Writing, writing, writing
I recently dusted off my old novel, Island of Fog, which I started way back in 2002. I wrote the first eight chapters fairly quickly, but then went into development hell and ended up revising everything I'd written. Then I wrote a few more chapters, and promptly went into development hell again. I completely re-arranged everything. Finally my ducks were in a row and I was able to advance to the next few chapters. By this time I had reached chapter twelve, and ideas/excerpts for several more chapters were taking shape.
Then, towards the end of 2006, I had to put my novel away and concentrate on working and being a father to my new little baby while my wife went back to school. I vowed to return to Island of Fog as soon as Lily started school.
She's now four and at Pre-K, and my novel has been calling me. "Keeiiiitthhh," it's been whispering in my dreams. "Open me up. Dust me off. Finish meeeeeeeee." So, in this last month I've written quite a bit -- something like 21,000 new words in addition to numerous read-throughs and further edits to older chapters. I'm now on Chapter 18, about 68,000 words in total so far. I plan to finish somewhere around Chapter 23+- depending on how things go, so I guess it'll be around 90,000 words when it's done.
On a few occasions I've been able to start and end a chapter in one session, which makes me very happy! It makes me feel very good about myself, and I can go and have another beer in celebration. When I don't make it through a whole chapter, I have another beer as a boost to my confidence. Oddly, when I don't get ANY writing done, I have another beer to drown my sorrows. So beer is a big factor in all this, no matter what. Still, beer tastes better with a little smile on my face than a grumpy frown.
I'm finding my characters easy to re-acquaint with. I know them very well by now, but I don't know everything about them yet. There are eight kids, all the exact same age, and each an only child. They were born and raised on this foggy island, and have never seen a blue sky, nor been Out There to the world that their parents abandoned. One of the kids, Abigail, is convinced they're all part of some experiment, and before long Hal and Robbie get the idea to build a raft and escape the island (see this website's masthead). It's risky though. The mainland is not too far away... but it's supposed to be a dead place now, and besides, there's talk of a hideous sea monster hanging about in the water surrounding the island. Is there really, or is this just a story? Meanwhile, Hal develops a strange itchy rash on his arm that comes and goes at random times, and it becomes apparent that this rash is the beginning of Much Bigger Issues...
I know about 95% of the story, but there are some details I haven't worked out yet. This is almost a case of watching it all unfold, as good old Enid Blyton did... but not quite. Like Blyton I tend to write and write with a vague sense of direction, but unlike Blyton I tend to stop and think, "Er, now what?" Don't get me wrong -- the path ahead is still clear. It's just that's there's a chasm I have to cross first. That's when I walk away, go and pick Lily up from school, clean up the kitchen, hack a few weeds, tidy out the van... Finally, inspiration hits and I get back to my writing. (I hasten to add that picking up Lily from school is something I would do anyway, regardless of how my book is going!)
Even when I finally write the last word of the last chapter, I have a lot of editing ahead of me. There are endless ways to refine sentences, change passive to active, and so on. I write fairly easily, kind of editing as I go, thinking things through and trying to tighten up my wording... but no matter how careful I am, I still find more to edit when I go over it again. Some writers are methodical about their edits; I heard about one who said he runs through the entire book exactly eight times, looking for a set list of different things with each pass. That sounds too regulated to me. And eight times? I think I've read my stuff a billion times by now, and it's still not write.
(Sorry, I meant right. Believe it or not, that's the kind of error I find from time to time, even after several read-throughs. *Sigh*)
It sounds excellent, and I really think you should approach an agent or publisher rather than going down the self-publishing route. I know self-publishing guarantees that the book will be published and published now rather than at some dim and distant point in the future and just possibly maybe, but ... I still think the traditional way is best, partly because they have people who can help you get it into shape and partly because — hey, they'll put the money in to publish it, distribute it, etc.
Have you thought of trying somewhere like Fidra Books? They republish old adventure books by Elinor Lyon and others, but I know Vanessa is happy to read new books with a view to publishing, and it sounds like yours might not be out of place on her list.
Good on you for getting on with the writing, though. I have been very slack of late, largely thanks to my preference for watching people running, jumping, somersaulting and throwing things. But I've just started a rewrite of the second book in my school-story series that's being published by Bettany Press, and I've also been working on ideas for a book aimed at the Australian kids' market.
