OK... I'm new to the *art of blogging*... so until I get the hang of it, please bear with me! :)
A Brief Wrap-up of the Story so Far...
Several years ago, when my oldest child was about 12, I started writing a story - mainly for her entertainment, but also as an outlet for my own creativity. At the time, work felt all-consuming - intruding on my personal time, separating me from my family. I was spending significant periods interstate away from home - something I hate doing - and I think my state of mind can only be considered to have been approaching *stale*.
I started by scratching a few notes down in an exercise book, and soon it seemed that a story was evolving more rapidly than I could write. Bouncing some ideas off my children, I started to create a fairy-tale - centred on a world that I knew they would have loved to visit.
Several months later, and I had a 300+ page story, that had grown too big for the children to
want to read at the time. My daughter told me that *she would read it, when it could be published in a book* - mainly because she had difficulty arranging the A4 sheets on her bed for night-time reading.
I have to admit that whilst I had always hoped to be published one day, that my main aim was for my children to read something that I had written for them. That became the driving force behind my desire, my dream, to see my story in paperback form. I did send it to a publisher or two, but rejection letters followed almost immediately. There is, apparently, not a market for children's fantasy stories written by previously-unpublished authors... :) Similarly, I sought a literary agent with no success. The project was temporarily shelved, although I continued to modify the manuscript, very occasionally, adding and subtracting portions of the story, evolving the characters as my own children grew up.
A couple of years ago, I was chatting with a friend who, like me, had an interest in writing. Over a coffee, and a foccacia, I started to get the notion to dust off my manuscript (thankyou, Belinda) - although realising that I would have to find it first - and see whether it was worth salvaging.
Again, I modified it, sent it out to a publisher or two only to receive similar responses to that I had gained previously. Reading through it again, and parts of it actually seemed so well written, that I had to remember whether it was in fact me who had put those words on paper. Notwithstanding the experience of reading something I had written, but so apparently *foreign*, I'll be the first to admit that my writing isn't the most grammatically correct. I do see myself as a story-teller, however, and that's all I really want to be...
Not so long ago... I returned to part-time University study. The University forums became a tool of great procrastination, and an interesting way to meet people whom I would have otherwise never have met. It's a funny thing, but I seemed to be more comfortable chatting about my writing to people I hadn't met, than to anyone in my immediate family. At that time, my parents and siblings had no idea that I was writing children's stories. And so, armed with relative anonymity, and hoping for some positive feedback, I actually sent the entire manuscript to someone, whom I hadn't physically met, but someone whom I thought would give me an idea of where I was at.
Apparently, she loved it... :) (Thank-you, amanda) A few weeks later, and after an *msn chat*, I'd been
dared to send it to another publisher! About the same time, I accidentally came across a Print-on-Demand (POD) publisher, Equilibrium Books (
www.equilibriumbooks.com). It seemed to me that fate was somehow intervening and that I should send my manuscript to them. A week later, I was offered an agreement to have my story published.
Much is made of the merits of POD publishing, and I must admit that there are times when the adverse nature of comments I've read have tarnished the experience of having a book published in this way. Nevertheless, it's provided me with an opportunity (for which I am grateful) to be read by people who don't know me personally, and that does give me a sense of satisfaction.
All that aside, the three-month intervening period between then and now, has been a time of excitement, nervousness and difficulty. The latter emotion associated with the requirement for me to atempt to self-publicise my writing, and probably the thing I find most difficult to do and the knowledge that my book will more than likely take significant effort and luck to ever appear on a maintream bookshop shelf.
At this particular point in time, I'm waiting for a box in the mail - :D - a few copies of the novel to give to my family and friends. It's due for release, any time now.
Finally, my kids will have a paperback copy of
their story, and so regardless of anything else that happens in the future... I'm glad to have brought my fairy-tale this far...
www.wyvernstone.com