Showing posts with label editing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label editing. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 January 2014




So how is progress with The Ancestor's Tale, the fourth book in The Sefuty Chronicles.

Actually, not so good.

I first realized the trouble I was in last summer, when I found, with careful contemplation,that what I was struggling with was in fact two books. They had inadvertently merged together. Now how has that happened?

I believe the problem was caused by the prolonged interruption in the writing of it, caused by illness. Some of the more minor characters had had time to think of themselves, time to enlarge and run away with their own tales.

Those characters were a handful of children.
And they weren't even dead!
So they didn't belong in the book titled The Ancestor's Tale!

Eventually I had to face facts and work out a plan to save this fourth Chronicle.
Drastic plans.

I dismantled the many thousands of words I had already written, 90,000 of them.
Painstakingly untangle the two separate stories.
Sat down to decide what could be salvaged from the wreck.

After a couple of weeks of pondering and pottering around the garden, I decided the children needed the limelight and in fact they should do so in The Children's Tale. I had approximately 30,000 words for this new tale. What to do with the rest, I didn’t want to lose the ancestors, their story was important too. They have been moved over to a new book Companion Tales, I had begun planning this book in 2012, they would provide most of the backbone to this follow up book.

Companion Tales will be a series of short stories chronicling not just the ancestors, but also a few of the minor characters already mentioned in the previous books of the series, who in fact had had a fair amount to do with the story. So the Companion Tales would include Kennett Marshall and Gran in their early lives as well as the geneticist who medals with the DNA. Along with a few characters from The Children’s Tale.

Sorted.

The new Children's Tale, which is to be the fourth in the series, deals with the first-generation of mongrels. The children of Bixs and Jack, and their siblings and friends. Born outside of the City in a time of violence and war, trying to make sense of where they belong, where their loyalties lie. I have decided that in fact this does actually make a better fourth book. The story continues the end of Jack's Tale more smoothly than the Ancestors would have done. This leads me to wonder whether our brains are cleverer than we are. Well of course they are, we know this, Somewhere in the deep recesses of my tired, ill, mind my brain knew as I was straying along the wrong path. In those hours that I spent on my bed, not being able to do anything except let my brain go along its own sweet way The Children's Tale took off.

It sounds simple written like this,

Dismantle, untangle, resurrect.

However, another problem with the writing of this book, caused by my long illness, is the fact that what I am working with words which have been written over a long period of time, some typed, some dictated, depending on how much energy I had. Some indeed hand written. They have been written when I have been feeling optimistic and well, they have also been written when the opposite has been true. Editing these words is proving to be a new challenge. I can manage the different character’s voices, but which of mine am I producing?


Now at the beginning of 2014 real deep editing has begun. This has been the longest period of time spent writing a book, it began at the beginning of 2012. I think it will in fact be a better book due to this length of time,the amount of daydreaming and thought that has gone into it. We will see what editing will do with it, whether or no I can in fact edit the separate versions to become one whole.

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

A Real Book!




While my friend edited and I struggled with software there were other considerations.  Ellen is ultimately a story about the after effects of humans trashing the planet so it seemed right and proper to try and keep the trashing at the minimum in her launch.  The search was on for an ethical printer.  Now there are many, they are not hard to find but they do not all offer the same.  Ethics are tricky things with many considerations.  Recycled, workers’ conditions, carbon footprints, mileage, inks, paper and so the list goes on.  With the ultimate question at the end: which one could I afford?

Cost was a pressing problem I thought about a lot as I engaged in other activities.  Obviously the larger the print run the better, but huge print runs were out of the question as how many copies realistically was a first time author, a self-publishing one at that, going to be able to shift?  There was no room in the garage for spare books, besides there were mice out there in the winter, couldn’t I just see their delight at a couple of boxes of pristine paper to keep them cosy!

I decided on one that was local, within thirty miles, with a lot of ‘green’ credentials and a chap at the other end of the phone, whose voice I fell for.  He was very helpful and gave me a lot of advice, for which I am forever grateful. 

I was also at this time beginning to research what was needed to be done after the book was printed, how to market Ellen.  I know, I know, completely the wrong way round! Reading all about strategies, I began to plan one for Ellen.  I couldn’t afford to pay up front for the first run but what if I collected pre-orders?  Some kind of flyer was needed.  Did I know enough people though who liked me enough to buy a book I had written?  I wrote a list.  Friends, groups to which I belonged, well known acquaintances, the list of names grew.  I thought I maybe could manage to shift a few books. 

So now the DTP was engaged in designing a flyer /order form.  It was to be a limited edition (how many I didn’t know until I had the orders) signed and with a discount.  The flyers were handed out with a certain amount of trepidation, after all I had no track record at all to offer.  I have very nice friends and acquaintances and the number of orders grew greater and greater.  My original few grew to many.  More than enough to cover the cost of the printing.  Enough now to add a basic package from the printers, they would, for a small fee, supply an ISBN (the cost of buying ten of these had been bothering me for a while, starting at my age was I ever going to write ten books!), stock the book and deal with future orders and the invoicing.  My skills with business are even poorer than my skills at editing.  It was a relief to be able to avail myself of this.

