The WMG Newsletter

Get advanced notice of new releases, bonus content, and so much more.

About WMG Publishing

Founded in 2010, WMG Publishing, Inc. is located in Lincoln City, OR. The company publishes more than 700 fiction and nonfiction titles in trade paperback, ebook and audiobook formats. In 2013, the company launched Fiction River: An Original Anthology Magazine, which publishes six volumes a year containing short fiction from New York Times bestsellers to debut authors. In 2018, the company relaunched Pulphouse Fiction Magazine, a quarterly publication containing short fiction from New York Times bestsellers to debut authors. WMG Publishing, Inc. is also an industry leader in the cutting edge of independent publishing, offering online lectures and workshops as well as in-person workshops in Las Vegas. For more information about WMG learning opportunities, go to www.wmgworkshops.comFor more information about the company, go to www.wmgpublishinginc.com or follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

The Latest News

Publisher’s Note: Oh, Those Mysterious Cats


We were back to business last week following the apocalyptic events here in the West, including the Echo Mountain Fire Complex, which at last information had burned 2,552 acres and destroyed 293 residential structures. They do not expect to be able to fully contain the fire until Sept. 30. Thankfully, we have not had reports yet that anyone died. I hope it stays that way.

According to the school district, 31 students and three staff lost homes to this fire. The start of school was delayed a week as a result. And our community is in pain. It’s hard to describe. We are just not ok right now. But we will soldier on.

I mentioned briefly in last week’s blog that when we evacuated our home due to wildfires our first priority in what we took with us was our three cats (and one dog). Taking our pets was never a question. We left not knowing whether we’d find a hotel to take us all in. I’d have slept in my car if it came to that. But it didn’t, thankfully, because of how wonderful the other Oregon communities were to us evacuees.

The hotel we landed at in Yachats had evacuees not just from our fire but also from the fire outside Eugene, Oregon. It was surreal. We were all comparing stories and wishing each other well. And we all had pets with us.

I wasn’t sure how the cats would travel. One of them is very easy. He’s the one who has been on several long trips in the past couple of years after breaking his leg, so I knew he’d be fine. The other two hate the car. One pees in his carrier just going to the vet. The other has been known to poop in there to express his displeasure.

As we fled town (John driving, me working on a hotel for us and others), we heard yowling and hissing coming from the back of the car. The boys were decidedly not happy.

But when we got to the hotel to check in, I discovered why. One of the cat carriers had shifted, tilting forward so my poor cat Max (the one who usually pees) was wedged in against the door of the other carrier. The yowling was him saying, Help, I’m squished. The hissing was my cat Sydney saying, Hey humans, we’ve got a problem back here! Max did pee in his carrier (not that I blame him) but that was it. Even with the hardships of being loaded into the car so fast, shifting in place, and not knowing where on Earth we were all going, they did great.

In fact, they did great at the hotel, too. Moved right in for the most part. Used the makeshift litter boxes. No accidents. They really handled it all beautifully.

Cats really are mysterious creatures. Just when you think you know how they’ll react, they can surprise you.

The cats in our latest volume of The Year of the Cat help prove this point. Here’s the synopsis of A Cat of Cozy Situations, which releases Tuesday, Sept. 22:

Cats find themselves in all sorts of situations, sometimes comic, sometimes scary, sometimes just plain headshaking. In fact, for some reason, cats tend to draw crazy situations to themselves like the old cliché, moths to a flame.

But nothing attracts cats like a good mystery, particularly of the cozy kind. Cats love crime; they love to solve crimes, to observe humans trying to solve crimes, and occasionally even to commit crimes, because, you know—cats.

The felines in this volume do all of the above and more. Grab a comfy chair and a purring feline, and dig in.

Includes:
“Lin Jee” by Mary A. Turzillo
“The Maltese Double Cross” by Carole Nelson Douglas
“Scrawny Pete” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“The White Cat” by W.W. Jacobs
“Uncle Philbert” by Dory Crowe
“Cat Nap” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“Mystery Cat” by Dean Wesley Smith
“The Christmas Kitten” by Ed Gorman

To read more about these mysterious cats, click here.

I’m happy to report that my boys are quite pleased to be back to their usual routines. Nothing mysterious about that.