Liz
Hi Keith, your novel sounds extremely good. Good luck on publishing. Of my opinion on the self v/s traditional publishing matter, I agree with Liz Filleul. Traditional publishing is way better.
Good luck on finishing.
Good for you, Keith. You're doing what I have only talked about. I look forward to reading it!
Well done Keith. It seems to be going along well. Once you've finished your book, will be the greatest feeling I'm sure. Good luck with which ever road to publishing you choose.
Hello...
I knew exactly what you meant when you wrote that you have to cross a chasm first before you continued your writing. I like reading so much and I continued to go to the local bookshop and library regularly until my playmate and classmate and all-the-time mate asked me, "You keep reading books from other people. When are you going to read a book by your hands?"
The question left me thinking for days and days. Then, I got up with a pure intention of yielding a storybook. I drew the plots and created the characters. I was at the quarter of the start when suddenly, all the ideas in my head just before I got hold of my laptop disappeared in the thin air. All of a sudden, I got a new idea, a whole new fresh idea of a teen book. I was in the middle of it when the same thing happened again. I lost all my ideas and I just stopped there.
I made a lot of ideas and yet, I created so little of it. When I was older, I tried to complete all my trials and I am attempting to finish my first idea of a teenager book about Sylvie Emerson Enright. I do hope that I can complete this book and what pleased me so much is I am already going further in the book.
So, I can completely understand your cross-the-chasm-first thing. Well, in my point of view, you already have your story in your hand. You just made up your mind on yielding your book and perhaps you can follow the advice of Miss Filleul. She has her point and I do think that self-publishing route is harder. Experience is the best teacher, as the saying goes.
I have not written in a long time because of my endless homework and examinations what with my sports training. So, I hope that this piece of comment might worth all the neglect. Plus, I see a lot of difference which I am just too happy to see. After all, it's a long duration of time. Plus, I got to see many new names with new-and-fresh comments. Well, that's for now. See you later.
Love and cheers,
Mimsy Kirana
Thanks, all, for your comments!
Liz, I hadn't realized you were published already! Please tell all. You can either email me, or post it here — plug away, don't be shy! I looked at Fidra Books (I've heard of them before) and I have considered that kind of thing, and it's always an option. I'd rather work with a local agent if possible; there's nothing like sitting down and talking face to face. I know a local author/publisher who is my first stop if I can ever pin him down — he's always busy! — but even if he can't help directly, he might be able to point me in the right direction.
As my new post points out, I'm like a pendulum when it comes to choosing between traditional and self-publishing (via POD). Obviously there's no real comparison — to be published with a big name is clearly the best thing. IF the manuscript is accepted! But there are many other considerations too, including promotion. How much promotion did Bettany Press do for you?
Thanks also, Harry, Nigel, Julie and Mimsy, for your kinds words and encouragement. :-)
I've had a few things published. Last year Bettany Press (a small-press publisher in the UK) published To All Appearance, Dead, a whodunit set in the world of girls' school-story collecting. This year, they're publishing First Term at Cotterford, a contemporary girls' boarding school novel. I've had true-crime stories published in a couple of anthologies put out by Five Mile Press here in Australia. And last year Mira (a branch of Harlequin) published an anthology of award-winning stories from Australia's annual Scarlet Stiletto Awards for short crime fiction by women — I had a story in there, because I won the main award in 2004. I currently have an Australian small-press publisher looking at doing an Australian edition of To All Appearance, Dead, so fingers crossed for that to work out. I'm also working on ideas for a couple of things that hopefully Five Mile Press will publish down the track — fingers crossed for that, too.
I try very hard to match what I write to a publisher I think will be interested in it. With To All Appearance, Dead, the main market was obviously going to be collectors of girls' school stories, so I approached Bettany Press, who republish old books in that genre. Girls Gone By and Fidra Books do the same thing, but I approached BP because their list included other books that were a bit 'different', and I thought they might be more likely to go out on a limb with my book. The book was launched at a conference for book collectors in the UK (I attended it, because the timing coincided with my visit to the UK to visit my mom) and I read out passages from it and signed copies. A media release was sent out, but didn't attract any attention, which was a shame, but there it is. Bettany Press is a tiny publisher and can't compete with the big publishers in that way.
Show/hide all posts
- Box of Fables (Island of Fog Book 16) is finished! How would you like to read it earlier than everyone else?
