Real-Life Fiction Podcast Interview

(Look out JK Rowling, I’m coming for you and your paper throne!)

This was a lot of fun, Matt James is an awesome interviewer and we laughed a lot. I’m really grateful for this opportunity to speak a little bit about writing and myself… let it be the beginning of many great things for my books!

Check it out, give it a thumbs up, comment away, and such…. and meanwhile I’ll get back to writing. 😉

Happy 2nd Published Anniversary! (Plus 2 days)

My first book, West of Prehistoric, came out on Sept 18th, 2020.

Thank you all, from the deepest and most fleshiest parts of my heart, for giving an unknown wannabe-author a chance to entertain you. I hope to continue doing so for a very long time to come

Much love and gratitude,

Erik.

August Update?

First off, I did the podcast interview with Matt James of Conundrum Publishing and Real-Life Fiction.

(The above photo was me testing out a web cam that I’d purchased for the interview. The picture was much better than my laptop would have given, and as an added bonus, it had a light and a mic on it to keep me loud and bright instead of sitting in dark shadows with sinister whispering.)

The interview lasted about an hour and was a lot of fun, at least 25% of the podcast was just us laughing. Part of that is because I write well but talk like an idiot…

Tentatively… it will be out at the end of September on both YouTube and Podcasty-type places.

Please watch it, and if it racks up enough views or ‘listens’ maybe they’ll let me come back for a follow up since this one was so fun.

Second off, I did the interview on Wednesday. It’s Sat night and I’m just now sitting down to work on Book IV. That’s because every day this week after work involved me sweating mightily while struggling to put together a swing set for the kids. Ugh. So much sweating and frustration. Especially when the very first piece you bolt in, you put in upside down.

Third off, Book IV story line is getting good. If anyone paid really, really close attention to the first book there was mention of a sister that was never mentioned again throughout the other books. That was for a good reason. And that’s all the hint you get.

Fourth, my goodness folks. The Reviews.

WOW.

I wish I could snag an Amazon screenshot showing all three books. But essentially:

West of Prehistoric: 222 Reviews. 4.6/5 stars.

Enter Prehistoric: 162 Reviews. 4.6/5 stars.

Taming Prehistoric: 75 Reviews. 4.6/5 Stars.

It took WoP 1 year and 1 day to hit 100 reviews. EP it took (I think) 10 months. TP is at 75 and it hasn’t been out 6 months yet. And they all have the same rating, that’s pretty sweet!

I’m not sure how I’m doing over on Goodreads. I don’t bother looking anymore as it’s considered a leper by most established authors. Because if the writer has any notorious views, as in the same mainstream views of 20 years ago, then readers will bombard their books with 1 or 2 star reviews before the book is even released. That place is trash. Don’t go there. Let that Amazon branch wither and die.

Have a wonderful weekend folks.

REAL-LIFE FICTION – A Conundrum Publishing Podcast is interviewing me.

I get to be interviewed for a new podcast next week which shall later be uploaded both on Youtube and where ever Podcasts are played.

Kind of nervous.

But also really excited.

And honestly, the biggest dilemma I’m having now is whether I use my sons awesome ‘wall of dinosaur filled shelves’ as my background or the walls of my very masculine writing nook in the basement…

Deep thoughts to be considered.

Anyways, back to writing Book IV. (I’m a little ahead right now and want to stay that way.)

21 Years left.

I’m 39 and at 60 everything is going to change when I lose the majority of my sight.

It’s called LORD (Late Onset Retinal Degeneration).

What is that?

Something kind of sucky and super rare. (Lucky me!)

***

https://rarediseases.info.nih.gov/diseases/4357/late-onset-retinal-degeneration

Disease at a Glance

Summary

Late-onset retinal degeneration is an inherited retinal dystrophy characterized by delayed dark adaptation and nyctalopia and drusen deposits presenting in adulthood, followed by cone and rod degeneration that presents in the sixth decade of life, which leads to central vision loss. Anterior segment features such as peripupillary iris transillumination defects and abnormally long anterior zonular insertions are also observed. Choroidal neovascularization and glaucoma may occur in the late stages of the disease.

Estimated Number of People with this Disease

This section is currently in development.

***

Well, my mom’s side of the family is in the ‘Number of People with this Disease’.

(Which, as an aside, is why it was so awesome when I got my books turned to AUDIO! Now they could listen to them!)

So, sixth decade of life.

I’m picking 60 as my ‘eyeballs gonna expire by’ date.

And I feel sort of bad about this… that while knowing I may very likely be legally blind in the future, I haven’t prepared well for it.

First is the boring stuff. Mainly aimed at helping my family out. By 2043 I want to have the house paid for, our 401K stocked up well enough for my planned forced retirement at 60, and debt free.

This is doable. With the help of Dave Ramsey’s calculator I worked out the math on how to pay the house off by then. And it’s gonna save us $88,000 in interest! As for debt, we’re pretty debt free. Except for our vehicles and I’ve started really considering at trading my beautiful, wonderful, immaculate, and gorgeous 2022 Ram Rebel for something used that I can pay off quicker. I’m on the fence about it. But it makes a lot of financial sense. So… we’ll see. (It’s such an awesome truck!)

The 401k… ugh. I worked the numbers and I’m not THAT happy with them. But I’m also partially banking on a total collapse of the US Dollar and our economy by then and living off the land by growing meat and veggies in the backyard.

That’s about 50% true. But I’m planning for both scenarios. Thus, more money goes into the 401k to make us more monies down the road.

And Social Security? -snort- Yeah, I ain’t banking on that.

So that’s the boring stuff.

The really, really important stuff?

Writing.

🙂

Gone are my daydreams of spending my golden twilight years in front of a computer, endlessly pounding away at the keyboard, churning out best selling novels filled with masculinity and adventure.

I mean, I can probably still do it. But it’s gonna be pretty different depending on how my eyeballs go. There are options to keep writing, but none that I’m excited about. Dictating? Ugh. Writing on a monster computer screen using my surviving peripheral vision? Ugh. But I also can’t imagine NOT creating verbal entertainment for the rest of my life, so we’ll see.

But there is a new found, “Holy Smokes I’ve got to get moving!”, on my writing passion.

21 years.

At my current rate, that’s 21 books before things start getting difficult at one book a year.

And to be honest, that’s not good enough. I can’t settle for only writing 21 more books the traditional way.

So.

It’s time to kick it up a notch. It’s time to perform. Time to put out. Time to produce.

It ain’t over yet.

Time to aim HARD for that 1 book every six month goal.

Let’s go for 42 instead of 21.

“Good.”