It was a liberating thing to set it down for a while and to suddenly see an open landscape in front of me. After a couple of months, I realized there was something in the back of my mind that I had always wanted to do but was too afraid to try. So I bought a gun, a bottle of Jack Daniels and I went down to the race track...kidding. I wanted to write a book. I really didn't think I could stay the course. I've written all my life, but mostly in the form of a four minute song - a 100,000 word novel is quite a departure. But I did it.
I gave myself a year to complete the book. I started at the end of January and finished at the end of June writing for an hour in the morning before work, an hour during lunch and whatever I could cram in on the weekends between family activities. I didn't tell anyone around me for a while, dreading the to-be-expected chuckle or eye-roll. "So, you're writing a novel... riiiiight." I wanted to be sure the bridge could hold my weight before I let anyone else know I was walking out over a new creative chasm.
I have to say it was an awesome ride - a catharsis. Every time I sat down to write, I completely fell into the story and became the characters. Like reading a good book, I didn't want it to end. A lot of that, I believe was the freedom of space - the opportunity to explore depths you just cannot go to in a song. Since then I've made two editing passes through the manuscript and had a number of friendly readers as well as a couple of critical ones. So far no one's given me that face - the one with the squinty eyes as if there's the smell of something dead. I take that as an encouraging sign.
So now, I'm learning the ropes of what it takes to get a book published. It turns out selling is about the same whether it's wrapping paper, songs, books or software. I've written a lot of query letters to agents and accepted the obligatory gauntlet of form rejections back, but I've had a couple of requests to read my book which makes me hopeful. Of the army of literary agents I've researched in recent months, Chris Parris-Lamb is one that stands out as a guy who might really get my book. However it works out, I did the fun part - the part that keeps me going. The rest is gravy.
The working title is WINDY GAP BREAKDOWN. I'll post an excerpt soon. In the meantime, I'm playing music again. I recorded and released a new single Two Shadows and I'm planning my next book.
Look forward to reading it!
ReplyDelete