Celebrating the Sisterhood

At WMG, we have long celebrated women in science fiction. Not the least of which is because we publish one of the greatest science fiction writers of our time—Hugo Award-winning and international bestselling author Kristine Kathryn Rusch.

It’s a sisterhood, really, women in science fiction. And Kris is a powerful voice in that sisterhood.

Kris not only writes amazing science fiction, but she also writes kick-ass female protagonists in that science fiction. Her Diving Universe is case in point.

Robert Jeschonek recognizes how many awesome women are writing science fiction, too. And he’s curated a whole StoryBundle featuring them, including one of Kris’ Diving books. It’s called The Space Opera Sisterhood Bundle. Here’s what Bob has to say about it:

What is it about space opera that makes us love it so much? The action, the exotic settings, the colorful characters, the alien species? The promise of countless adventures in the face of the great unknown?

Or is it mostly just the incredible wow factor of all the ships…the technology…the planets…the ray guns and laser swords? In many ways, it’s the ultimate escapist genre, transporting us to places and situations that dwarf our everyday troubles. And yet, at its heart, space opera is all about us—what it means to be human, and how we can triumph over our human limitations.

Whatever your reason for loving the genre, this bundle has what you’re looking for in abundance. The eleven books I’ve selected—each written by a true heroine of the genre—are packed with space opera goodness that will propel you to the furthest reaches of the known and unknown universe.

This fantastic StoryBundle offers four titles for $5 or all eleven titles for $20. And it includes Becalmed: A Diving Universe Novella. If you’ve never read the Diving series, or you missed this novella in particular, I highly recommend you pick up this bundle. Becalmed is a masterpiece of powerful writing.

You can buy the bundle or read more about it here.

So, c’mon. Join the sisterhood.

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

Take A Swing At This

Despite all the news about the Pacific Northwest heat wave, it’s been beautiful on the Oregon Coast this week. The marine layer has stayed offshore, but the ocean winds have kept us in the upper 60s most of the week. The wildlife is enjoying it, too. I’ve seen more species of butterflies and dragonflies recently than I’ve ever seen here. It’s amazing.

I also noted, as my husband and I drove to our favorite French café for breakfast last week past one of the resorts in town, that it’s perfect weather for golf.

I don’t have a lot to say about golf. I’ve always been, um, directionally challenged when it comes to my golf swing, so I’ve never really committed to learning. But we do have a resident golf expert in the company.

And he has some really cool words of wisdom about golf in his book The First Tee Panic.

Former PGA Golf Professional and bestselling author Dean Wesley Smith walks you step-by-step, club-by-club from your car to the first tee and beyond in a laugh-out-loud style that not only teaches, but entertains.

Any golfer recognizes the fears, the patterns, the downright horrors of the first shot of a round. Ever topped that first shot just off the front edge of the tee box? Or worse yet, whiffed it completely? 

Come on, admit it. It happened. Remember?

The problems with that first shot don’t start with the swing. Nope, the problems start in the parking lot. And this book will get you flawlessly from the parking lot, through the clubhouse, onto the driving range, over the putting green, and finally successfully off the first tee with a smile.

You can buy the ebook direct from us here, or you can get the paperback here or the audiobook from Audible here.

It’ll change your golf game and entertain you at the same time.

And what better way to enjoy the summer weather!

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

This Summer is Sizzling

This summer stands a good chance of being declared the hottest summer on record (at least here in the Northern Hemisphere). Even if it doesn’t hit that mark, it’s certainly breaking a lot of records. [link to ]

That certainly comes as no surprise to me. I suffered from heat illness myself this summer while in Las Vegas during the July heat wave. That’s something I haven’t experienced since Madrid in ’92. Years of living on the Oregon Coast have made me more susceptible to heat because we don’t get much of it here.

For example, although we are under an excessive heat warning all of next week, the predicted high temperature where I live will range from 70 to 79 degrees. Supposedly. If the marine layer doesn’t get sucked in by triple-digit heat in the Valley. Then, we’ll be lucky to get out of the 50s.

High temps in the 70s doesn’t sound high, but it actually is for here. We usually don’t break out of the 60s in the summer. And no one here has air conditioning. So, 79 can get rather warm, especially when you don’t expect it.

I certainly didn’t expect to suffer from heat illness while I was in Las Vegas. I knew to be careful, since Vegas was having record-setting heat (it was 115 degrees the day I fell ill). But I never expected five minutes on a sidewalk to take me out.

