Why not share your good news with your fellows and the world at large? Fill out the form linked below, and we’ll add your announcement to the Wily Writers’ private and public newsletters and to the Wily Facebook page. We want to brag about you!

What constitutes good news? So many things!

  • a novel launch
  • a short story, novelette, or novella sale
  • publication of the work you sold
  • receiving an award
  • scheduling an event
  • publishing a workshop or course
  • being a guest/panelist at a convention
  • or even a big life event — marriage, new baby, graduation? So many things.
Categories: Perk, Promotion

Every month, the Wily Writers Book Club reads a new dark fiction selection then discusses it in a Zoom meeting that we’ll record and post on the Wily Youtube channel.

We’ll schedule these in advance and all are welcome to attend. Check here for dates and times.

October’s Selection:

Buy It Today
The Book of Accidents by Chuck Wendig

A family returns to their hometown – and to the dark past that haunts them still – in this masterpiece of literary horror by the New York Times best-selling author of Wanderers.

“The dread, the scope, the pacing, the turns – I haven’t felt all this so intensely since The Shining.” (Stephen Graham Jones, New York Times best-selling author of The Only Good Indians)

Long ago, Nathan lived in a house in the country with his abusive father – and has never told his family what happened there.

Long ago, Maddie was a little girl making dolls in her bedroom when she saw something she shouldn’t have – and is trying to remember that lost trauma by making haunting sculptures.

Long ago, something sinister, something hungry, walked in the tunnels and the mountains and the coal mines of their hometown in rural Pennsylvania.

Now, Nate and Maddie Graves are married, and they have moved back to their hometown with their son, Oliver.

And now what happened long ago is happening again…and it is happening to Oliver. He meets a strange boy who becomes his best friend, a boy with secrets of his own and a taste for dark magic.

This dark magic puts them at the heart of a battle of good versus evil and a fight for the soul of the family – and perhaps for all of the world. But the Graves family has a secret weapon in this battle: their love for one another.


Chuck Wendig is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of Star Wars: Aftermath, as well as the Miriam Black thrillers, the Atlanta Burns books, Zer0es/Invasive, Wanderers, and the upcoming Book of Accidents (July 2021). He’s also worked in a variety of other formats, including comics, games, film, and television. A finalist for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer and the co-writer of the Emmy-nominated digital narrative Collapsus, he is also known for his books about writing. He lives in Pennsyltucky with his family. His agent is Stacia Decker, with Dunow, Carlson and Lerner.

Terribleminds is his blog where he rambles on about writing, parenthood, food, pop culture, and other such shenanigans. It is NSFW and NSFL.


Members are welcome to be part of the panel. You don’t have to be on camera, but if you are, then you will also be mentioned (with links) in the show notes! It’s an excellent (and perpetual) promotional beat for you and your works.

Come, participate, lurk, chat, and let’s discuss Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s Mexican Gothic.

Previous Discussions

July 2021 – Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s MEXICAN GOTHIC

Grab the Discussion Guide too!

June 2021 – Stephen Graham Jones’ THE ONLY GOOD INDIANS

Grab the Discussion Guide too!

Categories: Event, Public

Wily Writers authors read from their work.

Lisa MortonJennifer BrozekLoren Rhoads


Lisa Morton (author, screenwriter, and Halloween expert) offers up her short story titled “Poppies” from the forthcoming podcast “Spine Tinglers”. Two friends venture out to view California’s magnificent springtime poppy fields and learn that something malevolent lurks just beneath the vibrant orange blossoms.


Jennifer Brozek reads ShadowBytes…a mosaic story told through five pieces of connected flash fiction. In addition to being a Wily Writer, Jennifer is an award-winning author, editor, and media tie-in writer.


Loren Rhoads reads a selection from her collection UNSAFE WORDS. In addition to being a Wily Writer, Loren is a cemetery expert and the author or editor of 14 books.

