers (CLUE: it's also called "making friends").
And the more I wrote, combined with my other efforts, the more I found to write
about. Now, I couldn't turn off "the generator" if I wanted to, which
I didn't. I was having too much fun.
The
money and comp copies didn't hurt either.
"Anyone could
sit and wait for inspiration. Talent was being able to conjure it up, to GET
inspired." – Paul Stanley, musician
and cultural icon.
Then
in 2012, I made one of my few New Year's resolutions. I promised that I'd spend
the year working harder on my writing career in the hopes of building that
money to a point where it exceeded my primary income.
In
March of that year, I was brought into my District Manager's office for a talk.
He complimented me on my work ethic and my talent. However, since the company's
stock underperformed on the New York Stock Exchange, twenty-seven people in the
state of Illinois were going to be let go so the company gave the impression of
"handling" their expenses wisely. It turned out I was one of those
fated for "downsizing."
I
panicked. Who could blame me? I had a mortgage, regular bills, and a wife to
support.
Then
it hit me … I also had a Plan B! Now I had
to make the writing work. I went through all six stages of Kubler-Ross in 45
seconds, eager to leave and begin this new phase of my life. The
"generator" revved up until all gauges ventured deep into the red
zone.
"I'll show
you the bills and you'll get inspired."
Bill Aucoin, KISS' original manager.
Part
of my severance package included being placed with a re-employment agency.
While taking in their numerous webinars, I found one on Electronic Publishing
and booked a seat for the lecture. When it ended, all I saw was the potential.
No more vanity press. No more pushing your manuscript into the mail again and
again until you found an agent or a publisher who's accept it. No more waiting
on other people to make things happen. I became evangelical in my fervor for
the current state of publishing.
To this day, I shudder to think where I'd be if I'd not attended that webinar.
Now my "generator" had a place to move its output. I'd publish my own
work until it got noticed by enough people that I could make a living at it.
Beginning
my new occupation by releasing a book through Kindle Direct Publishing, I wrote
a story using a Valiant Comics character I liked so I could plug into an
established fan base. Then I wrote Santastein:
The Post-Holiday Prometheus because I had a rejected 10-minute stage play
that I could expand. From there, I created other, newer works. Through
relentless marketing, I gained new friends in the independent writing field,
both writers and editors. This led to more work and more exercise for "the
generator."
Now,
I'm a "hybrid" writer. I've published myself, which led to others
wanting to use my work.
I
still send out stories to other editors. However, if they didn't want it, I
knew one publishing house who'd print anything I wrote: ME!
Has
it been easy? No more than trying to pull yourself off the ground by your own
hair. It's been uphill and it's still uphill to this day in many ways. The
field changes constantly and there's always something new to learn.
Naturally,
I wouldn't have it any other way.
I
still recall that (much) younger me, sitting at my desk, literally paralyzed by
an inability to devise a reason to write. I still see that person in so many
people who ask me how to take that first step to becoming a paid freelance writer
and I tell them what many people told me on the way to Now.
Manage
your time wisely. Learn to prioritize. Remove your distractions. Work like you
have 30 days to live. Make a plan of attack and reward yourself when you reach
your benchmarks. Respect deadlines, yours and those of your editors. Never stop
learning. Stay on top of changes to your profession. Make friends in the field
because they're awesome and have much to teach you. Learn to be patient … well,
as much as possible.
And build that "generator."
"You can't
wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club." – Jack London
NEVER THE END
Brian
K. Morris is an independent publisher of books and comics with his
Freelance Words and now, Rising Tide Publications as well as a freelance
writer, "award-winning" playwright, occasional actor, frequent
convention guest and public speaker, as well as a former morticians assistant.
His latest book is The HauntingScripts of Bachelors Grove and his newest comic book release is The Ghostly Tales
of Spencer Spook #1, featuring the classic
character from Columbia and ACE Comics.
He lives in Central Indiana with his wife, no children, no pets, and too many
comic books. Follow his Rising
Tide page on Facebook. He's also on Instagram
and Twitter,
along with his own website, RisingTide.pub.