March Madness, April Showers

Crying Call has been out for a couple months now, and as the weather begins to warm up, that means we’re heading toward market season. Now begins the difficult time management of working on my next novel (Drawing Dead) while getting out there and marketing my finished works. I’ve already managed to have several good outings.

My best sales day ever happened about a month ago at Blake’s Boozy Book Fest. I have to hand it to Blake’s — their six-hour ticketed event was hands down the most fun and best organized book event I’ve ever been to. I’m not sure when their next book event will be, but I hope I’m invited to that one too. For the record, I sold ten copies of my crossword puzzle book, and sixty total books from the Thomas Vale series.

Meanwhile, Blake’s also has a monthly book club, and they selected Crying Call as their current read. I’ll be going there Wednesday night to meet the club, answer questions, and probably sign some books for them. I’ve never done a solo author signing before, and I’m looking forward to it. Actually, I have two solo signings this month, because I’ll be doing a signing at Calliope Bookshelf in Washington, MI on April 18th. More on that in the next post.

Next Saturday, the 11th, I’ll be at the Washtenaw County Fairgrounds, a little southwest of Ann Arbor, for “Books in the Barn,” which I understand is sort of like a Boozy Book Fair without the open bar.

Probably the coolest thing that happened was when I went back to the Third Coast Book Fest in Grand Haven, MI. Last year was their debut year, and I was there for it — it’s where I made my first ever sales at a public event. Three hundred sixty-four days later, Becka was able to come with me this time. She took the picture below.

It’s a picture of me standing with Debra, the first person who ever bought a book from me at a book event. She came up to the table this year, told me how much she enjoyed Blood Game, and promptly bought Crying Call. Guess I owe it to her to finish Drawing Dead on time, so she can finish the trilogy next year!

Happy New Year!

Good heavens! I just realized … I haven’t updated this blog since 2025!

Becka and the kids and I had a very happy and laid back holiday season, and relaxation continues for a little while longer. The kids don’t start back at school until January 5th, and my UDM classes don’t begin until the 12th. But you know me … I don’t know what to do with myself if I don’t have work or some sort of project to do, so I’ve still been busy.

I recorded two episodes for “Indie Reads Aloud,” which is Diana Kathryn Penn’s podcast where she briefly interviews writers before and after they read a selected passage from their book. Here’s a link to the YouTube video for Episode #271, where I read from Blood Game:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUJxrda8gXc

We also recorded a video for Crying Call, but that episode (#283 I think) doesn’t come out until February 4th, the day after its official release date. However, a little bird told me that if you’d like to hear it early, you might find the audio-only version on Spotify. See below.

Other updates? Well, Becka and I broke 97K words on the first draft our romance/thriller, about 85% done or so, and I just broke 41K words on the first draft of Drawing Dead (about 45% done).

If you check out my website, you’ll see a lot of reorganization underway, most of which is finished, but Becka will be helping me with some flashy stuff over the next few days. Expect the Blood Game banner to soon be replaced by an equally cool Crying Call banner.

Another big additions is an “Appearances” page accessible from the main menu. It contains Spotify links to most of my podcast appearances, including the two mentioned above. Here’s a link for your convenience: https://jeffe.boats/appearances/

I’m redid my “Books” page and am working on each individual book page. I’ve added more songs to the Drawing Dead playlist (a song for each chapter, as I write them). But the biggest addition is the “Free Stuff” page, where buttons are available to take you to the first few chapters of all my books, plus I’ll be adding a few other writing samples now and then, just for fun. Here’s the link: https://jeffe.boats/free-stuff/

That’s where I’m at. Less than five weeks to Crying Call’s release on February 3rd. My next blog post will come out early next week, and it’ll contain an “early bird” discount code for anyone who’d like to get the book early.

Ho! Ho! Ho! Holiday Sale for E-books!

I was going to wait until Boxing Day for this, and make it a post-Holidays sale, but … what the heck. Time to deck the halls and jingle some bells! Kindle sale !!! 🙂

I went and marked down the Kindle version of Blood Game to $2.99, which was as low as Amazon would let me go without doing something weird to the royalties structure. Obviously I’m hoping to get more readers and more reviews, drawing in the people who were squeamish about buying the book before. Now they can get it for less than what Amazon offers in digital rewards when you to agree to later shipments.

And then I did something similar for Crying Call, the sequel, which comes out on my birthday (February 3rd). I priced that one at $3.99, and made it available for pre-order.

