This episode is a conversation with Terry Mixon, bestselling Sci-Fi author of the Empire of Bones saga, among others. We discuss some of our takeaways at the conclusion of the 20Books Vegas 2023 conference for independent authors, but first we explore a little of the perspective of consuming fiction from the perspective of a military background. Terry Mixon is a veteran of the United States Army.
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A full [auto-generated] transcript follows below:
Oh, tricky. Okay.
Hello, and welcome to the Grand Hill Chronicles podcast. I am Don Bishop, writing as T. S. Pedramon. And I am here today with Terry Mixon.
[00:03:56] Terry Mixon: Mixon. M I X O N. Not Nixon. [00:04:00]
[00:04:00] Don Bishop: Nope. I have met so many people over the past week. Um, so, you can see, if you’re watching us on YouTube, you can see we’re in a different setting.
I’m not in my basement office. Um, we’re, we’re squatting in a conference session room.
[00:04:16] Terry Mixon: Don’t tell anyone, they’ll come and
[00:04:17] Don Bishop: kick us out. You can see our lanyards. This is at the end of 20 Books Vegas. Um, and I’ve talked about 20 Books before, so any consistent listener knows what I’m talking about. Um, yeah, a conference for independent authors, and it’s been a busy week, and we’ll talk more about that later, but, uh, right now as we speak, The rave, the reader and Author Vegas event is still ongoing in the main, um, what do you call that room?
I guess it’s
[00:04:47] Terry Mixon: the grand ballroom.
[00:04:48] Don Bishop: Yeah. Yeah. And yeah, or I think, um, they, they call it the event center, or it could be that too, the horseshoe event.
[00:04:55] Terry Mixon: We could call it what we want to call it. They’re not gonna
[00:04:58] Don Bishop: come after us. Yeah. And I, [00:05:00] um, yeah, I got, um, pictures with Larry Korea and um. Steve Diamond, and I got a picture yesterday with Todd McCaffrey, and I got, uh, an autographed book from him today, um, and yeah, a few others, a few other things, um, but, so, uh, Mr.
Mixon? You can call me Terry, please. Terry, alright, Terry, what is your background? Tell us
[00:05:26] Terry Mixon: all about it. Well, if you go back far enough, I served in the U. S. Army back in the 80s. I was a Helicopter Crew Chief on Scout Helicopters with the 101st Airborne Division. I got out of the service and got a degree, a two year degree, in computers and got hired by NASA to work on computers in the Mission Control
[00:05:46] Don Bishop: Center.
Um, you said Scout Helicopters. Mm hmm. What, um, what model? OH 58. Okay. I’m not a huge aficionado or, so, uh, OH 58,
[00:05:56] Terry Mixon: um. The Charlie models if you want to get specific.
[00:05:59] Don Bishop: Okay. [00:06:00] Some fans out there will appreciate that. I appreciate it, but I don’t know what you’re talking about. I know what an Osprey is, and I know what, uh,
[00:06:09] Terry Mixon: You see the news helicopters all flying around that all have that particular look?
The Bell Jet Rangers? The UH 58 is the military version of the Bell Jet
[00:06:19] Don Bishop: Ranger. Okay. Okay. Uh, so then you worked for NASA?
[00:06:24] Terry Mixon: I did for 16 years as a computer guy. Computers. Okay. I worked in the Mission Control Center and I still live in that general area. I
[00:06:32] Don Bishop: talked to, um, I’ve had another guest who was a, a programmer.
Um, I’m bad with names. Forgive me. We talked about Conlang. I don’t remember. It was like four episodes ago.
[00:06:48] Terry Mixon: That’s okay. It’s fine. I don’t remember what I had for
[00:06:49] Don Bishop: breakfast. Yeah. Okay. Um. We’re for NASA for 16 years. 16 years. That’s cool. Do you live in Houston? [00:07:00] I live just south of Houston. Okay. I was born in Houston.
My
[00:07:03] Terry Mixon: apologies and condolences
[00:07:05] Don Bishop: to you, sir. It’s a good town. I liked it. Which part of Houston? Um, well, I was born in Herman Hospital, but we, I don’t know where we lived at that point. Um, but then we, we moved to Utah and then a few years later we moved back. And I spent my elementary school years in, um, in, um, on the north side, um, Jersey Village area.
Yeah,
[00:07:34] Terry Mixon: I know where that is. We live in the south side in a town called Leak City, just over the Galveston border. Yeah.
[00:07:40] Don Bishop: Actually, so, uh, you know, I, we moved to Dallas when I was 10 and, um, I grew up and I went to a year of college and I did a two year mission and I went back to college, but after my mission, before going back to college, I worked a summer in pest control and I spent two months as a pest control [00:08:00] technician in Houston.
