Spring the Woods Anew

We had a busy April at Eagles Hill Publishing, my LLC. Mostly good stuff, little bit of bad. Such is life.

It kicked off with a fun visit to Blake’s Backyard Book Club, where I got to speak to about two dozen new readers and answer a lot of excellent questions. Their club reads a new book every month, alternating between suspense/thrillers and romance, and they chose Crying Call for their April read. I’d never before had the privilege of talking about writing to that big a crowd. It was a lot of fun, and I hope I get to do it again soon!

Then, we had a brief health crisis. Becka ended up in the hospital for a week — don’t panic, she’s fine. It’s a little scary when something like that happens to the woman who is my everything. My wife, my best friend, and now stepmom of our rampaging teen kaiju. My editor, my co-author, and the reigning queen of pub trivia. She does it all. She’s my Swiss Army wife.

The dust from that is still settling as she and I make some subtle, healthy life changes. I had to cancel a signing event over in Ann Arbor, but was still able to vend at a few night markets where I sold and signed oodles of books. To my surprise, Blood Game tends to outsell Crying Call at these events. Personally, I think Crying Call is the better book, and they can be read in either order, but when I pick up new readers they usually insist on reading the first book first. I guess that’s not surprising.

In all the hullabaloo surrounding that stuff, plus the end of my Winter semester at UDM, I found out that Crying Call won a few awards! Specifically, it took the bronze at the Spring 2026 BookFest in the categories Thriller/Espionage and Thriller/Literary. Blood Game won silver last year … I guess the competition was tougher this time around.

It’s kind of nice doing well in contests, I suppose. It feels validating. But in the end, all it means is I get to call my books “award-winning” on Amazon or elsewhere. But it doesn’t make me feel appreciated — that’s something that only comes from talking to my readers. What my readers think and how my books make them feel are what truly matters. Everything else is just the superficial trappings of the business.

So on that note, I’m lining up several more events for May and June, getting out there to meet new readers. On Saturday, May16th, I’ll be at a Boozy Book Fair at Coyote Joe’s all evening. That’s a country music bar not far from me, which I hear is a jumping place with good crowds on the week-ends. The Saturday after that I’ll be down in Toledo at the Muddy Maumee Book and Art Festival, another night market.

It’s finally warm enough in Michigan for farmer’s markets, so I’ll be sprinkling some of those into the week-ends between major events. That’s a bit of advice I’d give to any new, independent authors — hit a lot of farmer’s markets in your first year. You’ll do better at them than you think, and it’s a great place to practice your repartee before setting up at major markets and book festivals.

Maybe my next long post should be a general advice post: what I learned in my first year as an indie author. Secrets revealed! Scandals exposed! Inquiring minds want to know!

Poker in the Ears, Author in the Rear?

After mentioning me and Blood Game at the start of the podcast, you have to wait until about the 52:23 mark before my 25-minute interview begins. But as a bonus, when they’re done talking to me, one of the hosts and one of the fans of the podcast compete in a trivia contest about my book. It’s pretty cool! Check it out if you haven’t already. The Spotify link if below, but you can also find this wherever else you get your podcasts.

It was a little bit of wish fulfillment getting on that show, because I’ve been a fan of it for … jeez … I’m not even sure. Four or five years, I’d guess. Since whenever it was I first stumbled onto it, during COVID quarantine probably.

And in the wake of this podcast, I’ve been invited onto “Indie Author Reads,” to record an episode that’ll probably air in late April or early May. This one will be me reading an excerpt or two from Blood Game, and talking to the host before and after and maybe in-between.

In the mean time, I’m still scoping out book conventions and other opportunities to do book signings. And I’m waiting on information about whether Blood Game will be nominated for awards. I should get the first information about that sometime in the next month.

In other words, I’m doing all the things authors are supposed to do, except … I’m not spending as much time writing as I probably should. I need to work on my time management, as well as the resilience to keep on churning out the words no matter good and bad directions life pulls me.

So back to the writing then. I’m about 17,000 words into the first draft of Book 3, a.k.a. Drawing Dead, and it’s long past time I kicked that into a higher gear.