It has been a very long year for me. I spent a year of my writing
time to market the first novel as most novice authors might do. We
really want to see it sell and put everything else on the back burner.
Turns out to be a really bad choice. What would have happened if the
novel boomed? What else did I have to offer? Nothing, nothing at all.
Time flew by without me noticing. My several attempts to setup a book
signing (not one of the bad marketing elements) gained few sales; got
enough to buy gas for the ride home. I spent endless hours building
webpages to showcase my new novel, ran giveaways for publicity, and
drown my Facebook friends with my bottomless posts about this great new
read they should all pick up. After one full year of promoting, I had
the title of the second book written down – on scratch paper. Talk about
progress towards my second book! I should have been editing it by now
instead of just figuring out the title.
Here’s a little side note before I go on, what is written above is
all true and should leave a sour twang in a reader’s mouth to think
selling a novel is more important than the work itself. That’s not so. I
felt it was important for those reading my post today to gain one bit
of insight I lacked. “Don’t stop writing. No matter how dear to you your
first manuscript is; the important thing to keep in mind is offering
something else after that book starts flying off the shelves.” I am not
dissuaded from my poor marketing skills to try again, but I have also
learned to leave these kinds of matters in knowledgeable hands when I
can afford it. Money trees don’t grow well in sandy soil and I seem to
live in a desert.
The real goal of an author comes from and old saying, “They like me.
They really, really like me.” It is the craving to have your ego
stroked, petted, and praised for doing such a good job. We, as writers,
always seek out vindication for what we do. On the flip-side, bad
reviews could kill the initial inspiration driving that newly born
writer. He/She might have a great storytelling voice, but just needs a
mentor to guide them. Bad reviews are wonderful. These reviews tell a
writer where something went wrong and allows them to fix it in the next
novel. Positive criticism (even in its lowest form of sounding down
right mean) can improve writing skills. I have listened to those worldly
critics and done just that with the sequel to Temperature: Dead and Rising.
With all this said, I sit and wait for the current publisher to to
finish the formatting and release my second novel, Temperature: Bitter
Cold, into the wild. I will keep you apprised of thing until then
through my fan page or website.