And so I, I, I loved being back in Houston. Um, and it was, it was kind of a good little reunion for my heart and I drove all over. So league city, Bay city. Sugarland like Yeah, it was good. I’m
[00:08:21] Terry Mixon: the only thing I don’t like is the summer weather where it’s hot and humid I can deal with the hot. I’d rather not have the humid but hey, you know, you got what you got.
[00:08:29] Don Bishop: Yeah. Yeah So tell us about your books
[00:08:36] Terry Mixon: I Have written 40 books Most of them myself some co authored. I wrote the Empire of Bones saga Which is my own series, one of my own series. Okay. And I started that sucker off while I was still employed at NASA. Because I saw the layoffs coming. I had the longest layoff notice in history.
They gave me notice, you’re going to be laid off in three months. Then they extended it three [00:09:00] months. Then they extended it three months. It ended up being almost a year and a half that me knowing the end was coming. And so I said, I’m just going to go ahead and try to write these books and get them out there.
Got three of them published before the layoff happened. I’m
[00:09:19] Don Bishop: sorry, I keep trying to remember to look at the camera, look at the camera a little bit. Hi, we’re still here. Um, yeah, as long as I’m around, it’s going to be awkward. So, sorry for that, but, um, okay. So you, you, Did you say you started your first book while you were still at NASA?
[00:09:37] Terry Mixon: I published three books in the first series while I was still at NASA. And this book… What
[00:09:42] Don Bishop: year was this?
[00:09:43] Terry Mixon: 2014. 2014, okay. So the series itself is space opera with military elements of a society that survived after the fall of the Terran Empire. Okay. They don’t really know what destroyed it [00:10:00] because they lost so much during the…
The destruction. And the story is the exploration of the, the dead empire to try to find out what exactly happened there and finding out that it’s not quite as dead as they thought it was. So
[00:10:14] Don Bishop: what’s the um, where’s the political seat in, in this, in this series? If it’s not the Terran Empire, like what’s, where are these people from?
[00:10:25] Terry Mixon: I named a world Avalon. Okay. And stuck them off on that. They’re way…
[00:10:29] Don Bishop: Extra solar… They’re way off. Okay. Cool. Yeah, because you mentioned the death of the Terran Empire Made me think of Red Rising. Have you read that? No, I have not. I listened to the Red Rising Trilogy And there’s more after the three books, but I only half listens to the fourth one.
I didn’t care as much but the in in that franchise the seat of government for the solar system, so in that in [00:11:00] that franchise the Uh, society is still only within our solar system. Uh, it’s a little bit more realistic like that, but then again they have grav boots and, you know, but, um, and it takes months to go between planets if they’re far away.
Yeah. Uh, but, um, the seat of government and the center of society is on Earth’s moon. Yeah. Because centuries before this takes place, the, uh… Those who were working and living on the moon rebelled against Earth. So, anyway, yeah, you mentioned that and it, it, I think it’s really interesting to have, um, I don’t know, it’s, it’s kind of like a detail like that.
You picture humanity going out into the galaxy, um, and you imagine Earth is still being our center. But that’s not [00:12:00] the case, you know, it’s not the case, but
[00:12:01] Terry Mixon: the time they finally get back to it, books and books and books down the way, it’s basically a devastated wasteland where the enemy that destroyed the empire destroyed all the major cities using kinetic bombardment and all that’s left of humanity on the greatest homeworld of the homeworld of humanity are nomadic barbarians basically living in the wreckage that’s been left behind.
[00:12:28] Don Bishop: Okay. Well, cool. Um,
[00:12:32] Terry Mixon: the other series that I write is The Last Hunter that I write for Variant Publishing with, uh, J. N. Chaney as the co author. Okay. And it is much more military oriented, and it’s fighting off an invasion of robotic aliens and then the aliens that sent them, and trying to hold the Confederation against forces that they are ill concei ill prepared to deal with.
Did you notice we
[00:12:57] Don Bishop: just We scratched our faces in unison. [00:13:00] I did not notice that. It was kind of funny. Kind of weird.
[00:13:02] Terry Mixon: Yeah. But I got the idea for that story from watching, um, the movie Battleship. Where they take the ancient battleship and they take it to war against the aliens. I said, I could do something like that.
So the main warship is a battleship that’s hundreds of years out of date. And is a museum. And they have to take it to war. I,
[00:13:24] Don Bishop: I, I appreciate, um, Like, not just, not just you, but there, I’ve been surprised how many, uh, military or, or ex military people I’ve met at this convention this week. Um, so I appreciate that there’s somebody with a military background writing something military oriented.
Uh, because a lot of the time when I read or, or watch something, I, you know, it’s, it’s really clear that it was written by somebody who does not have a military background. And… Um, then even when it is, or [00:14:00] when they’ve heavily consulted with somebody, uh, and this is just me, but some things will bug me, uh, where it’s like, that’s not how it would happen or yeah, but then again, I have to, I have to remind myself that I don’t know everything and my, my experience is not representative of all like my, uh, 2000 and teens.
U. S. Marine Corps experience is not the case of all U. S. Marine Corps experience, let alone all U. S. military experience. And so, uh, like, me, uh, 11 years ago, coming fresh out of boot camp, and having the drill instructors just, um, not physically, but, pound into us, uh, how we are supposed to behave as young Marines.
Um, so I, I left bootcamp actually. I’ll, I’ll tell, I [00:15:00] left bootcamp, went through Marine combat training for a month, and then I went to my MOS school and I was a musician and, uh, walking down the hall of the Naval School of Music, I overheard a gunnery sergeant, um, E seven. E 7, I believe. Yeah, 7, sorry. I can’t believe that it even took me a moment to think about it.
Um, E 7 popped in my head, but I was doubting myself. Don’t doubt yourself. Confidence can keep you warm. That’s, that’s true. So, um, you know, translating for, for non Marines, E 7. Uh, this Gunnery Sergeant said to the Warrant Officer 5, Rosser, and I could not believe, like, In boot camp, it’s good morning, sir.
Good afternoon, sir. Um, you, you might like after boot camp, it’s understood you’re allowed to venture as far as like [00:16:00] URA, sir, or URA gunnery sergeant if you’re, you know, low private first class, uh, Lance Corporal, whatever. But I, I was taken aback and I, I was like, what? That is not what That is not how I was taught to behave in boot camp.
And that the fact of the matter is that my boot camp experience was not representative of the, of the current Marine Corps experience. No
[00:16:26] Terry Mixon: one’s boot camp experience is relevant to what they’re coming into because they train you in a different way. And then when you get out to where the work is actually taking place, you’ll find that it’s a completely different world.
[00:16:39] Don Bishop: That actually, sorry, I’m talking a lot. I do that. Um, that reminds me of, um, LDS missionaries that I went on a mission, uh, teaching the gospel of Jesus Christ for two years. And there’s, there’s a movie that exists called the best two years about an LDS missionary Uh, [00:17:00] in Denmark. Eh? Denmark? I
[00:17:03] Terry Mixon: don’t know. I don’t know much about the Nordic countries.
No, it’s not Denmark.
[00:17:07] Don Bishop: It’s the Netherlands. It’s the Netherlands. Um, and So you go to, you go to the Missionary Training Center for let’s say two months. It depends on your language that you’re learning. If you’re learning Russian, it’s probably going to be three months. Um, for me it was two months. Because I was learning Spanish.
Anyway, so, This, uh, This missionary arrives in the Netherlands, and he’s trying to speak Dutch with people, and his companion has a brief conversation with one of the locals, and the, uh, the new missionary turns to his companion afterwards and is like, What language was that? And he he’s from Oklahoma. He’s like, what language was that?
Oh, that was Dutch. He was like, [00:18:00] Oh, then I’m in trouble. Cause that is not what they taught me at the MTC. Yeah. So, yeah. I mean, coming out of bootcamp, it’s a training environment and they’re, they’re trying to lay a foundation. Um, they deconstruct
[00:18:15] Terry Mixon: you as a civilian and reconstruct you into the mold of what they want.
And that’s the whole, one of the big purposes of basic training is to do that reconstruction so that you are not a civilian anymore.
[00:18:28] Don Bishop: Yeah. Um, I’ll take a moment for, for our listeners and viewers. Uh, I wrote down a few things like topics to hit on. Uh, like here we are at 20 Books Vegas. This is Terry Mixon.
Tell us about your background. What do you write? Um, we’re about to get to where do you find, where can we find your work? But, um, I actually left space to let the conversation flow. And I thought we were going to be talking about conference takeaways, and we probably will. But I think this is a great thing, [00:19:00] um, This is, this will be interesting for listeners, and for your information, My target audience for the podcast is It’s anybody.
It’s not aimed at other writers. Well, then you’re in a target
[00:19:17] Terry Mixon: rich environment.
[00:19:19] Don Bishop: Yeah, because it’s anybody. But, um, yeah, so I think it’s interesting. And you mentioned Battleship, the movie Battleship. That was obviously done with a hearty amount of military consultation. Because the, the uniforms were current naval uniforms of the day, uh, there, there were lots of technical things, uh, that you would need to have somebody with a military background, uh, in order to get right.
But then, and this is what kind [00:20:00] of, I fight with myself, they, they took that. And then, uh, they just, they chopped it up whenever they felt like it.
[00:20:08] Terry Mixon: Exactly. That’s how they do it in movies. So
[00:20:11] Don Bishop: the, the museum ship.
