Award Season (10 Mar 2023 Status)

This week has been an embarrassment of riches regarding writing and publishing news, and just as I was thinking about how strange it would be to write a blog post with nothing big to share… BAM, the Aurealis Awards shortlists dropped with two Brain Jar Press titles included among the finalists (and many more authors who have published with Brain Jar nominated for work they’ve done with other companies).

Congratulations to Kirstyn McDermott, who wrote the fantastic Never Afters series these two books came from. It was an incredible honour to publish them, and it’s great to see the series get the recognition it deserves.

You can see the full Aurealis Awards finalist list here, and it’s full of great aussie speculative fiction for you to try.

You can grab copies of the Never Afters novellas from Brain Jar Press or wherever good books are sold.

ON THE DOCKET

Today, I need to write the last scene in tomorrow’s Saturday Morning Story on Patreon, finish the copyedits on the third issue of Eclectic Projects, get a new Angela Slatter book laid out, and get cracking on a freelance design project now the client has delivered all the details I need. There’s also a mentorship meeting around midday, my beloved is home sick, and I’m running on just a few hours sleep. I’ll be summoning all my resources to keep things on track, and full expect something to go off the rails before lunch time.

Meanwhile, I’ve got the detritus of another 700+ fraudulent orders to clear out of the Brain Jar Press systems after the latest run of fake orders, and the system will only let us clear 20 at a time. It’s going to be a long, irritating process.

PETER M. BALL INBOX: 31

BRAIN JAR INBOX: 13

BRAIN JAR SUBMISSION QUEUE: 4

Let There Be Gaimans (9 Mar 2023 Status Post)

OUT IN THE WORLD

I recently guested on the Pratchat podcast hosted by Ben McKenzie and Elizbath Flux, talking about Terry Pratchett’s non-fiction collection A Slip Of The Keyboard and the writing advice within. You can find the episode online now, or at any of the mysterious services that bring podcasts to your phone. Here’s the episode pitch:

Liz and Ben are joined by writer and publisher Peter M Ball for Pratchat’s first foray into Pratchett’s nonfiction! We discuss fandom, genre, Sharknado, figgins and even fit in six pieces from “A Scribbling Intruder”, the first section of Pratchett’s 2014 nonfiction anthology A Slip of the Keyboard.

Pratchett writes about the letters he receives from various kinds of fans as a popular genre author in “Kevins” (1993), before revisiting the same topic in the email age and explaining why he quit his own newsgroup in “Wyrd Ideas” (1999), both for The Author magazine. Then its time to discuss fantasy as a genre – both advice for writing it in “Notes From a Successful Fantasy Author: Keep It Real” for the 2007 edition of The Writers and Artists Notebook, and reasons why children should be reading it in “Let There Be Dragons”, a speech given at the Booksellers Association Annual Conference in 1993. Finally, best mates Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman tell us how they feel about each other, Terry in “Neil Gaiman: Amazing Master Conjuror” for the Boskone 39 convention booklet (2002), and Neil in his Foreword for A Slip of the Keyboard (2014).

As we’ve discussed before, Pratchett was never one to let a good idea only be used once – and you may have heard him talk to some of the themes in these pieces when being interviewed. Short stories may have cost him blood, as he used to say, but he never lost his journalistic mojo for writing fact and opinion – or replying to reader mail!

It’s been years since I got to go out and talk about stuff as a writer, rather than a publisher or an even organiser, and I had an extraordinary amount of fun nattering out about Pratchett (and more).

ON THE DOCKET

As predicted, I’ve spent the bulk of the last forty-eight hours shipping orders for Gorgons Deserve Nice Things (and other Brain Jar Press books—this seems to be the release where everyone caught up on releases they missed). We also announced the last book in Meg Vann’s InSecurity Triptych, Crawlspace, which will come out in May.

Brain Jar store got hit by another round of fraudulent orders yesterday. Once again, none of them are being processed as actual orders, but there’s the whole time-consuming process of clearing out the back end and dealing with the our payment processor to see if we can stop things from happening. There’s a chance it may involve investing in new and not-entirely-cheap services, which is probably the point where I need to rethink the current set-up.

Going a bit bonkers because our printer apparently shipped a recent order of books back on the 23rd of Feb, but the tracking is showing one of those codes that could mean “we forgot to process this properly, and the books are nearly there” and could mean “we’ve left this sitting on the dock, waiting for pick-up, for the better part of two weeks.” One of these is a frustrating annoyance, the other is a catastrophic problem that I should be fixing now, so not knowing which is in play is frustrating.

There’s also a mentee meeting this afternoon and I still need to finish a story for this week’s Patreon entry, plus I’ve almost got the March issue whipped into shape and ready to send to the printer (although, given the above, I really need to be expanding my lead time on these).

“Become a publisher,” they said. “It’ll be fun.” (And it is, mostly, but some days it’s all just a bit much to manage).

PETER M. BALL INBOX: 29

BRAIN JAR INBOX: 22

BRAIN JAR SUBMISSION QUEUE: 4

Status: 8 Mar 2023

The latest short story collection from Brain Jar Press, Tansy Rayner Roberts’ Gorgons Deserve Nice Things, went on sale yesterday and the response has been phenomenal. Gorgons is our most pre-ordered book in two years, and while we shipped the bulk of those over a month ago, there’s also been a steady stream of first day sales to keep things bubbling along. By the standards of small press publishing—or, at least, my little corner of it—it’s on the road to being our smash hit for 2023.

Here’s the blurb, for the curious:

“We lived in a world that did not allow women to breathe; how could we be anything but monsters?”

Tansy Rayner Roberts retells the stories of seven women from Greek mythology, giving voice to the scorned, the sidelined, and the monstrous.

A young gorgon finds acceptance at the Medusa Club. Atalanta spills the truth behind the myth of the Argonauts. Scylla suffers through a series of terrible college roommates. Handmaids in Sparta get more than they bargained for when they interfere in their queen’s correspondence with a Trojan prince. A comparative mythology graduate finds herself at a speed-dating night packed with dodgy gods. Behind a velvet rope, a queenly Minotaur presides over a roller disco. Persephone shares her story via a series of pomegranate recipes.

Deliciously mythic and delightfully funny, Gorgons Deserve Nice Things delivers new takes on ancient stories, reinvigorating them with modern perspectives and settings. Showcasing the craft and insight that made her one of Australia’s most beloved short fiction writers, this collection sees Roberts at her wry, subversive best

PRAISE FOR GORGONS DESERVE NICE THINGS

“A perfect concoction of Greek myths revisited, rewilded, and remade. Bite-sized and blazing with wit and rage these stories will delight. Gorgons deserve nice things, and readers of myth and fantasy deserve this most wonderful of books.” – Trent Jamieson, author of Day Boy and The Stone Road

“This collection is an absolute delight. Tansy Rayner Roberts’ take on Greek mythology is sometimes savage, sometimes witty, always written with elegance, and often downright hilarious.  The stories are insightful, reflecting the author’s deep knowledge of her source material. Five stars from me!” – Juliet Marillier, author of the Blackthorn & Grim and Warrior Bards series

Right, then. Now that I’ve done my bit to pay the bills and keep the cat in kibble…

ON THE DOCKET

Shipping books will be a big part of my day, obviously, but I’ve also got the soft launch of the next Brain Jar Press book and a bunch of other titles to push forward. At some point, I definitely need ot sit down and work on this week’s short story for Patreon, and prep Eclectic Projects 3 to go to the printer.

PETER M. BALL INBOX: 27

BRAIN JAR INBOX: 23

BRAIN JAR SUBMISSION QUEUE: 4

Release days—particularly big release days—always blow out my email numbers as there’s a chaotic stream of emails coming in alerting us to new orders, books going live on various sales platforms, and checking in on folks to make sure everything’s running smoothly.

I’ll be attempting to winnow those numbers down before the end of the day.