Get ‘Shadowfall’ for only 99c: Spooky Stories Promotion

Shadowfall, the first book in my sci-fi/horror trilogy Shadows, is in Kobo’s ‘Spooky Stories’ promotion over the month of October.

Cover of 'Shadowfall: Shadows Book One' by TW Iain, showing an alien monster with piercing eyes

(Please note that this promotion is only available in US and Canada, although the price of the book might be reduced in other territories too. This offer is only available through Kobo, and runs until the end of the month).

Looking for a new sci-fi/fantasy book? Look no further

With almost a hundred titles, this promotion has everything for sci-fi/fantasy readers. And the books are free. Yes, you need to sign up for the author’s newsletter to get each book, but there’s nothing stopping you from unsubscribing once you’ve downloaded the book. And you might just find your next favourite writer.

So check out the books here.

The changes have happened, so how are things going?

Change happens, and then it becomes the new normal. Sometimes this can take weeks or months (or years). Sometimes it feels almost instantaneous.

It feels like Iโ€™ve been in this new job for months already, even though itโ€™s only been three weeks. And although Iโ€™ve only released three chapters of my Grim Khonsu serial, it feels like Iโ€™ve been working on it for far, far longer.

Probably because I have. I had the idea bouncing around in my head for age, considering practicalities and deciding if I wanted to take the project on. Then there was the planning. And even though Iโ€™m only releasing a chapter a week, I donโ€™t want to get caught out, so Iโ€™m working a few weeks in advance. I already have another three chapters scheduled, and have many more in various stages of drafting and editing.

So, howโ€™s it going?


The first thing to say is that Iโ€™m enjoying it. Iโ€™m having fun writing the story, and Iโ€™m getting a lot of satisfaction from finally putting more fiction out into the world. While Iโ€™ve not received much (any?) direct feedback yet, the chapters Iโ€™ve posted have garnered more views than these behind-the-scenes posts, which is gratifying. A few more readers have subscribed. So things are generally very positive.
But there have been problems.

Even though I like to plan stories, they always change as I start writing. Iโ€™m fine with this. Planning gives a kind of idealised view of the story, but things donโ€™t always work out the way we envisage, and Iโ€™ll spot plot-holes and inconsistencies as I write. I also find that characters donโ€™t become fully developed until I start tapping away at the keyboard. And these changes mean altering things in each editing pass, especially in earlier chapters. I realise I havenโ€™t laid sufficient groundwork for later developments, or that Iโ€™ve started down avenues that lead nowhere.

Obviously, releasing a story as a serial means that those earlier chapters are already out there. Yes, I could go back and alter them (and I probably will when spelling errors come to light, because a few always slip through), but that would get confusing for anyone whoโ€™s already read the unedited versions. So I have to go with what Iโ€™ve published, and do the best I can to make everything else follow smoothly.

Iโ€™m countering this by working in advance. Having future chapters ready not only prepares me for those interruptions that will surely crop up and take away my writing time, but it also gives me some flexibility in making those changes.

At the moment, Iโ€™m approaching the climax of the story in my first draftโ€Œโ€”โ€Œand I know there is a lot to change. Over the next few weeks Iโ€™ll read through everything and see what needs altering in upcoming chapters. Iโ€™ll also hopefully spot continuity errors.

Iโ€™m playing about with Notebook.lm to help with this. Yes, itโ€™s AI, but Iโ€™m not using it to write any words in the story. Iโ€™m using it as a toolโ€Œโ€”โ€Œbecause thatโ€™s what AI ultimately is (or should be). By feeding in each chapter, I can have Notebook.lm look out for those errors. I can interrogate the AI about promises Iโ€™ve made to the reader, or open loops in earlier chapters that havenโ€™t yet been closed. Iโ€™ve also been asking it about genre tropesโ€Œโ€”โ€ŒIโ€™m calling Grim Khonsu a sci-fi detective noir, so how does it stand up against those separate genres?

Iโ€™m also using Notebook.lm to keep track of characters and places. I often add incidental characters and places as I write, and as I intend to write more Grim Khonsu stories it makes sense to keep track of all these mentions. I could do this manually, but why not use a decent tool for the job? And as this list of characters and places grows, I have more things to pull from later. If I need another incidental character, maybe I can call on one Iโ€™ve already used? And if a new story takes Grim into a different part of Khonsu, why not use an area Iโ€™ve already mentioned in passing?


Another tool Iโ€™m using in writing Grim Khonsu is Joplin. This is basically a note-taking app that syncs between phone and computer.

Why use this, when Iโ€™ve been a dedicated Scrivener user for years?

Iโ€™m not abandoning Scrivener. Far from it. Iโ€™m still using it for editing Grim Khonsu. But, with my new job and altered routines, I needed some way of writing when itโ€™s not convenient to boot up the laptop. Scrivener doesnโ€™t yet have an Android app, so thatโ€™s out. I tried a few other apps, but none worked quite how I needed them to. But Joplin did.

I donโ€™t know if Iโ€™d write a full โ€˜properโ€™ novel in Joplin, but it works great for a serial. I can arrange notes in folders, so I have a Grim Khonsu folder with separate notes for each chapter (which I then copy and paste into Scrivener for editing). I also have a few notes of, well, notes. Because each chapter has to be self-contained to an extent, working in a โ€˜smallerโ€™ app helps me focus on the arc in each chapter.

I have a couple of Bluetooth keyboards, too. One is a folding thing thatโ€™s awkward for fast typing, but it fits in my pocket, so itโ€™s very transportable. The other is still small, but has full-sized keys, and I can type almost as fast on that as I can on my laptop. Iโ€™ve used this second keyboard to write Grim Khonsu while having a coffee at the climbing wall, or in my car when I get to work too early. And, if I donโ€™t have either keyboard to hand, I can always use the phoneโ€™s on-screen keyboard. Thatโ€™s not ideal for writing drafts of the chapters, but it works fine for quick notes (especially as thoughts arise as Iโ€™m plodding on at work).


This new way of working already feels comfortable, and I can see myself using it for the next season of Grim Khonsu. Yes, Iโ€™m enjoying the project so much that I want to continue. I already have ideas for Grimโ€™s next case. I donโ€™t want to get too carried away yet, thoughโ€Œโ€”โ€Œthis first story needs to be my focus, and I also have those other Unity-related projects in progress (the large-scale space opera itself and the spin-off Chronicles Of Seraph adventures).

But what do you think of Grim Khonsu? If you havenโ€™t read it yet, you can find the first chapter at twiain.substack.com/p/chapter-1. Give it a read and tell me what you think. After all, a story is a conversation. Without readers, a story is nothing.


This post is the latest in a series Iโ€™m running onย Substack, chronicling my work on this space-opera project. If youโ€™d like to read these posts as they appear, please considerย subscribing for free.