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

Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: 2020 Ups the Ante


When I looked at the title of last week’s blog, “Not Your Typical Labor Day,” I couldn’t help but marvel at what an understatement that turned out to be.

If you follow us on Facebook or follow Dean Wesley Smith or Kristine Kathryn Rusch’s blogs, you’ll know that last week turned out to be far from typical for the staff at WMG and for a number of our writers in the area. And that’s saying a lot for 2020.

The evening of Labor Day (Monday, Sept. 7), the cool winds that normally blow from the west reversed almost instantaneously, filling the abnormally warm air with smoke from wildfires in the Valley. Strange and ominous, but not alarming.

But what we awoke to Tuesday morning was nothing short of apocalyptic. Dark, blood-red skies and thick smoke made the Oregon Coast look more like Mars than Earth. The power grid went down. As the day progressed, the skies changed from red to bright orange, to sickly yellow, and finally to dark gray. Word reached us that fires had erupted mere miles from Lincoln City (in the outskirts of the city in towns called Otis and Rose Lodge, which are part of the greater North Lincoln County community we call home). By Wednesday morning, although power had been restored, the smoke was chokingly thick and ash had started to fall.

The Sun. Tuesday in Lincoln City.

And then, all hell broke loose.

We went from no evacuation notice to Get Out Now in the space of minutes. Now, John and I had prepared for the possibility of evacuation (Nola was with her father last week, thank goodness). We had go-bags packed and had done a mental stock of what we needed to grab. But getting that notice that you have to flee, that the fire is headed your way, uncontrolled and gaining speed, well, nothing really prepares you for that. Fortunately, John and I both do well in crises and work well together as a team, so we managed to get the essentials (especially the three cats and the dog) together in the car and get out of town quickly. While John was loading the car to evacuate, I was on the phone providing guidance to staff and local writers as to where to go and what to do.

As for us, we had gas and a plan, so we headed south, using side roads to avoid the bulk of the traffic. We were lucky: we made the hour drive in an hour and a half. For many who fled just a bit later, that trip took up to eight hours.

Once safely at our evacuation destination (a hotel in the southern part of the county), I began the business of checking in with everyone. We evacuees were scattered to locations across three counties. I was also checking in with writers across three states who were in various levels of evacuation, as well, because what was happening to us was indeed apocalyptic. The entire Western US seemed like it was on fire. It still is today. Just in Oregon at last estimate, 12 percent of the state’s population has been evacuated or under one level or another of evacuation orders. Take a minute to process that. I’m having a hard time doing so.

So many people had to face evacuating their homes, which is terrifying enough, but we were also doing this in the middle of a historic pandemic. To give you an idea of the stress of all that, I’ll share with you a bit of Fitbit data. On Wednesday, the day we evacuated, I walked only 5,384 steps but burned 2,521 calories (that’s about 500 more calories than normal). My heart rate was in the cardio and peak zone for more than an hour…much of that while I was in the car (and I wasn’t even driving). It stayed in the fat-burning zone most of the day.

The Sun. Thursday in Yachats.

We spent two days in evacuation before the orders were scaled back on Friday, and we were able to return home.

Fortunately, for those of us in the Lincoln City area, the winds had shifted just in time. The fire was stopped just outside the city limits (and I mean just outside). If it had made it to the city limits, there would have been no stopping it. Lincoln City would be gone.

Unfortunately, for many of our community members in those ancillary towns I mentioned earlier, the Echo Mountain Fire Complex took everything. Homes, cars, pets… I haven’t heard any reports of loss of life so far, thankfully, but the last estimate was at 200 homes lost.

We are a small community. Their loss affects us all. But we will come together and help each other through it. That’s the beauty of a small town. It’s the gift of community.

No matter how different we might all be, no matter our politics, we are united around the needs of these poor families.

And I am reminded of the kindness of neighbors through all this. My own neighbor, Virgil, stayed behind to help protect our neighborhood from fire and potential looting. He works with heavy equipment and brought home a 500-gallon tank so he could spray down our homes with water. I wish he’d evacuated for his own safety, but I also appreciate what he did for those of us who did evacuate.

And the communities we evacuated to were wonderful to us, as well. In Yachats, where John and I evacuated to, the hotel made quick exceptions for those of us bringing pets (ever stayed in a hotel room with three cats and a dog?), and a Yachats resident donated $125 per room to any evacuees staying at our hotel. Everyone I know who evacuated had similar stories of help from our Oregon neighbors.

Sometimes, it takes a tragedy to remind us all that we really have more in common than we have differences. And that what really matters is our humanity.

I hope you are all safe and well during these tumultuous times. Let’s keep taking care of each other. We are all in this together.

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

Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: Not Your Typical Labor Day


As we enter Labor Day Weekend her in the US, the way just about everyone works these days has changed because of Covid-19. Our definition of front-line workers has expanded to include grocery store clerks and food service workers. We all now know what a “sneeze guard” is as they are ubiquitous. Once reserved for those in the medical and industrial fields, employees in every line of business now wear masks. And we all know exactly how far six feet apart is.

Doctors are conducting virtual visits and teachers have virtual classrooms. All are now embracing technologies they might never have used before.

Zoom is now a household name. 

Many are working from home for the first time and many will never go back to an office setting again, most likely.

For many workers, their entire relationship with work has changed completely.

This has affected writers, too, but not in the way you might think.

Writers have always worked from home. But many writers also have a day job (or had a day job…). The pandemic has not only given writers more time to write (whether voluntary or no), but it has also created an increased demand for their writing. The world needs books now more than ever.

So, I’m posting this blog early (on Friday) because WMG has another round of special deals for writers to learn their craft and their business. But the sale ends 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 8.

Dean Wesley Smith runs our workshops, so I thought I’d share what he wrote about the sale on his blog:

Summer Has Gone…

We are still in Covid. I honestly last spring never would have predicted this.

Back when WMG Publishing did what we all thought here would be the last workshop sale in May, we had an expectation that as things opened up, we would all be able to slowly go back to a changed, but new normal life. And that sort of happened for some.

Sort of. But by July it was clear that most of us were still locked up, wearing masks, and doing our best to move forward in some way or another. So WMG Publishing decided to do another sale the first week of July, thinking that would be the last one.

But now as we are into September, we still all need to stay home, be careful, and focus on other things besides what is happening in the world. Focus on our writing and learning. Kids are going back to school, mostly online at this point. Seems us older folks can do the same thing.

As I said two months ago, we can control our learning and our writing.

Back in March (a very, very long half year ago), Allyson and Kris both suggested we give writers some real deals on workshops to help out through the coming weeks. And we did with what we called the March Sadness Special.

Then in April we gave writers deals again on workshops to help out. We called that one the Spring Training Sale. Then, before things started to open, we gave writers what we thought would be the third and final sale called Summer Learning Sale. That turned out not to be, so July we did the Summer School Sale.

Now, two months have passed and once again we want to encourage you to stay in, stay safe.

And a great way to do that again is to focus on learning publishing and how to be a better storyteller. Indie writers are actually making more money in this time of crisis because we can write and put out books and people want to read.

So we are going to do one more sale of everything on WMG Publishing’s Teachable.

And we really, really hope never again. We want us all to get through this virus and go back to at least a new normal as soon as possible.

But, sadly, we are not there yet. And WMG Publishing wants to help you all get through this, so for the next eight days, until 5 pm on Tuesday, September 8th…

Every WMG Publishing Workshop, Lecture, Pop-Up, Class, or Subscription on Teachable will be HALF PRICE!

That’s right, on anything available on Teachable right now, (hit all courses to see everything) just use the code below and get it half price.

Yes, that includes the new workshops COVERS 101 and MAKING MONEY WITH YOUR WRITING (starts in October), plus the almost new PUBLISHING 101 and KILLING CRITICAL VOICE. Plus the new Pop-Ups and and any of the challenges.

So, stock up on workshops and lectures to get you through the fall.

Or even grab one of the Lifetime Workshop Subscriptions for half price.

The coupon code to get anything on WMG’s Teachable at half price for the next 7 days is:

EndofSummer

And feel free to pass this code around to any writer. We are all still stuck with this virus, so we might as well all keep learning.

But remember, this offer ends sharply at 5 pm West Coast Time on Tuesday, September 8th.

