Category Archives: audio book

Burning Skies Now Available in Audibook!

Hello, there!

I’m excited to announce that the next audiobook for the Sword of Dragons saga, Burning Skies, is now available!  Currently only available on Amazon, Audible, and iTunes, keep checking other vendors as the audiobook goes wide!

Click Here for Amazon

Click Here for Audible

Taking A Break From Audiobook Recording

As I’d mentioned in my previous article, I’m stepping back from Audiobook recording for the next few months.  The place we currently live in is not conducive to recording quality audio, and it’s getting worse and worse.  On top of that, I’ve just started a new job, a new career, and as does happen often with new careers (I think?), I’m exhausted every day after work as I try to learn everything.

But that doesn’t mean I’m done – I will record the rest of the Sword of Dragons saga, including book 5 when it’s done, as well as the Chronicles of the Sentinels trilogy!

Thanks for reading (and listening!) and keep checking back for more updates!

Thanks,
-Jon Wasik

Life Update – Audiobook Finished, Back to the Grind

Hey everyone!

I know it’s been a while since I wrote a blog on here, and I’m so sorry for that.  I’ve been trying to ‘keep up with’ posting on Instagram and Facebook, and being the introvert that I am, that…pretty much is all the energy I have, when it comes to social media.

And I’m honestly not sure it’s worth it.

Instagram is no longer a photo app – it’s all about the videos.  Scratch that, it’s all about the reels, which are limited to a minute and a half.  Recording any meaningful content in that short amount of time?  Not easy.  And I had to take something like 30 to 60 takes each time, trying to get it right while compressing the topic to 90 seconds.

I think I might give up on that.  While my initial foray into reels proved promising, with new followers and a couple of comments, it quickly died out, and is stagnant.  Again.

I guess I just suck with social media.  *shrug*

Burning Skies Audiobook Coming Soon!

It’s…been a battle.  I intended to record one audiobook per month once I was furloughed from my day job.  I succeeded with Rise of the Forgotten!  Then I got sick for the month of November with a throat thing.  Started recording in December, made pretty good progress, buuuut….grew increasingly frustrated with the noise in my neighborhood getting worse and worse.

And, well, things just kept getting delayed.  I finally, finally finished recording Burning Skies in January, and started editing.  Editing took a lot longer, because the noise I mentioned in my neighborhood?  It meant that I had to re-record a bunch of sections.

But finally, as of last week, editing is finished!  And I spent the first half of this week listening to Burning Skies “in the wild” to see how an average listener might listen to it.  I found some minor things, about 6 chapters needed breaths removed throughout that somehow wasn’t audible during my editing phase, and a couple of lines needed re-recording, but all in all, I’m really happy with how it turned out!

Especially Nuuldan, the dark dragon?  Oooh.  I channeled Sam Witwer’s version of Darth Maul when I recorded those lines, and they came out sooooo good!  I can’t wait for you all to hear it!

Yesterday, I uploaded all of the files to ACX, and submitted for approval!  So, assuming no quality issues are detected by the ACX techs, Burning Skies should show up on Audible, Amazon, and iTunes in the next 2 weeks!

So despite the setbacks, I battled through, and completed my second Audiobook!

Now…what’s next?

Wellllllllllll….

Assessing The Situation and Adapting

So after all of the delays with Burning Skies, I knew I was running up against a wall, time-wise.  My furlough only allowed me 3 months of paid-for insurance by my employer, and unemployment only allowed a little more than that.  My plan had been to record Rise, then Burning, then start auditioning for jobs to actually get paid for my voice work.

That last part was originally supposed to start in December.

When I hadn’t finished recording Burning Skies until January, I knew my original plan was in big, big trouble.

Then I started looking into how much I could expect to get paid as a voice actor going through ACX, without an agent, without a director or producer or editor, with me doing all of it.

So here’s the thing.  Audiobook narrators, and voice actors in general, don’t get paid for however long it takes them to do the job.  We get paid for a product.  We get paid Per Finished Hour of audio, or PFH.