My friend sent me the corrected book and then I ran through it again to check I had it all in the correct places.  Checked the page numbers ran the way I wanted.  Checked the copyright and dedication pages.

I e-mailed Ellen’s Tale and the cover for a proof copy and waited.  This was when I found that files change as they progress from one computer to another.  Pages had slipped, page numbers had vanished.  It would help they said, it really would help, if I could PDF the files (they had asked before but I had had no way of doing this).  I could see though that I would have to do something.  I learnt about page breaks, they helped keep the pages where I wanted them.  I learnt what a ‘pilcrow' was, and could check spacings, but I needed to find some way of PDFing.  I had spent too many long nights trying to fix these problems, reading the entire book word by word and checking the changed spacing. I was being pipped at this last post.

Luck, my magical friend came up trumps again in the wee small hours, as I drifted around the web trying to find what I wanted,presenting me with a six week free trial of a well known PDF package. Obviously not the whole package that enables one to run a whole business but certainly enough for me to transform 250 pages of doc. into the correct file to send to the printers.  All I had to do was work out how to do it.  Another long silent night as I checked and rechecked, lips moving as I swore and despaired.  I had a deadline.  How long would my nice friends wait for their books having already paid, and Christmas was looming ever nearer. 

I did it! and  at 3.30 a.m off sped Ellen intact at last to the printers.

One of the most exciting moments in life is opening a box full of brand spanking new fresh smelling books all bearing that title and your own name.  A real book, not a screen full of words, not a bundle of papers with squiggles and crossings out, no a book.  A book like all those hundreds one has read, a book like all those authors before have written.  It is a moment of heart stopping awesomeness.  A moment when one wishes to run down the street showing everyone, instead one thanks the fates that technology has produced the mobile phone and texting!  Tell the world according to oneself in a matter of moments, lovely!


Thursday, 2 December 2010

Book covers and pesky software




It seemed an enormous step and, after the first few hours of research, I was almost ready to give up.  Where to start was the most difficult.  How to find, with no recommendations, someone to help print Ellen’s Tale.  I had heard all the dread stories of the vanity press and in theory knew what they were.  However they do not put a sign up or an animated arrow pointing at themselves declaring ‘Me, me, I’m vanity’.

I spent days surfing, bookmarking various sites, reading, sometimes printing, reams of information from various POD firms.  So many differences but all had one thing in common: they cost more than I had.  My budget, on a small pension, was miniscule and even the cheapest was more than I could justify on a gamble, and I have never been a gambler.

So what to do?  I wasn’t giving up my dream.  Always if I’m told I can’t I become more determined that I can.  Fortunately I have always enjoyed reading for information and more recently surfing around.  I was in the middle of convalescing from major surgery so had plenty of time to spare.  Comparing prices and packets I knew I would have to do everything, bar the actual printing, myself.

What did I have to do?  Well, edit the book.  Not me, I am famous for my lack of spelling ability and my punctuation skills make the grown amongst us shudder.  I had a secret weapon though.  A ‘bestest’ friend of 50+ years to whom grammar and the correct use of the English language is a joy.  We were to have many a tussle in the months ahead!

Okay editing was sorted.  What else?  A cover.  The cost of hiring anyone to do this was way beyond my means but how did one design a book cover?  Look at those in the bookshops, I was advised.  I did, endlessly, and found no real inspiration, mainly of course because I still didn’t know what kind of book Ellen was.  I spent hours looking at royalty free photos, maybe something would trigger an eureka moment.  Nothing like a flash occurred but a steady thought that with all the thousand of photographs already in the house surely I could find something amongst them.  So now the hours were spent sorting through mine.  I was slowly building up a theme I wanted but how to do it I still didn’t know.  Well, some kind of photo software would be a start. A friend showed me how to do such clever things on hers, however it never seemed to work when I tried, but maybe it just needed practise! Or maybe desktop publishing software.  I am a firm believer in luck and it was just then I received an e-mail with special offers on some software, fairly basic but it was a start.  All that was left was to learn how to use it and to have a clear idea on what design I wanted!  Easy!  No.

DTP was a term I had a lot about in the years of computer owning but it was never anything I had tried.  I realise that many reading this will have not only mastered the skills almost before they were weaned and others had switched on and instantly got to grips with their programes.  Like many things in life DTP stared blackly back at me and refused to co-operate in any logical way, as far as I could see.  I would stare back as blackly and many a ‘wee small hour hours of mornings’ were to see me muttering incoherently in my hot milk ‘why won’t it do it? I don’t understand’.  I would emerge red-eyed in the morning determined to try again. 

Slowly it began to make sense, slowly a design began to emerge, slowly I began to see a book cover emerge.  I had my theme: each book (because by then I had written the first draft of a sequel and had another in my head!!) would indicate some aspect of climate change.  Each cover would be anything but pastel, the seeming fashion of the time, I liked colour.  I found the picture for the cover of Ellen’s Tale in a petal of a poppy, a photograph I had taken years before and almost discarded.