Still, nothing like some parts of the world are dealing with—which pairs record-breaking temperatures with high humidity. That’s a brutal kind of heat.

Here at WMG, we prefer to heat things up on the page instead. No chance of heat stroke there!

If that kind of heat sparks your interest, look no further than Summer Sizzles.

In this fourth Fiction River Special Edition, bestselling romance author and editor Kristine Grayson takes readers into the world of romantic suspense. These nine breathtaking stories—from military romance to love in the criminal underworld, from a highly unusual shipboard romance to a modern gothic novella set on an idyllic island—make a perfect beginning to summer reading. The heat of attraction, the sparks of passion, and the frisson of suspense all thread their way through every story in this spectacular volume.

Includes

 “Night Moves” by Katie Pressa

“Safe Like Cedar” by Lisa Silverthorne

“Flying Above the Hindu Kush” by M.L. Buchman

“Love on the Run” by Kelly Washington

“Need to Know” by Sabrina Chase

“Bribing Ghosts” by Leah Cutter

“Come Summer, Come Winter, I’ll Come for You” by Rei Rosenquist

“Totality” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

“That Summer on Blue Heron Island” by Dayle A. Dermatis

Intrigued? Of course you are. Buy the ebook now here. It’s a great choice for any summer reading list.

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

Grand Opening Sale!

Did you know you can buy books directly from WMG? Well, you can! And we have a brand-new online store for you to shop.

In addition to our main WMG online bookstore, we now have a dedicated store for Pulphouse Fiction Magazine. And we’re having a grand-opening sale this week to celebrate!

You can save 30% on books, 10% (plus free shipping) on merchandise, and 50% on everything we offer on WMG’s Teachable site.

That 30% off on books goes for every ebook we have for sale at pulphousemagazine.com and wmgbooks.com. (Right now, we only have ebooks available direct, but later this year we plan to add paper books and some audiobooks, as well.)

Every previously published issue of Pulphouse Fiction Magazine since our launch in 2018 is available on our Pulphouse store site, as well as all of our Pulphouse books, and, of course, subscriptions (but please note that subscriptions are not included in the grand opening sale).

Plus, not only do we have the Pulphouse merchandise we included in the 2023 Pulphouse Fiction Magazine Subscription Drive on Kickstarter—which ended on Thursday…thank you so much to all who supported it!—but we also have lots of new merchandise available for sale (at a 10% discount!).

Click here to go directly to the Pulphouse store.

Meanwhile, the majority of our ebook inventory is now available on our WMG bookstore. And all of it is 30% off.

Click here to go directly to the WMG Books store.

Last but certainly not least is the 50% off on our WMG Teachable site. That discount also applies to the recently launched Indie Writer’s Products Classes (where you can learn how to turn your series into merchandise) and the just announced Down in the Details classes.

To learn more about the new class and to read more about the Teachable part of the grand-opening sale, click here. (https://deanwesleysmith.com/grand-opening-sale/)

As you can see from our grand-opening sale, we are very excited about our new stores! Having the capability to do storewide sales on all of our available inventory is something we could never do with our retail partners. And while we’ll continue to offer our books through those venues, we will be focusing more and more on our own stores so that we can offer our readers the best deals possible.

And as my husband can attest, I sure do love a good sale!

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

Last Call for Some Fun Stuff

Our 2023 Pulphouse Fiction Magazine Subscription Drive on Kickstarter ends on Thursday, so you only have a few more days to get some really cool stuff.

We’ve hit our third stretch goal, which means that every backer at the $25 reward level and up gets three bonus ebooks: Fiction River Presents: The Unexpected, Fiction River: Universe Between, and a brand-new Pulphouse book that will be created because of this Kickstarter: The Alien Who Ate My Homework and Burped.

That’s on top of six new monthly issues of Pulphouse Fiction Magazine coming your way. And that’s not all!

Now that we’ve hit that third stretch goal, we’ve unlocked that rare opportunity I mentioned last week. One we’ve never offered before in a Kickstarter.

Any writer backing this Kickstarter will now have a chance to submit a story to Pulphouse Fiction Magazine. The magazine is never open for submissions, but for only the month of August, backers of this campaign who would like to try to have a story in the pages of Pulphouse may submit one story. (We pay 6 cents per word if accepted, and guidelines will be sent in an update after the campaign closes.)

And the more stretch goals we hit, the more opportunities writers will have to submit stories. Plus, the more new Pulphouse books readers will get to enjoy.

And don’t forget to check out the new Pulphouse mugs, calendar and pillow we have available as rewards (bundled with a Pulphouse subscription, of course). Our office at WMG headquarters is now decked out with all sorts of Pulphouse merchandise. That wacky little Thumper makes a great mascot not just on the pages of Pulphouse but also on my reading chair in pillow form and on my new coffee mug!

Click here to check out the Kickstarter so you can read Pulphouse, try your hand at writing for Pulphouse, and spread Pulphouse cheer all over your own house.

Immerse yourself in this innovative magazine. You won’t regret it!

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

This Kickstarter is Heating Up!

Now that the Craft Workshop has wrapped up, I’ve escaped the heat of Vegas. Whew!

But the Pulphouse Fiction Magazine Subscription Drive 2023 Kickstarter is still heating up! And that’s a kind of heat I always welcome.

We’ve hit two stretch goals so far, and the third stretch goal introduces something we’ve never offered before: a chance for writers who support the Kickstarter to submit a story to Pulphouse Fiction Magazine!

You can find more details in the Kickstarter under Stretch Goals, starting at the $10,000 stretch goal.

We also have two very special craft workshops for writers, exclusive to this campaign.

There’s the “Known and Strange Things” Special Workshop, which describes what many Pulphouse stories are at their core: A known thing turned strange (think a lot of Twilight Zone stories) or a strange thing written as if it is known.

Then there’s the “I Can’t Believe I’m Writing This” Special Workshop. It’s that secret sauce that makes a story truly great.

You can buy either workshop individually or you can buy them both together (and get a Pulphouse six-issue subscription as well).

Both workshops are three weeks long, are offered only twice, and the final week’s assignment for both workshops will be to write a short story that editor Dean Wesley Smith will consider for Pulphouse. (Not as submissions, just how Dean will look at the stories and tell you he is interested in seeing it sent back as a submission.)

You have your choice of taking either three-week workshop starting August 15th or starting September 12th.

Like I said, this Kickstarter is on fire!

Click here to read all about it.

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor

Calling All Pulphousers!

I’ve got a busy week ahead. First off, I’m in Las Vegas (in the record heat) managing logistics for the Fantasy/Thriller Craft Workshop that Kristine Kathryn Rusch is teaching. I love being on site for these workshops and seeing our writers in person. They’re so much fun! (I mean, hard work, too, but fun!) If you’re a writer, you should consider coming one of these days. You can learn more about them here.

Nola is here with me this time because she’s taking a theater summer camp at the Smith Center this week. So, that’s very cool, too! Las Vegas has a lot of resources that we, obviously, don’t have in little Lincoln City, Oregon, so the fact that this camp coincided with our workshop seemed like it was meant to be.

And while we’re here in Vegas, we are launching our next Pulphouse Fiction Magazine Subscription Drive on Kickstarter.

So much going on!

We have some very cool new stuff in this Kickstarter, including, for the first time, Pulphouse merchandise!

Reward options will include a mug and a pillow featuring the Pulphouse mascot Thumper as well as a calendar featuring some of our favorite cartoons from the pages of Pulphouse.

Here are pics by way of a preview:

Every reward comes with a six-month (six-issue) subscription to Pulphouse Fiction Magazine, as well (existing subscribers can have six issues added to their remaining subscription), so you can see what all the buzz is about. We’re also debuting our new 6×9 trade paperback format!

The Kickstarter launches at noon on Tuesday, but you can sign up here to be notified as soon as it does.

From Thumper to cartoons to tons of cutting-edge short stories, there’s so much to love with Pulphouse!

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

How Writers Fail

WMG Writer’s GuidesNonfiction Available in:ebook, $5.99trade paperback, $14.99 Get the ebook direct from WMG! Other buying options How Writers Fail: Analysis and SolutionsA WMG Writer’s Guide Kristine Kathryn Rusch Everyone fails at times. Writers fail in...

Epic Reading, Anyone?

This week is going to be epic! Because I have two fabulous new books to tell you about. One for readers and one to help writers.

First up is Wee Folk, a fantastic collection of stories that’s available right now exclusively as part of the Epic Elves StoryBundle.

Here’s the synopsis:

Wee folk populate fiction in a variety of forms, from elves to pixies to fairies to sprites. This collection of six stories from award-winning and bestselling master of short fiction Kristine Kathryn Rusch features all of them.

