A Writer’s Resolutions
It’s that time of year again. Time to take stock of accomplishments, of progress on your goals for the year, and to look forward with great expectations to the new year ahead. First and foremost, my wish for all my friends, family, and readers is for enough of everything, and lack of nothing. I am so grateful for my wife, my son and daughter, my extended family, all my friends and you, the readers. I am truly blessed.
So I sat down to write out my goals for the coming year, and tried to be realistic about them. I thought I would share them with you all for two main reasons. First, nothing happens without a plan. It helps to set out a map if you want to get somewhere, and goals can work like that. They clarify your intent, and give you a place to work toward as you progress in your writing. Goals can be interval, marking progress over 3 months, 6 months, whatever you choose. They can also be longer term, but they need to be concrete and measureable in order to be truly effective.
Second, I have realized over time if you set a goal, and make it public, you are engaging a whole lot of people in the act of helping you stick to it. Don’t believe me? Try announcing your new weight loss goals toyour friends and family, and count the number of times they ask how your diet is going. So here is my list of literary goals for the new year:
1. Read more. I know that sounds a little contradictory, but that is how I learn the rhythm, the pacing and the overall feel I want toput in my stories. And it isn’t that I want to read just mysteries. I learnedover time that any well written story will do, because there is always
something to be learned.
2. Write 2-5 pages a day, every day. Sounds like a lot? Well, it is the same pace my daughter set for herself as she participated in the local middle school’s NaNoWriMo exercise and at the end she had a 10,000 word story. If my 13 year old daughter can show that much discipline, so can I. Also, at this point, I have three works in progress, including a new Joe Banks novel. I’m sure I can find something to write about.
3. Regularly contribute to Murder by 4. Self serving, maybe. But my day job has been so demanding that I have not been able to hold up my regularly scheduled day for participation with some of the most talented writers I know. It is another simple way to hone the blade, as it were, and continue to write for an audience. Also, in researching some of the articles I’ve written, I’ve learned more about the craft and business of writing. I am happy to share that with you.
4. Save the hard edits to the end. Nothing slows my progress like re-editing in the middle of the first draft. I know from all the really successful writers I’ve read that you do the major edits at the end, and you sort the wheat from the chaff and fine tune your work. But I can’t help it, I still do it. So this year I promise to save the clean-up to the end, and will use that period to send a more complete story to my publisher.
It’s a short list, but manageable. I hope this helps you set some goals for your writing, and I wish you all the success, love and luck to make you happy in the next twelve months. Now if I can only do something about losing those extra pounds...
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Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Merry Christmas (and Woo Hoo!)
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to all!
Hi, folks.
I hope you are staying warm and toasty, enjoying loved ones, and playing plenty of board games with the kids. Last night my grandson Julian and I put up the last of the Christmas lights at our house. Talk about getting it done in the 11th hour! It was freezing out, there was a little bit of snow on the ground (our first of the season), and we had a ball. These are the moments around the holidays that mean the most to me - and I hope you're having many of these moments with the ones you love. ;o)
Last week I wrote an article for authors - Part 1 of the nuts and bolts of getting your books onto ACX as audio books. I'll be writing part 2 soon.
Yesterday, much to my delight, Healey's Cave and Tremolo were released on Audible.com, Amazon.com, and iTunes. It's funny, but even though I wrote these books, I find listening to Tom Fraser and Erik Synnestvedt's recordings totally engrossing. These guys are so talented, I'm in awe of them. It's a whole different experience than reading - almost like going to the theater. I especially like all the voices they do - complete with accents! You can listen to samples of their recordings and more, here.
It's easy to give audio books. There's even still time before Christmas, if you're still doing some last minute shopping. ;o) For those folks who love a good story but don't have time to listen - it's perfect. They can listen in the gym, on a hike, grocery shopping, or driving to work. It's kind of like carrying a movie around in your pocket, but your brain does the scene painting! Pretty neat, huh?
I hope you are staying warm and toasty, enjoying loved ones, and playing plenty of board games with the kids. Last night my grandson Julian and I put up the last of the Christmas lights at our house. Talk about getting it done in the 11th hour! It was freezing out, there was a little bit of snow on the ground (our first of the season), and we had a ball. These are the moments around the holidays that mean the most to me - and I hope you're having many of these moments with the ones you love. ;o)
Last week I wrote an article for authors - Part 1 of the nuts and bolts of getting your books onto ACX as audio books. I'll be writing part 2 soon.