Okay, yes. It’s there. It’s a real ship. It’s actually a museum. But in the movie, of course it has fuel and the engines work. They start right up. They start right up. And maybe that would be the case. Maybe they keep it ready to go. I’m betting
[00:20:33] Terry Mixon: not.
[00:20:34] Don Bishop: But they would not leave it loaded with artillery. Like those shells would not be there.
There might be some, there might be some historic, uh, shells, but they would empty them out. They would not have any explosives in them. Um, and I made
[00:20:49] Terry Mixon: a big point when I started The Last Hunter of having an engineering crew there that was active duty that the ship, while it was a museum, [00:21:00] was still on the active rolls, even though it’s not been maintained, everything is falling apart.
The engineer has kept the engines working. Yeah. So I had a way to move the ship and at least give it a little plausible, plausibility to being able to be used. Well, and that might
[00:21:16] Don Bishop: very well be the case, but is it the USS Missouri that’s in Pearl Harbor?
[00:21:20] Terry Mixon: I think it is, but I don’t
[00:21:21] Don Bishop: know for sure. I could see that.
I mean, I, I’m just unaware of the specifics of the current condition of the USS Missouri. Um, but I could definitely see that. I, I would not be surprised in the slightest. That they keep the engines in working condition, because maybe they would have to move it. Um, One of the big
[00:21:43] Terry Mixon: things with that particular series was it took them two, three books to get even a reasonable percentage of their old weapons functional.
[00:21:54] Don Bishop: And which, what’s the series called again? The Last Hunter. The Last Hunter. And where do we find it? [00:22:00] You can find
[00:22:00] Terry Mixon: it on Amazon, where all my books are at. Okay. I’m Amazon exclusive.
[00:22:04] Don Bishop: Oh, okay. Okay. So that makes it easy, doesn’t it? Yeah. And, uh, you do have your own site. It’s…
[00:22:12] Terry Mixon: TerryMixon. com Yeah, that’s what I thought.
And it’s got links that go right back to
[00:22:15] Don Bishop: Amazon. And that’s, um… So, I’m gonna…
Right here, like, I should be holding TerryMixon. com Uh, if I remember to edit this in here.
[00:22:37] Terry Mixon: That was one of the funnest parts of the first book. Was the horse trading and various shenanigans they had to get, to get even some of the parts and pieces they needed to get that ship able to go when the um, initial invasion happened. To try to just get it out of orbit, get it into space, get it doing things.[00:23:00]
And so that was a lot of fun to write that.
[00:23:03] Don Bishop: I’m just gonna make sure the audio is still
[00:23:04] Terry Mixon: rolling. Yeah, that would be very good if the audio was still rolling. It is. Good. It’s just that
[00:23:10] Don Bishop: the screensaver had turned on. So. Alright. Um. Yeah, it sounds, sounds interesting. Um, do you mind if we go ahead and talk about conference takeaways?
Sure, let’s do it. Um, what’s, what’s one for you? What have you
[00:23:27] Terry Mixon: taken? The biggest take away I have from this conference is that this is your one chance to be in an environment with thousands of other writers that you can talk to, that you can network with, that you can ask questions of, and that you can form relationships that are going to help you further down the line.
[00:23:48] Don Bishop: And I have, I have done a lot of networking myself. That’s, um, and I’ve, I have farmed the conference for podcast guests. I, uh, got a lot [00:24:00] of business cards, uh, sent a few emails on the spot just to establish contact. So we should have, uh, a good roster of, of interviews, uh, in the coming weeks and months. So, um, another takeaway is, I mean, I just, just learning the, the business of, Publishing, I guess.
And I went to some craft sessions as well. But as far as like the, the business of it, Um, as of today, Cause it, it was after midnight, Um, as of today, You can find, um, You can find as a serial fiction, Uh, my Nightshade Unicorn. Story. Uh, you can find the first chapter right now in Kindle Vela. Um, [00:25:00] and so like I, I took a moment and I spoke with Craig Martel who has been basically running these conferences.
Um, he’s stepping down and it won’t be 20 books next year. It’ll, it’ll be right. Author Nation. Author Nation next year. Um. But, uh, yeah, I took, I took a moment to ask him like, Hey, what would you suggest, um, strategy wise and financial strategy wise? So I talked to him about where I am with Nightshade Unicorn, um, where I have a manuscript and, um, I’m, I just finished my first pass through it to get rid of, um, dictation artifacts.
You’re a
[00:25:46] Terry Mixon: dictator like me. Yeah.
[00:25:51] Don Bishop: Um, so I just finished my first pass through it, uh, to, to do that. And I, um, [00:26:00] it still needs some massage, massaging, the book does. And I, I, after talking to him and then, and then sitting in the final, um, watching the final panel at the end of the conference, I decided, okay, what I’m doing is, I’m gonna serialize it, starting immediately, and I, I did, like I, up in my hotel room last night, I started serializing it.