Let’s say it takes me an hour to record a segment.  That’s an hour of audio, right?  Not necessarily, and especially not as a beginner.  I make mistakes.  I have to re-record.  I’ve learned that, in order to keep my flow on a story, when I mess up, I just immediately re-do that line or wherever a good break is to edit later.  Sometimes that’s only a little bit, and sometimes I mess up a lot.

Then, later, I have to go back and listen to and edit that hour.  Editing involves cutting, adjusting, and generally takes 1.5x as long to do, at least for me (dunno if I’m missing some trick of the trade…)  So that hour recording actually took 2.5 hours of my time to polish, and I may end up actually only having 50 minutes of a final product.  Maybe more, maybe less.

As a beginner, as a nobody on the ACX platform, I could probably expect the lower end of pay for jobs, which is a range of $50 to $100 PFH.

Now, let’s do some math, yeah?  I know, I hate math, too.

Rise of the Forgotten came out to about 10 hours finished.  At the low end, that would mean $500, at the high end, $1000.

In theory, that should have taken me 25 hours to finish, with the 2.5x math, right?  Less than a week, in theory.

It took me longer.  A lot longer.  It basically took me a month from beginning to end.  Now granted, throughout that month, my voice started weak and I couldn’t record for 8 hours a day, so that’s probably why.  Some days I could only do one or two chapters at most, my voice was still recovering from previous days of recording for 6 or more hours.  That’s part of it, your vocal chords are a muscle that need to be strengthened over time.  By the time I finished recording RotF, I was doing pretty good!

But it basically took me a month to finish.

Sooooo…if this was for someone else’s project?  That’s $500-$1000/month.  Before taxes, not  counting medical insurance or anything.  That’s it.

That is not enough to live off of, even in a dual-income home.  Not even close.

So that has led to a…difficult decision.

Back to the Grind – Day Job

After figuring all of that out in January, and knowing that my medical and unemployment benefits were about to run out, I knew I had no choice – I had to go back to a day job.

I really, really didn’t want to.

And I’m so, so incredibly frustrated!!!!  Of course my body decided to get a new illness in the middle of all of this!  Of course I then had to re-build up my vocal chords afterwards and take longer than I should have to record Burning Skies!  Of course everything had to fight me every single step of the way!

At least, that’s been my thoughts lately.  I’m not happy about how it all played out.  This…this was supposed to be my chance.  This was supposed to be how I was able to become a full-time creative.  I didn’t expect to get rich, I didn’t want to get rich, I just wanted a sustainable income!

Maybe, someday, I still can.  It’ll be easier with ‘professional’ gigs, where I have an agent and a producer and I record my work, send it off for someone else to edit, and then move on to the next project.  Maybe, but that’ll mean trying to get an agent to represent me, just for starters.  That’s a big if.

But for now, I have to take care of myself and my family.  I have to make sure we don’t end up on the streets.  And let’s face it, with practically zero social safety nets in the U.S., that’d be a scary prospect.

So I started applying for jobs on indeed.  Sys Admin jobs.  It literally made me nauseous when I first started looking – I not only didn’t want to go back to a 9-5 job, I really didn’t want to go back to the immensely stressful Sys Admin career, where employers increasingly take advantage of employees, adding more and more work and hours without any added pay.

At one point, I started wondering about trying to find other jobs.  Maybe as a proofreader or copy editor.  I started looking at those jobs, and felt like I had a leg up on those, since my Bachelor’s degree was in English.  But a lot of it was ‘gig’ work or temporary contracts, not a reliable source of income at all.

Then I thought…what about technical writing?  I started looking into that.  It looked…promising.  I’d take a definite pay cut, tech writers aren’t paid nearly as much as sys admins, but it was more than I was getting from unemployment by a significant amount, and we’d already proven that, if we had to, we could make that work!  So, why not go for it?

I posted on my private Facebook about thinking about going tech writing as a career, not really thinking anything about it.  But then, that same day, an old co-worker called me up and said he was a manager on a program in dire need of a proper documentation program, and he knew and liked my work in that regard (I’ve always built up the documentation programs for any job I was a sys admin at), and he wanted to hire me!

A few weeks later, and here I am, about to start not just a new day job, but a new career!

I’m excited.  I’m terrified.  I’m anxious.  I’m all over the board about it!  But one thing is for sure – I’ll be glad to have a steady paycheck again.

