Thursday, May 31, 2012

Fresh Wind in the New Sails

Post: 5
Books Sold: 0 (currently unpublished)
eBooks Sold: 1
Pages in Jumble: 107

I have spent time learning to find the chart to direct my passage into the new realm with the sleek Author-Ship beneath my feet and the steady wind of optimism at my back. And, alas, there are two early lessons from the experience. One, Jumble makes no progress in a week when time is spent muddling around with the locating of navigation charts. And two, while imaginary visions of coursing out into the open sea fill my head, I turn and look, and the shore is a stone's throw away.

But it doesn't matter, the time can grow long or short. We'll reach our destination. And there is fresh wind in the my sails to churn a fresh wake. So I hug the coast for awhile, researching my role, developing my authoring skills in the less-choppy water near shore, I'll be the better for it.

And I am already the better for it because of the influence from a nearby source. A gracious book reviewer, church leader to a daughter, and friend of the family, H.P., was kind enough to share in her experience in the publishing business to teach me. Please read her blog, Bookscoops. Her key advice:
  • Read, read, read
  • Sign up for writer's conferences
    • Already missed the one in April at Boise State
    • Great one coming up is the Writing and Illustrating for Young Readers, June 18-22, 2012 in Sandy, Utah.
    • Use the writer's conferences
      • For networking opportunities with editors and agents
      • To learn about the market
        • Everyone says the market is changing
        • But no one is sure where it is heading
  • Getting published these days has a lot to do with networking. Use conferences for networking possibilities
  • Some people are trying to self-publish (like me and Kindle Direct Publishing)
  • Learn to use a drawer manuscript. (I have been, and didn't even know I had been or what it was called)
  • Get your book out there:
    • Ask friends and neighbors to read and provide feedback
    • Decide what is worth keeping and changing by listening
  • Publishing Houses no longer accept unsolicited manuscripts. Need to have an agent. The Internet has made the dream of being an author explode. (I mentioned the documentary that I believe is called Cut, Copy, Paste which discusses the "democratization" of design in Graphic Arts)
  • Editors are looking for authors that already have a Blog and already have a market (I have the blog, but not the market, but you, dear reader, about to change that for me. Thank You!)
  • Publishers / Agents want plans for how your book fits into the market, especially in a query letter
  • A good resource for this is the 2012 Writer's Market
  • Look into:
    • Society for Children's Bookwriters
    • kidlit (Blog on advice on how to YA books)
      • recommends books as well
      • her information is invaluable
      • amazing information on her blog to be able to see things differently to improve writing
  • Word count is important for economic reasons. Need to keep the book to whatever the word count is that is about 200 pages
  • Then there was this great advice from H.P.:
    • since I have a background in chemistry, develop online tutorials for didactic books
    • publish non-fiction first, publish fiction later, others have followed this route
    • get a name and demand out first in their specialty
    • work books and things like that
    • then publish fiction
    • Example of someone that started with didactic, then moved to YA, The Black Death by Diane Zahler
  • Must be willing to accept feedback and make changes, especially from experts
With this last one in mind, I am going to recommend the following three links at the Writing and Illustrating for Young Readers web page, Getting the Most from Conference:
I have included this advice because typing it up reinforces the information. And a second benefit is that this blog provides a repository so I'll be able to access this information anywhere at any time.

Though my sails be trim, full of fresh wind, let 'em slack and coast to shore. The time will be well spent. One of them that I will be spending time on is Smart Self-Publishing: Becoming an Indie Author. I'll be sure to tell you about it once I've read it. I can tell you now, the butler didna do it. But the coxswain is missing and the paymaster's body is in the dodger. Oh, wait! The fantasy is in the book, not the blog. Only the sailing metaphors are in play here. The bilge needs emptied and the captain's head needs filled.

Rest, for tomorrow: AHEAD!

Shore! Ahoy!

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Among the Doldrums

Post: 4
Books Sold: 0 (currently unpublished)
eBooks Sold: 1
Pages in Jumble: 107

Even before the bowline is set adrift to release the ship, the captain has long since charted his course. So maybe the nautical metaphor is not the best choice. But I have chosen to take the Author-Ship to sea and find my course on the way. Foolhardy, m'lads? To be sure. But the adventure is there. I seek opportunity before skill with the hope that both will arrive.

I have learned on this adventure so far that it is actually possible to be close to shore, still seeking the tools to chart a course, and enter into the dreaded doldrums. Time to break out the boats and row the Author-Ship onward with raw motivation and strenuous pulls at the oars. But this is not a time to be called floundering; it is a time to rejoice for the strength and desire to put the oar to water for one more pull. The Author-Ship may not have a wake, nor even the long boat a wake, but the oars do, so pull we must.

The doldrums are that I have yet to determine the logs to read, the work of the day calls too much of my attention. Pull! But the oar's wake has produced the fact that I have progressed to within one step of getting something self-published. Pull! And another oar's wake has opened the lines of communication with potential publishers. Pull! And another oar's wake has brought me into a networking contact to a local insider in the publishing business. Pull! The official copyright has been delivered.

Do my eyes deceive me, or has the uncharted course brought us a little farther from shore?

Pull!

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Expanding Horizons

Post: 3
Books Sold: 0 (currently unpublished)
eBooks Sold: 1
Pages in Jumble: 105

So the author-ship continues to make forward progress; there's a steady wind pushing forward, leaving a steady wake behind. The course still remains uncharted, but I have started seeking out the advice of others that have charted similar courses. I am looking to purchase navigation logs like 2012 Writer's Market and other eBooks on Kindle that have advice for e-publishing. So far, I haven't purchased them, so I haven't read them. There will be time to read and research the specifics of charting the author-ship's course soon enough. At this stage, I'm just research the references resources with the 2012 Writer's Market coming up the leader so far. While the stages of the journey still stretch out unknown before me, I have not only located, but also painted my North Star. Any goal, every dream, needs an image to adapt your life to your dream. With my Polaris at the ready, I can complete the look of how I am gong to Dream and Dream Big.

And when that dream comes true, I will post the picture created in the joyous frenzy of possibility.

There's a red sky this night as the author-ship seeks the navigation charts that will lead to a successful journey. The port of success awaits the arrival of the author-ship. All hands on deck to set the sails and keep our wake full and fresh.

Ahead!

Thursday, May 3, 2012

The Voyage Continues

Post: 2
eBooks Sold: 1
Pages in Jumble: 47

The dream continues to grow as the length of Jumble increases. The seas are still choppy as the crew strains to bring the treasure in the hold to the unread masses.

Ahead!