iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch Apps for Writers

I love technology even though half the time I don’t know how to use it properly. Mostly I just push buttons so I can make pretty colors and neat sounds. Fortunately, I can use simple devices such as light switches and microwave ovens . . . although, some of the settings on the fancy microwaves still give me fits.

The latest technological wonder I’ve added to my robo-menagerie is the iPod Touch. It’s simple to use, and best of all it has those aforementioned lights and sounds I love so much. I’ve already wasted time on games and YouTube, so I thought I would check out some of the apps for writers. I found quite a few. I’m focusing on just the two that I thought I would use the most. These apps will also work for iPhone and iPad users.

My Writing Nook – The simple writing app has a word count feature, autosave, and a dictionary and thesaurus. You can write in portrait or landscape mode, and you can email documents to yourself. You might also want to use their free web app of the same name, which can sync with your iPod Touch. You can have your work in two places, and it will automatically update when you synchronize them with the touch of a button. The app costs $2.99

Screenplay – Black Mana Studios (an official technology partner of Final Draft) offers this screenwriting app. It works with Final Draft, naturally, but it can also import and export from Celtx, which is a free screenwriting program that many people are using. The app drag and drop scenes to rearrange them, write in landscape or portrait mode, and it features auto-complete for the character names so you don’t have to keep typing them throughout the script. The app costs $4.99. 

Since I’d never tried typing on the small screen of an iPod Touch before, I wasn’t sure how the apps were going to handle my clumsy fingers. I was surprised at how well it worked – very few typos . . . no more than I usually make.

I’ve only used these apps for a few weeks, so I may update this post with further thoughts if I find things that I love or hate about them. So far, I like them. While I probably won’t write an entire novel or screenplay on my iPod, it’s nice to know that I could if I wanted to!

What does this mean for me? It probably means I will find more ways to spend time writing when I should be doing important things like watching Warehouse 13 or old Lost episodes, or contemplating what to do when the zombies attack.

What about you? What cool apps have you found that you love?

Check out My Interview on Francy & Friends!

Last Sunday, I was on Francy & Friends and the show was a whole lot of fun. We talked about Meat City, writing, Nazi fish from my story “Night Feeders”, Twilight (fans of Twilight may want to avoid this), horror, snakes, drinking from my skull, and many other things. Please give it a listen!

Click here to go to the show!

2 Flash Pieces in New Anthology: A Pint of Bloody Fiction

I have two short pieces in the anthology A Pint of Bloody Fiction from House of Horror, which you should be able to order from the link at the end of the post.

When I say short, I mean short. Each of my stories, “Worst Thing I Ever Did” and “Rorschach’s Vampire”, is just 200 words long. In fact, all of the stories in the anthology conform to the brutal (and fun) short word count.

Order A Pint of Bloody Fiction

Check Out Irredeemable from Mark Waid and Peter Krause

Sunday, after a nice hike up, down, and around Torrey Pines State Reserve*, I had the opportunity to meet Peter Krause, an incredible artist and a very nice fellow. For those who don’t know, Mr. Krause was a fulltime artist for DC comics for a decade, drawing such iconic heroes as Superman and Captain Marvel.

He’s now working with comic book writer Mark Waid on the comic book Irredeemable, from Boom! Studios. Here’s the basic concept: Imagine Superman, pissed off at the world, and deciding to become the world’s greatest supervillain. Irredeemable is like that, but better. It’s darker than you might think too, which really appealed to my inner horror writer.

Waid’s story is stellar and the art is wonderful. I finished off the first four issues (collected into one volume) in one sitting. I can’t wait to read more, and I hope all you comic lovers out there do the same.

Zombie lovers: you can get a fix of Zombie Tales from Boom! Studios. They have a TON of other great properties too.

*My apologies to Peter if I looked (and perhaps smelled) as though I’d just come back from a mysterious island run by a man named Jacob and home to a smoke monster. That’s right, Lost is over, but I’m still gonna reference it.

Read the Excerpt from Meat City

I’d love if you would check out the excerpt from Meat City & Other Stories. You can read the first 1000 words (give or take) by clicking HERE. I appreciate it!

Writer’s Block? I Suffer from Writer’s Flood

I’ve never had to deal with a bout of writer’s block. For that, I’m very grateful. However, I do have what I call writer’s flood, a deluge of ideas that hit me almost constantly. To anyone who has writer’s block, this probably sounds great. I’m sure it’s better than staring at a blank page. Still, it has some drawbacks, and I’ll tell you why.