For more than one reason.

What’s Next?

Remember how I was saying that my neighborhood was getting worse and worse with noise?  Well, honestly, worse and worse in general.  This apartment complex is utter shit, the management company that took over after we moved in is horrible (Seriously, second time Greystar has taken over an apartment while we lived there and turned it to shit!  How are they surviving as a company??)

So with a steady paycheck again, we’re gonna move to a better apartment/neighborhood.  One that doesn’t stress us out, and one that won’t interfere with my ability to record audio.

Until then?  No more recording.  It’s too frustrating.

But once I’m settled into my day job and get a new daily routine going, I will continue writing and publishing novels.  The Sword of Dragons needs book 5, and Project Sirius book 2 needs to come out this year!

I don’t plan on publishing Sirius 2 until after we move, though.

I’m going to probably pull back from Instagram – it’s just not worth the effort I put into my videos, I get no engagement.

I’m probably going to delete my Patreon.  Absolutely no one seems to give a shit about it or has any interest in supporting me through that platform, so no sense keeping it online.

But overall, for the next few months, I’m going to focus on two things – moving, and mental/emotional health.

I’ve worked for employers who don’t give two shits about me for too long.  I’m hopeful that this new job won’t be like that (the manager’s a pretty cool guy!), but either way, I’m going to focus more on taking care of me, and being healthy and better.

I have no doubt that this new year is going to be full of even more change.

I’ll try to be better about keeping you all in the loop here.  After all, this blog is a better avenue for that – I’m a writer!  Writing is what I do best :)

Assuming anyone is still around reading this, and assuming anyone has read all the way to the bottom of this rather long post, thank you for your support and patience!

Until next time!
-Jon Wasik

First Audiobook Available! Rise of the Forgotten

Hello, there!

I am so very excited and proud to announce that my first audiobook, Rise of the Forgotten, is now available!  You can find it on the Audible and iTunes apps by searching for Jon Wasik, or you can click the link below to go straight to the Amazon store page!

Rise of the Forgotten Audibook

If you’ve been a regular reader here, you already know this, but not only is this my first novel converted into audiobook format, it’s also narrated by me!

Now, before you scoff and say, “Great, another author who thinks they can narrate their own book,” it’s more than just that.  (And for the record, some authors are fantastic at narrating their own books!)  I’ve been working towards switching careers to voice acting for quite some time now, and this first release is a culmination of practicing, of taking classes and voice lessons, and several false-starts and learning experiences.

In fact, this isn’t even my first completed audiobook that I’ve recorded!  But, well, the first one I completed was before I took lessons.  The quality of the voice acting reflects that fact very much, and I’ll be re-recording that book at a future date ;)

It’s also not the first time I started recording a Rise of the Forgotten audiobook, it’s just the first time I’ve finished and been happy with the results.  This single release represents hundreds of hours of learning, trying, learning some more, adjusting, learning even more, and then finally completing.

This particular version took me nearly a month to record, edit, and do re-recordings of a few chapters whose quality were too substandard to be recoverable.

To quote a song, “It’s been a long road, getting from there to here.”  But now I’m here, and this is just the beginning :D

What’s Next?

So, the next thing I was supposed to start over a week ago was recording Burning Skies.  I say supposed to because for the past two weeks, I’ve had a throat illness (maybe strep, maybe not, tests and diagnosis are inconclusive…)  This week, I’ve been doing my voice warmups every morning, but my throat has been very keen to tell me, “No, dumbass, I’m not ready for this yet!”  Sooooo yeah.

Artwork by Vuk Kostic

But, once I’m able, I definitely will begin recording Burning Skies in earnest.  After that?  Well, yes, I do intend to record audiobooks for all of the main-series Sword of Dragons novels (Orc War Campaigns, however, I’m not currently planning to).  I also intend to record audiobooks for the Chronicles of the Sentinels trilogy.

However, due to circumstances outside of my control (and details of which I won’t be going into,) I have several months off from work.  So I’m using this opportunity to try voice acting full-time.  Conceivably, recording my own audiobooks is a big and important step towards making that dream a reality, but unless my books suddenly get a lot more popular than they are now, that’s not sustainable.

