Author of adventure/thriller and horror fiction

  • Home
  • The Blog
  • Email List/Contact
  • Interviews
  • Apocalyptic
  • Horror
  • Military Thriller
  • Sci-fi/Fantasy
  • All books

Seven Things I Do While I Write

June 27, 2016 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

A while back, author Patrick Freivald tagged me on Facebook to list seven things I do while writing:

1. Research everything. I wrote a scene in a vampire novel where some desperate fathers rob a blood bank at a hospital. I downloaded a map of a hospital to use as a model, studied its security procedures, and explored how they dispose of blood samples in their trash (they often incinerate them onsite). I’m amazed that horror writers, with their online research habits, don’t end up investigated by the FBI.

2. Dream the novel. Another thing I do while writing is take a shower, drive a car, wait in line at a store, lie in bed falling asleep and sit on the can. There are many approaches to writing a novel, but one I used is to think an idea through for some time and then start typing after that. For me, writing isn’t just typing, it’s also thinking, taking notes, planning and researching. If you like this approach, keep a small notebook in your back pocket and a pen in your front pocket at all times. Think about your book in the still moments during the day and write down snatches of character, plot and dialog. When you reach a critical mass, start typing.

3. I write in almost absolute silence like the most boring person ever. I’ve tried to listen to music–and then I could be cool and say I listen to music while I write–but it just doesn’t work for me. Picture a guy staring at a screen with a blank look on his face for hours. That’s about as exciting as it gets. In my head, however, all hell is breaking loose.

4. Reread the last scene I wrote to get back into the manuscript’s vibe.

5. Play wack-a-mole with distractions like email and text messages popping up.

6. Don’t stop until I write at least one scene. Typically 1,000 words, and hope I have time and juice for another scene. I try to write a close-to-finished first draft rather than dash out the first draft and then do a methodical send draft, so the main goal for me is quality, not quantity.

7. Keep the emotional rollercoaster at bay until the writing is done. When I’m done, that’s when I allow myself to experience elation, self-doubt and the novel hangover.

Filed Under: Craig at Work, The Blog, Writing/Publishing

Artists Add Monsters to Thrift Store Paintings

June 27, 2016 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

monsterSome art for you for Horror Monday.

Artists Chris McMahon and Thryza Segal take old landscape paintings common in thrift stores and add monsters to create something new.

Great idea, and the paintings are awesome. Check them out here.

Filed Under: Art, Interesting Art, The Blog

Patrick D’Orazio Reviews CHILDREN OF GOD

June 24, 2016 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

CHILDREN OF GOD by Craig DiLouie-002Patrick D’Orazio author of the Comes the Dark trilogy, recently reviewed CHILDREN OF GOD (co-authored with Jonathan Moon) and writes, “An unexpected surprise from these two horror writers. I can’t honestly say that I’ve ever read something quite like this … how the two authors craft an overarching vision of what led up to … tragedy … is haunting, vivid, and gut-wrenching.”

Thanks for reviewing CHILDREN OF GOD, Patrick! We’re glad you dug it!

Click here to read the complete review.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, The Blog

Battle of Isandlwana

June 23, 2016 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

IsandlwanaIt’s History Thursday, Battle of Isandlwana.

British hopes to unite South African under a single confederation under British rule received a major setback when the invading army’s main camp, defended, by 1,800 troops, was overrun in an overwhelming attack by Zulu warriors.

The British had given the Zulu King Cetshwayo an ultimatum he couldn’t comply with so as to instigate the war. Lord Chelmsford led 15,000 troops into Zululand in five columns. The idea was to find the main Zulu army, encircle and destroy it before moving on to capture Ulundi, the Zulu capital. He was afraid the Zulus would avoid a fight, but these fears were unfounded.

The Zulus were a warrior society in which most able men constituted the army during times of war. They were armed mainly with short assegai spears, which they used for thrusting, and cowhide shields. While logistically they couldn’t stay in the field very long, they could travel large distances very quickly.

The king told the 24,000 warriors in his main army, “March slowly, attack at dawn and eat up the red soldiers.”

