Archive for December, 2010

Dec 28 2010

Mystory (Lessons Thereof)

Cross-posted from Speculative Faith.

(Someone once told me that “history” is called “history” because it’s HIS story, meaning God’s. Dunno if that’s true. But if it is, then my own personal story can be called “mystory.” In this case, I’m writing about the story of my stories, so that’s … “mystories”? But I digress. Ridiculously.)

I am a writer; in fact, I am a novelist. I get to call myself that, even though I do not have a single book published by a trade publisher, because I have been writing novels since I was 13ish. I’ve self-published five in various forms, and people read them, review them, and otherwise interact with them, so I figure that I’m doing what novelists do, and that’s good enough to claim the title.

In fact, this past week I finally finished a trilogy I have been working on for nearly ten years. In 2001 or thereabouts, I wrote a book called Worlds Unseen, which told the story of a handful of people who were curious enough — and gripped by longing enough — to explore beyond the boundaries of the world-as-they-knew-it and discover the truth about their history and future. As in our world, the truth is obscured by the machinations of evil. If discovered, it will set people free — but only if they’re willing to side with the ancient King and cast off the “safe” life they’ve always known.

Worlds Unseen helped me break through a few personal blocks as a writer, and I followed it right away with a sequel, Burning Light. I knew the story was supposed to be a trilogy. But back then I didn’t do outlines, and the third story wasn’t readily to hand like the first two had been. I was out of steam and content to let it rest.

So I did. Someday I would write a book called The Advent and finish the trilogy. Maybe.

In the meantime, I wrote a bunch of other books and became published as a freelance writer for various online and print magazines. In 2006 I entered the exciting waters of POD-enabled self-publishing, and in 2007 I looked fondly at Worlds Unseen and Burning Light and thought, why not? I have moved on to pursuing publication for other books. I could get these out into the world and start building readership. To the printing press!

This will have applicability to you shortly; keep reading . . .

Well, I did publish Worlds Unseen and Burning Light, and they began to accrue fans. They opened doors for me to get into all sorts of discussions with people about books and writing and my faith. They collected some good reviews. Worlds Unseen in its Smashwords-ebook form has been downloaded over 13,000 times.

But there was trouble. You cannot publish the first two books in a trilogy without eventually, someday, somehow, finishing the series. Readers made that clear. The third book needed to come out. And it didn’t want to.

The Advent turned into my life’s worst case of writer’s block. Dogged and determined, I wrote it. Hated and scrapped it. Wrote a different story with the same title. Scrapped most of it. Changed its name to Coming Day and kept going. Seven or so almost-complete rewrites later, I finally, finally wrote the book that finished the trilogy appropriately and in a way I could be proud of. It was like pulling teeth the entire way.

But now it’s done. I’ll be making it available to the world just as soon as the cover art is finished. And I can move on to new adventures, new worlds, new stories, and of course, marketing.

I share this bit of mystory with you because it highlighted two lessons for me.

1. Even when you think you know the cost ahead of time, anything you do will require commitment. Writing stories, like pulling a tooth or doing ministry or navigating a tricky relationship, requires a commitment that transcends how we feel at the moment. The upside of this is that commitment eventually yields fruit, and the fruit likewise transcends how we may have felt during the process.

2. Publishing, in any form, creates relationship and responsibility to readers. Don’t take that lightly. Like any relationship, it will cost something. It will require work and follow-through. And it will also create its own rewards. We are all, writers and readers both, engaged in one great conversation that truly impacts lives. And that is the best reason to pursue publishing in the first place.

I’d love to hear more about yourstories. Anybody?

P.S. If you’d like to read more about my trilogy, the website is www.worldsunseen.com.

5 responses so far

Dec 17 2010

It’s Here

Kudos to Deborah Thomson for the beautiful artwork. The book itself is in production and should be ready to order early next week :).

5 responses so far

Dec 13 2010

Sad

Published by under Seventh World Trilogy

At the end of a long, protracted wait, the release date for Coming Day has been officially moved to January 2011. I’m really disappointed about this — for one thing, I just really like to have projects wrapped up by the end of the year!

Publishing is famous for moving a glacial speeds. Independent publishing of the sort that I do moves much, much more quickly, but doing it well does require a certain amount of working with others and waiting on systems and printers, etc. Unfortunately, in this case the waiting has run smack into the Christmas season.

I hope those of you who are waiting with me will find the book worth the wait!

In happier news, it is snowing outside, with a particularly Christmasy sort of snow.  There is an enormous, beautiful Christmas tree in the room over, and everywhere I go, even in the most secular of places, I am liable to hear music playing and announcing that Christ is born. Merry Christmas season to you all!

2 responses so far

Dec 02 2010

“One of the Most Engaging and Exciting Authors I Have Read”

From the first chapter, Worlds Unseen draws you in with the mystery and spine-tingling adventures the characters encounter. Throughout the book you meet new and interesting people who have their own special roles in the unfolding of the story; from Nicholas, who hears things he should not be able to hear, to a princess, who loves her people enough to die for them, to the surviving members of a council long disbanded. Rachel Starr Thomson does a spectacular job of weaving many different people and stories together to culminate in a dramatic ending that leaves you on the edge of your seat in expectation of the second book, Burning Light.

Still waiting on the cover for Coming Day. In the meantime, Noelle Wickham was kind enough to review Worlds Unseen for an online magazine called Generation Impact. You can read the full review here.

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