Mark D. Trollinger's Blog

March 7, 2022

March 2022

Things are moving along well for two new projects. My cover designer Nyssa Iniguez has the craft beer-inspired cover nearly complete. Just a few minor adjustments with contrast and it will be ready to go.

The novella that covers events from the end of Book 4 has received good comments from one of my beta readers. She has read every book in the series and said she liked this one even better then the previous ones because it was geared into one character and her background.

Both of these should be published in March. Nyssa is currently working on sketches to release Book 2 with a craft beer-inspired cover. My goal is to have each book in the series as a craft beer cover and a cryptid cover.

If you would like to enter a giveaway contest for a signed copy of the yet-to-be-released craft beer-inspired cover of the Chupacabra and the Bat Rastard, visit my web site, https://funkytroll.wixsite.com/marktr..., and subscribe to the newsletter. A winner will be selected at the end of the month.
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Published on March 07, 2022 12:10

February 17, 2022

Updates

I have finished a 199 page novella that falls after book 4 in the T.I.M.E. series and overlaps with the first few chapters of Book 5 (not yet written). I have two beta readers so far, but would like at least one more.

I am working with another graphic designer to create another set of covers for each of the T.I.M.E. books. These will have a chalk-like appearance to them similar to many craft beer breweries use on their signage and menu boards. The craft beer-inspired cover for the Chupacabra should be available soon. I plan to have a cryptid edition cover (those currently released) and a craft beer-inspired cover for each of the books.

Additionally, the web site has been updated (https://funkytroll.wixsite.com/marktr...). A newsletter will be released beginning in March. If you are interested, visit the web site and subscribe. It will contain advanced release information, opportunities, and announcements.
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Published on February 17, 2022 09:58

November 5, 2021

Relaunch

Recently I completed writing book four in the T.I.M.E. series. I wrote it in a smaller format and found I preferred that size. The first three books in the series were then deactivated and will be relaunched in the smaller size. Each will now have a new cover design. I am hoping to release book 1 December 2, 2021. Book 2 will relaunch on December 9, Book 3 on December 16, and Book 4 will be published December 23.
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Published on November 05, 2021 08:28

September 23, 2020

The Red Ghost and a Chocolate Bunny: A Cryptozoology & Craft Beer Adventure - paperback

This Friday, September 25, 2020 the paperback edition of The Red Ghost and a Chocolate Bunny: A Cryptozoology & Craft Beer Adventure will be released on Amazon. There are two editions: one the regular cover created by Abir Hasan, and an alternate cover designed by Bobooks.
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Published on September 23, 2020 16:53 Tags: craft-beer, cryptozoology, fiction, phoenix

June 8, 2020

International ebook sale

Beginning this week, ebook versions of the The Chupacabra & the Bat Rastard: A Cryptozoology & Craft Beer Adventure as well as Champ and a Bit of Sunshine: A Cryptozoology & Craft Beer Adventure will be reduced for international customers. Read the first two books in the series prior to the August 1, 2020 launch of the third book, The Red Ghost and a Chocolate Bunny. The ebooks are available on Amazon at http://amzn.to/2z8VMMQ.
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Published on June 08, 2020 17:15

January 28, 2019

Question

Someone recently asked me what is something odd or interesting I do in my books. I don't know if this is interesting, but one thing I do is have a timeline for every chapter. In the first printings of the Chupacabra book I didn't have this and someone who read it and left me a very negative review said that they had a difficult time establishing the timeline. I revised the Chupacabra and placed it on a calendar, and with Champ as well as the current work in progress they follow the same method. Each chapter has a specific date and takes place usually over about 10 days - 2 weeks. The stories include a lot of mention of events the characters see or beers they have in a brewery. If an event is mentioned it actually occurred on the date listed in the chapter. If a beer is named at a brewery it was actually available at that brewery on that date. That is one of the challenging research aspects that I try to add, even though most people probably pay no attention to it. Even though the end result of the book is fantasy, I attempt to ground most of the book in reality based on the established timeline.

Other weird things I do...I have a list of odd words that I once read an article that said I wish these words made a comeback. Every book has at least one of those words included. Also, in book 1 I made a list of just random items and wondered if I could include them in a story. So in the Chupacabra you may find A pile of hay, a pool stick, or a A 60% off coupon. In Champ you might find a Spider-Man 2099 comic book, a bent paperclip, Five hard candies, a Vydox - orange male enhancement pill, or a lost dog poster. Weird and random, but so am I. Have suggested weird items for future stories? I am open to new ones.

