After A God's First World had been out a short time, I released a new printed book that includes both Infused and A God's First World. This is mainly for people that prefer printed books, but had not bought Infused previously. However, Infused is still available as a separate printed book.
This new combined book does use a smaller font to allow more words to fit onto a page. The print size is similar to what is commonly used in a standard paperback book. This allowed me to keep the page count down to 400 (from 530 pages with the larger print). This provides a less expensive alternative to buying the separate novels.
I'm seeing sales in new countries with the release of A God's First World. It seems that some people take you more seriously as a writer when you release your second novel; the new foreign sales have been for both novels.
I appreciate everyone that reads my stories. I hope that I bring some enjoyment, thought, and emotional involvement to you.
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Thursday, March 27, 2014
A God's First World is Published
After receiving the proof copy of the paperback edition of A God's First World, I found that I was happy with the cover and the formatting, so I released it for purchase on Amazon. I had also formatted e-book versions for Kindle and Nook, so I released those on the Amazon and Barnes and Noble web sites. I will be releasing the iBook version for Apple products soon.
It always feels good to have a nicely printed and bound copy of your novel in your hand. It presents you with a solid piece of evidence of your work that seeing the words on the screen just don't. Don't get me wrong, I am fine with reading books on an e-reader, but you want to be able to hold your baby in your hands.
It always feels good to have a nicely printed and bound copy of your novel in your hand. It presents you with a solid piece of evidence of your work that seeing the words on the screen just don't. Don't get me wrong, I am fine with reading books on an e-reader, but you want to be able to hold your baby in your hands.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Almost There
I have finished editing A God's First World, and I have formatted it for the print version, the Kindle version, and the Nook version. I am waiting for a proof to be shipped to me of the paperback version. Once I have that (assuming that it looks good), I will be making all of these different versions available for purchase. I still have to work on the iBook version for Apple's store, but that shouldn't take too long to do.
I pushed myself to go through this last pass of editing fairly quickly; I was able to work through three chapters on each of several evenings. Once I had finished the writing, I wanted to get the book into people's hands as soon as possible. With Infused, it sat around for about a year and a half after I had finished writing it before it was published. This was partially due to me slowly editing it myself, waiting on a friend to perform an in-depth grammatical edit, my lack of knowledge of how to publish a book, and being disillusioned by listening to other local authors talk about the business of selling books. This time, the book will be available about a month after I finished writing it.
I hope that people will enjoy this book. I have heard my best friend laugh, and I have heard her cry, as I have read the initial draft to her on the phone at night; it is a somewhat different type of store than Infused was. Whereas in Infused, Geoff reacted to the changes in his life without really changing himself (he was just freer to express who he was), he grows as a person in this story by actually experiencing life.
I pushed myself to go through this last pass of editing fairly quickly; I was able to work through three chapters on each of several evenings. Once I had finished the writing, I wanted to get the book into people's hands as soon as possible. With Infused, it sat around for about a year and a half after I had finished writing it before it was published. This was partially due to me slowly editing it myself, waiting on a friend to perform an in-depth grammatical edit, my lack of knowledge of how to publish a book, and being disillusioned by listening to other local authors talk about the business of selling books. This time, the book will be available about a month after I finished writing it.
I hope that people will enjoy this book. I have heard my best friend laugh, and I have heard her cry, as I have read the initial draft to her on the phone at night; it is a somewhat different type of store than Infused was. Whereas in Infused, Geoff reacted to the changes in his life without really changing himself (he was just freer to express who he was), he grows as a person in this story by actually experiencing life.
Saturday, March 8, 2014
A God's First World has been written
I have finished writing A God's First World, the sequel to Infused. I still have editing and formatting for the different mediums to take care of, but, of course, completing the initial draft is a major milestone. It ended up being thirty-seven chapters long and right around 90,000 words.
I have done a fair amount of editing along the way, and I have a better grasp on what things should look like than I did while working on my first book, so hopefully I will be able to finish up the editing and have the book available soon.
I have done a fair amount of editing along the way, and I have a better grasp on what things should look like than I did while working on my first book, so hopefully I will be able to finish up the editing and have the book available soon.
Friday, February 28, 2014
Contemplating the Last Few Chapters
Over the last couple of weeks I have been contemplating the chapters leading up to the end of the book. I obviously know where the story has gotten to, and I also know how it will end. I'm just trying to figure out exactly what should be in between. I know the gist of what should be in there, but I'm just not sure of actually what should be said.
Sometimes, thinking through parts of of a book can take a while and what I should write will just come to me after letting my thoughts simmer. But, because I am close to being finished, I wanted to make good use of my simmering time. So, I made an editing pass through the thirty-four chapters that have been written while the simmering proceeded.
It had been quite a while since I had read the first chapters; I started writing this book about a year ago. In addition to fixing punctuation, correcting grammar, and smoothing out disjointed sentences, I was able to find a few inconsistencies, or forgotten facts, that were mentioned in one part of the book and then were not referenced in another part when they would be applicable. It's difficult to remember everything that you happened to mention in an chapter that you wrote close to a year ago.
I still have one mistake that I always make when I am writing, I just don't seem to be able to make myself incorporate the correction into my thought processes. An example of my problem is, 'The man that ate the frog was happy.' The correct sentence should be 'The man who ate the frog was happy.' I always use 'that' instead of 'who'. So, what I did during this editing pass was to perform a search for the word 'that' in every chapter and figure out if it should be 'who' instead. Often the corrections do not sound right to me, but I know that they (probably) are.