MORE THAN ONE WORKSHOP???

Yes, you can buy more than one, but you just have to do it one at a time because Teachable has no shopping cart. And you can use Paypal or any credit card.

Give yourself or a friend the gift of learning and stay sane as we keep slogging through these tough times. There is no time limit on when you have to do a workshop either, so you can give them as gifts to other writers hurting more than you are.

So, in summary, just go to WMG Workshops on Teachable, find a workshop or Pop-Up, or Lecture, or subscription you are interested in, hit purchase, put in the coupon code EndofSummer and you will get it for half price.

And please stay home as much as possible, stay safe, and keep learning and writing.

Click here to go straight to the WMG Workshops on Teachable.

And a special thanks to all of our frontline workers this Labor Day, as what hasn’t changed in 2020 is that many of you will still be working on this holiday.

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

Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: This New Release Will Steal You Away


I think we all feel robbed of things these days. The year 2020 has been a great thief, stealing away lives, livelihoods, time with loved ones, even our own basic sense of security. For some kids, it’s even stealing the last of their true childhoods. I think we can all agree 2020 just generally sucks.

But there’s what we can control and what we can’t. We can make choices to protect ourselves and our loved ones to minimize our risks of contracting Covid-19. We can choose not to let the theft of time or jobs or travel conquer us. Sometimes, it’s damned hard, but I fervently believe that we must choose not to give in to despair. We must believe some good will come out of all of this. Perhaps even long overdue change.

Change is uncomfortable. And it often takes some major event to really set it in motion. (Like finally prioritizing your health after a brain tumor diagnosis, for example.)

But change can be a good thing. This pandemic has forced so many changes in so many areas, that you almost have to drill down to each one to properly evaluate it.

Take book publishing, for example. The pandemic forced us to rethink the way we handled certain projects so that we could deliver them in a timely manner. I won’t bore you with the details, so suffice it to say it’s been interesting at times.

But one of the things these changes allowed was the resumption of our Fiction River publication schedule. Which is why just three weeks after releasing Doorways to Enchantment, we have another new volume releasing tomorrow: Fiction River: Stolen, edited by Leah R. Cutter.

Here’s the synopsis:

Theft. Our reaction to it can vary based on what was stolen. We might crave stolen moments but fear stolen possessions. We might delight in a stolen kiss but feel the loss of stolen time. The thirteen stories in this volume explore theft in many different forms and range from humorous and lighthearted to serious and dark, with a wide span of genres and moods. But each and every story by these talented writers ends with hope. So, steal some time from your busy day and settle in with Fiction River: Stolen.

Includes:
“Look Safe” by Ron Collins
“The Ghost Ship” by Leah R. Cutter
“The Hair Thief” by Annie Reed
“Follow You” by Dayle A. Dermatis
“Loss of Power” by Paul Eckheart
“We Know Who We Are” by Rob Vagle
“A Murder of Clowns” by Robert Jeschonek
“The Watch” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“Music Hath Charms” by Nina Kiriki Hoffman
“Stealing Amy” by Tonya D. Price
“Cinnamon Chou: The Case of the Glittering Hoard” by Deb Logan
“Lazarus Coughed” by Stefon Mears
“A Touch of Memory” by C.A. Rowland

Click here to learn more.

So, if you need a break from pondering the many changes in your life right now, let Fiction River: Stolen steal you away to the world of fiction.

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

Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: Cats of the Cosmos


Have you ever wondered whether cats come from a different world entirely? Like, maybe they’ve been sent her to observe us? Have you ever looked into a cat’s eyes and wondered just what they might be thinking?

We spend a lot of time here at WMG contemplating the nature of cats. Some of that contemplation is of our own cats.

My daughter, Nola, and I have a game she loves to play where I voice our cats’ thoughts. They are loving and demanding and sometimes rather wish we’d figure out what they want and just do it already!

On the work front, we explore the nature of cats through fiction. Most notably, our Year of the Cat project, edited by Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith. And our fourth volume in that series, A Cat of Strange Lands, is now out.

Here’s the synopsis:

Cats roam everywhere on the planet. Everywhere. Their breed names often betray their place of origin—or their strange origin story in some now-lost land.