Yesterday, much to my delight, Healey's Cave and Tremolo were released on Audible.com, Amazon.com, and iTunes. It's funny, but even though I wrote these books, I find listening to Tom Fraser and Erik Synnestvedt's recordings totally engrossing. These guys are so talented, I'm in awe of them. It's a whole different experience than reading - almost like going to the theater. I especially like all the voices they do - complete with accents! You can listen to samples of their recordings and more, here.
It's easy to give audio books. There's even still time before Christmas, if you're still doing some last minute shopping. ;o) For those folks who love a good story but don't have time to listen - it's perfect. They can listen in the gym, on a hike, grocery shopping, or driving to work. It's kind of like carrying a movie around in your pocket, but your brain does the scene painting! Pretty neat, huh?
iTunes
Narrated by Dr. John Thomas Fraser
Narrated by Erik Synnvestvedt
How do people listen to audio books?
Then, download it onto your smart phone, iPad, iPod, PC or Mac, and you are allowed a one time burn to CD - usually it takes 7-10 CDs, depending on the length of the book. You can listen on your Kindle or Nook, your phone, or in your car using bluetooth through the speakers. Or, you can listen the good old-fashioned way using CDs at home or in your car.
Lots of options!
To spread the word, I'm asking folks to please pass this onto their friends and family - thanks in advance for helping out!
Happy Holidays and warmest regards,
Aaron Lazar
Many more audio books are coming! Stay tuned for Mazurka, FireSong, and For the Birds!
P.S. The new cover art for the sequel to Healey's Cave, Book 2 in Moore Mysteries, TERROR COMES KNOCKING, just came in, from artist Ardy Scott. Isn't it great?
Coming in February, 2012.
And here's the new cover for the author's preferred edition of DOUBLE FORTE', coming out in February, too. ;o)
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Out of the Mist
a
Good morning, all. I hope you are enjoying the holiday season. We're trying hard this year to spend more time in front of the fire playing Scrabble and Yahtzee, rather than running around buying stuff. Sure, we're giving presents, but we've toned it down a lot. We want to savor the season, not have to be hassled by all the craziness out there. So I hope you manage to carve out a few moments of quiet family time, too. Blessings to all.
Today please help me welcome thriller writer D. Pat Thomas to Murderby4. Pattie and I have been writing friends for a long time. When I read about her experiences in Scotland, they thrilled me, and I asked if she'd share them with us here today. She graciously agreed. ;o)
I hope this sends a shiver up your spine like it did to me. (and how DO you explain those upward flying "raindrops?")
Welcome, Pattie!
Aaron Paul Lazar
www.legardemysteries.com
a
OUT OF THE MIST
copyright 2011 by D. Pat Thomas
OUT OF THE MIST
We authors all know that when you do research, it’s to find out what you don’t already know. Thing is, you never know where that will lead you, and in my case, it came as a whale of a surprise.
The heroine of my first novel, Any Given Tuesday, is Scottish. Her name is Audrey. Having always been intrigued by Scottish history and culture, my second novel will have Scotland as one of its key locales. Attempts to research the history I was interested in were proving useless; local libraries had very little, the Internet was not getting me there and even Amazon didn’t have what I was looking for. There was but one thing to do: burn through some frequent flyer miles and go see what I could dig up.
As exotic as that sounds, the trip started out with whole days at the Scottish National Library in Edinburgh, sitting at a table, prohibited for using anything other than a pencil to record what I found. But the inventory of books was mind-boggling, and I sat with stacks of them piled in front of me, feasting on more information than I could hardly digest.
The Picts were a people who mostly inhabited the northeastern part of Scotland, then mysteriously disappeared leaving only an array of carved stones and some metal work behind for the rest of us to try to decipher. It wasn’t until my third day in the library that I learned something I never imagined: modern day witchcraft derives from Pictish religious practices. Say what? Of course, my research at night consisted of going on ghost tours and visiting graveyards, underground passages and dungeons. Edinburgh is like that.
Oh, my friends, that’s just the beginning. At this point I should make it clear that I have never written or aspired to write paranormal fiction. But I digress.
From Edinburgh I drove north into the misty highlands to Perth and stayed at a B&B on the River Tay. The owner was a garrulous bookworm, much taken with having a writer to pass time with. She told me stories. Like about the friend she’d had for over 20 years who just recently floored her by divulging her sideline as a medium.
