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Jason Stadtlander

Hilarious Author, Carol E. Wyer puts Jason in the Spotlight!

Hilarious Author, Carol E. Wyer puts Jason in the Spotlight! 150 150 Jason Stadtlander

Jason in the Spotlight!

“I am all of a fluster today and have even put on make up. My knees have just turned to jelly and I have, according to Hubby got a very “high colour”! Why? Well, opposite me is *gulp* Jason P. Stadtlander. (Even his name makes him sound like a superstar).

Jason is a sci-fi/horror/suspense author and is currently working on not one but four novels. I understand that one is semi-erotic (Whoops, I have gone all flushed again.)
Jason, a very warm (has someone turned up the heat in here?) welcome to you. I am very glad you agreed to come on to my blog today. I have a few easy, rapid fire questions for you, just to get you comfortable. Ready?”

read more…

Where The Streets Have No Name

Where The Streets Have No Name 150 150 Jason Stadtlander

The Sanity of Insanity

InsaneAlthough this may sound like some “new age” meditation article, it is not that. It’s about taking a moment and being human, detached from society’s rules and the rat-race in general. It’s about remembering that you’re a living being and have a life of your own.

Taking a moment to step out of time, out of a moment in your life is never easy but it is so critical for self-reflection and the health of your mind. The one thing that so many people do not think about, and I mean truly think about; is themselves.

Most of us go about our daily routine, getting up, going to school or going to work and don’t really think twice about our own internal workings. I believe that a lot of people are probably scared of their mind, what it might think about or where it might go if it lacks the normal daily stimulus or worse yet, where it won’t go. The truth is though, there is nothing wrong with it not going anywhere. The human mind is always trying to find a way to stimulate itself or relax itself. It’s the whole reason we dream at night or space out during the day.

Find Your Peace

It’s not easy and it may very well go against every ounce of your values, but play hookie for half a day. If you’re married, have kids, etc. Send the kids to school and take half the day off or if you can, take the whole day off. Find yourself a book to lose yourself in. And I mean a real book with pages you have to physically turn. Disconnect yourself from all electronics and leave your phone at home. Go and sit at the Inner Peacepark or at the beach or even in your own back yard, but make sure you can’t hear phones ring or sirens blare or children laughing and screaming. The idea is solitude without interruption.

Some of us are blessed enough to have that space outside of our back yard and others might have to drive forty miles to find it. Whatever the case, find it.

As strange as it sounds, even if you’re not an avid reader, the book part is an important part of this equation. It will allow you to not only have a distraction in your solitude (because, yes, we still need that) but it will also allow you to escape to a world completely disconnected from yours. You find your mind drifting from time to time off the book and maybe you’ll have to re-read the same page three times… but your mind will be relaxing and within no time at all, you will have covered thirty pages without even realizing it.

Breathe, Drink and Live

Have plenty of water on hand and dress comfortably for your day off. Be sure that you don’t have a day planner with you, a computer, an iPod or anything else that is electronic. Remember what life was like before it all, what we are without that, that we have created. Every once in a while take a moment and look around you at the trees, the grass or simply your own bedroom if that is where you needed to find solitude. Breathe deeply and think about things that are going on in your life and how you have been (or not been) dealing with them. It is not important that you find solutions in this day off. All that is important is that you focus on yourself and be selfish, for a day. It will help you to care for others and help you cope with your days so much easier.

 

Now, if I could only follow my own advice. 🙂

 

Getting the most from a Book Signing – Authors and Readers

Getting the most from a Book Signing – Authors and Readers 150 150 Jason Stadtlander

Book signings benefit three people:

  • The Fan (reader)
  • The Author (and the publisher a bit)
  • The Bookstore

First, lets look at how each benefit from book signings.

The Fan or Reader

There is more to a book signing than simply showing up and getting a signature on a book.

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Meet the author

Author Jason P. Stadtlander with fan Tina at The Beehive Bookstore in Delaware, Ohio

Meet the Author – A book signing is a chance for you as the reader to actually meet the author and if you’re lucky enough for the bookstore to not be busy at the moment you are there – perhaps even have a more personal conversation with the author.