- How to find the best keywords for Amazon (AMS) sponsored ads
- Next Chapter Con - A Books and Authors Convention
- The best laid plans of mice and men... and overworked writers who bite off more than they can chew
- Look out for at least 3 new books coming in 2019
- Book cover, title, and blurb - how did I get it so wrong?
- A cat named Frosty, a new book convention, and unicorns
- Fantasy and sci-fi cons and other author events
- Sci-fi episodic serial fiction - free for KU Kindle Unlimited readers
- How I'm going to publish 15 books in seven months
- Post a review for Island of Fog Box Set 1-3 and help make the next Box Set free!
- Doctor Who, anyone?
- Death Storm (Island of Fog Legacies #5) is published!
- A mild obsession with talking dragons in my fantasy books
- Middle-grade fantasy books with an Island of Fog theme
- Finding mythical monsters to put in my books
- Working hard to hardly work
- Island of Fog Box Sets now available... and FREE on Kindle Unlimited
- Get ready for a World of Fog
- Exactly how many times does an author edit and proofread a novel before publishing?
- New book hurtles toward publication
- Female fauns and other imponderables
- Save 20% on Island of Fog titles for a limited time
- A faun with a mist-erious power
- Think your book doesn't need proofreading? Think again!
- Results of BookBub promo for Sleep Writer (Book 1)
- Warp Giants (Sleep Writer Book 4) is published!
- A book is finished, and a new one starts!
- Con Nooga... and reactions to my book selling techniques
- Goodbye 2017, Hello 2018
- Tails of a Shapeshifter is published!
- Sleep Writer series has a brand new set of covers
- Constructing, websiting, and writing all at once
- Haunted Fortress (Island of Fog Legacies #4) is published!
- Completed book, forthcoming books, audiobooks, book sales, book covers, and... darkness!
- Book 4 of the Island of Fog Legacies just about finished
- Cover art, movie theaters, lazy writing, clunky first chapters, and being incredibly successful
- Novel proofreading service
- Gargoyle Scourge (Island of Fog Legacies #3) is published!
- Gargoyle Scourge available from bookstores on March 1st, 2017
- Island of Fog translated into Spanish!
- Gargoyle Scourge is ready for beta reading
- Happy holidays, massive downloads, foggy plans, black comedies, and daft ideas
- Gargoyles, a classroom in Australia, book reviews, and my kitchen floor
- Working on a new book cover for Sleep Writer
- When is it okay to give away major plot details?
- Latest book, website changes, marketing, and freebies!
- What's a self-published indie novel really worth?
- Sinister Roots (Island of Fog Legacies #2) is published!
- Sinister Roots launches in 9 days... and Unicorn Hunters is on sale!
- Plotting the next book
- Sinister Roots is finished!
- Back from vacation, and hardly a word written!
- Writer's block, stalling, and just plain old procrastination
- How do most readers find good new books to read?
- On the lookout for repeated words in manuscripts
- Free short story The Silver Wand (Part 4 of 4) now available
- Introducing the next book in the Island of Fog Legacies series
- Answers to a few niggles
- Unicorn Hunters (Island of Fog Legacies #1) is published and available everywhere!
- Free short story The Silver Wand (Part 3 of 4) now available
- Using a Chromebook for novel writing and editing
- Early reviews for Unicorn Hunters
- Pre-order Unicorn Hunters and get it on March 15th 2016
- Free short story The Silver Wand (Part 2 of 4) now available
- Unicorn Hunters first draft finished!
- Free short story The Silver Wand (Part 1 of 4) now available
- Sleep Writer series now available in paperback!
- New cover for new book in new Island of Fog series!
- Just over a million words
- Free short story Be Good for Belsnickel now available
- My name is Keith Robinson and I'm a writer
- Free short story The Soothsayer now available
- Mountain of Whispers Audiobook now available!
- Help make a book permafree... and then get it for free!
- Caleb's World (Sleep Writer Book 3) is published
- Another book just about ready to publish
- Free short story Trading Magic now available
- Free short story Unicorn Poachers now available
- Caleb's World undergoing final edits
- Free short story Robbie and the Ogres now available
- Monsters in the Fog is published!
- The second Island of Fog Chronicles book due for release on August 1st
- Free short story Riding the Serpent now available
- Robot Blood (Sleep Writer Book 2) is published
- Labyrinth of Fire Audiobook now available!
- Robot Blood is finished!
