Opportunity to Win a 1-Year Audible Subscription

Miranda Honfleur is running a giveaway with a chance to win a 1-Year Audible subscription - $150 value! If you sign up, you are allowing a handful of authors (but not me) to add you to their mailing list. I’m actually on a few of those lists, and they have pretty good content. You can always unsubscribe if you disagree…

http://www.mirandahonfleur.com/promo/

Even if you don’t want to sign up for the newsletters and have a chance at the subscription, there are some great Audiobooks Miranda recommends (including mine), so click over and check them out!

Wondering about author newsletters? It’s not too late to sign up for mine… Newsletter HERE.

Alec Hutson's The Silver Sorceress is out today!

Alec Hutson’s The Silver Sorceress is out today! This is the highly-anticipated sequel to The Crimson Queen, which I really enjoyed. I enjoyed it so much, that I actually did an interview with Alec a few months ago for my newsletter. In honor of Silver Sorceress coming out, I thought I’d post that interview. My favorite part, SS had the working title of The Shadow King? Does the title give anything away? You’ll have to read the book to find out…

Check out the interview and scroll to the bottom to see the cover. If you don’t need no stinkin’ interview to buy the book, the you can grab The Silver Sorceress HERE.

AC: What fantasy books and worlds have inspired you?

AH: When I was very young, I lost myself in The Wizard of Eathsea, The Chronciles of Prydain, and the old Forgotten Realms novels. I read Game of Thrones when it was released in 1996, and it completely changed my sense of what fantasy could be. Later, New Weird authors like China Mieville, KJ Bishop, and M. John Harrison were hugely influential. For worlds, Westeros, certainly. Faerun. Krynn. Bas Lag.

AC: After finishing Crimson Queen, I couldn’t wait to dive into the next book and learn more about the world. Can you give us a sneak peek of where the story will go and when to expect it?

AH: The next book will be Shadow King, and I expect to have it ready to go sometime this Spring. Most of it is already written, but I’m going to make sure I’m completely happy with everything before I usher it out into the world. The story will follow three main POV threads – Keilan, Demian / Alyanna, and Cho Lin. The first three characters will be familiar to readers of Queen, and Cho Lin was introduced in a story in my short story collection The Manticore’s Soiree. She’s the daughter of the Shan demon hunter who was tasked with recapturing the Chosen in The Crimson Queen. That duty now falls to her. 

I have the story arc for the three books in The Raveling trilogy all set. Readers will get to wander around fairly widely, with extended stops in The Empire of Swords and Flowers and the Frostlands. I may write further books in Araen, as I do enjoy the world and I think there’s plenty more to explore.

AC: How did you get into writing?

AH: My aunt owns a very large and excellent independent bookstore in Newburyport, Massachusetts. I grew up among the shelves and worked there when I was younger. I read voraciously as a child and my lifelong dream has been to instill the same sense of wonder in others that I enjoyed.

Bonus Material: Alec Hutson lives in Shanghai China, loves ultimate Frisbee, and the first chapter of CQ was written after exploring the ruins of Angkor Wat in Cambodia.

Book 5 is out on Audio!

Burning Tower: Benjamin Ashwood Book 5 is now available on audio!

Eric Michael Summerer is back with more great narration and this book is getting the best reviews of the series! If you are like my wife, and have been waiting for the audio even though you know you are featured as a character in this book and you keep asking me what happens to you and I keep saying “why don’t you just read it” and you are like “no, I like the audio version better” and I am like, “then you have to wait” and you are like, “my character had better not die” and I am like, “your character doesn’t die” and you are like, “my friends keep saying I’m a bad guy” and I am like, “that’s because they actually read the book” and you are like, “audio is so much better” — now is the time to pounce…

Pro-tip, don’t name characters after your wife.

Amazon: https://amzn.to/2ItD3RG

Audible: https://www.audible.com/author/AC-Cobble/B01GA7NZTE

Burning Tower - Benjamin Ashwood Book 5.jpg

Video with Thomas Webb

My small press, Cobble Publishing, is putting out three books in Thomas Webb’s Clockwerk Thriller series. We have two out, with the third to arrive likely around January. I absolutely love these books. When people ask, I describe them as “If Michael Bay wrote Steampunk”.

I think that’s accurate - these books are incredible escapism fun. When reading them, you can see the movie playing in your head… When you peel back the onion though, they go a lot deeper, and in the interview below Thomas discusses that. There are not a lot of people of color in SciFi, and very few on the covers of books. We put someone of color on the cover of Stalemate because it’s true to the story, and true to Thomas’ story. He has a lot to say about that in his interview, and I hope you check it out.