Categories: Event, Public

The following ad appeared in the July 2021 issue of the Horror Writers Association newsletter as part of our Wily Writers Group Promotions Project! Thanks to a generous donation from a wily member, we were able to purchase two full-page ads. The second one will appear in August 2021.

Wily Writers bannerBAXTER ❖ RHOADS ❖ RABARTS/MURRAY ❖ NAVARRO ❖ MCCOY




Alan Baxter's THE GULP cover art

Buy Now
THE GULP by Alan Baxter
(published by 13th Dragon)

The isolated Australian harbour town of Gulpepper is not like other places. Some maps don’t even show it. And only outsiders use the full name. Everyone who lives there calls it The Gulp. The place has a habit of swallowing people.

  • A truck driver thinks the stories about The Gulp are made up to scare him. Until he gets there.
  • Teenage siblings try to cover up the death of their mother, but their plans go drastically awry.
  • Under the blinking eye of the old lighthouse, a rock fisher makes the strangest catch of his life.

Five novellas by Alan Baxter. Five descents into darkness. Welcome to The Gulp, where nothing is as it seems.

Unsafe Words by Loren Rhoads book cover

Buy Now
UNSAFE WORDS by Loren Rhoads
(published by Automatism Press)

In the first full-length collection of her edgy, award-winning short stories, Loren Rhoads punctures the boundaries between horror, dark fantasy, and science fiction in a maelstrom of sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll.

Ghosts, succubi, naiads, vampires, the Wild Hunt, and the worst predator in the woods stalk these pages, alongside human monsters who follow their cravings past sanity or sense.

The stories are drawn from the pages of the magazines Cemetery Dance, City Slab, Instant City, and Space & Time, the Wily Writers podcast, and the books Sins of the Sirens, Demon Lovers, The Haunted Mansion Project: Year Two, Tales for the Camp Fire, and more.

Buy Now
BLOOD OF THE SUN
by Dan Rabarts and Lee Murray

(The Path of Ra, book 3, published by Raw Dog Screaming Press)

There’s been a gang massacre on Auckland’s Freyberg Wharf. Body parts everywhere. And with the police’s go-to laboratory out of action, it’s up to scientific consult Pandora (Penny) Yee to sort through the mess.

It’s a hellish task, made worse by the earthquake swarms, the insufferable heat, and Cerberus’ infernal barking. And what’s got into her brother Matiu? Does it have something to do with the ship’s consignment? Or is Matiu running with the gangs again? Because if he’s involved, Penny will murder him herself…

Join Penny and Matiu Yee for the family reunion to end all family reunions, as the struggle between light and dark erupts across Auckland’s volcanic skyline.

Buy Now
AFTERAGE by Yvonne Navarro
(published by Macabre Ink)

A plague of vampirism has crept across the country, reducing once-thriving cities to ghost towns.

In Chicago, a few scattered survivors hide behind the fortified walls of office buildings and museums, raiding deserted stores for dwindling supplies of clothing and food.

Meanwhile a hungry vampire population also struggles for survival as their prey grows scarce, forcing them to capture alive the last remaining humans as breeding stock for the blood farms that will ensure their future.

Buy Now
DARK WAS THE NIGHT
by Angel Leigh McCoy

(published by Wily Writers LLC)

The horror stories in this collection take you deep into lives touched by darkness.

Herein, you’ll meet a grandmother with a knack for storytelling, a little girl caught in a lightning storm, and a medical intern who learns the true meaning of family–the hard way.

At times gory, very often moody and intense, these tales reveal a truth about our world: evil exists, and love persists.


 

WilyWriters.NET provides a haven and point of connection for dark fiction writers. It holds open a space where wordsmiths can raise the vibration of their work, increase book sales, spread name recognition, earn reader respect, and blow away the bar on product quality.

Categories: Promotion, Public

from Wily Writer Loren Rhoads

I am a planner junkie. For years, I kept searching for a system that would help me organize all the information I need, track all my submissions, make space for my to-do lists, and keep my calendar. I would hear one of my writer friends rave about a system they were excited to try or see an ad that promised to get me organized and snatch it up. I ended up with a cupboard full of half-used planners.