- Free short story Darcy the Dryad now available
- Robot Blood nearing completion and on schedule for June release
- Free short story Bird-Girl and the Shaggy Beast now available
- The price of Island of Fog novellas
- Free short story Night of the Centaur now available
- Free short story Nameless Monster is available today
- Island of Fog Audiobook published!
- Plans to continue the Island of Fog series
- Get a free cartoon of your child or other small person as a superhero monster!
- Eye of the Manticore and Wings of a Faerie are published!
- Countdown to February 15th
- Unearthed (Fractured Book 2) is published!
- Lots of fog planned for 2015
- Eye of the Manticore is finished and in final editing stage
- Island of Fog audiobook planned for release in the spring
- Island of Fog as an audiobook?
- A Very Merry Shapeshifting Christmas
- What's happening over Christmas and into the New Year
- Unearthed (Fractured Book 2) is ready for beta readers
- Island of Fog Chronicles coming in the New Year
- Island of Fog Omnibus Edition (Books 1-3)
- Fractured Book 2 is full steam ahead
- Sleep Writer (Book 1) is published!
- New series about to be launched
- Castle of Spells (Island of Fog, Book 9) is published!
- Possible reworking of Island of Fog
- Prison of Despair (Island of Fog, Book 8) is published!
- Castle of Spells on the horizon
- Prison of Despair beta readers!
- Last day of April
- Coming up in 2014
- The timeline in a long-running series
- What future Island of Fog tales would YOU like to see?
- My new writing regime
- Island of Fog Book 9: Castle of Spells
- Island of Fog Book 8: Prison of Despair
- Quincy's Curse is published!
- What's going on (and not)
- Valley of Monsters (Island of Fog, Book 7) is published!
- How to provide a reader with recaps of previous books in a series
- Valley of Monsters is now out to beta readers
- Are you interested in beta-reading Valley of Monsters?
- A series of Unearthly Tales starting in 2014
- Quincy's Curse out for beta reading
- FRACTURED is published and available!
- Progress on Valley of Monsters and beyond
- Books I'll be publishing in the next few months
- Island of Fog Book 7: Valley of Monsters
- Advertising and promoting an ebook with BookBub
- Sci-fi and fantasy novel Fractured is ready for beta reading
- Going perma-free on Amazon
- All books in the Island of Fog fantasy series now available at Amazon, Kobo, iBookstore, and Barnes & Noble
- Finding beta readers and proofreaders for your self-published indie novel
- Writing and editing a sci-fi/fantasy novel with another author
- Island of Fog is a B.R.A.G. Medallion Honoree
- Ned Firebreak by Brian Clopper
- The cost of shipping books internationally
- Chamber of Ghosts is published
- Island of Fog Book 7 - including prequel!
- Pre-order Chamber of Ghosts
- Movie adaptation of Island of Fog for release in 2015 (April Fool's)
- Island of Fog featured as Book of the Month
- Letters and artwork from a classroom in North Carolina
- Calling for Chamber of Ghosts beta readers
- Late edits to Chamber of Ghosts
- Website overhaul
- The ISLAND OF FOG fantasy series
- Collaborative novel writing
- Fractured - a free sci-fi and fantasy novel
- First draft of Chamber of Ghosts is finished
- Dragon book series
- Four FREE Kindle books for Christmas
- Piers Anthony reviews Roads of Madness
- Writing schedule
- How to design a book cover
- Island of Fog Book 6 - Chamber of Ghosts
- Free Kindle books for Halloween
- Island of Fog Book 6
- KDP Select aftermath
- In the works for 2012 and 2013
- Searching for young-adult and middle-grade fantasy books on Kindle
- Roads of Madness is available in print
- Does KDP Select work?
- Roads of Madness is available on Kindle
- Island of Fog is FREE for Kindle on August 29th-30th
- Brand new Island of Fog web page
- New book cover for Island of Fog
- Advanced reader copies of Roads of Madness nearly ready
- Flight of Blue
- Irving Wishbutton and the Questing Academy
- Get an advance copy of Roads of Madness
- Roads of Madness preview and launch date
- Ideas to reboot the Island of Fog series
- Price change for Kindle and Nook ebooks
- Letters and artwork from fifth-grade students
- Summer Reading Kick-off - winner of Island of Fog series
- The power of a printed book
- Author Keith Robinson's Fantasy Novels Make Front Page With Chickamauga Library Book Signing
- How NOT to promote your self-published novel
- Book signing at Chickamauga Library on April 10th
- Roads of Madness on Twitter and Facebook
- Do you like cliffhangers in novels?
