Posts Tagged ‘YA’

As you probably know, I’ve been working towards the goal of getting published for several years now. Last year I had some success with my short stories, managing to get three of them accepted by various e-magazines and digital sites. That success only encouraged me to work harder to get my books in front of publishers to try and get them published as well.

Then, in October, I received my first book contract for my YA Superhero novel, “Mik Murdoch, Boy Superhero”. The book is the first in what I expect to be a six-book series. I was (and still am) very excited about this development, but, as I have said many, many times, publishing is slow. I know where in the queue it sits for revisions and I know when the deadline is for the cover-art. I also know it probably won’t be available until Spring 2012.

That is the way of the industry, especially with smaller presses that have limited resources. I have no complaints and I cannot wait to get going on the process.

There have been additional developments in my quest to make my books available. A few months ago I decided to self-publish another YA book of mine. It was my thought that I could get the books to cross-promote each other and I would get another kind of publishing experience.

And let me tell you, it has really driven home why the publishing industry moves slowly.

Let me walk you through the process:

  1. Finish manuscript and proof it and revise it until you think you have something good. Luckily, I was already at this point when I made the decision to self-publish. As some of you know, the question of when to stop revising and move on to step two is a bit of an arcane art. Set a deadline.
  2. Get you manuscript in front of beta readers for critique and comment. I think this is a key step and can be accomplished in a couple ways: have trusted people who you know will give you an honest assessment of your work or use a community like Critters.org. In either case, be prepared to wait… and wait some more. You will not get as many responses back as you might expect, so use a bit of a shotgun approach. If you think you need three critiques, get six people to read your work. Set deadlines.
  3. Start looking at cover-art and who or where you will acquire it. If you are asking someone to create it especially for your book, get them working on it immediately. Set deadlines.
  4. Start researching how you are going to publish the book and with what service. There are many to chose from: Lulu.com, Createspace, Smashwords and a host of others, both good and bad. When you know how you are moving forward, understand the potential pitfalls and advantages of your decision. Set deadline to finish research.
  5. Take all the comments from your beta readers and make the necessary changes to your book. This can be extremely time-consuming, so be prepared. Oh yeah, and set a deadline for the edits to be complete.
  6. Take the finished pieces of cover-art and book and, using the templates provided by your service of choice, layout your book. Yes, you guessed it, set a deadline for completion of this step.
  7. Do quality control of the book. Each eVersion has its own gotchas and you should get an ARC (Advanced Reader Copy) of your print book. Spend the time necessary to go over each with a fine-toothed comb to remove any mistakes you may find. Unless, of course, you don’t care about the quality of the book. Set a deadline.
  8. Release book. Set a deadline.

You couldn’t help but notice “set a deadline” in each step. That’s because this must be treated as a project and projects need deadlines. Without them, it will never get finished. People will never give their pieces the attention required and you will have other things get in the way. Also, don’t be too disappointed if your release date slides a little. In my case, I had hoped to release the book May 20th. It is now June 18th and the book is still under construction. My new release date is July 8th. I might be able to beat that, but that is my release deadline.

You should note, that none of the steps above include marketing and promotion. Those are key to selling your book and should be underway as soon as you have your plan in place. That way, you have some hope of selling your book once it is finished. But that is another project altogether.

The big lesson learned here? Publishing is slow, regardless of whether you do it yourself or have an actual publisher do it for you. Once you realize that, you will sleep better at night.

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13
Apr

What to Write, What to Write?

   Posted by: Michell    in About Writing, Irreverent Muse

I’ve been thinking a lot about my writing the past few days. Not thinking about it in terms of “Why am I bothering” or anything like that. More about “Am I going in too many different directions?”

To give you some idea of what I’m talking about, I have written six books with one underway. One is an adult, traditional fantasy, one is a YA mystery adventure (coming out soon), one is a science fiction comedy and three are YA superhero (same series). Now I’m working on a collaboration project that is a YA steampunk superhero mashup (with JR Murdock). If you were counting, that is five different storylines/series.

Granted, the traditional fantasy may never see the light of day, but that still means I’m working on four different series. Is that the smartest thing I could be doing?

Perhaps I should focus on one or two and work them through to their logical conclusions rather than spread myself out so much. The problem is, that isn’t how my mind works. The story ideas that I get are all over the place. I love challenging myself to write in different ways/genres.

But what will my readers think? Will they say, “Michell, you need to finish this series because it really interests me. The others don’t. Hurry up.” Or will they like my writing style enough that they will discover all of the characters I write and eagerly await the next installment, whatever that may be?

One of my favorite authors, Terry Pratchett, has done what I consider to be the penultimate series. Discworld. Within the Discworld he has written many, many different story arcs and characters. Sometimes they interact and most times they do not. He has the Rincewind arc, the Commander Vimes and the Anhk-Morpork Guards arc, the Witches arc, the Tiffany Aching arc and several others. He’s even done a number of one-offs. All within the same world.

Is that what I should be doing?

I know that I have several story arc ideas for my “Mik Murdoch” world. That is the YA Superhero series that I have sold the first book of to 5 Rivers Publishing. I’m already looking ahead to some of the other series I hope to write in that world. The thing is, I also have stories I want to write (or have written) don’t fit here.

Should I abandon those in favor of the common world?

I don’t think so. I know it will cause me additional stress to spread out my writing in so many directions, but I also believe it will help me to grow and continue growing as a writer. The downside is the books for the various series will take longer to write, but I hope my readers will understand.

What do you think? Should a writer (say me) focus his or her energies to a single project at a time before moving onto something else?

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23
Mar

The Secret is (finally) Out

   Posted by: Michell    in Irreverent Muse

I’ve been hinting at a secret project for several weeks/months that I finally announced during Episode 53 of Get Published. For those of you who either don’t listen to the show or haven’t yet heard, spoiler alert. You may want to avoid reading further until after you have listened to the show. For the rest of you, read on.

The secret project is actually my first collaborative writing project. I am working with author, podcaster and social media personality, JR Murdock who currently has two books up on Podiobooks.com. We are writing a Steampunk, YA, Superhero mashup.

What is making it fun for both of us is the way we are writing the story. JR is writing the part of the hero and I am writing the part of the villain.

When we first started tossing story ideas around I knew that the part of the villain would be a blast to write. Naturally, I figured I would have to fight JR to the death to get the part. As it turned out, he felt exactly the same way about the hero so we had an accord right out of the gate.

So how did we go about getting ready to write as a team? Well, the first thing we did was come up with a high level outline. We decided how we wanted the story flow to go and went from there. We had most of the plotting completed prior to NaNoWriMo and started writing during November.

Weekly meetings to compare notes really helped and gave us the opportunity to bounce ideas off each other. We are now about 70 – 80% finished the first draft and then we will get down to revisions. The story has been a LOT of fun to work on and I can’t wait to share it with you all.

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