Image, Loren Rhoads

Loren Rhoads

I am also an inveterate list-maker. Often, when I sit down with my notebook for a day’s writing, I begin with a to-do list to clear my head. I had to-dos in my in-box, my notebook, my diary, on scraps of paper on my desk, in my unanswered emails. I had folders full of notes from conferences, tear sheets from writer’s magazines, articles I’d printed out from the internet. The weight of everything I thought I should do made me freeze.

Last year, when all my anchors were suddenly gone—no more writing in the cafe after dropping my kid off at school, no more writing in the car before I picked her up in the afternoon—I really struggled to focus and get anything done. What saved me was my planner stash. I took the planners apart and pulled out all my favorite charts: what were my goals for the year? What writing projects had I started and drifted away from? What markets did I want to pitch articles to? When were my favorite magazines open for story submissions?

Armed with that information, I made a master to-do list. Everything went on it, no matter how big or small. Which social media did I enjoy using and what was my theory behind my presence there? What were my goals for my newsletter and how could I better connect with my readers there? Since I couldn’t attend the conventions I’d looked forward to, how else could I get my books into the hands of readers?

Once I finally had EVERYTHING noted down, I could see that it was clearly too much for one person to accomplish RIGHT NOW. I used my planner sheets to pull out the little things that I could finish easily. Once I crossed those off my list, I got a jolt of pride that carried me forward to tackle bigger projects.

I made writing dates with friends over Zoom. A writer I knew set up a Tuesday morning chat for her writer friends. I joined Shut Up & Write sessions. I organized Happy Hours and went to writer’s group meetings online. Slowly, my weeks took on some structure. I needed a calendar to keep track of when everything was happening.

I’d published a novel in February (then saw all the conventions I’d planned to attend get postponed or canceled), so with my planner’s help, I managed to put together a blog tour and list of reviewers. After I attended the Bram Stoker Awards online, I was inspired to assemble a collection of my short stories, using what I’d learned from the first blog tour to promote it. Cross that goal off my list!

Inspired by my planner, I also did some major reorganization projects in my office, emptying all my file drawers and consolidating my research. I (finally!) assembled a binder of all the contracts I’d signed over my writing career. I made another binder of unfinished stories, so I could see the work ahead of me.

Having projects waiting for my attention made it much easier to deal with the discovery that the nonfiction book I’d been researching didn’t match the book the publisher wanted, one I was unable to write because of a previous contractual obligation. In another time, I would have been spun by the rejection. I would have been lost for months. Instead, because I’d been doing all this work on goals, I quickly shifted gears and began work on what became the third book I published last year. It’s no exaggeration to say that my cobbled-together planner was a lifesaver.

The upshot of this is: there are many planners for writers out there. Some focus on logging your daily word count. Others track the business aspects of being a writer: your income and expenses. Still others concentrate on calculating your available writing time and how to make best use of it. Some combine inspiration with goal-setting. Finding the right planner for yourself may take a couple of tries, but if you find a planner that supports the kind of writer you are and the work you want to do, it can change your life. It is definitely worth the effort.

Check out the Spooky Writer’s Planner that Loren designed with the help of artist EMZ Rich, available through the Wily Writers Gift Shop.

Categories: Productivity

SEO = Search Engine Optimization

The most important thing I’ve learned during my journey to figure out publishing and the promotion of my work is this:

The world is run by search engines.

That’s oversimplified, but it’s true. I hadn’t thought of Amazon as a search engine, but that’s what it is. Sure, it’s an online store, but the engine that drives it is all about the searching.

Google, Bing, AOL, and Yahoo Search are all commonly accepted search engines, but consider for a moment that Youtube, Barnes & Noble, your online library catalog, and many other websites you visit are driven by a search engine.

In the most basic terms, search engines send a digital spider to “crawl” across vast amounts of data—very quickly—looking for the search term (a.k.a. keyword) you put in the box. Search engines do their absolute best to find the right matches for your search, but consider for a moment what a monumental task this is.