In many cases you will get a chance to see if the author is at all like their characters, which you may be surprised at the similarities. It also gives you a chance to ask the author questions you may be wondering such as: Where did you come up with xx idea? What inspired you to write? etc.

Photo Op – One other benefit that you and the author will enjoy is a photo opportunity. Most authors really enjoy connecting with their readers and enjoy getting photos with their readers. It is a chance for other fans to see that ‘yes, this person is real’.

Read on Author, Read on – Another less talked about aspect is the chance to possibly hear the author do a reading. Okay, at first this may sound a little strange… you sit around and listen to an author read some from their book. However, you may find it intriguing to hear an author read their own work. I can speak from experience in that I enjoy my characters I’ve created. I tend to give “voices” to them and provide a personality to them that you may not hear in your head when you’re reading it on your own.

The Author

Here are a few reasons that book signings benefit authors and some dos and don’ts for authors.

Publicize! – Probably the most obvious reason for doing a book signing is to publicize your work. You may not think that hitting one book store at a time will make a difference, but people talk. Word of mouth is probably your most powerful marketing tool. An author who is out there meeting the people who the book is reaching, is naturally more talked about than those who do not.

InspireInspire – Although I have only done a few book signings, at each book signing I have met other people aspiring to write who have stopped out for nothing more than inspiration. After all, you have achieved what they are dreaming to… You’re a published author! Say a little something to fellow writers, everyone’s writing is important. Do not be concerned with competition or anything silly like that. Everyone’s writing is different and in my opinion; EVERYONE has something to contribute to the world of literature.

At a recent book signing someone stopped out to let me know that her friend was starting out as a novelist and that it would mean a lot if I could write a little something to him. I was honored that she thought my words might make a difference (See: http://dougdutcher.livejournal.com/5066.html).

Photo Op – Pretty much the same reasons as I gave fans… it’s a chance for you to be seen as a real person as well have a few photos for your Facebook Fan Page or Twitter accounts.

Connect with Bookstores – Connecting with small bookstores is very important. Yes, there are the big guys like Amazon.com and Barnes and Nobles who are going to carry your book but may not give it much more shelf space than the latest copy of People Magazine. Small booksellers will promote you if you promote them. Talk about them, tell your fans about them and they in turn will be very happy to have you out for book signings and events.

Connect with Teachers – Something that you may not think about is the chance to connect with English and Literature teachers and professors. Yes, they too attend book signings. I recently had a teacher attend a book signing who wants to use “Ruins of the Mind” to teach his class about short stories. This means a couple dozen sales of my book as well as an opportunity for me to possibly speak to his class later.

Don’t sit at the table – Big, HUGE advice here. You are there to promote yourself and your book as well as the bookstore. Get up, go meet people, ask them what they are looking for and get a store representative to help you help them. Find out what the customers like to read and suggest your book. It can often surprise customers when you’re walking around and mention that you wrote “this book”. Nothing is more boring than an author who is just sitting there like a limp noodle with a stack of books around them. Get personal and be personable.

The Bookstore Owner

An author event may seem like a pain, some promotion, having to set up a table, posters, etc. However, it brings people in to your store and if planned right it will be beneficial for you and the author.

Promote – Promoting a book signing costs almost nothing for a bookstore (other than getting some Promote your Eventsinventory in for the signing). Most authors will send you photos, press releases and posters for free. If the author knows what they are doing, they will send you a ‘press ready’ press release that you can email off to your local newspapers and TV stations. My biggest advice here, bug your local press to put something in the paper or get a TV station down to your store. It may not sound like a big deal but the public loves a reason to get out of the house and if they don’t know about it, they won’t come.

Social network your author events in newsletters, on your bookstore’s Facebook page and on twitter.

As an author, I usually do a lot of the promoting of my book signings on my website, Facebook page, Twitter, LinkedIn, Goodreads, etc.

 

 

Get the most from a book signing

As a reader, attend it! Buy a book to show your support for your author and ask the author to say something personal. Talk to the author so they know a little bit about you, it will make the signing more personal.

As an author, promote your event! Talk about it on Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, LinkedIn, newspapers, TV, anywhere you can talk about it, do it.