What else? What would you like to know? Ask anything.
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Published on January 28, 2019 14:14 Tags: ask-the-author, random-things, weird-stuff

November 25, 2018

Update on the book tour

Yesterday I finished stop number three on my international book signing tour. The first three stops have been in Scottsdale, AZ (Phoenix), Henderson, NV (Las Vegas), and Marana, AZ (Tucson). It has been an exciting experience to travel to different breweries and meet people. I wasn't sure what to expect, but all three have been fun and I have met some really nice people. I have introduced them to the premise of the book and it has been well-received.

I look forward to more upcoming shows. The next two are particularly exciting because they are in Austin, TX and San Antonio, TX. The book's main characters live in Austin and in the first book they travel to San Antonio. The name "The Bat Rastard" is inspired by Freetail Brewing's beer called "The Old Bat Rastard." I will have a signing at their brewery on 12/14 and they have some things planned as well. The beer, which normally comes out at the first of the year will be available during the show. They have a key and will have bottles in the cooler. I am really looking forward to not only those two shows, but exploring the area. I will have to take a lot of notes in Austin for inclusion in future books.

I hope to see you at an upcoming event! Cheers!
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Published on November 25, 2018 09:12 Tags: book-signing, brewery, craft-beer, cryptozoology, fiction, meet-and-greet

October 11, 2018

First Book Signing Event

It is just about three weeks before the book signing tour begins. It kicks off November 3 in Scottsdale, AZ at Mesquite River Brewing Company. I will have 25 copies of each book in paperback and 3 in hardback to sign at each show. I have had a larger number than that say they are coming. If you want to ensure there will be copies for you, I recommend pre-ordering through a link I set up on Ebay. Another benefit to pre-ordering is a discounted price. The books are being offered individually or as a combo set (discount on the set).

Here is the link:
https://www.ebay.com/sch/trollinger20...
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Published on October 11, 2018 07:37 Tags: arizona, book-signing, book-tour, craft-beer, cryptozoology, phoenix, scottsdale

August 27, 2018

Book Tour

I have had at least a passing interest in the idea of a book tour for some time; however, struggled to dedicate the time to actually making it a reality. It was a few people who sparked a more solid interest. First Loren Coleman, one of the most prominent cryptozoology researchers posted to me on Twitter suggesting that since my book deals with cryptozoology and craft beer, I should come to the museum for a signing event because there is one place where a cryptozoology museum and a craft beer brewery are in the same area. I liked the idea. More recently, Scott Metzger of Freetail Brewing asked me if his company's beer, Old Bat Rastard, inspired my story or title in any way. I said yes and a short discussion later he suggested I visit the brewery for a book signing. That's great - but how do I do it?

I belong to a few writing groups online and have read many articles. I have found the number of resources to assist self-published authors who really have few connections to be limited. Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail." I have always thought I could solve anything if given enough thought. I don't have a mentor who can guide me and I don't have a circle of friends who are attempting similar things. But that's cool. I can go at it, learn along the way, and maybe help someone in the future.

To begin I thought it best to look at the books and think about the audience. One of the guiding documents that inspired me to write the stories in the first place was a 2016 Pew Research article that stated 26% of American did not read another book after high school. Most of these were men. It also identified the average reading level to be about the eighth grade. My books are not written with elegant words or flowery writing, but just regular conversational language. They are about mysterious creatures and beer, so maybe those are things guys like. I did have a few friends who were not beer drinkers read the stories, and while they liked the creatures, the travel, and the pop-culture aspects they were bored by the beer-talk.

Thinking about the book tour I wanted to first think of the location. A traditional book store would likely attract avid readers, but that runs the risk they may not like beer and therefore be bored. Since there are few examples of this type of tour I thought that leaves the possibilities open to whatever I can envision. So I thought about Scott and Loren's comments and thought why not have an event in a brewery? Then it could be assumed the patrons are fans of beer and they may find the creatures to be interesting. Yes, I was invited to Freetail Brewing, but why stop at one? Since I am uncertain how it will go it might be a descent hit or it may be a huge failure. If it is a failure, might as well go big. So I envisioned a 17 city nation-wide book signing tour held in local breweries.