About 4,000 warriors were detached for a diversionary attack on another column. Chelmsford took the bait with the bulk of his forces, leaving Lieutenant Colonel Henry Pulleine in charge of the main camp. The Zulu main army discovered the camp and attacked immediately, deploying into a battle line as they ran.

Despite an advantage in cannon and musketry, the British were poorly led and deployed, and they had not entrenched. In the ensuing battle, more than 1,300 British troops were killed, while the Zulus suffered losses of about 1,000 warriors.

Isandlwana proved a major defeat for the British. King Cetshwayo attempted a negotiated peace but was rebuffed by Chelmsford, who hoped to restore his shattered reputation. The British invaded a second time and crushed the Zulus at the Battle of Ulundi before burning the Zulu capital, ending the war.

The terrific film ZULU DAWN depicts the destruction of the British army, check it out:

Filed Under: Other History, The Blog

Mosquitoes Find Some People Especially Delicious

June 21, 2016 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

mosquitoIt’s Science Tuesday–let’s talk about mosquitoes.

About 20% of people are especially delicious for mosquitoes to take blood from, according to scientists.

* 85% of people secrete a chemical indicating what blood type they have; mosquitoes prefer Type O blood more than Type A and B
* People who exhale more CO2, which attracts mosquitoes from up to 164 feet away (a reason why mosquitoes like to bite pregnant women and larger people)
* Mosquitoes are attracted to body sweat and people with higher body temperatures
* Some skin bacteria attracts mosquitoes; as bacteria are denser on ankles on feet, mosquitoes like to bite there
* Drinking beer attracts mosquitoes (it raises body temperature)
* It’s possible even clothing choices can attract mosquitoes–colors that stand out, as mosquitoes can see you

In contrast, about 15% of people excrete chemicals that appear to repel mosquitoes. Scientists are now attempting to isolate these molecules for potential use in mosquito repellent.

The Smithsonian Magazine has more here.

Filed Under: Cool Science, The Blog

Launch Party for CHILDREN OF GOD

June 19, 2016 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Chris and I hosted a party last night to celebrate the launch of CHILDREN OF GOD, my horror poetry collection. Calgary’s writing community turned out for the fun. Owl’s Nest sold CHILDREN OF GOD, one of Chris’s books (EVERYTHING LEADS BACK TO ALICE), and works by other local authors. Tons of fun! This is my idea of a book launch–a house party with books.

Chris and me, the happy hosts.
Chris and me, the happy hosts.

party3

party4

party5

party6

Filed Under: Craig at Work, The Blog

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 148
  • 149
  • 150
  • 151
  • 152
  • …
  • 154
  • Next Page »

Categories

  • APOCALYPTIC/HORROR
    • Apocalyptic
    • Art
    • Film Shorts/TV
    • Movies
    • Music Videos
    • Reviews of Other Books
    • Weird/Funny
    • Zombies
  • COMICS
    • Comic Books
  • CRAIG'S WORK
    • Armor Series
    • Aviator Series
    • Castles in the Sky
    • Crash Dive Series
    • Djinn
    • Episode Thirteen
    • Hell's Eden
    • How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive
    • My Ex, The Antichrist
    • One of Us
    • Our War
    • Q.R.F.
    • Strike
    • Suffer the Children
    • The Alchemists
    • The Children of Red Peak
    • The End of the Road
    • The Final Cut
    • The Front
    • The Infection
    • The Killing Floor
    • The Retreat Series
    • The Thin White Line
    • Tooth and Nail
  • GAMES
    • Video & Board Games
  • HISTORY
    • Other History
    • Submarines & WW2
  • MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE
    • Books
    • Film Shorts
    • Interesting Art
    • Movies & TV
    • Music
  • POLITICAL
    • Politics
  • SCIENCE
    • Cool Science
  • The Blog
  • WRITING LIFE
    • Craig at Work
    • Interviews with Craig
    • Reader Mail
    • Writing/Publishing

Copyright © 2025 · Author Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in