How to THiNC…

How to ThiNC

How to ThiNC

Yesterday, my new book, How to THiNC, A Guide to Creating & Publishing a THiNC Book, was released in Second Life. The big release was tied into the companion seminar to the book, which…hopefully…helped other writers with their own goal of self-publishing in Second Life.

This is a new foray for me…electronic publishing…but, if yesterday’s comments and sales turn out to be more than simple platitudes, then it will be a lasting one.

How to THiNC grew out of a need, both for myself and my workshop members, to learn the process of publishing in the virtual world.  THiNC is one of the few companies in Second Life to offer publishing tools, and really the only one who offers a first-life analogue (meaning their book looks and feels like a first-life book).

In teaching myself how to use the THiNC publishing system, I experimented with image sizes and resolutions, fonts and image-types, and word processors and graphics editors.  I certainly wasn’t an expert before I began this process, but I’d like to think I became one along the way.  That said, I’m sure that there is more I have to learn, and maybe even some things I got wrong, but the information in the book stands as a comprehensive overview of the whole process.

While I’m pleased at the reception the book has received, I’m very pleased with the turn-out at the seminar.  While we didn’t quite “crash-the-sim,” we certainly filled it.  The crowd wasn’t just members of my own workshop, either…the seminar drew in quite a few members of Third Life and FarPoint Media too.  I think there were even a few people there who were drawn in by word-of-mouth, and not any association to my group at all!

Over 75% of the people attending the seminar purchased my book.  To each of them, I say “Thank you.”  I hope that you find it useful in helping you to make your own books.

How to THiNC wasn’t supposed to be my first book to be published in Second Life.  That spot was meant to be reserved for Body Language.  Before I could publish Body Language, though, I had to learn the publishing process.  How to ThiNC grew out of that…  Now that it’s done though, my focus returns to my now-second book.  Hopefully you’ll see it in about four weeks from now!

Oh, and the seminar has received its first review as well! Pamqui Vita wrote about the seminar and the book on his Spanish-language blog, Profesionales de la Información en Second Life.

For those of you using Second Life who would like to find my workshop and my book, just follow the slurl to the F&SF Writer’s Workshop Storefront.  It will be on display from October 15th onwards…

Stepping into a new world…

This is me. Honestly, it is! Or perhaps I should say that this is my avatar in Second Life. All three of those statements are true, but some of them may take some explaining.

As I mentioned before, Second Life (SL) is a virtual world that rivals our own in terms of the myriad possibilities open to us. Really, the only limit is your own imagination.

Many “residents” of SL are happy to call it a game. It certainly shares many traits with MMORPGs already cramming the interwebs that waste untold man-hours every day, but the differences are what I want to focus on.

See…unlike the people who joined SL to play a game…I joined the community to learn and teach. I didn’t know much about the “game” aspect of SL. All I knew is that real-world people were using the program to connect with other people like me. Those of us stuck in the small towns, or the big ones, for that matter. Those of us who would benefit from a more diverse community than our home towns allowed.

In my “first life,” I was only able to attend writing seminars at annual conventions. Professional, and local, workshops were out of the question as well. Using SL, however, I am able to bridge the gap between my office desk and the industry professionals who can help me the most.

When I heard from Mike Stackpole that he was developing a free, writer-based community using Second Life, I had to check it out. With thoughts of easy access to workshops, networking possibilities with other industry professionals, and potential new-media publishing possibilities, I signed onto SL for the first time and found that most of my expectations were met.

Setting aside the fact that I was blown away by the scope of SL, I found that it offered a lot of potential for advancement within my targeted field of writing. There were industry professionals, there were writing groups, there was lots of marketing being done, but there was also room for improvement.

Mike had been working hard, not just marketing, but publishing inside SL as well. He had also begun the early-days of community-building with the founding of Third Life Books alongside his friend Kat Klaybourne. The Third Life concept was to bring first-life people into SL for the purpose of making something bigger than either of those individually (first life+second life=third life).

Nearly a year has passed, since those very early days, and Third Life has grown into a fully realised community. Third Life Books has now expanded to include FarPoint Media, a group of first-rate podcasts, Third Life Interiors, offering furniture for your virtual home, and various resources for the newly-minted resident.

I am happy to say that I also play a role in this new community. Not content to wait around for things to happen, I took the initiative and, with Mike’s and Kat’s help, began to organise the Fantasy & Science-Fiction Writer’s Workshop. The workshop is a real-world tool for real-life writers to meet, network, discuss, learn, and teach. This is a group of serious writers who, for one reason or another, have found that using SL as a learning tool works for them.

In future posts, I hope to tell you more about Third Life Books, the F&SF Writer’s Workshop, and my experiences in Second Life. For now, if you’re interested, you can check out our workshop bio by using the link at the top of the page, or just clicking here.

So, rather than think of SL as a game, I suggest you think of it as a tool. As with all tools, what you do with it is up to you.