Just so you know, I will state that no one in my novel eats frogs (just in case you were wondering).
Sometimes, thinking through parts of of a book can take a while and what I should write will just come to me after letting my thoughts simmer. But, because I am close to being finished, I wanted to make good use of my simmering time. So, I made an editing pass through the thirty-four chapters that have been written while the simmering proceeded.
It had been quite a while since I had read the first chapters; I started writing this book about a year ago. In addition to fixing punctuation, correcting grammar, and smoothing out disjointed sentences, I was able to find a few inconsistencies, or forgotten facts, that were mentioned in one part of the book and then were not referenced in another part when they would be applicable. It's difficult to remember everything that you happened to mention in an chapter that you wrote close to a year ago.
I still have one mistake that I always make when I am writing, I just don't seem to be able to make myself incorporate the correction into my thought processes. An example of my problem is, 'The man that ate the frog was happy.' The correct sentence should be 'The man who ate the frog was happy.' I always use 'that' instead of 'who'. So, what I did during this editing pass was to perform a search for the word 'that' in every chapter and figure out if it should be 'who' instead. Often the corrections do not sound right to me, but I know that they (probably) are.
Just so you know, I will state that no one in my novel eats frogs (just in case you were wondering).
Saturday, February 15, 2014
Getting Close
I've written a couple of more chapters since my last update and I've gone back and performed my initial edit on those chapters as well as all of the others that I had not done so on. The chapter that I made myself "slog" though was fairly long to begin with, but after I edited it, it turned out to be long enough to break into two chapters. There was also a subject change near the middle of the chapter that lent itself to being a good place to separate the text into the individual chapters.
I am getting very close to the end of the novel. Currently, I have completed thirty-four chapters and the word count is closing in on 82,000. It looks like this book will end up being about the same length as Infused. I've written part of the next chapter, and I know what the last chapter will say for the most part, so I just have to work out what goes between those two chapters. That shouldn't be too hard, right?
I am getting very close to the end of the novel. Currently, I have completed thirty-four chapters and the word count is closing in on 82,000. It looks like this book will end up being about the same length as Infused. I've written part of the next chapter, and I know what the last chapter will say for the most part, so I just have to work out what goes between those two chapters. That shouldn't be too hard, right?
Monday, January 27, 2014
Slogging Through
The last time that I had a chapter that I just didn't feel like writing, I didn't write at all for a couple of months. I knew what I wanted to say in the chapter, I just didn't feel the like writing it. It's not that the chapter was a bad chapter, it dealt with things that needed to be said and happen, but they were not directly related to the main plot. Of course, most novels have side stories and the main plot line can have effects that can widen out the breadth of the narrative, but that doesn't always mean that the author feels the urge to work on those sections as much as other sections.
Last night, I made myself finish up another chapter that I just didn't want to write. Normally when I write, I will sit down and write complete chapters at a time. But, when I don't really want to write for some reason, I'll end up writing just part of a chapter. Over the last week, I sat down four different days and was only able to get part of this chapter written each time. Once again, I knew most of the details before I even started the chapter. I had thought about a lot of the specifics of what would happen in this chapter a number of times over the past month or so. I knew what would be covered in this chapter before I made all of that progress on the book over the holidays. But, I just didn't want to write it down for some reason. However, I am pretty far along in the book and I want to try and finish up the initial draft relatively soon, so, I knew that I didn't want to waste a couple of more months due to a chapter not wanting to be written. Thus, I slogged my way through writing the chapter.
The new chapter ended up being longer than my average chapters, so I didn't scrimp on words, but when I read it to my best friend on the phone (as I have done with all of the chapters of this book), it just sounded awkward. Forcing myself to get through writing it resulted in text that did not flow like my writing normally does. I always smooth out edges as I go back and edit the chapters, but this chapter is going to take a lot more work when editing than normal to clear up all of the choppiness. But, don't worry, I will smooth it out. Just not right now. I'm sure that it will be easier coming back to clean it up after I've written a few chapters that don't have me looking for any excuse to step away from the keyboard.
Last night, I made myself finish up another chapter that I just didn't want to write. Normally when I write, I will sit down and write complete chapters at a time. But, when I don't really want to write for some reason, I'll end up writing just part of a chapter. Over the last week, I sat down four different days and was only able to get part of this chapter written each time. Once again, I knew most of the details before I even started the chapter. I had thought about a lot of the specifics of what would happen in this chapter a number of times over the past month or so. I knew what would be covered in this chapter before I made all of that progress on the book over the holidays. But, I just didn't want to write it down for some reason. However, I am pretty far along in the book and I want to try and finish up the initial draft relatively soon, so, I knew that I didn't want to waste a couple of more months due to a chapter not wanting to be written. Thus, I slogged my way through writing the chapter.
The new chapter ended up being longer than my average chapters, so I didn't scrimp on words, but when I read it to my best friend on the phone (as I have done with all of the chapters of this book), it just sounded awkward. Forcing myself to get through writing it resulted in text that did not flow like my writing normally does. I always smooth out edges as I go back and edit the chapters, but this chapter is going to take a lot more work when editing than normal to clear up all of the choppiness. But, don't worry, I will smooth it out. Just not right now. I'm sure that it will be easier coming back to clean it up after I've written a few chapters that don't have me looking for any excuse to step away from the keyboard.
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