Tampilkan postingan dengan label Christine London. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Christine London. Tampilkan semua postingan

Sabtu, 10 Juli 2010

Talking with Author Christine London

Dear Budding Author,

                       Congratulations on the near completion of your first novel. It is a feat not unlike sailing single-handed around the world. Many aspire to doing so; few actually are able to write “the end” on a full-length work.
   You are on the right track having friends read and comment on your work. It is most important to have others eyes, ears and hearts evaluate what you do---especially when you are new at writing fiction. Better would be to join a writers group so you have access to people who have walked this path before you. I cannot stress the value enough of doing this. To try to walk the road to publication without colleagues is tantamount to reinventing sliced bread.
   I belong to Romance Writers Of America, the largest professional writers organization in the world. Yes…they do accept international members, but I also know there is a similar organization in UK. My chapter meets once a month nearby, but for those who do not live close enough, there are online chapters. Each meeting has a speaker/workshop given by an industry professional. Topics cover writing craft, promotions, industry etc. You simply cannot access any better information and perhaps more importantly---support/networking.
   Most communications, including soliciting publisher, editors and agents, is done over the Internet. It is one of the greatest things about writing---you can do it, including the administrative and promotional work, from anywhere in the world.
   DO you need money?? NOOOOOOOO!!! If they are asking you for money they are charlatans. Legitimate publishers and agents evaluate, contract, edit, format, produce cover art and distribute your work as part of the cost of doing business. Money should ALWAYS flow from publisher to author, not the other way around. The only exception is in self-publishing. If you were to research doing this, you would find it a legitimate avenue if you are trying to get a work published for limited/niche audience to buy it or if you were producing a work meant for family and friends only. These are legitimate reasons for people to go this route. There are even a few well-known authors that launch a book via self-publishing, but these individuals already have a fan base and a platform. To self publish as an unknown and expect to reach an audience of any size is extremely difficult/unlikely to succeed. Handling all the many aspects of publishing on your own not only requires knowledge of the market and the art of production, it requires the building of an audience to purchase the book. While the Internet has opened the publishing world up, it is still a task that requires unreal amounts of time (even for those of us published by legitimate presses). It is not unlike opening a new business (which, btw, it IS). You can expect about a five-year ‘launch’ period to grow your name recognition and readership. Not to have any help via a publisher sets you adrift-- alone. Publishers, even ones that do electronic books only, find distribution avenues that are not available to an individual.
   Are there self-publishing success stories?? Yes. They are one in a million however and usually from an author who is already a known commodity.

   Okay…now for the reality check. There are lots of people with potential talent. The marketplace is flooded with them. It is therefore absolutely necessary that any work you submit for potential publication be as shiny spic and span perfect as you can make it. How do you improve?? You write, you write, and you write some more. Never stop. Tenacity wins the prize. It is those who stick to it in spite of the ungodly amount of rejection (nearly all published authors have enough rejection letters to wall paper at least one room) Ninety eight to ninety nine percent rejection rate of all manuscripts that cross a publisher/editors desk is the norm.
   How do you improve your chances of being read/taken seriously?? Learn how to write a decent “query’ letter, gain some writing credits (write magazine articles, quote your past publishing credit(s), network, network, network to gain referrals). If you can afford it, attend writer’s conventions. That is where the ‘big boys’ can be found. You can rub whiskers with the best authors as well as access agents/editors. Put names to the faces and maybe even have opportunity to ‘pitch’ your novel face to face. There is nothing like face to face. We are, after all, all still human (as are these ‘rock stars’ of the publishing world). Pressing the flesh is still one of the most effective ways to learn and become known. You never know who is going to be connected to whom---six degrees of separation and all.
   As far as learning names and addresses of publishers/editors/agents---that can be gleaned from an Internet search. Even if you use one of the printed publisher/editor/agent listing guides, it is still necessary to visit each targeted agent/editor/publisher website to learn their submissions guideline (and follow them exactly!)
   An agent is more difficult to land than a publishing contract. They are the people that live and work in New York (the global publishing Mecca), lunch with the powers that be, and know their personalities/desires/needs better than any other living persons. They can negotiate a contract that gives you much more money than you could do on your own. They know what all the fine print means and what is best for an author’s career. They work for YOU and as such, get fifteen percent of your royalties for the effort. That amount is small if they are worth their weight. 

    That said, you can, and many do, get published (especially through smaller presses) without an agent. There are positives and negatives (as is the case in most things in life) to small house verses big house. Small houses tend to be more open to work that is not considered as mainstream as the Big Boys ask for. The small press is simply more willing and capable to ‘take a chance’.
   Electronic books are the future; so don’t shy away from getting published in this medium. It is a great foot in the door with global distribution via the Internet…nothing to sneeze at.
   Most people write their entire lives and still cannot break in (the negative). BUT (and this is an enormous BUT) tenacity will get you there. Don’t ever give up. You will grow and improve your entire career, your entire life. It is a business you can do well into old age (mind remaining intact of course). You don’t need to dress for the office, commute, put up with restrictive hours or face the public (very often).
   Don’t expect to make money at this. DO it for the love of it. If you love what you do and are persistent, money may or may not follow. If you think getting published is difficult, making a living at it is even more so. Most authors have a day job well into their careers to pay the bills. Many always keep that day job. More than pocket money initially is a pipe dream and any of that is more than likely going to go right back into your new business. You will spend more than you earn in promotions, conventions etc very easily. None of this spending however should be required of you (as I previously stated).
   So, dear author, with all this available online, there simply is no reason for you not to proceed. YOU CAN DO THIS if your heart, mind, and soul are dedicated to it. We who are authors have been bitten. We must do what we do as the characters and stories have nowhere else to go but onto the page. We have the power to change worlds---one person at a time. There is nothing more potent than the written word. If you have been blessed/burdened as the vehicle of that word---HONOUR YOUR GIFT. Take it in all seriousness. You have something to say to people now and those that will come after you…the power to uplift, educate, inspire and entertain. No small potatoes.
   Don’t rely on any one person, but yourself. This is a subjective business and all it takes is finding that one editor, that one agent who will say yes!