For example, a search for “werewolf novels” is going to find a gajillion results. Of all those results, how does Amazon or Google know which ones to serve up first?

What is a keyword?

A keyword is a word or phrase that a user inputs into the search field with the intent of finding information relative to the keyword. It can be one word or several.

How Search Engines Prioritize Results

Complex algorithms that I will never fully understand determine which results rise to the top of the list. The following criteria are the most important to us writers (not in any order):

  • How well it matched the user’s keywords (what the user put in the search box)
  • How many others have clicked on the result (yes, it’s a popularity contest—why Stephen King always gets top billing)
  • Whether or not you’ve paid for primo placement (advertising)

Of those three things, there are two that you can control. Advertising costs money. Matching search terms costs time—and that’s search engine optimization (SEO).

Why You Should Care

Real talk. If no one ever sees your work, they can’t read it. It’s in your best interest to make it as easy as possible for the search engine to match your work to the user’s keywords.

Now for the How

1. Stop and think whenever you put anything out into the digital world either through your website, a blog, a product page, your bio, a Reddit post, a Facebook page, a Youtube video description, and so on… Think for a moment about how a search engine will view that content, then do your best to give search engines a little help.

2. It’s all about word choice.

Some simple rules apply. Remember this: when a search engine spider crawls a database or the Internet, it’s looking for text that matches the user’s query.

Thus:

  • Don’t put important text only in images. The spider can’t see it there.
  • Use words that you think a user might input when looking for a work like yours. It’s a guessing game, yes, but you can improve your chances with little effort. You can identify your best keywords in advance and keep a list somewhere for easy reference. Over time, this will become second nature. You may have noticed that some authors always use the same descriptive words and phrases in their promotional content. This is why.
  • Don’t get lazy. Add that description or bio to your Youtube video, article, or interview. The title is never enough.
  • Don’t just add a list of keywords. Work the keywords into the body of the text. We used to be able to add a long list of keywords, but these days most spiders recognize that it’s not part of the actual content. The one exception is hashtags on sites like Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter, etc. Those are also search engines, and those hashtags are keywords that help them serve up your content to the appropriate viewers.

Samples

Here are two versions of the same answer to an interview question.

Where do you get your ideas?
When I’m writing, I’m off in my imaginary world, but I also try to notice the real world around me. Most of my ideas come from the things I see, read, overhear, or even dream.

NOTE: vague terms, not much a search engine spider can latch onto

Where do you get your ideas?
When I’m writing a novel in my werewolf series, the HAIRY TEETH CHRONICLES, I let my hilarious characters and their twisted romance guide me, but the initial creative inspiration for the stories—the ideas—could come from funny dialogue I overhear out in public, the serial killer I read about, or a sexy dream I had.

NOTE: Keywords people might search on and find this:
writing a novel, novel, werewolf series, werewolf novel, novel series, werewolf chronicles, hairy, hairy teeth, hilarious characters, twisted romance, romance, creative inspiration, creative ideas, twisted stories, creative stories, funny, funny dialogue, serial killer, sexy, sexy dream.
This text, which is about twice as long as the previous version has a far-greater chance of attracting a spider.

NOTE-2: Many search engines will take individual words and recombine them to match them to different phrases. For example, “funny dream” isn’t a phrase used here, but anyone searching on it may still see your interview in their results. You don’t have to put in all the keywords with exact phrasing so long as the pieces are all there.

Here are two versions of a book description.

MORNING BREATH is the third book in the HAIRY TEETH CHRONICLES. Jim and Brenda have finally made up with the neighbors and are expecting their first child when the world is turned on its head. Adam is back, and he’s packing.

MORNING BREATH is the fast-paced third novel in the HAIRY TEETH CHRONICLES, a series that follows the romantic misadventures of two suburban werewolves. The sassy main characters ended the feud with their neighbors in the second novel—BLOODSHED IN THE SHED—and learned they’re pregnant. All seems idyllic until the seductive rogue vampire Adam returns for vengeance.

