Ssshhh… this is on the lowdown, but there’s two new books coming.
This is one of those projects that’s very much “need to know” because this client wants my participation to be private. So I can’t share any identifying information.
Ssshhh… this is on the lowdown, but there’s two new books coming.
This is one of those projects that’s very much “need to know” because this client wants my participation to be private. So I can’t share any identifying information.
I’ve partnered with a creator who’s built out a massive future human sci-fi universe, filled with geological cataclysms, modified Earth species, alien species, interstellar wars, and more.
Sometimes, a “no” is the best deliverable.
I was approached by a client who was finishing up a non-fiction book. He had a very short deadline — ten days — to get the manuscript to his publisher. And he was up against the wall.
When I talk to writers about helping with their books, the first thing I always start with is “What draft are you on?” Because there’s a sweet spot where I can add value.
I’ve spent the last few months helping a new overseas client create a custom interactive teaching app for kids.
The story is essentially a spacecraft in distress with a ticking time bomb element… it takes place over a very short period of time as things go terribly wrong. It put me in a mind of Gravity in that sense… urgency was on every page.
Well, the first draft of this latest ghostwriting gig is all done and delivered to the client. How’d it work out, and what’s next?
Sometimes I get asked, “If you’re not an Instructional Designer, and you’re not an expert in the topic we’re teaching, why exactly do we need you?”
I’m excited to be bringing another client’s vision from screenplay to novel. This story is based around an awesome concept that brings old-school 1970 disaster films into a whole new epoch of science fiction awesomeness!
I’ll use whatever assets you’ve got to work with, and we’ll have a conversation (or two) to discuss your story, themes, concepts, and ideas before writing gets started. Here’s what that process looks like: