Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2011

Camera on Four. Rolling...

So this is going to be a fairly long post. I’m going to cheat quite a lot and post something from my book.

Basically the last couple of weeks have been busy. I’ve finally finished the book – now to be known as Queen of the World – and it has been edited, redrafted and tweaked about as much as I can do without seeking professional assistance. It’s about as good as it is going to get. I’ve sent off a few agents in the States because I haven’t yet gotten around to finding a printer. Most UK agencies was a regular mail submission. I trawled a few agencies which accept email submissions and tried my hand. So far, no joy.

I did get one request for a full manuscript submission though. I’m not going to name anything yet in case it all falls through. Hopefully I’m going to get more than one request for a manuscript in my career so naming each one as it goes seems a bit silly. If it gets accepted then, of course, I’ll plug the bejeezus out of it. We’ll see.

Oh, and some guy offered to give me a thousand euros if he can invest in the manuscript. Bit of an ego boost, to be honest. We’re talking a salad-tossing confidence boost here. Reckon it’s going to be turned down though. As someone said on my Facebook - If it’s good enough to be invested in then it’s good enough to retain 100% ownership of it. But anyway, felt a bit splendid when the offer came in.

In the next couple of days some proper work will begin on the sequel. It is currently in progress in the sense that I have about four scenes and two new characters in my head. I also have the first few chapters primed and ready to go. I know how the book will open and how all the robot ninja sharks will be seamlessly integrated into my world of magical realism.

(Part of the above paragraph may be a lie.)

Now to the long bit. This is the prologue to Queen of the World. I hope you enjoy it and get a better sense of what this blog has been banging on about for the last two months.

Most people say that magic doesn’t exist. They’re correct, to an extent. Magic is a product of the imagination. People would like to be able to fly; to conjure fire from their fingertips. Those early days of childhood, where anything seems possible, stay with us. They help form our future and they linger long after we have matured. A boy may eventually stop pretending to be a famous hero, but the dream of fame itself does not completely fade. Neither does the ambition of being the greatest swordsman or the finest archer in all the land. The world admires those skilled in the martial arts.
The world wants heroes.
Unfortunately life doesn’t work that way and so admiration comes in other forms. A man who can provide for his family is respected. A loving parent is, in turn, loved by her children. The king of a nation who rules with a fair and steady hand is given the loyalty of his people. This is how it should be, and this is how many believe it to be these days. For most, life is relatively peaceful.
It was not always so.
The world was once savage and cruel. Respect and admiration was demanded by the strongest and the most barbaric. Loyalty was given to those who were feared the most. Nations were forged by warlords, by chieftains, by people who were larger than life. They ruled with an iron fist, caring little for the common wants and needs of their subjects. They made vicious examples of any who stood up to them. Those who would not fight worked the fields and were at the mercy of the very soldiers who claimed to protect them. War was common, as opposing factions fought for land, resources and power. Lives were short and brutal.
Then came the Four.
Nobody knows where they came from or why they came. The Four walked separate from one another, each journeying one corner of the land. Slowly, patiently, they came to every one of the warlords and the chieftains in turn. They were viewed with suspicion, with intrigue, with derision and scorn. The Four would ask for an audience. This was sometimes granted, but often denied.
The Four could be persuasive.
It is said that they could do anything.
Anything. The legends tell of mountains being cracked open with the wave of a hand. Whole cities brought tumbling down. Rivers made to boil and the sky turned to flame. Men were shaped to appear as beasts and women to birds. They could kill with a look and torture with a word.
The warlords and chieftains listened.
The Four came with a simple message. Those in power would use their position to help their people. They would make peace with one another and focus on advancing culture, education and science. They would protect those who lived under their rule and no longer terrorise them. They would ease the burden of taxes and let the people support themselves as well as each other. They would promote trade. They would provide sanitation and medicines.
They would do all this, or they would be removed from their rule forcibly.
One does not argue with a God.
Some did, of course. Some tried to silence these arrogant men who made demands of them. They did not live long to regret that choice. The more intelligent of the warlords, the smartest of the chieftains, these were the ones who survived. They did as they were asked, and they pledged to lead their people into a new age of prosperity and peace.
The Four, once satisfied, left. They did so with a warning.
Let things return to how they were, and we will return.
Since that time, over five hundred years previous, no nation has dared test this promise.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Prologue, Pt.1

Bosh.

Alright, so this could be a massively failed experiment. I am notoriously bad for not keeping these things up to date. I used to have a blog when I was, what, seventeen or so, which I kept fairly regularly updated for a few years. I either got bored with it or I ran out of things to say. When you're seventeen there's little of importance to be said anyway. Don't get me wrong, I remember that it felt important at the time. It was the most important thing in the world to have my say. I guess it was just easier to ignore the amount of absolute cock I was typing while I said it.

Fast forward to the present day. I have done lots more with my life. I learnt more, experienced more, seen things I didn't really think I would see and got fairly drunk along the way. The main focus to be discussed here, though, is my writing and my attempts to become published. I've just completed the first draft of my first novel. Three days ago, in fact, and I'm pretty chuffed with it. I've spent the last couple of days celebrating with my fiancée. Maybe it's not a big deal - I mean, it's just a lot of words on a text document at the moment, right? - but considering the story surrounding my attempts at writing the bloody thing, I felt it deserved a little celebration at least. I'll get into that eventually. (Since actually getting the book to the point where it's ready to mail out to publishers will take a while I'll need to fluff out these weekly posts at some point. Next week, maybe.)

I'll also be updating on my thoughts and experiences along the road to getting the book into print. I'll provide links to any good articles I find on agents, publishers, the writing market as a whole, self publishing, the ebook revolution and anything else. I'll try and steer clear of the cute kittens, though. Don't get me wrong, I love a cute kitten as much as the next person, but there's a million and one other kitten blogs and I'm going to try and keep this semi-professional. Hah, that's an idea. Give it a few months and see how many uses of the words 'dick' are here. (smiley face!)

Also, I'll try and avoid the use of smilies. I'm useless for spamming them everywhere on my Facebook page.

There could be hundreds, maybe thousands, of similar blogs up already. I just couldn't find too many. I mean, there's author's blogs and journalist blogs and blogs about the state of the literary market at the moment. I simply couldn't locate any directly revelant to the challenge of getting it from my brain to my word processor to someone willing to publish it, or at least a blog that was being updated at the same time it all happened. I'm basically making it all up as I go along, y'know. I don't know about blog groups or author review trading (Read it in an article somewhere that that happens!). I consider myself fairly well versed in the use of the Internet as a tool for communication and information distribution, but not so much when it comes to writers and readers getting a dialogue going.

If my book sucks and I lose interest, I'll just post some cute kittens.