Monday, January 31, 2005

Adventures in Publishing Must Get Done

I'm determined to have Adventures in Publishing published and available at the CIPA show in March. Here's where I am right this second:

HELP! I MAY HAVE COPYRIGHT ISSUES


If your manuscript appears to contain images and/or pas-sages of text that are problematic during the pre-publication process, your Author Representative may mention potential copyright issues.

If your manuscript contains any images and/or text that you did not personally create as original material, you may not have the legal right to include such material in your publication. Such material includes lyrics to songs; excerpts from published stories, books, or poems; published and commercially produced images; images containing the likeness of someone you do not know person-ally (living or dead); and photographs taken by someone other than you or an immediate family member.

Friday, January 28, 2005

Cover Quotes

As "Publishing Gems: Insider Information for the Self-Publishing Writer" nears official publication I've been working on solidifying the cover. This includes both the design/layout as well as the copy. The front layout is complete, although I want an industry endorsement on the front.

I want some on the back, too.

So I've contacted some other well-known industry professionals associated with self-publishing: Judith, the current president of CIPA; Dan, the man who literally wrote the book on self-publishing, and Jan, the executive director of PMA.

Judith and Dan are maybes. Jan is a no. It's not PMA's policy to endorse their member’s books. Two out of three isn't bad if they pan out -- plus I'm taking advantage of services Outskirts Press offers to all its offers by securing a guaranteed pre-publication book review.

Its imperative (borderline imperative) that how-to or reference books covering a particular field feature industry endorsements on the cover.

Dan Poynter was very gracious. He suggested I send him the pre-pub galley in PDF along with a draft of the testimonial that he would edit to his liking. Prompt, professional, perfect. I have a space reserved for his quote above the title of my book, so I hope it's good.

New Hires at Outskirts Press

Some new hires and reorganizations have taken place this week at Outskirts Press. For those of us keeping score (probably just me), here's the new scorecard:

Brent - President/CEO/CMB
Jeanine - COO/BM
Lynn - CFO/BM
Tony - BM

Chris - Started as an author rep, and will still handle some of those responsibilities, although core efforts are now focused on marketing, both for the company and select authors/books.

Amy - Customer Service / Author Rep back-up

Vicky - Customer Service / Author Rep back-up

Mary - New hire, Author Rep

Deni - New hire, Author Rep


Wednesday, January 26, 2005

Publishing Gems Cover

The pre-edit galley draft of Publishing Gems: Insider Information for the Self-Publishing Writer went to the printer today and we'll be able to forward galley review copies to pertinent publications in time for them to consider a review before the book's official publication in April. I'm trying to have our Publishing Guide complete by then, too. The first draft was complete and all board members had a chance to provide their .02, but then we changed the orientation of Outskirts Press from pure POD to custom publishing with more flexibility. That changes much of the content (although much of it also stays the same -- we're just as advantageous as before, only more so. "More so" is easy to add to the book).

So, I mention both because I'm trying to aim for a synchronous publication because I allude to being the author of Publishing Gems on Adventures in Publishing, and I mention that I'm the author of Adventures in Publishing on Publishing Gems. It would be best to hit a window where both are true as fast as possible.

All this brings to mind one of the chapters of Publishing Gems, which is about establishing one's self as an expert. I'm trying to follow my own advice. Step one is writing the book. Check (almost).

Here's a tentative cover for publishing Gems. I think it's going to change a bit. The COO thought the "self publishing" part was too difficult to read. What do YOU think?



We're also going to change the title just slightly. The subtitle is Insider Information for the Self-Publishing Writer. Oooh... insider info. Very la-de-da!

Sunday, January 23, 2005

Publishing Gems Tip # 1

Sending my latest book to the printer this week for review copies to be produced. Here's tip # 1.


NINE STEPS FOR PLOTTING A FICTION FOUNDATION


Start with a piece of paper. It should be large enough to write on. 8.5 x 11 is perfect. Draw two parallel lines both vertically and horizontally across the page, creating 9 comparable boxes, as if you were starting a game of tic-tac-toe. These boxes represent either chapters, scenes, or sections, depending upon your book’s intended length.

Number the boxes, starting from the upper left: 1, 2, 3.
Next row, starting from the left: 4, 5, 6.
Last row: 7, 8, 9.
Title each box…

Box 1) Triggering Event

First thing’s first. What happens? Why have you bothered to write a book, and more importantly, why should a reader invest time flipping through its pages. Your “triggering event” is the answer to those questions, so make it a good one. Also, don’t make the reader wait very long for it. First sentence, first paragraph, first page. These are good spots for a triggering event.

Box 2) Characterization

Generally, books succeed or fail on the strength of their characters more so than on the strength of their plots. While your protagonist may have been involved in the “triggering event” there wasn’t time in Box 1 to characterize him or her. Here’s where you explore what makes your protagonist tick. No, this isn’t an excuse for drawn out exposition, history, or back story. If your “triggering event” is captivating, the reader will discover enough about the protagonist in Box 2 simply by reading how he or she reacts to Box 1.

Box 3) First Turning Point

By now, your plot is picking up steam, and because of Box 2, the reader is invested in the ride. Time to throw a monkey wrench into the works. This turning point can be either a positive event for your protagonist, or a negative one, but it should be directly related to either a character flaw or trait your protagonist demonstrates in Box 2 (see, there’s a reason these boxes are touching one another – keep this in mind when you get to Box 6).

Box 4) Exposition

You’ve earned some time to fill the reader in on important data. Since this box touches Box 1, here’s where you shed some light on that “triggering event” and since it also touches Box 7, you get to foreshadow your protagonist’s darkest hour. In common cases, for example, Box 4 can reveal a relationship dynamic or a character flaw that contributes to the dark times in ahead.


Box 5) Connect the Dots

Box 5 represents the trickiest part of fiction, and is often where plots fall apart, or where authors experience massive writer’s block. Since Box 5 is the center of the book, it touches, and therefore must relate to, all the boxes around it. Kind of like a nucleus at the center of an atom bomb, Box 5 should tick systematically upon elements introduced in Box 2 and Box 4. And like the calm before the storm, Box 5 should give the false impression of resolution before heading like a freight train to Box 6. Most importantly, it needs to provide subtle, foreshadowing support for the protagonist’s revelation in Box 8.

Box 6) Negative Turning Point

Here’s where that atom bomb explodes and all hell breaks loose. It’s a shock to the reader, and yet, it makes perfect sense due to the foundation built in Box 3.

Box 7) Antagonist Wins

The protagonist is defeated here, and the antagonist is going to “win.” Even though the reader may have seen Box 6 coming, the protagonist didn’t=. How the protagonist deals with the defeat in Box 7 will depend upon the traits and/or story developed in Box 4, and will lead to Box 8.

Box 8) Revelation

Of course! The protagonist’s revelation turns the tide. Here is where the protagonist connects the dots here, just like the reader did in Box 5. Part of the fun of a great fiction novel is allowing the reader to be just one step ahead of the protagonist, who overcomes the obstacles in Box 8 via the devise introduced in Box 5.

9) Protagonist Wins

The “negative” turning point in Box 6 is rectified while the character’s resolve from Box 8 is brought into full bloom.

Congratulations! Another great tale told greatly.

Friday, January 21, 2005

Birthday

I forgot to mention. Wednesday was my birthday.