PaulLev

Not exactly free, but all the science fiction and fantasy ebooks on this page are 99 cents each for the next few days https://t.co/F6ZH94HXpK  And in case you missed it, my frank interview about the writerly life https://michaelaventrella.com/2016/08/15/interview-with-author-paul-levinson/

PaulLev

"Loose Ends" - my Hugo-nominated, Nebula-nominated, Sturgeon-finalist novella first published in Analog Magazine in 1997, will be FREE as a Kindle ebook on Amazon for just one day, December 15. Since Amazon works on California time, this special event will start around 3:30am Eastern time on December 15. If you don't have a Kindle, you can download a free app for your tablet, smartphone, or laptop, and read the novella that way.   You can find the story and the app here http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00OJY02KQ  (or put in the appropriate Canadian, UK, or international address for amazon).
          
          from the Tangent review: "Paul Levinson has taken the brilliant step of combining the emotional impact of two tragic American events ... But Levinson does much more. He creates a love story set against the evocative portrait of New York City."

PaulLev

@EmilyCharlotteCooledge It's an amazing thrill to meet someone face to face who has either read your work and loves it or wants to read it. Though I haven't yet read your story, I have feeling it won't all that long before you're signing your books at a convention too. CPC was first published in Analog Mag in 1995, reprinted a whole bunch of times, most recently in The Mammouth Book of Time Travel. And Phil D's adventures continue in lots of places, including my novel The Silk Code, which won the Locus Award for Best First Science Fiction novel of 1999.

PaulLev

@EmilyCharlotteCooledge Publishing has been a mixed bag for me, as far as difficulty.  My very first publication about the Beatles - in the Village Voice (a New York City) - was easy: I sent in a Letter to the Editor, and the next thing I knew the letter was published as an article, and I got a check for $65 in the mail!   But it took me five years of going to conventions and meeting editors to get my first science fiction novel published - The Silk Code.
            
            I got an agent to negotiate a better deal for me on that first novel.  But I had already made the connection with the editor on my own.   In retrospect, although the agent did get me a better deal, he didn't do much for my other contracts.  Meanwhile, he happily collected his 15% - and 20% for translations.  I left him after 10 years, and, in retrospect, I should have done that much sooner.
            
            I love biology!  For a while, when I first got to the City College in New York, I wanted to be a bio-chemist.  But I didn't enjoy getting into class at 8am in the morning to dissect a fetal pig in alcohol :)  
            
            But I studied evolution and DNA for my doctoral dissertation, "Human Replay: A Theory of the Evolution of Media," and that knowledge served me in good stead when I was writing The Silk Code, which has the tagline "DNA is the ultimate dossier".
            
            You can have a really good life being both an author working in another profession - whether teaching, research, etc.  So I'd recommend that you continue your writing as well as your university degree,
            
            "The Heist" already caught my eye, and that's indeed the next story of yours that I'll be reading!
            
            -Paul
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EmilyCharlotteCooledge

Wow, you have a pretty impressive set of skills then! You're very lucky to have been published, was it difficult publishing without an agent? And when you did get an agent, what was your opinion on them?
            
            Physics and forensics I have knowledge in but not to a degree standard, I'm leaning more towards biomedicine or pathology as my university degree but I'm still undecided yet so who knows. 
            
            Thank you! As am I with yours, it's very original and a breath of fresh air to Wattpad. Some of my most oldest works, most notably the Madman trilogy, are very rough and poorly written but I'm currently in the process of rewriting my oldest ones to bring it up to the same standard as the rest. 
            Another you might be interested in: "The Heist", a new crime / action new project of mine I've just begun. 
            
            Hahaha, well you must be interesting enough to have something to write in your wiki! 
            
            All the best,
            -E.C.Cooledge :) x
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PaulLev

@EmilyCharlotteCooledge I've probably been to almost a hundred book signings by now.  I'm also a professor, but as I much as I love teaching, I love writing even more! :)
            
            My very first publications were articles about the Beatles, back in the 1970s, which I sold to local newspapers - a real thrill! Then I went on to scholarly articles and books - this was classic traditional publishing, without even an agent.  I just got my books to editors after meeting them at conferences, etc.  Then I began to publish science fiction - by sending them to paper magazines (and now online magazines).  I've had almost fifty stories published so far.  My first novel was published in 1999 - The Silk Code - and for that I did get an agent, for the first time.  But after having five novels published by a traditional publisher, I left both the publisher and my agent, and made a deal with a small independent press in Texas.  And that's where I happily am now for my science fiction :)  I do think that self-publishing is likely the best way to go for someone starting now - I would do that myself, if I was just starting out now.  For my nonfiction books, I deal with big publishers directly (no agent).
            
            I actually have a PhD in media theory and history - not forensics and physics, in which I'm a self-taught amateur :)
            
            I'm very much enjoying your novel, and will keep on reading it, as well as your other works.  You have real talent as writer - breadth of imagination, and a good sense of character.  Keep up the good work!
            
            PS - Here's a Wikipedia article about me, for more boring details about my professional life :)  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Levinson
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PaulLev

@EmilyCharlotteCooledge Exactly what I'll be reading - your Half-Life - when I get home tonight, after enjoyable signing of my old-fashioned novels (printed on paper :) ) at American Library Association conference in snowy Philadelphia. Glad you enjoyed CPC!
          

EmilyCharlotteCooledge

Thank you! It means a lot! 
            I hope you enjoy 'Half-life', the next chapter for it should come out sometime soon, either tomorrow or Monday.
            Wow, it must be amazing to go to a book signing, something I can only dream off. You must be a fine writer. :)
            Is CPC available as a paperback too? 
            All the best,
            -E.C.Cooledge :) x
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EmilyCharlotteCooledge

Hi Paul! 
          
          Thanks for following me, it means a lot, I love your current book, a genius idea. 
          
          I hope you enjoy any of my works if you choose to read them, my current new project: "Half-life." might be something you'll enjoy. [It's an action / science-fiction.]
          
          Many thanks,
          -E.C.Cooledge :) x

BobbyMorris83

Hello Paul, extraordinary for me to run into someone who's a "someone" in RL! ;-) I've visited your youtube channel, where (amongst other things) I was pleased to see you sticking up for video games.

PaulLev

Ha - absolutely - that little bout with Thompson was aired live at 6 in the morning.  Probably 3 people saw it.  But the second life it's had on YouTube made it all worthwhile and then some!
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