Um, and then I set a release date, so I’ll, I guess I’m announcing that right now. Um, unless things go wrong, cause this is my first time publishing a book. Um, the release date for Nightshade Unicorn Forerunner. Uh, which is book one in the series will be February 28th, 2024. Um, yeah, sorry. I didn’t mean to steal the fun.
No, no, no, no, no, no. It came up. No, that’s great
[00:26:56] Terry Mixon: news. So I’m Publishing your first book is
[00:26:58] Don Bishop: real important. [00:27:00] Yeah. And, and because of rules with Kindle Vela, that means that I have to finish serializing it at least 30 days before. Um, so yeah, it, I’ll, I’ll serialize it. Uh, over the next couple of months, and then I’ll publish the book.
Uh, and while I’m serializing, I’m going to be writing book two. I’m hoping to start dictating book two on my drive home, uh, which I will start this evening and, uh, get home Monday evening. Um, but, uh, also I need cover art, you know? So that’s another point of networking. I spoke to artists. Um, I spoke to artists.
It’s not what I meant to say, but that is true. I spoke to artists, uh, and we will communicate further to, to see if, um, to see if they are an, [00:28:00] an aesthetic match for what I’m looking for and if, uh, I wish to meet their price point. Um, what I meant to say though was that I spoke to authors whose. Covers I liked and I said, who is your artist?
Who, who drew that for you? Um, so yeah, I’m getting the ball rolling on, on purchasing some cover art for nightshade unicorn. Uh, in the meanwhile, the, uh, serial is using an AI image, AI generated image. This
[00:28:35] Terry Mixon: interview is over . No, it’s not over. No.
[00:28:38] Don Bishop: Um, I’m glad for AI in this case like. I, um, I am definitely going to hire art for this, for this book.
Um, but the AI lets me have an image that I can work with right now. Uh, and so that’s, that’s really fortunate in, [00:29:00] in my opinion. With my first
[00:29:01] Terry Mixon: book, I went to, uh, stock art sites and found a decent image that I could use for the first book in the series. And that helped me get off the, off the
[00:29:11] Don Bishop: ground. I considered stock art, but, uh, You, you can’t find stock art of a, uh, What’s the word?
Of an intimidating black unicorn. That would be more problematic. Yeah. I need an intimidating black unicorn on my cover. Yeah,
[00:29:28] Terry Mixon: that, that is a challenge I’ll grant you. Yeah.
[00:29:32] Don Bishop: Um, what’s another takeaway?
[00:29:35] Terry Mixon: Before we go to another takeaway, I want to ask a question to you about your dictation. What do you use
[00:29:42] Don Bishop: mostly Microsoft word?
Um, I also see Microsoft word has some, some drawbacks. It irks me that it stops listening after about 10 seconds without dictation. Yeah, that would be very problematic. And Microsoft [00:30:00] So if you take a moment to think, which I do frequently, it stops, and you have to start it again. Um, there’s a keyboard shortcut, at least, uh, which I, I learned after having to go and, and, and use the mouse, like, as somebody who likes to use computers very quickly, and I, I use all the keyboard shortcuts I know to flip back and forth between windows.
Every time you reach for the mouse, you slow yourself down. And. Whether your hands are on the keyboard or not, every time you reach for the mouse, you’re slowing down time a little bit. Unless you’re just really good and precise by nature, and I’m not. Um, so I, and the button to begin dictation isn’t that big.
And so, and, like if you go and click it, in the act of doing that you move the mouse, so the next time you have to click it again you have to move the mouse back to where the button is. Yikes. Um. [00:31:00] Actually, so I have a, I have a, a, a drawing monitor. What’s it called? It’s, it’s, it’s a little drawing pads. Yeah.
A drawing tablet. That’s what it’s called. It’s a monitor that has a pen for input, but it has some programmable buttons on the side. Um, and I got a treadmill off of Facebook marketplace for 80 and it barely fits in my basement office, but. It works and it’s helpful. So I, um, I take the drawing tablet, and I put it on the, the treadmill’s, um, thing where you would put a book, and I can see Microsoft Word right there, and I put the microphone, uh, on a shelf behind the treadmill, and as I’m walking along, and if I take a moment and it stops dictating, there’s, I programmed, One of the buttons on the monitor to that [00:32:00] shortcut.
So I can start and stop dictation with a single click, which was helpful. Is it very accurate? Um, it’s, it’s pretty good. It’s,
[00:32:12] Terry Mixon: except for fantasy names. I was going to say, with fantasy names, that seems like that would be
[00:32:15] Don Bishop: problematic. Yeah, and anybody who’s listened to me in the past few weeks already knows that I have substituted words.