This collection honors that feline diversity in odd ways as much as possible. And the strange lands that cats not only originate from, but find themselves in.

These cats prowl in a witch’s hut, an enchanted shop, post-apocalyptic cities such as Las Vegas and Seattle, as well as across an ancient land where they once ruled as gods.

Come settle in for a journey through the kitty-cat cosmos.

Includes:
“Cat Web” by Meyari McFarland
“Burning Bright” by Leigh Saunders
“The Poop Thief” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“Cat in a Different Place” by Dean Wesley Smith
“A Silly Question” by E. Nesbit
“The Witch’s Cat” by Manly Wade Wellman
“Life, with Cats” by Annie Reed
“Night of the Hogtied Alien” by Stefon Mears
“Fur Tsunami” by Kent Patterson

You can find out more about A Cat of Strange Lands here.

And while you’re reading it, take a look at your cats’ eyes. See if you can figure out if they approve of your taste in fiction. I’ll bet they’ll give you a look of aloof approval.

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


Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: Let’s Play a Game


Not too surprisingly, games have gained in popularity since the pandemic started. That’s certainly true in my house. We’ve been playing quite a bit of Clue, in fact. Nola, as you might have gathered from past blogs, likes crime scene investigation and whodunits.

Games, especially physical-product games like card-and-dice games, are a godsend right now because they don’t involve a screen to interact with each other. It’s a nice break from that useful but sometimes overwhelming technology.

And because WMG is always looking for new ways to entertain our readers, we got together with Catalyst Game Labs to see what we could create as a new reward for The Return of Boss Kickstarter, which ends Thursday.

The result: a card-and-dice game based on the first few books in Kristine Kathryn Rusch’s bestselling Diving series.

Here’s more about Diving into the Wreck, An Encounters Game from Catalyst Game Labs:

Boss Needs Your Help!

Gear up, check your lines, and prepare to descend into the latest wreck discovered by Boss and her crew of salvage experts. Build resources, explore lost ships and abandoned space stations, and hopefully escape with something more than your lives.

A cooperative push-your-luck encounters game. Players use a set of six dice to defeat a “storyline” of Challenge cards, hoping to discover deeper secrets as they go. Accrue and spend resources, watch each other’s back, and solve each phase in time to escape the final challenge.

Fifty-five cards; 6 dice; 1 rules sheet. Heroics not included.

The game will retail from Catalyst for $11.95, but you can get it through the Kickstarter campaign for only $10. You can get it with both new Diving series books, or add it to any other reward for $10, or buy five games at a time to give as gifts.

Click here to learn more.

If you’ve ever wished you could join Boss’ crew, now you can! And don’t forget to see what else is new in the Kickstarter while you’re there. We’ve hit several stretch goals, so the value of the rewards is better than ever.

Dive on in!

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

Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: Exactly What We Need Right Now


Sometimes, a new release hits the timing perfectly.

That can sometimes be a bad thing. It happened to us very early on in my tenure with WMG when a new release, Bleed Through by Kristine Kathryn Rusch, was about to hit the shelves. Bleed Through is a brilliant and poignant book that explores the aftermath of a school shooting and the fallout of such traumatic events. But the week before we were set to release the book, another major school shooting happened. We just couldn’t justify promoting involving a school shooting (even tangentially) given the timing. So, we released it quietly. That book has never really gotten the attention it deserves, sadly, because school shootings have been far too common over the recent years.

But sometimes, the timing works in our favor. And that’s exactly the case with our newest volume of Fiction River, which releases this week. Called Doorways to Enchantment, this anthology is filled with portal fantasy stories.

And who wouldn’t want to open a portal to a different world right now, right?

Here’s the synopsis:

The passage from real life to an imagined, magical one has fulfilled a childish yearning for many a young person, particularly those who grew up in less than desirable circumstances. Writer and editor Dayle A. Dermatis tapped into that yearning to bring together this collection of stories that take their characters through portals to fantastical worlds—although sometimes the new worlds prove more problematic than the old ones. Still, for anyone who sees herself as the hero of her own story, these stories can’t help but tempt the imagination. And this volume itself opens a doorway to enchantment.