So this is important … if you’re one of the folks who pre-ordered it before now, or if you’d like to join that group of people, please click on the image of the book cover below. It’s a link to where you can pre-order it in its Kindle format. Pre-orders in the old format should disappear in the week or so, so switching to the new one will keep you on schedule to get Crying Call on the release date. And the fact that it’s now less than half the previous price is another nice perk!

One thing I’ve learned in my first year of publishing is that I probably overpriced my e-books the first time. So this is me correcting that mistake. Hopefully I’ll get a lot more readers this time around, and a lot more reviews.

And it’s the reviews I really, really need. Good reviews are way more valuable to me than the teeny tiny revenues I’m getting. Having lots of reviews is the only way indie authors like myself can be seen and get promoted by the cold, blind machines of Amazon and other online distributors.

If you like my work, and want to help me out, please leave a good online review. Amazon is the best place for that, but Barnes&Noble and GoodReads reviews help too. And please do that for every other author you like, too. I can’t tell you how much we appreciate it.

Buon Natale!

Oh Yeah, I Forgot To Mention…

It suddenly occurred to me … I haven’t mentioned my awards in this blog yet. Oops! Well, as it happens …

…Blood Game won two silver medals at BookFest! It finished second in the categories:

Best Thriller/Espionage and Best Mystery/Espionage.

And in true spy fashion, I sneakily forgot to say anything this for about a month. Guess I’ve had a lot on my mind. Blood Game is also up for other awards, but I won’t know those results until the Fall. What I’m really hoping for is a nomination for Best Book at the GPI (Global Poker Index) awards in February, but that might be a longshot.

Meanwhile, I’ve been getting some good feedback. A handful of the folks who’ve read Crying Call early have told me they liked it and considered it better than Blood Game. Not surprising — most writers improve as they go, especially from the first book to the second.

Some of them liked the secret, sort-of-experimental thing I did near the end of Crying Call, while some didn’t quite get it. I don’t want to say exactly what it is here and spoil the surprise. I’ll just say that there are a few spots in Crying Call where I deliberately change the voice of the narrator, and for some people it provokes the strong emotions I want, while other readers seem unfazed by it. To each his own, I guess.

That’s all for now. I’m jamming away at the first draft of Drawing Dead, about 25% of the way. The explosive opening gambit is written, and in another chapter or so the main action of the book will kick off. It’s always more fun writing the action bits.

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.

Back from the Third Coast Book Fest

Trivia Question: Which of the 48 continental states has the most coastline?

Answer: Michigan! Because it has two long peninsulas set in the middle of the Great Lakes.

So “Third Coast Book Festival” is an appropriate name, it seems, as they held it on the left coast of Michigan last Saturday. One hundred authors, give or take, swarmed into the downtown of Grand Haven, and various businesses let us set up sales tables. I estimate about 150-200 book lovers walked about the town, coming in from the cold to talk to us and occasionally buy a few signed copies of our books.

I had a pretty good time, and I’d say the event was fairly well run considering it was their first time doing it. And they invited the authors to a “VIP charity ball” in the evening, where we got to connect with other authors and talk to some readers. I suspect they’ll have the bugs worked out by next year, and rumor has it there’ll be some bigtime authors invited. Mark it on your calendars: March 21, 2026. I’ll be there!

That said, I was absolutely exhausted when I got home, late Saturday night. It takes a lot out of autistic people to be that extroverted and social for that long. I don’t think I could have done it again the next day. I’m going to have to build up my tolerance and incorporate some self-care as I continue to do bigger and bigger festivals as my career develops.

I sold a bunch of copies of Blood Game, and for the first time ever, I also sold some copies of Crying Call, a.k.a. Book 2 of the Thomas Vale series. It can be ordered on my website now, but I’m not really hyping it yet. I just figured — if I’m going to go to the bother of lugging boxes of books across the state, I might as well bring both titles.

Yeah, yeah, I know, it’s confusing. The official release date for Crying Call will be my 53rd birthday, 2/3/26. And that’s when any preorders at Amazon, Barnes&Noble, et cetera will be delivered. If I can manage to get my books on shelves at B&N or other places, that’s the day they’ll appear. My plan is to release a new book every first Tuesday of February for as long as I can keep up.

But as the owner of the copyrights, I can sell my books any time I want. So despite the fact that I haven’t even done a Crying Call “official cover reveal” yet (mid-April, probably), I’ve sold several copies and sent a few more out in ARC packages. My hope is that by the time the official release day comes, I’ll have lots and lots of reviews online. So I’m beginning the process earlier this time, having learned from last time that three months early isn’t enough.

And that’s all for now. This week I get back to just writing, working on the first draft of Drawing Dead (Book 3). I’m looking forward to being interviewed by the hosts of “Poker In the Ears” next week, and I’ll post a link to the show when it drops.