So after Burning Skies, I’m planning to start auditioning for other, paying gigs.  Starting with audiobooks, but I’ll also be trying to find an agent willing to take me on as a client and find me roles.  As I’ve learned in class, the most common role that ‘pays the bills’ are commercials, so I’ve no doubt I’ll be doing lots of those, but I’m hoping for more audiobooks and, even more of a dream, working on projects like video games or animated shows/movies!

Those are lofty dreams, and may be a long ways off.  And honestly, if I only ever do audiobooks, if I am able to get steady work and (relatively speaking) steady income from audiobooks, I’d be super ecstatic and would happily leave the I.T. world behind.

That’s a lot of future I’ve just imagined and covered.  It’s possible that none of this will work out.  I may be going back to work as early as January, and if my voice acting is showing no promise by then, I’ll relegate it to part-time (but won’t be giving up on it).

What About Your Writing?

Well, like the blog name says, I’m a writer at heart ;)  I won’t be giving up on that.  But it is, for the moment, taking a bit of a back seat.  While I’m sick and can’t record new audio, I am writing the next Sword of Dragons book, but it’s slow work and, once my voice is good, it’ll once again take a back seat.

But you can’t keep an obsessed writer down.  I’ll finish Sword of Dragons 5.  And Project Sirius book 2 is already written, it just needs polish.  I intend to publish it sometime in 2024!

So don’t worry, there’s still plenty more to come from me, and plenty more content for this blog :)

Thanks for reading!  And as a reminder, click here to head to the audiobook page for Rise of the Forgotten :D

-Jon Wasik

So It Begins – The Sword of Dragons Book 5

Hello, there!

First a quick update from my previous post – I am still furloughed, but as I had planned, I have been treating voice acting/audiobook narration as a full-time job, with some success!

RotF’s Audiobook Cover Art

As of last week, I finished editing of my first Audiobook, Rise of the Forgotten, and I’ve sent it into ACX!  As soon as they approve it, it’ll go live on Amazon, Audible, and iTunes!  :D

Unfortunately, last week I also came down with strep throat.  (Again.)  I’m on the mend, but my voice is still out of commission, probably for this entire week.

So what am I to do?  No way to record new audio, and no other audio to edit?

Why, write, of course!

And so today, finally, after so much development and plotting and scheming, I start writing book 5 of the Sword of Dragons saga!!!!

I have to say that I’m really glad that I decided to stick with 6 books for the saga – that gave me freedom to come up with a really good build-up novel, and if it comes out as well as I see it in my head, you all are in for a real treat :)

Obviously, I’m not gonna give any real spoilers, but I will say this – just like in Advent Darkness, book 5’s prologue won’t be the ‘traditional’ fantasy/adventure prologue, but will be from a character’s POV, and will help set up the primary conflict.  And I’ll be introducing a new character right away, one whom no one knows or has heard about, but whose name will suggest a particular relation to Kemlia of Gevron.

Speaking of whom, after re-reading the saga over the past couple months in preparation for writing book 5, I have to say that Kemila has become one of my favorite characters.  She’s so fun to write (and read!) and I’m looking forward to writing more flirtatious and sarcastic dialogue from her :)

Anywho, the more time I spend writing this, the less time I have to write book 5, so that’s all for today!  Stay tuned for the announcement of when the audiobook is available!  :D

Thanks for reading,
-Jon Wasik

Finding Opportunities – Shifting Gears After Setbacks

The title I just wrote for this blog sounds like a bad advertisement.  You know the ones, I see videos for them all the time on Instagram.  “Turning Setbacks Into Opportunities!” or something like that.

But, well…sometimes that’s all you can do in life.  And here I am, facing the need to do that.

I was furloughed from my day job last week.  If you’re not sure what that is, it’s basically a temporary, unpaid leave of absence, with the intent of bringing the employee back after the event causing the furlough passes.  In most cases, that ‘event’ is financial difficulties (see Federal Government’s Inability To Pass A Budget as an example).

And like most furloughs, I’m unsure how long it’ll last.  Could be weeks.  Could be months.

