Unpublished,…for Now

Sad Face amongst Happy Faces

This is definitely not my favorite blog post. In this article I must admit a mistake. After having started an analysis of my previous published novel, “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.“, I’m still happy in general with the book I produced, but not happy with the quality of the product I unleashed upon the world. In my defense, writing a novel is a massive undertaking that people don’t truly appreciate, nor understand the level of work involved to make it happen. To be honest, to some extent, I have to include myself in that category. I had put in many hours to write this novel, but was only able to do it sporadically, in stints here and there, followed by long pauses do to other life demands. That’s not the best way to write a novel, by far.

I found myself having to get back on track each time I would reengage the project, which only caused things to move slower, and made the rewrite of the 1st draft much more work than it would have otherwise been. After outlining the novel initially, I decided I wanted to try some dictation software to see if I could write faster that way. I was surprised that I was in fact able to write at a much faster pace than when I typed in my ideas,.. and I’m not a slow typist. Thinking I would exponentially speed up my progress, I happily proceeded using the astounding software for many multiple chapters. The downside,.. sometimes the software would hear words that I didn’t say, or maybe didn’t pronounce clear enough for it to perfectly interpret. I was of the mindset, then, and probably still am, that it’s best to just get out your creativity on the first draft and just edit it later to a better state of coherency. That seems to be a relatively popular approach that many writers use, so I ran with it.

I believe the initial creative process is probably the most fun part of writing a novel for most people. The re-write is less thrilling, but an incredibly important part of creating a quality product that people will enjoy. When re-writing the first draft of “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.“, I found an incredible amount of errors, at least for my taste. The voice dictation software worked very well for the most part, accurately reflecting the words I’d spoken into it. But every now and then, it would populate words that would ruin the meaning of the sentence. This left me with a manuscript riddled with minute errors to fix. Words that a writer never would have intentionally written into sentences, but which needed to be fixed.

Another aspect of the 1st Draft rewrite was the normal consequence of starting and stopping the project so many times over the years, and yes,.. I did say years. When I did a blog post that memorialized that I’d started my novel project over 4 years ago, that really hit home. At that point I was very motivated to complete the project and was in the midst of the rewrite. I found plot lines that were mixed out of order or repeated, as I didn’t remember I’d covered something the last time I’d written. Character names were interchange occasionally and phrasing was sometimes awkward. There were a lot of things to clean up, but to be fair, that’s to be expected when your first draft efforts are mainly to get that story on paper.

So I worked on the rewrite, and I fixed a lot of errors, polishing things as I went. I was able to catch a lot of issues, but discovered an interesting thing in the process. I’m not sure if this is a characteristic of my my own brain or if others experience it as well, but I would sometimes find that I would read a sentence as intended, and not as it was. I’d think that a word was there as I’d expect it to be, but it wasn’t. I’d read again and found the error. This was a rare thing to find, but when you have even a small number of such occurrences, and multiply them by 80,000 + words, you’re going to have errors that remain.

I’d considered and priced the possibility of using a professional proofreader, and would have loved to opt for this as my third phase of the project to make sure everything was in good order, but the cost was too high. The lowest cost I could find for my humble novel project was one thousand dollars. I was under no illusion that my one novel, amongst thirty million other books on Amazon.com, would become a best seller and I’d be soon fending off multiple movie option deals. Given that, it seemed too much to remove this amount from my family reserves just for my book. So I set out to do the job myself, and I corrected a lot of issues.

After that process, I was anxious to make my dream a reality and publish my book,… and so I did. And this brings me to the mistake I made. I have to admit now, with a heavy heart, that I rushed the publication process a little too quickly. After having worked on “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” for so long, I just wanted it out there, but I should have waited. After a reader noted they found a “do” which should have been a “due”, I was mad at myself for having missed that. He said there weren’t as many errors as he’d seen in other independent books, but it was something mentioned in his otherwise positive review. He’d actually given the book a four star review, but I knew at that moment, the product,… my novel,… was not what it should have been for that reader. So I fixed that typo, thinking it was likely just one of the many issues that I just happened to miss fixing, but the thought that there could be more, dogged me for weeks.

So at one point, I grabbed a hard copy of my novel and began to reread it with a more critical eye to see if there were additional issues remaining. While there many pages without any issues, there were far too many where some remained. As I continued, I came across a “teeth” that should have been a “teach” and at that point, was starting to feel a bit demoralized. The dictation software had got me again, and when I’d reviewed it, I apparently saw what I expected, instead of the word that was actually on the page. I was too close to the project and the writing to proofread it effectively in one pass.

As it’s become clear now, I should have done one or two new passes over the book to ensure all typos and errors had been fixed. Either that, or hire a profession proofreader who would see any flaws given they were emotionally distant from the project. While I”m not exactly a perfectionist, I owe anyone who might read my novel in the future a better experience, and have thus decided to unpublish my novel for now. I’ve taken “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” off of all the markets it was available in for now. As there’s still some work to do, I’ll do my very best to make my novel the very best it can be and will republish it in the future.

Definitely NOT my favorite blog post.

Progress Report:
Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” Novel Progress: DONE, but now Unpublished [Additional proofreading project started.]

Burt’s Bots” Novel Outline progress:
Outline:  19,742 words  (Getting the story down first)
Novel 1st Draft:  13,367 (Went back to outlining 1st though, but delayed for additional proofreading of 1st novel.)

The Birth of My Novel

After many, many hours of work, my 1st novel, “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” is finally published and ready to be found by the world.  It is now published on Amazon.com, iBooks, Barnes & Noble (Nook), Kobo, Playster, Tolino and Scribd.  Amazon even allows me to offer a paperback version that they will print on demand, which is an awesome feature.  I’d ordered the proof copy to be sure that it looked okay, and found the size to be a bit large, so I created a new, smaller version that will be up online in just a few days.  I’m not sure how many people are still reading paper books, but it’s great to have that available and you know I’m going to get some extra author copies as well.  Nothing beats holding your own novel in your hand.  Mind blowing.

I must admit, although the world doesn’t much know my novel exists at this point, it’s amazing to me that I’ve published my novel.  Being able to self-publish your book is a major boon to independent authors wishing to get their work out there.  Would it be awesome to be accepted by a literary agent who would pitch and sell my novel to a traditional publisher?  You bet it would be, but what was the necessary first step to getting published years ago, is not the roadblock it once was.  Now authors can very easily self-publish and get their work into the hands of readers around the world.  A process now possible for all authors, although with wildly varying results.  Self-marketing seems to be the key to your book being discovered, so this process is now underway.

For what is a writer if no one ever reads their work?  Answer,… a sad writer.  Not wanting to be sad, I’m now working on getting the word out about my first novel.

Progress Report:
Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” Novel Progress: DONE, published!
1st Draft Novel:  78,198 words
2nd Draft Novel Rewrite:  Completed 2/11/2018!

Burt’s Bots” Novel Outline progress:
Outline:  17.816 words  (Rereading outline to date now)
Novel 1st Draft:  13,367 (Went back to outlining 1st though)

Judging a Book by its Cover

We all know the saying, which is quite wise when it comes to people, but there’s a reason this saying came to be.  Many a book has been put aside, passed over, or never read at all because of its cover and the instant impression someone had about what the story inside might be like.  So with my book about to be published soon, I needed to find a cover that would relay a part of what the story was about, so people will find it intriguing enough to at least read the description, and hopefully buy the book.

This seemed like a tall order as one my central characters was female, or at least a representation of that, and also a computer.  I did a lot of searching and had a few other possibilities, but this one seemed the best as the woman modeling for it looked the closest to how I envisioned Sofia to appear, and it included elements of both digital and fiber optics technology.  What would be an odd backdrop for other author’s books was the perfect one for mine.

I searched quite a few sites to find one that would both fit my needs and my budget.  There were more sources than I expected and found many that would allow you to work with the artists to customize your cover to meet your exact needs.  Needless to say, that came at a price.  For that kind of service and customization, it would seem worth it and a fair price to pay those artists for that work, but I needed something more economical.

I settled on a great source of many different book covers created by a plethora of graphic artists where the prices were quite reasonable.  On SelfPubBookCovers.com they had many different covers for a variety of genres, but to find the right cover, you have to put in the time to search.  I’d actually started this process a while back, so I had some time to keep looking for what would work best.  This helped as new covers get uploaded all the time.  You have the ability to save a cover, but it can still be bought by others, so no guarantees there unless you shell out the cash to make it yours.  Their site also allows for you to put in your own text, using different fonts and effects to make it look just right.  Even after purchasing, you can go back later and make edits and download the graphic again.

I’ve uploaded the cover in the Amazon Kindle Self Publishing site for my initial tests and it looked fine, so I hope that this was the right choice.  Only time will tell.

Progress Report:
Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” Novel Progress: DONE, publishing soon!
1st Draft Novel:  78,198 words
2nd Draft Novel Rewrite:  Completed 2/11/2018!

Burt’s Bots” Novel Outline progress:
Outline:  17.816 words  (Added more notes to the outline)
Novel 1st Draft:  13,367 (Went back to outlining 1st though)

“Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” Novel is Finished!

Done!Just a quick post to memorialize the day I finished editing the 2nd draft of my novel, “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.”!  It’s been far too long from when I started this whole process to this day, but I’m finally finished.  Just a bit of polishing for e-book and print formats, as well as cover and publishing page design, but the re-write is done.

The final pages went amazingly fast.  A few changes here and there that made me feel better about the prose, but before I knew it, I was done.

Now comes the next phase of the process.  It will involve query letters to Literary agents, of course, but these days, it will also involve the very act of self-publishing as well.  The reality today is that aspiring novelists, like me, can publish an e-book themselves on Amazon, Nook, iBooks, etc.  My first novel coming soon.

Progress Report:
Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” Novel Progress: DONE!
1st Draft Novel:  78,198 words
2nd Draft Novel Rewrite:  Completed 2/11/2018!

Burt’s Bots” Novel Outline progress:
Outline:  17.816 words  (Added more notes to the outline)
Novel 1st Draft:  13,367 (Went back to outlining 1st though)

3 Homes in 1 Year

Looking to thwart the progress on your new novel?  I would suggest that you live in 3 different places in the same year.  That was my unexpected experience in 2017.  My wife and I had intended to live in our newly rented apartment for at least a year before we started looking for a new home to buy, but a very noisy bar down the street and neighbors above us who must have had feet the size of the Flintstones changed our minds.  When we found the perfect little house, emphasis on the little, that we could actually afford, we made our move.

This was our second move in a year, and the third place we’d call home in that year, as well, but it was worth the effort.  The rehabbers who fixed up the place did a pretty good job in most parts of the home, but cut a few corners in other ways that weren’t too bad, but did require us to make some changes.  Being an older home, it had some things we just had to get fixed like the lack of ground wiring on our electrical sockets, and an oddly placed electrical panel that would have been blocked by the washer.  I left that to a professional, but took on other projects, like creating 13 window screens which were MIA when we bought the place.  Multiple other projects also ensued for a base level conversion to make it our little place.

On this last move I secured my first novel draft with much more dignity, having learned from my last mistake, and have recently found some time to continue the rewrite.  With all of our must do home projects done, I delved back into the “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” novel and found, to my surprise, that I’m very close to it being done.  I expect to have this completed by the end of next month.  A dangerous thing to say publicly, considering the amount of time this has taken me, but writing a novel is quite a lot of work.  I work hard in other areas of my life so this has been a bit of a balancing act.  Unfortunately, the novel has had to be prioritized down the list, at times, given it’s more of a dream of mine that isn’t producing any cash flow, as of yet.

After the final push this month, I’ll need to quickly immerse myself into the business of self-publishing and promotion.  I’d done some research before, but need to firm up my plan of action.  I’ll blog more on this as I get into the process as the information I’m finding is all over the place.  Amazon has good information on the technical process of bringing your book to life on their platform, but little on the other aspects of the journey.  Questions still abound as to how I structure the business aspect.  I found a good book on the promotion part and think I also found a good book cover, but there is still much to decide and act upon.  More to follow soon, as I’m determined to finish my first novel so I can start writing the next one I already have planned.

With no more home moves planned for at least the next ten years, I’ll have more time to work on this life goal of mine.

Progress Report:
Burt’s Bots” Novel Outline progress:
Outline:  17.816 words  (Added more notes to the outline)
Novel 1st Draft:  13,367 (Went back to outlining 1st though)

Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” Novel Progress:
1st Draft Novel:  78,198 words
2nd Draft Novel Rewrite: Up to page #320 of 351

A New Place to Write!

Unfortunately, my blog about completing my first novel is going off topic again as a big life change has delayed my final edit of “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.”  I hate that so many of my recent posts have been on why I’m not working on the novel, but selling our condo and finding a new place to live has been a major life event to deal with.  My wife and I have basically been flipping our own condo, updating hardware, paint, flooring, HVAC, etc., and that alone was a tremendous amount of back-breaking work.  We gave about a third of what we owned to charity, and put another third in storage, in order to give our place a very light and airy feeling.  At one point, while moving a massive amount of boxes to storage, we came back and found that we’d left one lone box on the side of the building courtyard, completely exposed to anyone walking by.  To my horror, I looked and found it was labeled as containing my second draft novel!  Needless to say, my heart sank as that became a metaphor for how I’ve been neglecting it lately.  Thankfully, it had not been disturbed and I quickly secured it under lock and key until the moment I can move it to our new place and get back to work.

The next stage to come was the staging and selling process, which was also involved.  Those who have sold their properties know what it’s like to live an unnaturally perfectly clean lifestyle, knowing at any minute, someone may want to check out your home. Thankfully it all worked out well as we got multiple offers and settled on one of them.  Now, since we accepted an offer, it’s all about the moving process.  Complicated by staging furniture we’ll give away and new furniture we’ll buy,.. there’s still a lot on my plate.

My life is currently one big checklist of things to do, get and complete to make this move happen.  And my special box with my 2nd draft novel waits for me to get this move done and unpack it.  I believe I marked it with a very big star, so finding it among the thirty or so boxes should be easy,…right?

God willing, my next post will be about how productive a writer I’ve become from our new home.

No Progress:   🙁
Burt’s Bots” Novel progress at Camp NaNoWriMo:
Outline:  17.816 words
Novel 1st Draft:  13,367 (Went back to outlining 1st though)

Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” Novel Progress:
1st Draft Novel:  78,198 words
2nd Draft Novel Rewrite: Up to page #213 of 351

Rewriting or Polishing?

Scrivener Rewriting WorkWell in my case, it’s really a bit of both.  I think I outlined well enough that I don’t have massive issues  to work on, but scenes will be changed and disappearing character’s will be fixed, but much of everything else is polishing.   Sure, I’ve found my fair share of spelling and grammatical errors, and I am having to fix sections that repeat scenes or have other conflicting information, but progress is good and I can see the end is still a ways down the road, but definitely approaching.

As with most of my novel writing journey, I don’t really know if my techniques are the best, but they appear to work for me.  I did a read of my novel with a red pen on hand, and made notes on parts that didn’t make sense, or where facts changed from a previous chapter.  The red ink did flow for spelling errors as well, but thanks to my Scrivener’s program spell checker, it wasn’t too awful.  My lovely wife was kind enough to have gone through a read of my first draft as well and made her own notes of questions, observations and spelling errors so that helped a lot too.  Thankfully she liked the novel as well, but she is a little biased so my ego’s not swelling up too big.  Still wonderful to me to have satisfied my first reader, particularly this one.

So my method now is to take my first draft novel with red pen marked edits and do the physical rewrite in my Scrivener program.  It’s a little disjointed a process though as I do a quick look at the papers with edit notes, then go at it in Scrivener, but I inevitably get ahead of my marked papers in the program itself.  Then I go back to make sure I didn’t miss any of my previously marked issues.  Thankfully, I haven’t found many issues I didn’t catch a second time, but I did find just a few that I didn’t catch on the first.  Guess that’s really part of the process, but I hope it ends up in a well edited novel with as few mistakes as I can possibly manage.

Considering that people will be paying for my humble little novel, I think I owe it to them to do the best I can to make it as readable as possible, as well as what I hope will be an entertaining story.  I’ve been looking into hiring a professional proofreader for a final check, but the costs can be in the $1,000 level and up, so I’ll probably not go that route because that’s a pretty big investment to make for a first novel.

I think it would pain me very much to read reviews that indicated they found a lot of errors in the words I’d put down on paper.  I don’t want to go the analysis paralysis route either, though, so at some point soon, I’ll be making my last skim over everything and making the final push to get it published.  In my day job position, this will entail my “coming out” with my novelist aspirations as I’m required to notify my employer of any outside business activity, and selling books, no matter how few (or hopefully many) fits into this definition.

So after all this time, working on this first novel of mine, I’m getting very close to publishing it on Kindle and other platforms.  I’m hoping the rest of the rewrite goes well, and I get closer to the ultimate goal.  Partly because I want to see “Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.” live, and that won’t happen until it’s published.  Another part, though, wants to finish this story, so I can move on to the next one.  Almost there.

Novel: Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.
1st Draft Rewrite Progress:  Up to Page 72 of 351 (double space proof copy print)

The Best Laid Plans,…

My poor under-worked MacBook Pro.
My poor under-worked MacBook Pro.

The great line from a poem by Robert Burns which John Steinbeck used for his novel ,.. “the best laid plans of mice and men, often go awry,” comes to mind as I look at my lack of progress during the NanoWriMo event this November.  I’d planned to be on fire to complete 50,000 words into my new novel by month end, but given that I’m only at 13,366 words, it’s not likely.

I’m liking the new novel and story very much, so that’s not really the problem.  I’m thinking there are a couple of things that have gotten me off track.

First and foremost is the guilt factor.  I have all the edit points noted on my hard copy of my first draft novel, ‘Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.’ that are ready for me to start working on my second draft, but I’d put that aside to do the NanoWriMo event.  I feel that I compromised on this as not finishing what I started makes me feel bad.  I’m into the new book already while leaving my first project to languish, thinking that I needed the NanoWriMo event to spur me on to get more writing done per day, but it just doesn’t feel right.

Secondly,…in my rush to ready myself for this month long event, I also compromised the way I write in that I normally complete an outline first, hashing out the plot details and discovering new twists I want to add in the process.  While I started my outline for my second novel, and have an idea of where it is ultimately going, I don’t have it completely fleshed out yet.  I probably don’t even have it completed enough to get to the 50,000 word mark, if I’m honest with myself, and that’s not usually how I’ve worked in the past on writing projects.  In fact, the times I didn’t have my outline envisioned were when I created long, rambling stories that didn’t come together all that well.  I like to envision the story in the outline process, but this new novel isn’t completely envisioned yet, so that’s been bothering me.

Throw into the mix that in November I had a very tense day job work event to deal with and a little holiday called Thanksgiving as well, and there was even more distractions than usual to keep my from writing.

So even though there is some guilt as well in not finishing the NanoWriMo event as planned, I’m pulling back on my overly ambitious plan for novel number two, and am going back, for now, to finish my first one.  Definitely a crash and burn situation on my NanoWriMo plan, but I think it’s best for my writing style that I deliver my first baby before working on the second.

In thinking about my outline first preference, I know that some writers don’t work this way.  They like to compose things by the seat of their pants and use the actual process of writing their novel as their way of exploring the possibilities of their imagination.  I guess I do this as well, to some extent, but I put that in the outlining process of dreaming up the whole story.  I never follow the outline religiously, as you’ll always come up with things in the process to make your story better, but it helps to keep me on track otherwise during the actual writing process.  This also seems to help me keep track of the details, which can be considerable in a novel, and allow me to concentrate on the creativity of the story details.  I think for my personality, it’s the best way for me to work, and actually allows me to extend the creative process out farther, in both the outlining and writing stages.

So that’s my elaborate excuse for failing at my plan to complete 50,000 written words in November.  Instead, I’m hoping to have my second draft of my first novel completed by year end, and then I’ll send it off to a proofreader and continue work on my second novel’s outline first.  To me,…that’s the right way to do things

2nd Novel, 1st Draft:  Burt’s Bots
November 29th, 2015:

Outline:  Partially done for the first part of the story
Novel Word Count:  13,366

 

 

Finishing the First Draft!

Finishing the First Draft!

I FINISHED MY 1ST DRAFT!  The last chapter has been written and I’ve finally finished this fairly large body or work and gotten my story out.  I had a great push in this last month thanks to the accountability of my Camp Nanowrimo experience.  This nonprofit website was create in a Spring Camp style and participants were grouped in cabins per the camp theme.  Most of my cabin mates had the same kind of 30,000 word count goals similar to mine. Well actually my estimate was just over 31 thousand words to complete my novel but I came up about 6 thousand words short of my projected end point.

This Camp Nanowrimo experience began on April 1st and with every writing session you were to post your word count totals.  I must admit that it really energized and standardized my writing efforts.  Since this was all being done part time, it’s taken me some time to get this done, but the camp helped me to get into the daily writing habit.  I had a great desire to keep my word counts up.  I was no longer writing all by myself, with no accountability.  I suddenly had peers, also with their own writing goals, whose progress I could see and whom I showed my progress to as well.  This was very motivating and really encouraged me to write often.  It’s a different experience when you are working in tandem with other aspiring writers, also working hard on their own stories. 

The site had a message board where each cabin member could leave comments on their progress, and often encouragement to others as well.  It was a really great experience and really helped me to make that final push to complete the first draft.  They have a more famous event in November where they challenge writers to complete their 50,000 word novel in that month alone.  I plan to take up that challenge with a new book idea that’s been percolating in my head, but that means I have to get busy on the next phase of this 1st novel,.. the rewrite!

While it’s a sweet victory to celebrate the completion of my novel’s first draft, like any other work, it’s going to need rewriting, polishing and editing.  This process promises to be easier than the first, but it’s still going to be a substantial amount of work.  This will be the phase where I’ll no doubt find multiple flaws and misspellings as well as intended elements I left out entirely, or repeated more than once.  The document I have now is definitely not ready for prime time for sure, but it’s my story, created out of thin air, and now out of my head.  Now comes the refining of what I’ve done.  Now comes the crafting of this story into a novel that I pray people will enjoy.

Your prayers are still welcomed as I enter this new phase of writing.  I’ll take a very short break and then will start by reading what I’ve created. Prior to this, I’ll finish reading a good book on the rewriting process so as to hopefully provide some useful times.  But for now, a minor celebration for my wife and I, and my thanks to God for helping me get to this point.

April 25th, 2015:
Current Novel Word Count:
   78,198 Words
Percentage towards 1st Draft Goal:  100%
Title: Inheriting S.O.F.I.A.