Poker Book Club? Hell, Yeah!

Damn, it feels good to be writing again.

The words started flowing again this morning, for a pivotal action scene near the beginning of Drawing Dead. The third book has its opening gambit take place in Antarctica (yes, seriously!), and the action is as hot as the weather is cold. At least it will be if I write it well. Feels good to be crafting stories again.

These last few months I’ve been working so hard at everything BUT writing, trying to market and publicize my book and do all the little things they don’t teach you in English class. It’s a lot of behind-the-scenes scraping and hustling, often with no idea if any of it will even work, and some days it feels like shouting in the wilderness. But today was not one of those days!

I tuned into my favorite poker/pop-culture podcast, “Poker In the Ears,” and heard the official announcement of something co-host Joe Stapleton had already told me by email. “Blood Game” has been chosen for a “poker book club.” Basically, I’ll be invited to record part of one of their shows, probably in April. Fans of the show (and there are MANY) are being encouraged to read the book over the next two months, to come up with questions to be asked of me on that show.

I wonder what their audience will think. Maybe they’ll like my book, and maybe they won’t. Some of both probably. No work of art is for everyone.

These are primarily poker fans, and I think they’ll like the detail I put into strategic decisions. “Blood Game” is also, as far as I’m aware, the only work of popular fiction that talks about hand ranges or the fact that PLO exists. But I took some of that out in places where it was maybe too much, and hurt the pacing. Maybe I’ll put some alternate versions of chapters on my website someday, so the poker aficionados can read more of the stuff they like.

At the risk of stating the obvious, this is beyond cool! And I really appreciate the opportunity to get my voice out to the masses. I think that’s all any upstart writer can hope for. A chance to be heard.

Part of what makes the traditional publishing process so hard is you go into it knowing that most agents aren’t even going to read your sample pages, and editors won’t even talk to you without an agent. Just getting people to give you a chance is a massive hurdle. So many of us just give up. Thanks, Mom and Dad, for the fact I don’t know how.

Maybe someday I’ll be in a position to give fellow writers a boost. For now, it’s my time to appreciate being on the receiving end.

(Check out “Poker In the Ears” wherever you find podcasts. In this post, I refer to a four-minute block early on in Episode 328)

All the Little Chores

The store-release date for Blood Game is now set at February 4th, and I think that’ll be the pattern going forward. My limited market research suggests early February is a good spot for me to appear — not many other big thriller releases, plus there’s all the post-Christmas gift card usage at online retailers, plus the avid readers who picked up a lot of books over the holidays will have finished some or all of them by then.

So I’m leaning toward three consecutive first-week-of-February releases for the opening trilogy, and we’ll see after that.

I’m starting to get my marketing ducks in a row. It’s exciting watching my book pop up on most of the worldwide Amazon sites and lots of other sites I’ve never even heard of. Available for presale in most places. I have no way of knowing how many pre-orders have been made — probably not many yet. I’m still learning how to acquire that sort of information. Tack that on to my ongoing and evolving list of chores.

I’ve sent out most of the non-family ARCs (advanced reader copies), though some of the family and friend ARCs are delayed due to some holiday printing delays (another reason to release in February). Most of the poker/gambling folks I reached out to responded to me, and most will at least give me a nice blurb-quote for my website or future book jackets. Maybe mention me on their platforms. I may or may not get invited onto a podcast or three. That’s all up in the air for the moment.

All of the autism influencers and experts I’ve written have ignored me, with the exception of one flat rejection from the person’s agent. Honestly, that was expected. There was only one of those I really wanted to talk to anyway, but so far that one has ghosted me. Maybe it’s because the holidays. I’m hoping that’s all it is.

It’s really hard to break in when no one’s heard of you, and no one thinks what you’re doing matters. I’ve never doubted myself for even a second, and it certainly helps that I’m quite well off and don’t need to be financially successful as an author. Takes the pressure off, at least. But I do doubt whether the literature space will ever accept me. I have doubts about whether my message will reach its audience.

In the mean time, all I can do is keep banging away at all the chores — all those little things you have to do to self-publish properly. I’m having a hell of a time getting the USPS mailer software installed in my order pages, which is why the book can’t be purchased pre-sale on my website yet. In the next few days, I may have to rig up something functional but not as good, just to get things going while I continue to wrestle with the post office.

I should also start an LLC for “Eagles Hill Publishing,” my personal imprint. I hear that’s inexpensive and not very difficult, but we’ll see. Aiming for the end of the week to have these things done. The struggle continues.