So I had a very important decision to make.  After spending a day and a half absorbing and processing this difficult turn of events, I decided to do what I’ve been wanting to do for a long time – do something creative full-time.

But not writing.  Because I’m not profitable on my writing, let alone making nearly enough to live off of.  I wish I were, but I’m not even close.

Instead, I’m turning to the other endeavor I started working towards last year.

Voice Acting.

Last week, starting Wednesday, I’ve begun treating voice acting as a full-time job.  For now, I’m building my vocal cords back up on my own novels, starting with Rise of the Forgotten.  Fun fact, your vocal cords are literally muscles.  If you don’t use them much, they grow weak.

After about 5 hours of audiobook recording on Wednesday, my vocal cords were tired!  So I have to build up my strength, and what better way than to do it on my own books?

So that’s what I’m doing now.  As soon as I finish this blog and post it, I’m warming up my voice and getting back to it!  And if I can maintain the rate I was going last week, I hope to be finished with Rise of the Forgotten sometime next week, at least recording.  Editing will, naturally, take longer.

I’ve also decided to try to be more active on social media.  Everything on Instagram has turned to videos these days – if you’re posting photos, no one seems to care anymore.  Which is ridiculous, it’s freaking Instagram!  If you want videos, go to TikTok!  (Which, 90% of the videos on Instagram are reposts of TikTok, so…really, it’s stupid that this has become a thing!)

In any case, you’ll find me a lot more on Instagram and Facebook in the coming weeks!  Click the links below to find your way there :)  Already, you’ll find a video on this very topic, and my first excerpt from recording an audiobook!

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authorjonwasik

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kataar2002/

Thanks for reading!
-Jon Wasik

Voice Acting – A Bold New Course

Hello, there!

In my last post of 2022, I mentioned at the end that I had begun to pursue voice acting as a career!  I wanted to go into a bit more detail on what brought me to that decision, and where I’m at with it today :)

Unintended Careers

By day, I’m a computer sys admin, specializing in Windows desktop and server administration.  (All you Unix/Linux/Mac lovers out there, I’m sorry but I don’t know enough about them to help you troubleshoot!)  And by all measures, my career is a resounding success!  I make enough money to live comfortably (though inflation isn’t helping), I’m pretty good at what I do (but not as good as the best), and I’ve built up an impressive resume over the past twenty years (wow, yeah, 20 years exactly this month!)

So why do I want to change?  Why would I jeopardize a good, stable career for something like voice acting which is inherently not stable?  And probably won’t pay nearly as much, at least not at first and possibly not ever.

Well…I’m good at what I do, that’s true.  But I do it only because I’m good at it.  I never intended to get into Sys Admin work, I just fell into it because I was good at computers and had a knack for it.  When I first started college, I majored in English with the intent of becoming a teacher while writing on the side, in the hopes of one day transitioning to becoming a full-time writer.

That plan fell through very quickly.  After just two months as a substitute teacher, I said, “Hell no!”  But in reality, my decision not to teach started long before that, when I first started learning what was involved and what it was like to be a public school teacher.  And to put it succinctly – Red Tape.  Way too much bureaucracy and not enough freedom to actually teach what you should be teaching.  The public school system was a joke.  And the pay is an even bigger joke.

During my time in college, a friend of mine who worked as a computer lab assistant as a work study said they were hiring, and she knew how good I was with computers.  So I got that job and quit my job at the movie theaters.  That’s what started it.  I made contacts, gained experience.  Did the same job at the 2nd college I transferred to, then came back after graduation to work part-time and then full-time at the first college.  And my career just kept going.

But it was never something I intended to make as a life-long career.  In my mind, it was a stopover until I could make enough from writing.

Unfortunately, 20 years later and I’m still nowhere near making enough money as a writer to quit I.T.

After the lackluster reception of Chronicles of the Sentinels, I despaired.  I thought that would have been what launched my career off the ground, and instead, no one pays attention to it.  (Thankfully Sword of Dragons grows ever-more popular, but by itself, it isn’t enough.)  I thought…my career as a writer would never become more than a pipe dream.  I thought I was trapped in I.T. forever and I could see no way out.