Um, so in Nightshade Unicorn, there is no state of Alabama. But the first, the main character’s name, Alabva, is not something Microsoft Word will recognize. So I say Alabama, and then later I Control F and Find and Replace. Um, so yeah, Alabva is Alabama, and Geronimon is Honeymoon, and Sakala is Sockeye. Um, cause I, I don’t really talk about different breeds of salmon.
[00:32:52] Terry Mixon: Wow, I would, I would totally lose my mind trying to remember everybody’s shortcut name.
[00:32:56] Don Bishop: Yeah, that has been, um, [00:33:00] yeah, that’s a difficulty. I
[00:33:02] Terry Mixon: did invest years ago in Dragon NaturallySpeaking, and I’ve updated it over the years, and it’s pretty good at you programming in different names and getting the spelling right.
Um, it’s been… It’s pricey, but it was one of the best investments I made for dictating more than, out of 40 books that I’ve written, I would estimate 30 of them have had their first drafts narrated, dictated by me through Dragon.
[00:33:29] Don Bishop: I missed the chance earlier when you first said that you wrote 40 books right after I mentioned that we’re at 20 books in Vegas.
So is that 40 books to 100k? You
[00:33:39] Terry Mixon: know, it’s 40 books to significantly more than 100k.
[00:33:43] Don Bishop: Nice. Okay. Yeah. So it works. It does work.
[00:33:48] Terry Mixon: Um. It really does. Long series are king.
[00:33:51] Don Bishop: Okay. Oh yeah, I was going to ask. So you only have two series? Oh
[00:33:54] Terry Mixon: no, I’ve got other series that, that I’ve got, if I had to break it down, I’ve got Empire of Bones.
It [00:34:00] has 14 books. The 15th book is written and I just have to go through the editing process to make it happen. Uh, Last Hunter has 11 books currently out in it. I’ve got four books in the Humanity Unlimited saga that I’ve written. Three books in Imperial Marines and two singletons that, that didn’t warrant going to further books in the series.
[00:34:23] Don Bishop: What is Humanity Unlimited? Is that enhanced? I think it’s
[00:34:27] Terry Mixon: more like Stargate type stuff with aliens and strange humans mixing it up on Earth. Okay. Okay. Much more near term science fiction than what I’ve written before.
[00:34:46] Don Bishop: Um, back to dictation. Another thing that I have used is called Oh,
[00:34:53] Terry Mixon: Lil and I co wrote five books with Glenn Stewart.
So those are the other ones. Yeah.
[00:34:59] Don Bishop: [00:35:00] Okay. Um, another dictation tool that I’ve used is Lily speech. Or is that I think it’s Lily, not Libby. Um, but if Lily doesn’t come up, then it’s Libby Lily speech, which is Uh, it runs off of Google’s speech to text engine, and it does not stop listening unless you tell it to.
[00:35:24] Terry Mixon: Neither does Dragon, and it also has a program called Dragon Anywhere that you can pay the monthly fee for it to do constant voice recognition over a connection out to the internet. I’ve never used it, but since we’re talking about it, I should mention that they have that option. I prefer doing it at my computer.
It’s too noisy of an environment to do it out walking and doing other stuff.
[00:35:48] Don Bishop: But as I, uh, as I drive home, I want to dictate, I’ll just be recording it. And then I’ll, I’ll use either [00:36:00] Microsoft Word for the web or Descript to, uh, transcribe it. And it
[00:36:08] Terry Mixon: can go ahead and take that incoming file and… And run it through the mill and spit out the words for you.
Yeah. Good deal. Dragging can do that as well. But I’ve noticed that it’s not as accurate as when I’m just doing it myself.
[00:36:21] Don Bishop: Yeah. It’ll take more cleanup on the back end. Because, um, if I’m watching it… Maybe I shouldn’t watch it. But if I’m watching it and I see it mess up, then I often go back and fix it. I don’t
[00:36:35] Terry Mixon: watch it anymore.
I have my monitor going, but I slide my chair back far enough so that my Bluetooth headphones still works, and I can see that it’s still doing stuff, but I can’t read
[00:36:44] Don Bishop: the words. Does, does Dragon, is Dragon good at punctuation? Yes. Because Microsoft Word is not that great at punctuation. Well, I dictate my own
[00:36:53] Terry Mixon: punctuation.
[00:36:54] Don Bishop: I, I do that. Yeah. And if I’m not watching it. I sometimes forget to punctuate. [00:37:00] I forget to close quote
[00:37:01] Terry Mixon: and… Dragon is really good with, with interpreting the punctuation that I say and putting it where I want it. Okay.
[00:37:09] Don Bishop: Cool. Um, what else? What else do you take away? From
[00:37:15] Terry Mixon: here, the biggest takeaway that I have is you have to take everything that you’ve learned from wherever you learn it, pick out the pieces that are most important to you.
and actually implement them. There’s so many people that go to conferences that get good advice, that they make good notes, they do that and then nothing happens. They don’t actually implement the things that they’ve learned. Even if it’s only just some minor change or one good idea that you think would be good.