If “Michael Bay wrote Steampunk” is interesting, but “pushing diversity” is not interesting to you, I recommend you still give these books a shot. Thomas is not heavy-handed or preachy, he is simply writing what is true to him. That’s what I love about it, this is an authentic story told from a really interesting perspective. If it helps, Thomas is also a former marine, so the combat scenes are badass.

Find the interview HERE.

Or the books HERE.

Non-Fiction Book Recommendations

I promised some non-fiction recommendations, and here they are! These are not the books I’m reading right now, they are ones that I think could have a huge impact on people’s thinking.

Hans Rosling’s Factfulness - This book is stellar - read it first! Rosling (and his children, he died) delve into the concept that while we think the world is getting worse and worse, it’s actually getting better and better. They have the data to prove it. A lot of it. For example, one hundred years ago, women were allowed to vote in one country. Now, there is only one country they are not allowed to vote in. In the last 30 or so years, 30% more of the entire world has access to clean water! I could go on and on as Rosling has a mountain of examples. This book is key in 1) improving your outlook, and 2) teaching you to really understand data, and how to cut through the statistical noise.

Nate Silver’s The Signal and the Noise - Speaking of which… In today’s world, it’s gotten more and more difficult to find that signal amongst the noise. Nate Silver, political and sports predicting wunderkind, gives us some pointers in here. This book is about 6 years old now I think, but it’s still relevant. One thing that blew my mind, weather prediction, one of the trickiest forecasting sciences out there, uses computer based modeling that is then adjusted by humans. Really interesting stuff to think about as our world grows more and more algorithmically determined. If Nate writes an update to this around 2020, I’m first in line. Take my money sir!

Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow - Kahneman and his long-time work partner Amos Tversky are the two godfathers of behavioral economics. That is the study of how people REALLY think and act - not how your economics or psychology professor claimed they think and act. This book is chock full if fascinating experiments (seriously) Kahneman has run, and the work he describes is the foundation for most of the behavioral economics studies and books that followed. Start at the beginning, start with this one.

Nassim Nicholas Taleb The Black Swan - A study how improbably seeming events have outsize impacts on the world or our lives. The decade old financial crash is one good example - very few analysts predicted it, but it was a major event that cascaded across the globe and set the table for changes in economic and political policy that we are still adjusting to. A hurricane is another example, where you may not see it coming, but it completely reorders your personal life or the life in your city. They can be positive though, and my writing is a prime example of that (this book is one factor that inspired me to write). My friends and family would have called me becoming a full-time author highly improbably, yet, here I am… This book delves into how these events go unpredicted, and how we can adjust to the unknown. Taleb’s Antifragile digs deeper into that subject, but it’s not quite as good as this one.

Charles MacKay Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds - This book was first published I believe in 1852 and is out of print. The ones I found on Amazon appear to be scams. I have an edition from Three Rivers Press (imprint of PRH), and it’s legitimate, so look for that one if you can. Do Not buy a self-published version of this book, and if it’s less than 300 or so pages, it’s fake! We can get into copyright law and how this is possible another day… Anyway, this book is over 150 years old now, and it tells you everything you need to know about Bitcoin. It’s great stuff, and shows that as much as the world has changed, it really hasn’t changed.

Malcom Gladwell The Tipping Point, Blink, Outliers - Three in one! Malcolm Gladwell does an amazing job distilling some really complex concepts and showing them to you in a unique, digestible way. I really loved these three books, but be warned, some of his later books aren’t as strong. David and Goliath, for example, was a bit garbage. Anyway, if you find some of my other recommendations difficult to get through, then check out Gladwell. It’s light, easy reading, and very educational. Some of his concepts have sunk into our collective conscious now - so it’s great to hear it from the man himself.

Stephen King’s On Writing - Stephen King’s “How to Become a Writer” paired with an autobiography. Insightful stuff, though I will warn you, the advice is terribly out of date now. Self-publishing, KDP, etc didn’t exist when King wrote this. That being said, for any aspiring writer, it’s incredible to see how King got started. Spoiler, he wasn’t born as an author who’s sold 100’s of millions of copies. He worked hard and got there… We can’t follow in his footsteps because the industry has changed, but the concept remains the same.

Honorable mentions: Anything by Michael Lewis for insight into financial crimes, any biography by Walter Isaacson (except the one on Da Vinci, it sucked), Daniel Yergin’s The Prize for THE comprehensive tome on the oil industry, and how it has had an incredible impact on modern day geopolitics, Benjamin Wallace’s The Billionaire’s Vinegar for something a little lighter and more fun, and to see how crazy rich people are.

Whew, enough to keep you busy? If you know some books you think I’ll enjoy, let me know here! I read mostly non-fiction these days, and I’m always on the lookout for something life changing.

AC