Regards,
Christine London



Senin, 14 Juni 2010

Talking with Author Christine London


Why I Write Contemporary?

So often those of us who have been called to spend hours in front of that blank glowing screen are asked why. When we could be enjoying a film, a barbeque, our friends or just washing our socks, we toil over plot and setting. Define it as a calling, an addiction, a penchant or insanity; those who write popular fiction have something deep inside them the normal human being does not—characters. Yes…with an ‘s’. Maybe we grew up with a greater than average curiosity about what makes people tick, or in the case of we romance writers, a softer heart that believes nothing is more powerful than love. Whatever it is we few intrepid souls park ourselves in front of a computer and/or carry a composition book and pen wherever we go because not to do so would impoverish our world…and yours.

The ineffable “they” say that most people want to write a book someday. It is the few that actually make it to those two little words ‘the end’ and fewer who manage to navigate the soul-blistering world of publishing. The waiting, the rejection, the learning curve are not for sissies.

Most writers will tell you that there are certain types of stories that attract them. In my case, I write to uplift, inspire, educate and entertain-- a tall order I take it with all seriousness. Like most art forms, literature falls under the influence of trends. Just as television seems to be inundated with crime investigation programs, popular fiction is flooded with revenge thrillers, vampires and fantasy.



Maybe it is our global recession that steers people to escape. Maybe we are drawn to the unknown, the unfeasible or downright unbelievable. Whatever the case, there has been and always will be the deep seeded need for people to experience the world through others eyes.

I write Contemporary.

I write contemporary because that’s what has always attracted me. Before I started to write fiction I was a big self-help and psychology reader. My major in college focused on the human condition. Even when I used to watch a daytime soap, I chose All My Children because it fit the lunch hour timeslot and it did NOT have ghosts, vampires or anything out of the contemporary reality (if you can call a soap 'reality’...lol)

People are endlessly fascinating to me, as is setting. I love to travel and use my experiences to research new locations and character(s). Modern day dilemmas and locales are more accessible and relatable. Not that basic human interest has changed over the generations. A good read is a good read no matter what century it is set because of this unchangeable human nature. Yet, I find modern life very exciting and think we are all fortunate to be alive in this amazing time of change and burgeoning knowledge.  How do we deal with this avalanche of knowledge and choice in our present day? Fascinating stuff.

Sub Genre?? The book I just contracted with MuseItHot Publishing is a romantic suspense. (Shadows Steal The Light- Feb 2011) It is not easy to keep track of all the details that make a suspense, a really fast paced and fun read. It was a challenge in the writing---yet at the end of the day it turned out amazing. My Coast Guard rescue at sea, gone wrong book, Against The Current (Phaze Books at Phaze.com) also was exciting to construct with its realistic challenges and the suspense inherent in how these brave men and women handle emergency situations.


Exotic setting?? Most of my works take place, at least partially, in the UK. It has been a home away from home ever since I fell in love with it during a year of University spent abroad in London. Scotland feels strangely familiar as though I have lived there before or belong there. So I write about these people and their beautiful corner of the world. I have their idioms and speech patterns ingrained in my internal ear putting me in a unique position---I can write Brits so Americans can understand them. I imbed explanations of odd idiom or cultural stuff within the fabric of the story so Americans are not left scratching their heads. Yet when I do book signing I often have readers surprised to find that I am not British....a real compliment.

My most recent e-book release through Awe Struck Publishing is set on a beautiful Island off the coast of Naples, Italy. I have holidayed there twice and simply love it. It is a real joy to be able to bring wonderful settings to readers that they may never have a chance to visit. Or maybe they will do because of the sense of character my settings take on. :) Leap Of Faith is a great vicarious vacation.

Guess you can extrapolate that I don't plan any ghosts or vampires in my work anytime soon though I have learned to never say never. As a former Kindergarten teacher, most people would not have expected me to turn spicy romance author, so who knows?? It is the truth in the telling that sets a story above others. A hundred years from now we in the contemporary vein will be sought out as accurate reflections of a time in history when change was the only thing certain and men and women met the challenge with amazing resiliency and courage. That is the stuff of world building to know that eyes unborn will read and marvel. The readers of today will always appreciate something they can sink their teeth into as familiar, yet inspiring because the characters handled their situation in creative ways that uplift, educate, entertain. Hmmm…think I just may have hit on something here.

Warm Regards,
Christine London
www.christinelondon.com

"London Blog" at Blogspot: http://christinelondon.blogspot.com/
My Space (and Blog there): http://www.myspace.com/christine_london
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=697467403&ref=profile   and  http://www.facebook.com/pages/Christine-London/71009389201

Twitter:  http://twitter.com/ChristineLondon

Phaze Books:  http://phaze.com/

Awe Struck Publishing:  http://www.awe-struck.net/index.html

MuseItHot:  http://museithot.blogspot.com/