If you go to a conference and you pull away a couple of things that makes your writing or your publishing better. If you have paid for that conference. But if you don’t put it into practice, all you’re doing is socializing. [00:38:00]
[00:38:00] Don Bishop: Yeah. Well, I mean, I, I, I guess I, I’m going to give myself a good grade here because I, I haven’t gone home yet and I’m already…
You still have time. I haven’t gone home yet and I’m still, I’m already implementing, you know, I, I… There you go. I threw the thing on Vella and, uh, cause, um, Russell Nolte was in a panel and… No. That was something different. Who did I talk to about Vella? But basically, why not? I talked to Craig Martel about it.
And I was like, I don’t see any reason not to serialize it for now.
[00:38:41] Terry Mixon: In the liter PG world, a lot of the people that are writing books in that, They’ll publish it, not on Vela, but they’ll publish it on a site called Royal Road, which is a free site. And as the books are ready to come down, they’ll take all of it down and then publish it.
They’ll also use [00:39:00] Patreon, so that if you really want to pay money to get further ahead, you can get however many chapters further ahead of what you’re doing by going to
[00:39:08] Don Bishop: Patreon. You just reminded me, that’s, I, um, since I’m moving into, uh, being… like being out there. Really? Um, I need to work on my ecosystem.
Uh, cause I, I want to do subscriptions. Um, I messed up setting up my Ream account and I need them to reset it for me. So I’m right now I’m waiting for them to do that again. My fault. Um, so I can get started there and uh, uh, I have a Patreon. I have, uh, Uh, Kofi, um, but, and I have a sub stack, but there, I need to figure out exactly what I’m doing with all these different platforms.
Um, and
[00:39:59] Terry Mixon: you need a [00:40:00] cohesive and a comprehensive plan
[00:40:01] Don Bishop: to implement. Yes. And I think I took one step in that direction before the conference, uh, in making my little business card. Um, so this is, is. NFC enabled. So if you tap your phone on it, then that’s pretty spicy. It pops up, uh, pops up my contact in like you, so you can save it to your phone, but that doesn’t always work for everybody.
So there’s a QR code on the back. Um, and the QR code leads to a, uh, my digital contact card, right? Um, these are kind of like dot cards, uh, except it’s not a dot card. I ordered blank NFC cards and some blank, uh, sticker labels and did the rest myself. Um, and so that, that digital contact card is like, it has my picture and it has my pen [00:41:00] name and it has links.
Boom, boom. So it’s a centralized location for me. It’s not complete yet. Right. Yeah, you know. Um, and I, I haven’t figured out what I’m doing with the subscription platforms. So, I’ve kind
[00:41:17] Terry Mixon: of crippled my own. I used to do all of my stuff on Patreon before I published it more as accountability for me because I’m more likely to produce things quickly if I’ve got an audience that is paying for the privilege of seeing it.
And And now that I’m co writing, I can’t put those chapters out there so I can write my own stuff, but it’s more like a chapter a week rather than something more frequent than that. And I occasionally feel bad about
[00:41:45] Don Bishop: that. Maybe you could, no, I don’t know, I don’t know, that’s, that’s something to think about.
Um, yeah, start a, start a company with [00:42:00] your co author and, and. I don’t know, somehow split the proceeds. But then, now we’re talking about setting up a whole other…
[00:42:08] Terry Mixon: Added complication may not be worthwhile on that one. Yeah. Yeah. And as far as that, the co author, I’m the junior partner in that. He’s the one that has the say.
Okay.
[00:42:21] Don Bishop: Um, yeah. Excuse me. What else, what else did you take away this week?
[00:42:33] Terry Mixon: That’s it for me. I’m sure there’s other things in my head. Yeah. What about for yourself?
[00:42:38] Don Bishop: Uh, a lot of networking, a lot of upcoming podcast guests, but not only that, but, um, people to reach out to. Um, there was somebody I talked to who has a subscriber list, an email, a newsletter subscriber list of 30, [00:43:00] 000.
Um, Mine, I think, is at 11 now. 11 or 11, 000. 11 individual. Oh, okay. I was gonna say
[00:43:10] Terry Mixon: 11,
[00:43:10] Don Bishop: 000 is pretty good. Cause I haven’t pushed it yet. I haven’t pushed it. Um, but I asked her, like, can, can you help me? How do I, how do I build this? So I’m gonna be talking with her and. Is this the newsletter ninja? Um. Tammy?
No. No. Just somebody else that. I found myself next to in a session that we both attended and, and
[00:43:35] Terry Mixon: there’s a couple of books on Amazon called Newsletter Ninja. And there’s a lot of very good basic advice on newsletters in those. So I would recommend that to you. Okay. Tammy is the one that does it. And I’m, if I try to pronounce her last name, I will massacre it.