That thought alone made me feel far more miserable than I ever have before.  And that on top of one of the worst and most stressful years of my life?  I was feeling pretty low in 2022.

Leveraging My Talents

I don’t remember exactly when it happened.  I think it was early Summer or maybe even late Spring 2022.  I’d been seeing advertisements on Facebook for Voice Acting/Voice Over Careers.  I ignored them mostly, like I do most ads on the internet.

Image Source – masseffect.com

But…I remembered auditioning for a voice acting role for Mass Effect Andromeda, and even though I didn’t get the role, I enjoyed the process so much.  Getting the script, interpreting the character, etc.  I remember years and years of singing in choir and loving every second of it.  Working with the choir, working with the director, how much I loved using my voice to give something to the audience, and I remember how much praise I received, from directors, from the audience.  I remember the terror, thrill, exhilaration, and sense of accomplishment when I started doing some solos.

I never actually clicked on one of those ad links, but I did start ‘googling’ to learn about the industry and the methods of ‘getting into it.’  I also, perhaps most importantly, read about the average income, and started doing some calculations as to how much of a pay cut my wife and I could weather.

And it seemed doable.  The industry is competitive, but the demand is growing, especially in the areas of audiobook narration and video game roles, as I read in the 2022 State of Voice Over.  And just how much is average?  According to an article on voice123.com, about $76k.  As I said, a pay cut from what I currently make.  And perhaps not a livable wage in Denver, CO (though there are those living in Denver who make less than that and somehow get by, so it’s possible!)

But that brings me to another development in the industry: pandemic forced a lot of folks to start working from home, and even before that, there were already a lot of voice talents setting up home studios to record from home (because let’s face it, renting studio time is expensive).  In particular, audiobook narration is often done from home studios more than not.

Which means voice acting can be done from anywhere.  We could, conceivably, move somewhere with cheaper cost of living, and suddenly that $76k/year is doable.

Of course, like pretty much any career out there…you don’t start out earning the average.  And that’s why I’m not diving in head-first.

But the turning point, I think, was when I turned to my coworker one day and asked, “have you ever changed careers?”  He said he had.  When I asked how old he was when he did it, it turns out he was my age.  He had transitioned from another, wholly unrelated career to I.T. security in his late 30’s.

So even though I’m in my late 30’s…it’s not too late.  That’s when I decided to pursue it.

Caution and Education

Much like with my writing, I can’t just drop my day job on a whim and dedicate 100% of my time to voice acting.  I’d love to.  Especially lately, my day job has been exhausting me and I have to really really push myself to do any recording after work each day.  There are days when I just can’t do it.

So, I do what I can when I can, pushing myself as hard as I can without letting myself go too far (unlike I did last year…I don’t want a repeat of that).

But where am I now?  Well, one of the biggest things I kept reading online, from “how to break into the industry!” blogs to statements from voice actors, has been ‘education.’  Stage and screen actors agree on that as well – no matter how much (or little) natural talent you might have, education, voice coaching, voice lessons, etc, can make the difference between a good and a great actor.  It’s a must.

So I decided to take a combined approach last year.  Before we sold our house, I started recording my first audiobook, that of Legacy.  My thinking at the time was, since it wasn’t a super popular book, it would be a good way to practice.  And I did what I’m doing now, I recorded after work and on weekends when energy allowed.  It was a challenge in that house, though, let me tell you – that house had crap for sound insulation, and any time a neighbor decided to make any noise, it disrupted my ability to record.  And when the winds shifted just right, we were directly beneath the take-off vector from Denver International Airport, which meant jets with their engines at near-full-throttle were flying directly overhead.

But I finished recording.  Meanwhile, I signed up for my first voice over lessons, though it wouldn’t start until the fall semester.

And then we sold the house and moved into an apartment that has, I kid you not, foot-thick concrete walls separating the units.  With the hope that external noise wouldn’t be as big of a problem.  (I mean, it did help, but we still get a surprising amount of dog barking or engine break noises from the nearby Interstate.)

Moving delayed editing of the Legacy audiobook by a lot.  But it turns out that was a good thing.  You see, shortly after moving into the apartment, I started my voice over class.  Aaaaaand….about 3 weeks in, I finally had time to start editing Legacy again.  And I stopped.  Because just what I’d learned in 3 weeks in class was enough for me to recognize that I did not do a good job on my recording.

