Kings
Thursday, July 31st, 2008This sounds really cool to me. Enough so that I wish NBC had promoted it at Comic-Con. A very creative idea. My curiosity is seriously piqued.
This sounds really cool to me. Enough so that I wish NBC had promoted it at Comic-Con. A very creative idea. My curiosity is seriously piqued.
It’s that crazy time of the year, and I’ll be flying out early in the morning at the crack of whyamIawake? to San Diego for the annual Geekapalooza, Nerdopolis, fanboy prom… Comic-Con! I and 125,000 of my closest friends (or, you know, total strangers, whatever) will be taking a look at what’s hot and what’s to come in the world of movies, television, comic books, video games, and more.
I’ll be blogging my experiences and all of the latest news over at PopCultureGeek.com with my partner in crime, Doug Kline. We’re going all out for our usual non-stop coverage, with tons of photos, videos, and lots and lots of words.
I’m also going to try and shop myself around to the comic book publishing companies and see if I can get a foot in the door to do some comic book writing. (If you feel led to pray for this, that would be great! Karen and I could really use the income.) I don’t expect it to be easy — like all things, it will depend on meeting just the right people — but I’m going to pray for some divine appointments and give it my best shot.
Here goes nothing.
I don’t have a lot to say about today at ICRS, because I didn’t stay that long. I was pretty much done by around 11:30 in the morning. As I told several people on my way out, ICRS started making me feel bad about being a Christian today. It wasn’t any different than yesterday, really, I just reached a critical mass point with it. I had to get out. And I won’t be going back tomorrow. I’ve had my fill. I’m all done for this year. See you in Denver in next year, CBA.
Before I forget, let me say once again a huge THANK YOU to everyone who came to my book signing. 2008 hasn’t been my best year, professionally, so it did my heart good to be here for that. It was so nice to meet some true fans among the crowd, and I even heard several comments about how much some of you miss Infuze, which was also a really nice thing for these ears to hear.
(And fans of Infuze: stay tuned. I don’t have a website in the works, and Infuze isn’t coming back. It’s nothing like that. But I may have a bit of news in the near future that should be of great interest to Infuze enthusiasts.)
Speaking of Infuze, I ran into blogger/writer/thinker/speaker Andy Crouch today. He’s a guy after Infuze’s heart. We’d never met before, and he was doing a book signing for his new nonfiction title, Culture Making, which looks really good, and right up my alley. Super nice guy. Can’t wait to read that book.
I’m missing E3 to be here, and man, I do feel it. I could have gone and covered it for PopCultureGeek.com, but my wife and I both felt that ICRS was more important. (And probably less expensive.) I miss my annual video game fix, though.
Had a cool lunch meeting with Paul Higdon (the designer of all my book covers, I mentioned him yesterday), and we brainstormed cover ideas for Offworld, my next novel. (I’m writing it now; it’ll be out next summer.) He’s insanely talented, but this is a tricky one. It’s got a simple story hook, but that same hook represents an enormous challenge to communicate visually. Paul asked me really intelligent questions about the story, the characters, the thematic elements, and the entire plot. And I answered his every question as best I could. I could practically see the wheels turning in his mind. Sometimes when I answered one of his questions, his eyes would twinkle a little bit. We seemed to be on the same page as for the level of detail and photo-realism and how it should be presented. Now it just comes down to what he can come up with, image wise, with the limited budget BHP has. I should get to see something within the next few months, but I gave Paul all my info so we can stay in direct contact, and he can continue to grill me if needed.
Speaking of Offworld, after I left the convention center after lunch, I rented a car and drove out to Kennedy Space Center. I’d always wanted to go there, and this was too good an opportunity to pass up. Plus, it allowed me to do a little research for Offworld. (Don’t bother asking for details; my lips are sealed!) I took tons of photos and threw a few of them up on Facebook. Check it out if you can. They turned out pretty cool, especially the super-zooms I was able to get of the launching pads and gantries. Wish I’d had more than a few hours to poke around; there’s tons more to do there than you might think.
That’s pretty much it for me from ICRS this year. It was a fun experience. I loved connecting with friends, old and new. And I’m glad it’s over now and I get to go home and see my adoring wife and my wonderful little boy!
(And despite what Sharon Hinck may tell you, my 7-month-old son Evan really can say “I love Da-Da.”)
I actually took notes so I’d remember all this stuff for my blog. That’s right, I love my readers that much. And also, I may not officially be a reporter at the moment, but I just can’t seem to shake the habit.
In no particular order:
Off to bed now, at last… More tomorrow.