Ultimately, you’re going to be doing what you do best: choose the most descriptive and appropriate words that your reader-soulmates might use when looking for your work.

The world is a search engine. Keep that in the back of your mind whenever writing promotional content. Your fans will thank you!

Categories: Promotion, Public

It’s not immediately obvious how to add more information to your Wily member profile, so I’ve put together some instructions.

Updating your profile allows other members to see who you are and what you’ve done. We can all get to know one another.

To find the extended information on your profile:

  1. Make sure you’re logged in.
  2. Click on Members.
  3. Click on your own name.
  4. Click on “Profile”.
    • Here, you can add a profile banner and photo.
  5. Click on “Edit”. This page will take you to a list of fields and questions about yourself. Fill in as many as you’d like!
    • Tip: You can control who sees certain parts of your profile by clicking on “Change” next to “This field may be seen by: “.
    • You can clear the Genres and Media you chose by clicking on “Clear” below that box.
  6. Don’t forget to click “Save Changes” at the bottom.
Categories: Productivity, Public

In the community area, members can create their own groups—both public and private. Use them for workshopping or just talking privately. Set up a private forum just for the people in your group.

Here are the instructions for setting up a group.

  1. From the Groups page (members only), click “Create a Group.”
  2. Next, fill out the Group name and Group description.
  3. Click “Create Group and Continue.”
  4. Next, on the Settings tab, select the privacy option you wish to assign for the group and who can invite users to the group. Click “Next Step.”
  5. On the Avatars Tab, assign a specific avatar to the group if you wish. Click “Next Step.” Same for the Banner.
  6. On the Invites, you can invite users to this Group. You can send invites at any time. BuddyPress requires you to have friend connections before you can invite users.
  7. Click “Finish.”

Contact @Angel if you have any trouble or need assistance.

Note that the admin (@Angel) has access to all groups, even private ones, and the Terms of Service apply there as well as in public areas.

Categories: Perk, Public

Workshops are a great way to get feedback on your work in progress as well as getting to know your peers and make new friends.

Members can create their own workshops and a private group for them. The group will have its own forum just for those people in your group. This way, you don’t have to worry about your manuscript being seen by a broader population.

If you’d like to join a private workshop in progress, request an invitation from one of its members. Our first group is the L’il Workshop of Horrors (members only). Why not give it a poke and see if it squeaks?

BEST PRACTICES:

  • Best not to post the same piece more than twice, at most. Once is best.
  • Best not to argue with the feedback you receive. Just consider it and do what you think is best for your story.
  • Best not to post a whole novel or long work at once. Post in short pieces (chapter or a few pages). You’re far more likely to receive feedback.
  • Give more than you receive. Read others’ work and provide thoughtful constructive feedback.
  • You may invite others to the group if you’d like. It’s best to discuss this will all existing members first.
  • The group is set Private to avoid non-members seeing your work. Please do not change this setting.
  • Give the Terms of Service a look for more on Wily etiquette.
  • Talk to @Angel if you have any difficulties.
Categories: Perk, Public

A comprehensive list of all the video tutorials created for Wily Writers. You can also browse and subscribe to our Youtube channel if you find that more efficient.

Image Editing

Spreadsheets

Categories: List, Public

In this repository, you’ll find spreadsheets and other documents you may find useful. Click the link to download the file.

OF NOTE: Even if you don’t have Excel, you can import .XLS files into Google Spreadsheets. Watch our quick video tutorial to learn how (How to Import an Excel Spreadsheet into Google Sheets).

Categories: List, Public

If this doesn’t get your body moving and blood flowing, nothing will. Don’t be shy. Take a dance break. You’ve earned it!

There’s something for everyone in this playlist. Choose one or put it on random and see what message the Universe is sending you.

Dance like nobody’s watching.

Make your own playlist and link to it in the comments! Share what gets you pumped.

Categories: Health, Public