Now I’m from Ohio, and things like that just haven’t happened in my neighborhood. It seemed everywhere I went, the supernatural preceded me.
I had picked out a small village for Audrey to be from. The local museum was rich with information about nearby Pictish stones, and the helpful and friendly librarian turned out to be (get ready) a past practitioner of the very witchcraft I’d been reading about!
Are you beginning to think this is all a bit odd? Me too. She introduced me to her friend, who sold jewelry and crystals and had just opened up a back “healing room” in her store.
I quite surprised myself by being totally comfortable with my new friends. And curious, I was very curious. Before I left, my new friend took me for a walk through the "Fairy Glen." She said she had seen pictures taken there that showed orbs glowing amongst the trees. I didn’t disbelieve her. But my pictures only showed lovely autumn woods with waterfalls in a heavy rain.
From there I drove along narrow roads curving through empty fields, on through moor and valley and along Lock Ness, gray and unsettled below. It was stark terrain with burgeoning, jagged rock outcroppings. At times I was sandwiched by soaring cliffs smeared with rust colored ferns, pressed deep inside narrow valleys with rushing streams crashing down from above. From Oban I took a ferry to the Isle of Mull and wandered there, lost from civilization, wrapped in foggy mist, dwarfed by the stark expanse of the desolate moor.
I’d read about a prehistoric stone near the B&B where I stayed on Mull. So I went there, and in a darkening drizzle, I lept across widening puddles in a broad field and squinted against the rain drops, trying to pick out the white stones marking my approach from the scattered sheep dotting the pasture.
Just as I started wondering if I should turn back, I saw it. An old mossy stone slab, sticking up from the soggy turf, making a statement that could no longer be understood.
I approached, stood transfixed, finally took a picture. I almost turned back but decided I needed to see the other side of the stone. Something about this decision felt very daring. I circled around, reverent before the ancient silhouette framed against the looming mountain across the pasture. I took another picture. For some reason, a part of me was magnetized, wanting to stay, to be still and assimilate this amazing prehistoric mystery, perhaps even to gain understanding.
I stood for a moment, pulled in. Then I took another picture and with indistinct but quickly increasing discomfort, I turned away to hurry back to the dry warmth of the car.
Now, cynic that I am, the “orbs” you see could probably be explained by the rain. Maybe there were droplets on the lens and they caught and reflected the flash that went off in the dimness of dusk. (Or not.)
But the last picture stumps me. They show the droplets, if that’s what they are, moving upwards. Last time I checked, it just doesn’t rain upside down. I have not altered these pictures; I wouldn’t know how to “create effects.” They were taken with a Canon PowerShot SD700 Digital Elf. (No pun intended)
You are invited to explain, comment, opine and educate me and others in my guestbook. If the orbs and streaks are supernatural, what are they? If they aren’t supernatural, how did they come to be in my pictures?
***
D. Pat
Thomas is a budding author from Cleveland, Ohio who harbors a fascination with
reading and writing blood-thumping thrillers. Her first novel, Any Given Tuesday, takes the reader deep
inside the reclusive culture of North Korea to expose a galling threat to the
free world. Her second novel, Stone of
Destiny, is in process and delves into the mysterious disappearance of the
Pictish people of Scotland. To find out more, go to www.d-pat-thomas.com.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
AUDIOBOOKS: HOW IT’S DONE THROUGH ACX.COM Part I
copyright 2017, Aaron Paul Lazar
Have you ever wondered how writers get their books made into audiobooks?
It's a lot of fun, as well as being another opportunity to share your work with the world and add some money to that monthly subsidy.
It's a lot of fun, as well as being another opportunity to share your work with the world and add some money to that monthly subsidy.
I currently have twenty-six books with ACX, Audiobook Creation Exchange. ACX is a wonderful site
where authors, producers, and actors can network and pair up. It's owned by Audible, which in turn belongs to Amazon. It's been growing in leaps and bounds over the past few years, and many authors and listeners swear by it as a reliable resource for affordable audiobooks.
Want to give it a go?
Read on! I’m going to document the process for you in a few articles so you can give it a try yourself. You’ll need to know how to get started, how to get through the editing process, and what to do once your book is available for sale.
Want to give it a go?
Read on! I’m going to document the process for you in a few articles so you can give it a try yourself. You’ll need to know how to get started, how to get through the editing process, and what to do once your book is available for sale.