It’s my third ICRS. Can you believe it?
So I got here thinking that this would be my big year, you know? The grand finale of the Dominion Trilogy, the big ending, the Trilogy is completed. Quite an accomplishment. I figured I had reason to feel kinda special this year.
Turns out, I’m not so much. As it was explained to me, the third book in a series is “a hard sell,” because the audience for the series is “pretty much defined at this point.” What about people new to the series who could be enticed to start at the beginning and buy/read all three, you ask? I guess we don’t care that much about reaching them.
I was only requested for one interview this year (though it’s with Moody Radio, which is pretty cool), and Bethany House didn’t even bother to put up a poster for the cover of Merciless anywhere on their booth, as they have the last two years, with Relentless and Fearless. And it might make me petty, but I’m a little nonplussed at that.
However, all this leads me to believe that next year, Offworld will be a much bigger deal. I mean, I guess it will. Because it’s something entirely new, it’s more easily accessible to new readers, and therefore it’s easier for salesmen and bookstore buyers to take hold of. It all makes sense, I guess, but I sure wish I’d known beforehand that the industry hype for the Trilogy would dwindle for the last book. It seems like such a shame, doesn’t it? Fearless got a lot more attention when it came out, but Merciless is unquestionably the superior book.
In other news, I found out today that my next three novels with Bethany House (including Offworld) will release only in trade paperback. The time of the hardbacks at BHP has ended! I was kinda shocked at this. Apparently, bookstores hate hard cover books from BHP… something to do with displaying in stores and store sales and all that wonderful red tape. Basically, the stores don’t like ‘em, so BHP ain’t makin’ ‘em anymore.
I suppose that’s a good thing. I imagine most readers will think it is; it’ll be a lot easier on their wallets. But there’s a certain level of prestige that only comes with hardback releases, which I’ll miss. (That’s my ego talking… Just ignore it and it’ll go away.)
Ran into Brad Whittington, the hilariously witty author of “the Fred books,” as they’re called. We hung out at a special event for authors represented by Alive Communications, where the special speaker was Anne Graham Lotz. She was fantastic. She spoke about the seven churches of Revelation, and told about actually visiting the ruins of all seven recently on a special trip she took, and taught on what she learned from each church and what the Bible had to say about them. It wasn’t a big scholarly thing; she explained the insights God revealed to her about her own life through studying these ancient churches. It was really awesome stuff about God’s sufficiency and how he only uses the weak and the small and the unworthy — because they’re the ones that let him lead the way. One of my favorite things she said was that if God opens a door in front of you, he doesn’t do it so you can poke your head inside and see what it looks like in there. He means for you to walk through it — right then, when the door opens.
Oh, and every time I see someone I know, they immediately want to know what happened at Infuze. Why did it close down? What really happened? (Our funding was pulled, it’s just that simple.)
Insider dirt is big at ICRS.
Ran into a few other people I know, like the super-sweet Brandilyn Collins. Here I thought most of the authors I know wouldn’t even be here this year, since so many of them are signed to Thomas Nelson, and TN (creating quite the stir) pulled out of ICRS this year.
So that’s my first day. Good fellowship and networking so far. Met some really nice people. Got a little discouraged that Merciless isn’t going to be the hot tamale I’d hoped it might be. And I’m really worn out at seeing some of the horribly cliched and silly books and gifts and whatnot that this industry puts out; it’s such a silly cliche it’s hard to believe it still happens, but not only does it happen, they celebrate it with big, giant banners all over the place. It’s surreal.
But while the industry may be kind of a strange animal, the people are, by and large, good, kind, warm, friendly folks.
Big, big day tomorrow. That one interview I mentioned is in the afternoon. My book signing is at 11:30 in the morning (which makes me a bit nervous that no one I know will show up, since they might not have been there long enough to find out what time my signing is). Then there’s the annual Baker/Bethany Dinner, which is taking place at Epcot this year. (Oh, did I mention I’ve never been to Florida before? So this is my first time at everything.) Anyway, I gotta get to bed. It’s gonna be crazy tomorrow.
Check out my pictures from my first day. I posted ‘em on Facebook.
These are the first two reviews I’ve seen anywhere:
What Robin Parrish has done with the Dominion Trilogy is take the best aspects of comic books and combined them with the best aspects of regular fiction (i.e., novels). And then he has the audacity to link it all into something… Biblical. Wow.
Robin Parrish’s talent is creative genius. How his mind could contain a trilogy of this magnitude is astounding to me, and I read a lot of books in all genres of fiction…
So… So far, so good.