Just like in a real honest-to-goodness flood with rising waters (and large ladies in ice cream stained moo moos clinging to the tin roofs of their homes), it’s easy to get swept away. The rush of ideas can be overwhelming. You start working on one idea only to have another more attractive idea come along. The real problem comes from separating the good ideas from the bad and realizing that just because you have a cool idea it doesn’t mean you have a story. The bad ideas, the ones that never really go anywhere, outnumber the ones that have potential and they can threaten to drown you if you aren’t vigilant. Carefully choose those ideas you pursue.

Ideas in most cases are just fragments. You need to make sure that any idea you choose has a potential greater than the initial “cool idea”. It has to be able to support a real story; you need characters, a good setting, plot, etc. Don’t waste too much time on idea fragments that aren’t going anywhere. Instead, file them away and come back to them later. If it’s still a real stinker of an idea when you revisit it, scrap it. I’ve found that I’m far less frustrated when I don’t futz around with those deadwood ideas.

When the good ideas (those I think are good) start to pile up, I have to prioritize. What do I want to do first? I write fulltime, so I need to write something that has commercial potential and that is still fun, interesting, and something that I really want to write. I’d like to say I’m getting better at figuring this out, but I’m not. Organization is not something that comes naturally to me. At any given time, I’ll have several projects going.

Right now is a prime example. I’m working on an outline for a screenplay, a comic book (I plan to post the first pages of the script for Aberrant Nation here soon), several novels (including one that ties into “Meat City” and “Ballad of the Pale Riders”), and a strange hybrid project that . . . well, you’ll see. Plus, I’m getting into some interesting collaborations. And doing some artwork. And freelancing.

As much of logistical headache as it can be, it’s fun and I think all of my current projects have potential. Of course, I imagine every writer feels that way about his or her ideas. If they didn’t, why even bother?

Writers flood is like having your muse regurgitate on you. Except that every once is a while she upchucks a gold nugget. I’m cool with that.

Sparrow Rock by Nate Kenyon

I just finished reading Sparrow Rock by Nate Kenyon, a claustrophobic end of the world horror novel that keeps ratcheting up the tension page by page until, by the end, the reader can barely breathe. Sparrow Rock is horror with a capital H, with a neat twist toward the end that I certainly won’t give away.

 I enjoy reading horror fiction for the thrills and blood spills as much as for the deeper meanings and observations regarding life. This novel was frightening in its apocalyptic premise and the theme of isolation. But not knowing what really goes on inside your friends’ heads, or inside your own head for that matter, is truly chilling. Sparrow Rock delivers on the horror, and the novel will stick with me for quite a while.

 Even now, when I have just the slightest itching sensation on my leg or the back of my neck, I think about the book and the . . . well, you’re going to have to read it to know! Yes, I’m a tease.

 The novel is published by Leisure, and you can order a copy through their site or through this Amazon link.

Check out Nate’s website!

Sparrow Rock

Now You Can Order a Signed Copy of MEAT CITY & OTHER STORIES

I have copies of my collection, Meat City & Other Stories, now available for purchase directly through my website. They are just $15, which includes the shipping. I’d love for you to order some for yourself or as a gift to the horror lover in your life! You can buy the book through the paypal link on the sidebar. I’d love to know what you think of the stories after you’ve finished reading!

Order a signed copy for just $15, includes shipping

More Hiram Grange Hits the Stands!

Hiram Grange & the Chosen One is now available for all of you Hiram addicts. I haven’t read the book yet, but I plan to order a copy soon. This volume is by Kevin Lucia, whose work I first read in Abominations and Northern Haunts. If you haven’t read anything by Lucia yet, you’re missing out.

The book is sure to be a treat, especially if you like Absinthe addled addicts (say that three times fast) with a penchant for starlets. After I’ve ordered and received a copy, I’ll do a proper review here. Should be fun – It’s got Queen Mab of Faerie who foresees the destruction of the world and Hiram trying his damndest to make things right.

As always, the cover is phenomenal – take a look below to see what I mean. Click the cover to head to Shroud’s website and order.

Urban Fantasy Short Story Now Available on Amazon

The rights to my urban fantasy short story “Blood, Magic, and a Concubine” reverted to me a few weeks ago – the magazine that held the rights closed and all rights reverted to authors and artists. I was sorry to see the magazine go, but I figured I might as well make the best of the situation. So, I uploaded the story to Amazon as a Kindle title. It’s just 99 cents, and it includes an excerpt from my novella Meat City in Meat City & Other Stories, which is available for purchase through Amazon, Black Bed Sheet Books, and other stores.

I thought I would add an excerpt from “Blood, Magic, and a Concubine” here so you can see if it is something that you might like to read. Other tales from Underbelly are coming as well, including “Nine-Tenths”, which will be a free story on this site, and a novella called Light of the Silvery Moon, which features Johnny Stone and a pack of irate werewolves who are trying to figure out who killed a prominent member of the Blackpool Pack.

Enough of my rambling, click for the excerpt.




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