All centered on the magical, Wee Folk starts off with four stories with an edge. From a new twist on a theatrical legend in “Puckish Behavior” to a gunslinger for hire in “Renn and the Little Men” to funeral disruptors in “Flower Fairies” to battle-worn pixies in “Dispatches from the Front,” the wee folk in these stories prove anything but ordinary.

The final two stories feature elves at the holidays with a lot on their plates, with one Christmas elf serving time for his crimes in “By the Chimney with Care” and another with a big job in “Up on the Rooftop.”

In each magical story, the masterful Kristine Kathryn Rusch puts her trademark twist on the very nature of wee folk.

You can get Wee Folk and nine other epic elven tales for $20. Click here to learn more.

Speaking of epic, you’ve heard of epic fails? Well, writers can fail themselves and their writing in the most epic of ways. In the latest WMG Writer’s Guide, How Writers Fail, Kris discusses these pitfalls and offers hopeful solutions to the problems.

Here’s the synopsis:

Everyone fails at times. Writers fail in predictable ways—ways both foreseeable and preventable.

In this WMG Writer’s Guide, New York Timesbestselling and award-winning author Kristine Kathryn Rusch addresses the pitfalls writers face and offers solutions to help them overcome those obstacles.

Because the best writers push through their challenges to ultimately find success, as Rusch brilliantly illustrates in these real-world examples.

This one was also a StoryBundle exclusive in the recent Write Stuff StoryBundle, but if you missed it there, it will be available in ebook and trade paperback on Tuesday, July 11. Click here to learn more.

So many epic options.

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

Gearing up for Summer Learning

Growing up in New Jersey, the official start of summer was Memorial Day. Even though school wasn’t out yet, by the end of May the weather had warmed enough that summer was very much on our minds. Those last couple weeks of school were tough.

But now that I live on the Oregon Coast, the official start of summer is July 4. That’s because it isn’t until July that we can be reasonably assured of decent weather. What a difference from the East Coast to the West…

And while summer might conjure up images of warm beaches and picnics and barbecues, it also makes me think of learning.

One of the reasons for that is some of my favorite college classes were summer classes. With condensed semesters and sunshiny days, I always loved taking classes in the summer. My favorites were microeconomics and a linguistics class called The Etymology of the English Language. Neither of these were directly related to my major, but I found each of them fascinating. I still reference lessons learned in those classes regularly.

These days, I teach summer classes myself. Right now, I’m teaching Introduction to Fiction Editing, where I guide aspiring editors to learn how to edit without destroying the writer’s voice. I have writers taking the class, too, so they can understand how to safeguard their own writing from overzealous editors.

And in early August, I’ll be on campus at Western Colorado University teaching at the weeklong summer residency for its Publishing Master’s Program.

So, as you can see, I really do spend most of my summer teaching.

And while I’m doing that, you can spend your summer learning!

And there’s never been a better time to learn writing and publishing from Dean Wesley Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch, because now through Friday, July 7, you can get all of the WMG Teachable classes for 50% off, plus get a free gift!

Here are the details in a nutshell:

To learn all the details, including more information on these cool new classes, click here.

Happy summer learning!

Allyson Longueira is publisher of WMG Publishing. She is an award-winning writer, editor and designer, working mother, and brain tumor survivor.

Guest Publisher’s Note: The Write Stuff

I am a fan of New Journalism. In Cold Blood is one of my favorite books, one that I’ve reread many times. I’m a huge fan, too, of Joan Didion. Her prose is exquisite in just about everything she wrote. And I have devoured the works of later writers such as Ted Conover, who wrote Newjack, and Alec Kotlowitz, who wrote There Are No Children Here, among others who have been called New Journalists.

It was a term often attributed to Tom Wolfe about his own work, among others, from the 1960s and 1970s, but New Journalism dates back at least to the nineteenth century. And some of the great writers of nonfiction of the earlier decades of the twentieth century in particular are my heroes. People such as Ernest Hemingway, working as a journalist during the Spanish Civil War, as well as his nonfiction books Death in the Afternoon and A Movable Feast, and Joseph Mitchell, who wrote Up in the Old Hotel, and other works, often for the New Yorker. Both of those great writers, and I’m sure others, laid the groundwork for Wolfe and the later twentieth century nonfiction writers by creating works that packed the kind of rhetorical and emotional punch that readers were used to expecting in fiction, but had not looked for in war stories and stories about the eccentricities of mid-century New Yorker City dwellers.

