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Readers always want to buy cheap wow gold know how long it takes for cheap wow gold someone to “make it�in cheapest wow gold a creative field. Can you tell us a wow cheap gold little about the path that brought you to where you are today? Wow, this is a very complicated question. I started out in the 1980s as a database programmer for cheap gold wow a wow gold major university who would program video games on the side. Then one day, I lost my job in state budget cuts. I took my summer of unemployment to bum around. I found a book about “gag writing.�I read it and started to write gags and send them to cartoonists and comedians. I was surprised that I sold thousands of them. I then married a graduate student from Costa Rica. She owed Costa Rica years of service, so we moved there. We had our son. So I acted as a gag writer house dad in Costa Rica for three years. I started working on my first novel, The Doomsday Brunette, then. My wife took a post doc position in the United States in 1994, and we moved back. I took a part time job working on this new thing called the World Wide Web. I figured out this web thing was going to be big. A friend suggested I publish Doomsday Brunette on the web. I did, with his help. It did okay, so that made me decide to try other web publications. I did a comic called Computtons, and I also started on kicking ideas around for my next novel, The Plutonium Blonde. I didn’t really know what to do with this novel. I figured not being an actual novel writer, no publisher would want it. So I kind of sat on it. One day while web surfing, I found the Sci Fi Channel web site and asked them, “Hey, how would you like some original content?�I listed all the cartoonists and comedians I wrote for (some of them had TV shows). Sci Fi said, “Sure.�So I wrote The Plutonium Blonde as a weekly web serial. Once the story ran its course on the Sci Fi (now called syfy) site, I figured, “Now maybe a book publisher will like me.�I sent the story to an agent I knew. The agent sent it to all the major publishers. They ALL REJECTED it. So that was that. I figured writing over. I figured I would become a full time web guru. Then in 1999, my cousin Larry Ganem (who works for DC comics) sent me a note about this little e book publisher called Peanut Press. Larry had helped me with Plutonium Blonde and thought Peanut might be interested. I just sent them an e mail. They responded in hours. They had read the story online and loved it. So TPB became an e book. The e book sold great; it was their number one selling e book for many weeks, until some guy named Stephen King wrote Riding the Bullet. So then I figured, “That’s it �I’ve had my 15 minutes �Time to put the writing to rest.�Then one day in early 2000, I am sitting at my cubicle doing web stuff, when I get an e mail saying, “READ YOUR BOOK, LOVE IT. I THINK I WANT TO BUY IT. LET’S TALK.�I thought, “Ok, some lady wants to buy my book.�I sent the e mail to my agent friend. My agent told me this was actually the owner of Daw books and I really should talk with her. Turns out she really did like my writing so much she wanted me to expand Plutonium Blonde into a full length novel. I did so with Larry’s help; after all, in those days, I was a web guy not a writer. I didn’t know about things like when to use a ; and fancy writer stuff like that. |
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