Includes:
“Restoration” by Sabrina Chase
“Father Otto” by Mary Jo Rabe
“Common Cause” by David Stier
“The Higher Duty” by Leah Cutter
“The Realm That Didn’t Suck” by Robert Jeschonek
“Honed Sharp and Ready” by Brigid Collins
“Elf Help Seminar” by Stefon Mears
“Stone Tower” by Dory Crowe
“The Door to Nowhere” by Leigh Saunders
“You Can’t Take What I Won’t Give” by Leslie Claire Walker
“Into the Fire, the Second Time” by Chuck Heintzelman
“Fun House Mirrors” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“And the Bears Will Sing You Home” by Dayle A. Dermatis

With titles like “The Realm That Didn’t Suck,” it’s kinda perfect.

Click here to learn more.

I wish you a happy journey into other realms.

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

Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: Teaching in the Future


It’s going to be strange not teaching today. As I mentioned a couple of blogs ago, I spent the past two weeks teaching an intensive summer residency as part of Western Colorado University’s Graduate Program in Creative Writing’s Publishing Program. It was exhausting and exhilarating. And I’m sad that I won’t be seeing those amazing students on Zoom today.

But I will still be overseeing someone’s education today, at least. My daughter, Nola, will be participating in a special Zoom-based summer camp called Operation: Forensic Science from The Mob Museum in downtown Las Vegas. She has already participated in their other virtual summer camp called Operation: Investigation. It was awesome! Seeing what the museum has done with summer camp learning makes me hopeful for what can be done with distance learning this fall (because there’s definitely going to be distance learning this fall…).

Nola loves forensic investigation. And I love her inquisitiveness. This week, they’ll be studying death investigation, DNA analysis, fingerprint analysis, and ballistics.

Although this pandemic has made a lot of things harder, it has also opened new doors, like the ability to attend a virtual summer camp from a museum 1,000 miles away. It’s amazing the technology we have today. Science fiction becomes science fact with a fascinating level of regularity.

Those sf writers sure know their stuff.

All this talk about virtual crime scene investigation and sf novels and technology reminds me of Kristine Kathryn Rusch’s Hugo Award-winning Retrieval Artist series.

Miles Flint’s first appearance was in The Retrieval Artist: A Retrieval Artist Short Novel. It’s a great place to start. It’s also a great standalone story. Here’s the synopsis:

The short novel that started the entire Retrieval Artist series, The Retrieval Artist introduced Miles Flint to the world.

Hugo-nominated, chosen as one of the best stories of the year, The Retrieval Artist created an entire universe, and Flint himself became what io9 calls “one of the top ten science fiction detectives ever.”

“Part CSI, part Blade Runner, and part hard-boiled gumshoe, the retrieval artist of the series title, one Miles Flint, would be as at home on a foggy San Francisco street in the 1940s as he is in the domed lunar colony of Armstrong City.” —The Edge

The ebook is available for $2.99 here.

And if you’ve read the series, but not this award-winning short novel, now’s a great time to pick it up. The story takes place later in the timeline than all of the novels in the series.

Science, technology, hope for the future…we could all use more of those right now.

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


Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: Cats, Myths and other Stories


Cats get a bad rap. Whereas dogs are portrayed as the loyal companion and as a rescuer or lifesaver, cats are often cast as having evil intent. From bringing bad luck to feasting on your body after you die, cats are oft maligned when it comes to myth and legend.

So, is it any wonder that cats can be so standoffish?

Yet, we are fascinated by them nonetheless. Perhaps because of their aloof natures. And we explore this theme in the latest volume of The Year of the Cat: A Cat of Disdainful Looks.

Here’s the synopsis:

Cats possess the ability to snub you faster than anything alive. They turn on the charm when it suits them, but then freeze your soul into an apologetic lump of ice with a single look.

The cats in these stories go to sea, work in the mines, foil burglars, engage in political infighting, solve crimes, and engage in dirty tricks to make their owners comply with their wishes. Not much escapes the scope of their powers.

With classic tales from Rudyard Kipling and Mark Twain, as well as new stories from some of today’s most original storytellers, this collection simply dares you to pick it up.

