This is not so much a blog post as
it is an announcement that my new book Ink Spots is now available at Amazon on
Kindle and paperback. Ink Spots is
a collection of my blog posts from over the years. Many of you may have read them, but I’m hoping that some of
you may want them conveniently on your Kindle or Nook. Or you might want an actual physical
book to pop on the shelf to refer to from time to time. Or you may want to give a book to
someone as a gift. ‘Tis the season.
I’m just sayin’…
Last year I had the pleasure of
working with legendary animator, and very cool person, Glen Keane and he was
nice enough to provide a very nice foreword for the book.
Glen Keane and I at the pharmacy after he drove me to the dentist. Even while I was in pain the man was a joy to work with. |
“Brian McDonald is an
exceedingly rare combination of talent and heart.
He not only is a remarkable
teacher he is also a gifted storyteller.
This makes what he has to share
that much more valuable. He speaks with passion and experience.” -- Glen
Keane excerpted from his foreword to Ink Spots
Other equally cool folks had nice
things to say about the book. Here
are just a few:
"Brian is that friend in
movie storytelling that everyone deserves. He writes in clear, readily usable
ways to improve your screenwriting. Like time-release story capsules they
ignite and helped me over many movies and countless story bends. Give him
a read, take a couple and repeat as needed." -- Ronnie del Carmen, story supervisor on UP and Finding
Nemo, director and writer at Pixar Animation Studios.
"Brian's book is filled
with insightful and useful gems for writers of any experience level. The
only reason you'll want to put it down is to go start writing yourself." -- J. Elvis Weinstein
writer/producer "Freak and Geeks", "Mystery Science Theater
3000", "Cinematic Titanic"
"Brian's
books and website are succinct, insightful resources for understanding not only
the mechanics, but the purpose, of storytelling. I've recommended them so many
times you'd think I was getting a piece of the action." — Chris Warner, Senior Editor Dark Horse Comics/Books
Others were nice enough to lend
their comments as well and they are in the book. I want to thank everyone for their support of the book.
I also want to thank those who have
been reading this blog over the years. You kept me going. When I started I didn’t know if anyone
would read it, or care. But it
turns out people did read it and got something useful from it. Thank you sincerely for your
readership. You guys have been great.
Soon I will post a real blog. I
promise. But, I did recently do a guest blog for Elise Stephens at http://www.elisestephens.com/
P.S. My apologies. In a mad dash to
get this book out before the holidays it looks like the wrong cover file was
sent to the printer – the word “forward” should be “foreword”. What this means
is that after the holidays the book will be unavailable while this correction
is made. Maybe this means the first version will be worth money one of these
days like an upside down stamp or buffalo nickel. Or not.
8 comments:
Finally! Ordering now.
Yay ! Loved the first books, can't wait to own this one too !
Thanks, guys.
And no iBookStore again...
BRIAN! ;o) Just finished Ink Spots, and just wanted to thank you for putting together such a compendium of wisdom for us! I'd read one or two chapters before bed every night and was sad when I finished it. Always a joy to read these golden nuggets of knowledge! Thank you for sharing!
Thank you, Christine! Always nice to her from you and the rest of the former students. Hope things are good.
Hello Brian! Long time fan, first time commenting!... I've just finished Ink Spots, great stuff, thank you... Definitely as 'must read and re-read' as the equally awesome Invisible Ink.
I am an illustrator, but find so many parallels, universal tenets for creativity in your writing that are as applicable to picture making as they are to word making.
You mention that you are learning magic, and how it has illuminated storytelling further for you. May I recommend a FANTASTIC (nonfiction) book called 'Sleights of Mind'? A husband and wife (PHDs in psychology / neurology) see a stage magic show and realise that magicians, painters, animators, actors and pickpockets take advantage of the cognitive, psychological 'wiring' of people that they study 'in the lab'. They decide to learn to be magicians, and in the process they record what the tricks are, but WHY and how they work. It's fabulous, it'll blow your mind. Keep up the awesomeness!
Very best regards,
Luke Newell
http://lukenool.wordpress.com/#
Hello Luke,
Thanks for reading the blog and books. Happy to know you enjoy them.
Yeah, I have many animators and illustrators that follow my work for some reason. My first film jobs were in animation and motion graphics and a huge number of my friends are visual artists. I have spent years talking with them about storytelling so maybe that comes through in my writing.
As for Slight of Mind I actually have a link to it on one of my posts: http://invisibleinkblog.blogspot.com/2010/11/isolation-of-interest-more-thoughts-on.html
The post is reprinted in Ink Spots, but, of course, the links are not there. And you're right, how magic works in mind blowing.
Thanks, Luke, for following my work and for being kind enough to write and let me know how much you like it.
-- Brian
Post a Comment