Meet Michele Jones

Quantum Wanderlust
Michele Jones is one of the masterminds behind AIW Press, and the two anthologies I’ve been invited to participate in. She’s also the author of one of the stories inside Quantum Wanderlust. She’s here to give us a behind the scenes of putting an anthology together. Let’s make her feel welcome and use those sharing buttons today. Thanks.

***

Hey Craig, thanks for having me. By the way, I love Lisa’s radio show. You have very interesting guests. If you don’t mind, I thought we could talk about putting together our newest anthology, Quantum Wanderlust.

I believe there are some similarities between producing an anthology and writing a successful story or novel, or producing a live radio show. It all comes down to planning.

Our team meets and discusses ideas and themes for upcoming anthologies. We’ve done holiday, westerns, and wanted something different. Thus, Quantum Wanderlust was born. Of course, the ideas that didn’t make the cut were filed for future use.

Once we have chosen the theme, we develop the concept that all submissions must adhere to. All of our anthologies have guidelines the selected authors must abide by, theme, word count, and of course they must not be offensive to the readers or the participating authors, therefore, we stay away from political and religious topics when producing the anthology.

After hashing out the details, we have a call for submissions. This includes reaching out to the authors that participated in previous anthologies. We provide the details of the anthology, such as theme, word count, deadline, editing process, and marketing.

After we have commitments from the authors, we create an online forum for information pertaining to the anthology. This is where we discuss the progress of the stories and the marketing we will be doing.

While that is happening in the forefront, we work behind the scenes producing the marketing material. We gather the author bio, and any links they provide for their work. As the stories come in we start the editing process. We review all content to make sure it adheres to our rules, and edit for grammar. Once completed, all edits are returned to the author for approval. Don’t be alarmed, any edit that we do will not change the author’s voice or the plot of the story.

Once we have all the finished pieces, we start the layout for the compilation. We come up with a one or two line short synopsis for marketing and we pull a quote to introduce the story.

I’ve read all the stories in Quantum Wanderlust. Craig chose to travel back in time and came up with a great plot twist in his story, Swift Wings. I chose to travel to the future in my story, The Fabric of Time, where one snag in the fabric can alter the future.

Don’t forget to pick up your free copy of Quantum Wanderlust at all the major sites. These thirteen authors will take you on some interesting time travel adventures. Oh, and if you don’t mind, please leave a review.

***

Quantum WanderlustWhat if you had all the time in the world?

Thirteen authors answer that question with short stories about time travel. Go back in time to right a wrong, forward to see the future. No jump is too large, no method unfeasible, no lesson beyond learning.

• Visit the past to learn a family secret.

• See the formation of a future dictatorship.

• Assume responsibility for weaving the fabric of time.

• Travel back in time to WWII.

• Use a family heirloom to solve problems.

• Wear an inheritance to visit ancestors.

• Leave a dystopian future for the hope of something better.

• Make history come true in an unexpected way.

• Fight evil fairies to protect a chosen angel.

• Live with the childhood memory of visitors until the day they arrive.

• Seek medical help for a memory issue and get way more than bargained for.

• Discover that with great power comes great responsibility.

• Uncover the secrets of a pharaoh’s tomb and curse.

Do the characters observe or interact? Is the outcome better or worse than the original timeline? Read these stories to learn how far they go, how they get there, and what happens when they return.

The scope is virtually limitless, definitely timeless.

Pick up your free copy here

Michele JonesBio:

Michele Jones lives in Western Pennsylvania with her husband and two spoiled dogs.

Along with her writing, family, cooking, and sports are her passions. She is a diehard Penguin, Steeler, and Pirate fan… really, a diehard anything-Pittsburgh fan.

Michele writes memoirs, short stories, romance, and poetry, but her passion lies in writing paranormal, suspense, and thrillers.

You can follow her online at www.michele-jones.com

Connect online:

Twitter | Facebook | Pinterest | Published Works | Goodreads

39 Comments

Filed under Writing

39 responses to “Meet Michele Jones

  1. a pleasure to share this brilliant anthology!

    Liked by 3 people

  2. Pingback: I’m Visiting C.S. Boyack Today | Michele Jones

  3. Great post, Michele! A lot of people probably don’t realize the steps in taking an anthology from the initial idea to a published book. Really enjoying the stories in this one.

    Liked by 3 people

  4. It was great to take a peek at the process involved in an anthology.

    Liked by 2 people

  5. Nice to see Michele here today. Great post.

    Liked by 2 people

  6. Nice to meet you Michelle – interesting to hear the behind the scenes details.

    Liked by 2 people

  7. D.L Finn, Author

    Interesting to learn about the process of how an Anthology comes together. I have my copy can’t wait to read it soon.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Ali Isaac

    Thanks for sharing your process, Michelle. Sounds like a LOT of hard work. Good luck with your anthology.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. What a great peek into what goes on behind the scenes in creating an anthology. AIW Press always puts out a classy book. I loved getting a look into how it all comes together. Wonderful post, Michele!

    Liked by 2 people

  10. Good information. Thanks for sharing… Now, if you can only rewire my brain to perform all the so-called basics of this great internet world. I sometimes feel really dumb and take to heart that special group of words written for us folks in Twilight – ‘too old to learn new tricks’! BUT, I’m addicted and do love it!

    Liked by 2 people

  11. Thanks for having me, Craig. It was a pleasure to share the process with your readers.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Such an informative look at a complex process, Michele. The end result looks great! I look forward to learning more. Thanks for posting, Craig.

    Liked by 2 people

  13. Reblogged this on Author Don Massenzio and commented:
    Meet Author Michele Jones in this post from the Entertaining Stories blog. I had the pleasure of interviewing Michele on my own blog. This post gives even more insight into her work.

    Liked by 3 people

Leave a comment