So I decided to focus on learning to be a better voice actor.  I finished the first class, and then took a Characters voice class, and I made improvements by leaps and bounds!  And I was loving doing the work, too, it was so much fun!

The instructor invited me to join her advanced class, so I’ll be doing that later this year (she’s also hoping to have an animated characters class, too, so I might be taking two voice classes this semester, if I have time!)  But in the mean time, to keep honing my new skills, I’ve started recording an audiobook for Rise of the Forgotten!

Artwork by Vuk Kostic

That…has been an interesting experience.  Um.  Well, let’s just say that I’m glad to know my writing improved in my later books, because I have some poorly-written, and therefore hard-to-read-out-loud sentences in Rise *nervous laugh*

But in and of itself, that challenge has been eye-opening for both my writing and my voice acting!  And I’ve been able to voice some very fun characters.  The best so far has been that of Larash, the slightly-crazy Keeper of the Way in chapter 4.  And it wasn’t just the ‘act crazy’ that was fun, it was the fact that he very slowly regains his sanity throughout the chapter, and capturing that was an enjoyable challenge!

I’m 7 chapters in right now, and I just hope that what I’m doing is good enough!  I haven’t stopped to edit any yet, though maybe I should, just to see if it’s up to snuff or not before I record anymore…

Anywho, that’s where I’m at.  Depending on how things go when I start releasing audiobooks, IE whether they sell well or not (I keep hearing requests from people for audiobook versions of all of my novels, and audiobooks are becoming increasingly popular, so maybe!) I could start to make a transition towards the end of the year.  IE: see about going part-time at my current job, see where we might end up having to move in the future to afford it, etc.

But that’s all for now (and what a long post this turned into!)  Thanks for sticking through and reading!

-Jon Wasik

The Voice of the Writer – Recording Audio Books

Hi everyone!

I apologize for skipping a couple of weeks in blogs, life has a way of getting away with our time.

Last weekend, I had a book release/book signing party, and for the first time at such a party, I read a passage aloud from my newest book to an audience!

Truth be told, I thought I’d done horribly.  I was so nervous that I forgot to read it in my ‘voice actor’ voice,.  I just read it in my normal speaking voice, felt like I rushed some areas…

And then I received overwhelmingly positive feedback!  Some that day, and then more and more in the days that followed.  If you’re curious to see video of it, click here!

Furthermore, I have been repeatedly asked if there will be an audio book released.  Many folks have told me over the years that, as busy people, they don’t have time to read, but they can listen to audio books when they, for instance, are commuting to and from work.

So I’ve made a decision: while I’m still going to spend several hours a day during my holiday writing book 3, I’m going to also spend time working on getting the released books into audio!  I probably won’t release them all at once like I did in November, but rather one at a time…you know, to save my sanity ;)

Relearning the Voice

When you can’t afford a recording studio, improvise!

Not having funds for a professional studio, I took the same approach from my last false-start: I setup recording in a closet.  As I started and re-started recordings on Rise of the Forgotten’s prologue, I realized that I had to re-teach myself how to read for audience.

It’s easy and it’s hard all at the same time.  As I learned years ago when my friend Wayne voice-coached me, what I feel is over-the-top comes out as really good, and anything less is bland.  So I have to remember every time, don’t hold back.

I might feel silly, and given the ultra-thin barrier between the apartments above and below us, I’m sure our neighbors are wondering what the heck’s going on, but I think the results will be worth it.

The even stranger sensation is that I feel embarrassed as I read aloud over-the-top, even though there’s no one around.  Do you ever feel second-hand embarrassment when you see someone say or do something very awkward on TV?  It’s kinda like that, except that I’m embarrassed by how my own voice sounds as I’m recording.

And then I hear it play back and it’s good.  Based on those results and the encouragement I’ve received from dozens of people, I’m looking forward to releasing my books in audio format!

Thanks for reading!  Until next week, dear readers, and the annual “Looking back, looking forward” end of the year blog :)

Merry Christmas!
-Jon Wasik