- Island of Fog Book 5: Roads of Madness
- Brian Clopper: writer, teacher and foot soldier
- Quincy's Curse and Caleb's World
- What does 2012 have in store?
- On the subject of Santa Claus
- Lake of Spirits review by Piers Anthony
- Stop typing for a second, please!
- Where did Miss Simone come from?
- Are prologues necessary?
- Lake of Spirits now available in print
- Dragon*Con 2011
- Lake of Spirits available on Kindle and Nook
- Third Writers' Platform-Building Campaign
- Lake of Spirits proofreading and editing is finished!
- Reviews and featured spots for Island of Fog series
- Why I write a chapter summary for the next book
- What blog posts do you like and dislike?
- Creepy and not great for impressionable children
- Lake of Spirits is being proofread
- Thinking about Island of Fog: Book 5
- On the search for a literary agent
- How many self-published books sold to date
- Lake of Spirits first draft is FINISHED!
- The second trilogy
- Progress in the lake
- The benefits of self-publishing and ebooks
- Millions of books sold at Barnes & Noble
- Book signing at Barnes & Noble, Chattanooga, TN
- Letters from Jones Dairy Elementary School Part II
- The science of fantasy creatures
- The phoenix arises
- Island of Fog Book IV: Lake of Spirits
- The Impossible World
- Preparing for the storm
- A new year and a new novel
- Question Time: Part 2
- NaNoWriMo 2010 Winner
- Publisher says no
- NaNoWriMo update
- NaNoWriMo 2010
- Books Never-Ending
- On the shelf at Barnes & Noble
- School blog
- Question Time: Part 1
- Dragon*Con in Atlanta, Georgia
- On TV again... or was I?
- Author copyright
- Busy day at the office
- Mountain of Whispers is PUBLISHED!
- Mountain of Whispers is FINISHED!
- Minichapters
- Mountain of Whispers final book cover!
- Mountain of Whispers cover update
- Books can be ordered at Barnes & Noble
- You can't rush a genius...
- Look, I can't help being British
- Cherokee Regional Summer Reading Kickoff 2010
- Readability test
- Review by Publishers Weekly
- Mountain of Whispers first draft completed
- Farewell to ABNA
- Naga mythology... and Medusa
- Abigail doesn't sing!
- ABNA expert reviewers
- The ABNA quarterfinalist results are in!
- Writer's Digest International Self-Published Book Awards
- Letters from Jones Dairy Elementary School
- ABNA first round winning pitch
- A third of the way through Mountain of Whispers
- New shipping rates
- Manticores
- ABNA pitch
- Piers Anthony and Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award
- Book Talk at Rossville Library
- Quality control at CreateSpace
- Mountain of Whispers
- Book III: The plot thickens
- Expanded Distribution at CreateSpace
- Self-publishing
- Book delivery... and new book trailer
- Replacement order, watery events, and ideas for book title
- Box of books missing... or lost?
- Book Nook in Dalton
- Book review winner... and Happy Thanksgiving!
- Book signings and events galore
- Labyrinth of Fire available for pre-order
- Grammar, and other pointless trivia
- Library visit, events, agents, editing, and reviews!
- Teen Read Week at Chickamauga Library
- Georgia Literary Festival 2009
- Book cover comparison
- New dragonized book cover
- Win a copy of Labyrinth of Fire by reviewing Island of Fog
- 104,227
- Final chapters of Labyrinth of Fire
- Lava tubes and dragons
- Male harpies
- Impromptu talk and book signing at Rossville Middle School
- Three library book talks finished
- Treatments and manuscripts
- Ray Atkins book talk and signing
- The Bookshelf interview on UCTV-3
- TV and film agent for Island of Fog
- TV interview and appearances
- Island of Fog now on Kindle
- Tweeting and writing
- Gumberoos and squonks
- Labyrinth of Fire
- First public speaking
- Thumbs up from Piers Anthony
- Down Home Days
- First delivery of books
- Island of Fog now published and available to buy!
- PDF download now available
- Proof book has arrived
- Island of Fog is published!
- Final, final, FINAL edit
- The manuscript is back!
- Sending Island of Fog to an editor
- Self-Publishing vs. Traditional Publishing
- Writing, writing, writing
- Feeling an urge to write