I am very excited to be participating in the tour for the great anthology Hero's Best Friend and have an interesting Guest Post for you today by the editor Scott M. Sandridge. Read on and enjoy!
Writers
are Born, and then Made
By
Scott M. Sandridge
When
I was a kid (around 8 or 9), I saw the movie, The Neverending Story, and decided I was going to write a story
that would never end. After about a hundred-fifty pages I learned two important
things: every story needs a beginning, middle, and end; and my writing skills sucked. So instead of writing, I
read. I read everything I could get my hands on. Novels, short stories, plays;
there weren’t a whole lot of kids my age who had read A Midsummer Night’s Dream by Age 9, White Fang by age 10, and the Hardy Boys and Tom Swift series by
age 12. I didn’t get into comic books until around 12-13 (what can I say? I do
everything backwards).
So
before long, at around 13-14, after I discovered the Lord of the Rings trilogy in the school library, I tried to write
yet another novel. My writing skills, while still needing a lot of work, didn’t suck anywhere near
as bad that time, mostly due to my age (and English classes) but also because
of all the reading I had done. Alas I had failed to finish that novel, too. However,
in English class I discovered Edgar Allen Poe and fell instantly in love with
the short story form. Yet I still kept trying to finish that novel (actually, I
wanted to write a whole trilogy at that time, silly me)…which to this day
remains unfinished.
And
so I continued reading: Dragonlance novels, Dark Sun novels, Forgotten Realms
novels, Star Wars novels, comic books, RPG rule books, Fantasy (especially
anything Tolkien), Science Fiction (loved Ender’s
Game), and of course Horror (especially Stephen King). And at around the
age of 25 I started submitting short stories to market…and learned my next
lesson: getting that first publishing credit is hard, really really really hard. I even managed to finish a
90k word horror novel in just two weeks (and no, that one will likely never get
published). At around the year 2000, I realized I still needed a lot to learn.
So
I took a writer’s workshop. I learned a lot. A whole lot.
And
ceased writing for almost five years. I just couldn’t write, couldn’t think of
anything to write. That’s when I
learned what real writer’s block was.
But
I kept reading, even moreso than before.
I
started up writing again in 2005. I took all my previously written short
stories that I couldn’t publish before and did page one rewrite all of them,
all twenty-three of them. And then I started writing new material. And
submitting, and even getting stories published! To date I have almost thirty
short stories published.
And
I’m working on completing a trilogy. So far I have two books finished and a
third one to go. Will I ever see a novel published? Maybe, maybe not. But I’ll
keep at it, dammit!
Because
the three most valuable lessons I’ve learned out of it all is….
Practice,
Persistence, and Patience.
About the editor: Scott M. Sandridge is a writer,
editor, freedom fighter, and all-around trouble-maker. His latest works as an
editor include the Seventh Star Press anthologies Hero’s Best Friend: An
Anthology of Animal Companions, and the two volumes of A Chimerical World,
Tales of the Seelie Court and Tales of the Unseelie Court.
Twitter:
Facebook:
Website/Blog:
Goodreads:
https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/5772749-scott-sandridge
Book Synopsis for Hero’s Best Friend: How far would Gandalf have
gotten without Shadowfax? Where would the Vault Dweller be without Dogmeat? And
could the Beastmaster been the Beastmaster without his fuzzy allies? Animal
companions are more than just sidekicks. Animals can be heroes, too!
Found within are twenty
stories of heroic action that focuses on the furries and scalies who have long
been the unsung heroes pulling their foolish human buddies out of the fire, and
often at great sacrifice-from authors both established and new, including Frank
Creed, S. H. Roddey, and Steven S. Long.
Whether you're a fan of
Epic Fantasy, Sword & Sorcery, Science Fiction, or just animal stories in
general, this is the anthology for you!
So sit back, kick your
feet up, and find out what it truly means to be the Hero's Best Friend.
Featured in Hero's Best
Friend: An Anthology of Animal Companions:
Joy Ward: "Toby and
Steve Save the World"
Frank Creed: "Dusk"
Cassie Schau: "The
Hunter's Boy"
Steven Donahue:
"Grit"
Jason Cordova: "Hill
142"
Herika R. Raymer:
"Dook"..
Essel Pratt:
"Brothers".
Lisa Hawkridge:
"Ezra's Girl".
S. H. Roddey: "Look
What the Cat Dragged In."
Steven S. Long: "The
Wolf Sentinel"
Laura Anne Ewald:
"Memorandum"
Cindy Koepp: "The
Hat".
Ian Hunter: "Scarheid
in the Glisting".
Steven Grassie: "The
Masterless".
David Wright: "Wind
of Change"
Renee Carter Hall:
"The Emerald Mage"..
Nick Bryan: "The
Violet Curse"..
Lillian Csernica &
Kevin Andrew Murphy:
"The Restless
Armadillo".
Douglas J. Ogurek:
"Stuck on the Squigglybounce"
Sheila Deeth:
"Passage"
Amazon Links for Hero’s Best Friend
Print Version
Kindle Version
http://www.amazon.com/Heros-Best-Friend-Anthology-Companions-ebook/dp/B00IAHEI1W