So I’m not going to try to do it. Tammy, uh, something. I’ll [00:44:00] look it up because I don’t want to, I don’t want to massacre somebody’s name because that’s awful.
[00:44:07] Don Bishop: And, uh, I mentioned earlier that I, I had a financial strategy question for Craig Mortel. And that was about editing because I have, uh, you know, I’m leaving my day job without being published first.
And so I’m, I’m, I’m cutting off my income. But I have. Some money in the bank. I could pay and run the gamut of editing But I At the same time. I’m I’m still learning the craft and it probably It might not be worth it to me at this time to pay for full service edits so he suggested I I do pay for copy edits Um, and, and lean on beta readers for the [00:45:00] developmental edits.
So. Oop. Keeps on
[00:45:06] Terry Mixon: jumping to that. Fine. I’m not, it’s gonna cut, it obscures the name. Okay. But, Newsletter Ninja. Cool. It’s a great book to go ahead and get some basic fundamental ideas on things that work with newsletters. In my books, when I started out, I read this before I started out, at least I think I did, and I went ahead and put a link to my newsletter in the front matter, as well as being right at the back of the story, right after the end, basically.
So my also bots and the newsletter are on the same page, front and back, and having it in those two places, I think has helped me accumulate people for the newsletter. They might not see it in the front. They might see it as soon as they finish reading the story and go, Oh yeah, click, right there on the spot.
I like that guy, let’s go ahead and do [00:46:00] that. And it bore fruit immediately with book one, building that newsletter. So, don’t miss a beat there, go ahead
[00:46:11] Don Bishop: and put it in the front and back. I definitely need to be working on, on uh, on a following. Cause, you know, I need it. A good launch, you know? Let’s see if I can pronounce her
[00:46:23] Terry Mixon: name, because it’s terrible.
[00:46:24] Don Bishop: I guess I need to remind myself I shouldn’t stress too much about I shouldn’t stress at all about launching my first book. I should do what I can to make sure it’s as good as it can be. Good as I can make it, but
[00:46:39] Terry Mixon: That’s why I wasn’t wanting to, you know, masquer any names, you
[00:46:42] Don Bishop: can L A B R E C Q U E I would say Librec?
Maybe?
[00:46:49] Terry Mixon: I’m terrible with names to begin with, so I don’t want to be, be massacring somebody’s name right out of the bat.
[00:46:57] Don Bishop: So, yeah. [00:47:00] Um, what was I just saying that, um,
Oh, right. So, launching my first book, I shouldn’t stress about the launch going well. I should do… The, the things that have been shown to work, and then not worry about it, and not stress about it. And move on to book two. Yep, yep, book two. Cause they say, they say a lot that, um, The best advertising for your book is to write a new one.
Is your next one. It’s true. And they say, um, as far as like running ads, paying for advertisements on Facebook or Amazon or Google. Um, I’ve heard a couple of people. Did I hear it this week? I definitely heard it last year when I came. They say, um, don’t, don’t [00:48:00] advertise until you have three books. And then when you have those three books in the series.
You advertise the first one.
[00:48:08] Terry Mixon: I know that the last part is true. When you’re advertising, focus your attention on that first book in the series. Because that’s where the entry points are. You’ve got to focus your advertising on the entry points that readers are going to find for you. If you advertise book 10, that’s probably not going to grab somebody.
[00:48:25] Don Bishop: Yeah. Oh, excuse me. Entry points. That’s important. Um. Okay, I think this has been a good conversation. We could probably wrap up unless you do it. Uh, to remind our listeners, this is Terry Mixon. You can find him at TerryMixon. com. You can also find his books on Amazon. Uh, Mixon
[00:48:49] Terry Mixon: is Terry Mixon writing science fiction.
[00:48:51] Don Bishop: Yeah, just search probably just for Mixon and that would…
[00:48:55] Terry Mixon: If you search for Terry Mixon, you’ll find
[00:48:57] Don Bishop: me. Yeah. [00:49:00] Uh, and I would remind our listeners and viewers about our Fan Tasty contest. Uh, we’re coming to the last couple of weeks of the contest now. Um, so take a picture of what you grew in your garden or that you cooked in your kitchen, and you can tweet it at me, um, at, uh, Grenthill Cron.
And, or you could email it at fantasty at thorn dot link, um, or send it to me on Instagram as well. But, uh, send me those pictures and Thanksgiving dinner counts. And this is good for a 35 gift certificate to the restaurant or retailer of your choice. And the contest closes November 30th. Uh, that will be the last day for submissions, and then we’ll choose a winner in December and contact you to send your, you, your, [00:50:00] uh, prize, so.
Thank you, and thank you, Terry. My pleasure. And we’ll see you next time on the Grand Hill Chronicles podcast.