So, I love new journalism, and I remember enjoying Wolfe’s The Right Stuff up until the moment when he completely lost me. I remember it well. That moment came when he told me what Ham, the first American astronaut who orbited the earth in a Mercury capsule in January of 1961, felt and thought about the trip. I bought the accounts Wolfe offered of Chuck Yeager, ace pilot, and the men who, unlike Yeager, were chosen as astronauts for the Mercury missions.

But I knew for a fact that Wolfe had not interviewed Ham, because Ham was a chimpanzee.

And with that one choice, to invent the thoughts and feelings of a chimp, Wolfe lost me. He went in the blink of a chimp’s eye from The Right Stuff to wrong, wrong, wrong.

It can happen to any writer, and obviously by alienating me as a reader, Wolfe did no damage to his career. But there are many ways for writers to put a foot wrong, particularly now that there are so many choices to make, not only about what they write but also about their career paths and the skills necessary to accomplish their goals.

Which is why award-winning and bestselling author Kristine Kathryn Rusch has curated a StoryBundle for writers called The Write Stuff. And talk about packing a punch, this bundle of ten books and lectures on the stuff that writers absolutely need in 2023 delivers a heck of a wallop.

As Kris puts it:

These days, anyone can write and publish a book. The rise of electronic books has made publishing easy and quick. However, not everyone can have a writing career.

Writing careers take patience and a willingness to learn. Writers must learn the basics of craft, which they’ve always needed to know. But now, writers also need to learn how to run a small business. They must also understand that at times, they’ll have to try a few other things to keep their writing business afloat.

Through it all, they must maintain their enthusiasm and avoid pitfalls that have prevented promising writers from having actual careers.

It’s that time of year when writers need a boost. Look no further than The Write Stuff for a firm push to get you going on your first novel, some wisdom about creating characters, advice on how to be productive, and getting down to brass tacks, Dean Wesley Smith has a workshop on “How to Make More than Coffee Money” from your writing. Kris herself has a new book in the bundle on How Writers Fail: Analysis and Solutions.

There is lots for everyone at every stage of a writing career. Avoid the pitfalls (such as channeling chimp emotions), absorb the wisdom, and then get writing!

Guest Publisher’s Note: Happy Juneteenth National Independence Day!

Juneteenth is the newest federal holiday, having been declared by President Biden in 2021, and it celebrates the end of slavery in the US. It marks the day, June 19, 1865, two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation went into effect, and just over two months after Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox, when the people of Texas learned that they were all free under the laws of the United States of America.

Major General Granger of the Union Army made the announcement upon his arrival in Galveston, Texas, to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation.

Here is the text of his order, now in the National Archives:

Galveston Texas June 19th 1865

General Orders

No. 3.

The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor.

The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere.

By order of Major General Granger

F.W. EmeryMajor A.A. Genl

We leave it to you to divine the meaning behind the advice to the “freedmen” to remain quietly in place and keep working as hired labor. As we all know, this wasn’t the end of the story by a long shot.

It was, however, arguably the beginning of a new chapter in American history, and one that is well deserving of celebration.

The Smithsonian has a wealth of interesting archival materials and interviews about the holiday, which is well worth visiting. And here is a link to information about celebrations across the country. Galveston, for example, will host an annual reading of the Emancipation Proclamation.

WMG publishes a newsletter every week dedicated to holidays of various kinds, called Every Day’s a Holiday, in which we give away fiction and discounted workshops to subscribers. Today’s Juneteenth newsletter offers a short story, “Well-Chosen Words” by award-winning author Kristine Kathryn Rusch.

Legend has it that Abraham Lincoln scrawled the Gettysburg Address on the back of an envelope as he traveled to the battlefield to dedicate a cemetery. But the legend belies Lincoln’s struggle to carefully choose the right words. Words that must soothe a fractured nation, inspire change and chart the course for the nation’s future. Because his speech in Gettysburg will change history, but not necessarily in the way he hopes.

Written by a Sidewise Award winner for Best Alternate History, “Well-Chosen Words” first appeared in an anthology called Alternate Gettysburgs.

“Kristine Kathryn Rusch looks at the anxiety Lincoln had in selecting the ‘Well-Chosen Words’ he would speak at the dedication of the cemetery at Gettysburg, while his host, David Wills, fretted about the success of the event itself. The story is well written, with both characters coming to life…”

—Steven H. Silver, SF Site

We thought we’d offer the story to readers of this blog, too, in honor of Juneteenth. Just click here to download your free ebook.

And don’t forget to check out our many bestsellers and award-winners by Dean Wesley Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch at wmgbooks.com!