As a book store owner, setup a small display of the book with a little poster of the author a few weeks before. Send out an e-newsletter. Talk to the press.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

Lone Ship

Lone Ship 150 150 Jason Stadtlander

A Lone ShipI stand upon my ship.
Lost in the waves of life.
Trapped by the sea that carries me.
No change in the horizon in any direction.
My life is a an illusion.
A fabric, woven of threads threads I can’t grasp.

My oasis is a shore I can never reach,
For this planet that I exist upon is endless.
Endless waves of endless seas, without substance.
A desolate grey sky that torments me,
Creating storms that toss me about.

Sometimes the storms are enough to crush me,
But they do not as that is not my fate.
My fate is out of my control,
Drifting, to a harbor, a mirage.
Trapping me upon my ship.
As I sail on for lands I will never reach.

~ Jason P. Stadtlander

Broaden Your Literary Palette

Broaden Your Literary Palette 150 150 Jason Stadtlander

I stand and look at my sad excuse for a library (actually just a single wooden bookshelf) and let out a sigh as I see a nice collection, but very few names. Dean Koontz, Stephen King, Clive Cussler, J.R.R. Tolkien, John Saul and a smattering of other authors.

I find it it a bit depressing. First, that I don’t have a monster library that stretches the walls of my enormous library with ladders that roll back and forth so that I can ride along the walls as I read my rare Stephen King signed first edition of Carrie… Well, okay, my ten foot by ten foot office that is tucked into the corner of my basement, and the closest thing I have to a signed copy of Carrie is the library stamp in the cover that says “Used”.

Secondly, that there are so few names. Granted, I do have a few more names on my Kindle app on my iPad. However, expanding one’s reader palette requires three things:

  1. Money. Something I do not have much of, being a fledgling author.
  2. Time to read more, something I do not have much of working full time… being a fledgling author.
  3. Most importantly, the ability (or desire) to step outside one’s comfort levels when it comes to reading. This I have.

Don’t get me wrong, I too see a stack of books at the bookstore or online and can’t help but gravitate towards the authors I already love. However, as of late I have been trying more to concentrate on diversifying my literary palette.

With each new author you will find that their style is different. It takes a while to get comfortable with how they create characters and how they paint a scene. However, in time you (and I) will find it also broadens your vocabulary, understanding and quite possibly your intellect as well.

So, step out today and buy a new author you’ve never read. And I, shall do the same.

From Horrible Dreams To Mighty Gleams

From Horrible Dreams To Mighty Gleams 150 150 Jason Stadtlander

A dark monster stalks the night, the ultimate hunter. Preying on children who don’t obey their parents. Could it be, the Boogie Man? No… it is none other than The Steel Van Man.

Open the Door?
I will admit that the thought of writing a horror story scares me a bit. No, not because it’s a horror story – but rather because I have to put myself into a mindset that can be… Uncomfortable for the average person.

I have one such horror story I have worked on, set it down. Worked on again, and set it down. The truth is, the main antagonist in the story is of an imaginary man from my childhood: The Steel Van Man. As a child my father used to warn me to get to bed or he would call the Steel Van Man. I can remember hearing the theme song to MASH and wanting to stay up to go watch it and my father would go to the telephone (then NOT cordless on the wall) and pick it up feigning dialing. I would freak out and run for my bunk bed.

This image developed in my head about this phantom creature that stalked children in the night and collected the bad ones. It became so solid in fact that it became quite easy for me to sit down and write the novel, having a plethora of details already in my mind.

Now, I have once again picked up my proverbial pencil (actually my keyboard) and started writing it again. I think what disturbs me most is that some of the chapters I write are from his point of view… And if find it unnerving that I can tap a part of my psyche that can write this man into existence.

So, in short, I hope that everyone will enjoy this thriller when I am done. Let me know if you want to hear more and I will post more thoughts on the project as it develops.

Haikus of Love

Haikus of Love 150 150 Jason Stadtlander

Soulmates
Spirits of wonder
For love, two hearts that unite
Soul mates connected

For the love of a child
A child so young
Small windows of innocence
A heart that’s so true

 

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