Includes:
“The Cat Who Walked by Himself” by Rudyard Kipling
“Midshipman, the Cat” by John Coleman Adams
“Dick Baker’s Cat” by Mark Twain
“Cat Burglary” by Jodi Lyn Nye
“An Incursion of Mice” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“Cat in the Air” by Dean Wesley Smith
“The Language of Cats” by Stefon Mears
“Erwin or Ralph” by Ray Vukcevich

You can buy the book here starting tomorrow.

And speaking of myths (and magic, and monsters…), there’s only a couple of days left to take advantage of the deals in our latest StoryBundle: The Magic, Monsters and Myth Bundle, curated by Kristine Kathryn Rusch.

Here’s what Kris has to say about the bundle:

I don’t know how you’re feeling about 2020, but I’m ready to peek to the end of this chapter, and see how it all resolves. If I think about the year too much, I get uneasy. I need more escapes than usual, at a time when the world has decided to shut down 90% of all our relaxation fun.

We still have books, though. And books are a marvelous, marvelous escape.

I like reading about the world with a bit of sparkle in the down times. And this bundle is all about the sparkle. Sometimes the sparkle is magic. Sometimes it’s a made-up world. Sometimes it’s love.

We have a little bit of everything here.

That little bit of everything features 11 books, including The Cop Car: A Ghost of a Chance Novella by Dean Wesley Smith, Hidden Charm: A Fates Universe Novel by Kristine Grayson, and Fiction River: Tavern Tales.

As always with StoryBundle, you name your own price, so it’s a great deal

To learn more about this bundle, click here.

So many tantalizing tales to choose from.

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

Keep up to date with exclusive deals on WMG products, including books and online lectures and workshops, as well as the latest news about new releases and so much more! Sign up for the Grab a Book and Chill weekly newsletter, and you’ll get two new free ebooks just for signing up: An Easy Shot: A Golf Thriller by Dean Wesley Smith and Days of Rage: A Smokey Dalton Novel by Kris Nelscott.

Publisher’s Note: Changing How We Learn


For the next two weeks, I’ll be wearing two hats. One, of course, is Publisher/CEO of WMG Publishing, of which you’re probably familiar (hence these blogs). The second hat is a professor with Western Colorado University’s Graduate Program in Creative Writing (GPCW). I’m on the faculty there in the Publishing concentration, alongside Director Kevin J. Anderson (yes, the same New York Times bestselling author we all know and love).

Pre-pandemic, I would have spent these two weeks in the beautiful mountains of Gunnison, Colorado. But like many things these days, we had to move the annual summer residency for our students online.

That was easier for the GPCW than for some of the other Western departments. Ours is already an online program most of the year. Switching from an in-person residency to a virtual residency took some reinvention, for sure, but the bones of it were all there.

We were lucky in that way.

Moving to online teaching is a transition being made right now in all levels of education, from schools and universities to summer camps to professional courses. Some of it was done quickly by necessity this spring, but as the pandemic continues, more creativity and adjustments are needed.

Fortunately (and I say fortunately because I’m an optimistic realist), I’ve had experience with these transitions at all levels: with my own daughter’s online schooling and summer camps, with the university work I just mentioned, and also with the professional courses we offer through WMG.

WMG has been offering online lectures and workshops for years. In fact, we have almost 150 options right now on Teachable and we add more all the time. (Click here to see them all.)

And in recent years, we started adding an online component (in the form of a Study Along option) to our in-person workshops.

But the pandemic still disrupted our plans for the in-person workshops. For the smaller Craft Workshops, we’ve postponed the in-person option but we’ll carry on with an online option for those workshops scheduled through early 2021.

But our two big annual in-person workshops don’t lend themselves to a virtual format. So, we’ve decided to postpone each of those for a year. We had already postponed the Business Master Class to the fall of 2021. And now, we’ve also postponed the Anthology Workshop from late winter 2021 to the same time frame in 2022.

To learn more about all of our (normally) in-person workshops, click here.

Given the lasting power of the pandemic, we just can’t risk bringing folks together until the tide turns in the future. We don’t know when that is, of course, so more adjustments might be necessary.

But there’s no shortage of learning available for everyone. We just need to seek it out, be creative, and find all of the amazing options that are either now being offered or were already right there in plain site (play on words intended).

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