With the audience and type of location envisioned, what cities should I use? Since I live in Phoenix it makes sense to have the first one here. Lots of local friends, limited travel, and I know my way around town. I already had the invite from San Antonio and Book 1 is set there, so that makes sense as a stop. The characters themselves are from Austin, TX so I added that as a stop I could combine with San Antonio. Book 2 is set in Burlington, VT but there are scenes in Boston, Salem MA, Portland ME, and Burlington - so Salem, Portland, and Burlington made sense. I added Dayton OH, Columbus, OH, and Atlanta, GA because I used to live in Atlanta and Yellow Springs, OH. Later I added Cincinnati because Book 4 will be set around Cincinnati and I thought this would be a good opportunity to introduce people to me and the series. That might help interest when I get around to Book 4. San Diego and Denver are big craft beer towns, so I added them. I thought from there I could hit Los Angeles with San Diego and Albuquerque with Denver. Plus I have a friend in Albuquerque so I could visit her and her husband. I added Tucson and Las Vegas because they were close driving cities and I thought that would give me three events under my belt before venturing further out of state. The last edition was Tijuana because Baja is growing rapidly as a craft beer producer, it's close to San Diego, and then I could say it's an international tour. I am still working on confirming five of the cities, but overall it is going well. I have approached it by asking on social media if I could hold a book event there. I started sending email, but who knows if they read it. I switched to Facebook messenger because I can see if it has been read. They usually give me an email address to send the request to, but having already made contact it isn't out of the blue now. No one has said no yet, but some have not responded. If I ask twice and have no response, I move on. Good thing about craft beer is there are thousands of locations.

But that brings me to my current challenges. What does the event look like and what are some challenges? I have a cryptozoology presentation that covers the topic, my books, and I envision something local for each stop. But most breweries don't have the ability for that, so the approach is a 2 hour block of time at a table speaking to people who come up. I can introduce the book to them, answer any questions, give background on myself, the characters, the books, the beers, etc. After the two hours I will hang out in the brewery and mingle. I think it best to look at it not as a book selling event, but a chance to meet people and introduce myself. That maybe leads to future readers.

But the business end - I likely have little cash on hand and the bars won't sell the book so I need a way to do transactions. I just signed up for the square and I could do PayPal also. I am thinking I might open a second account just for author stuff and the sales go into that. It would make it easier for tax purposes too. Then I wondered if I need to make the business name an official business? I use a name that I had to create for school work in digital film classes, but it isn't really a business. Maybe it should be. There are a lot of questions there about what is needed, how to get started, etc.

My next dilemma is quantity. I originally thought 25 copies of each book in paperback and maybe 3 copies in hardback. I expected maybe a good day would be 5 copies sold, then afterwards I would reorder 5 copies have maintain a stock of 25. But what if I just happen to sell more? I invited more than 100 to the Phoenix event. I know not everyone will come. Also those who marked "interested" also will not all come, and those who do attend may just be there to say hi and not buy anything...but what if they do? What if on the leg of the tour where I visit LA, San Diego, and Tijuana, what if I sell out during the second stop? Now I don't have copies and it will take about two weeks to get more. My current idea is to suggest pre-sales. Maybe 15% off for buying ahead of time. That would not only give me $ but give me a more solid inventory count. Still working on that idea.

There will also be a t-shirt. Kind of like a concert tour shirt, but with my Chupacabra cover on the front and the back contains a list of dates, breweries, and cities.

I hope to discover the answers to these questions and work out the details before the events. Plus there will be likely on the job learning. Once learned I will share the experience and my attempts with others so maybe if they try in the future it will be easier for them. Until then I will seek to figure it out and leave a trail.

As I said, it could be a good idea or a huge disaster. Only one way to find out...
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Published on August 27, 2018 23:40 Tags: book-tour, craft-beer, cryptozoology, fiction, meet-and-greet, organization

March 26, 2018

Book 3

For my third book in the cryptozoology & craft beer series I was going to create my own creature. I figured less research in the prior body of knowledge that way. I had one idea and it could fit, but it wasn't completely hooking me. I created a second creature but again, meh. Both caused me to sit around for 3 months without writing anything except occasional notes trying to make the creatures fit.

Yesterday I was reading a web page that collects obscure cryptids and surprisingly there was one in Arizona. I immediately liked it and thought of ways that I could use it. So now I think I am switching gears. The only challenge is in book 2 I planted a sculpture of a centaur made by a local Native tribe. That was a lead in for book 3. Now I have to figure out how to spin that.

Also I think I need a cover artist that can draw. The guy I have been using designs covers with clipart, but I don't think he can draw what I am looking for. Anyone want to take a shot at being a cover artist? :-)
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Published on March 26, 2018 13:09 Tags: cover-artist, craft-beer, cryptozoology, fiction, graphic-designer