A little bit of
history:
I’ve tried to record my own books. Lord knows, I’ve tried. I
spent a week downloading various (free) audio programs, playing with the
settings, recording just a few chapters over and over again every time I messed
up a word, or a loud truck went by, or the dogs barked.
I drove myself nuts. Finally, after hours of labor, I
created some audio files of me reading the first few chapters in Tremolo: cry of the loon, and posted
them on my website.
Don’t get me wrong. I enjoyed it. I really did. But while I
was doing this, I wasn’t writing. And
if I had ever hoped to get my complete set of sixteen books recorded as audio
books, it would have taken months for each project. I’d never get my current
book finished at that rate.
I sent off a few of the mp3 samples to my publisher. She had
her “audio guy” listen to them, and he said they had too much “hiss,” that I’d
need a different mike. Of course, I had used the simple microphone that comes
with my MacBook Pro, and that naturally isn’t geared for serious recording.
For the time being, I let it go at that. After all, I had
seven books to edit that were scheduled for 2012 release, and was working on
the third book in my Tall Pines mystery series. With the full time day job,
there wasn’t must time left for anything extra.
The tip:
The dream of getting my books into audio books didn’t die, it
just simmered under the surface for a little while, until a good friend gave me
a tip. Her Simon & Schuster book was going to audio book format through a
company called ACX.
Excited, I started to investigate. The nicest part
of the whole deal is one available option called “Royalty Share” where the narrators/actors/producers
and authors to do the recording work up front, put no money down, and then
share the royalties when the sales start coming in. Of course you can also
simply hire a narrator and his studio to do the recordings, and keep your share
of the royalties for yourself, if you want.
Alternatively, you can record your own books, but you’d probably have to invest in a good mike, become well-versed in manipulating audio files, or have a an audio-techie colleague to help you.
Important stuff to
know:
Now this part is really important. Please read this
carefully:
You need to find out who owns the audio rights for your book(s).
Check your book contracts, and if you’re not sure, call your
publisher.
I hadn’t really paid attention to that part of the
contract(s) with my original publisher, Twilight Times Books, but soon discovered that she
hadn’t included audio rights in our contract, so the rights were mine.
For those whose publishers’ have retained the rights, don’t
panic. Your publisher or agent can submit your books to ACX if he or she is so
inclined, you’ll just have to share the royalties with her and your actor/narrator/producer.
If you establish that you own the audio rights, the next
step is to register. Please note you must already have
books in the Amazon bookstore to be able to register.
I was surprised that Twilight Times Books wasn’t on the ACX publishers list
(lots of companies weren’t, since this is a new program and they are still
growing their lists), but didn’t let that stop me. I knew my publisher was
highly-regarded in the industry, that she’d been interviewed by Publisher’s
Weekly, and that our company was a member in good standing of Mystery Writers
of America (MWA) and International Thriller Writers. These credentials were
legit and impressive.
I was able to chat with Nicole O., one of the ACX customer
support folks, who was extremely helpful. We talked on the phone several times
about my publisher and my books, and I provided all the information needed. After
a while, the books were listed on the site for actors to listen to and
(hopefully) submit auditions. Of course, I had to upload all the details about
the work – number of pages, genre, synopsis, and a short excerpt for the actors
to use in their auditions.
I was thrilled to receive an audition almost immediately for
TREMOLO: CRY OF THE LOON.
The voice actor/narrator, Erik S, did a great job, creating a
very young-sounding voice for my eleven-year-old Gus LeGarde. I was pleased
with his accents for Gus’s grandparents who live in Maine, Oscar and Millie
Stone (British transplants), Elsbeth and Siegfried (German twins, Gus’s
friends,) etc. Each voice was consistent and unique, and wonderful rendered. (2014 update: Erik has also recorded the two sequels, Don't Let the Wind Catch You and Voodoo Summer.
The First Fifteen
Minute Sample:
After we started work on Tremolo, Erik prepared the first fifteen-minute
sample. I listened, made a few minor suggestions, and then approved the posted files.
This is important for many reasons. For one thing, you need to confirm that the
voices for each character are suitable and hopefully match the “voices in your
head.”
Well, that sounded a little weird, but if you’re like me and
consider your stories like parallel universes, then you know exactly how your
characters sound, and you often picture them in movies with actors you’ve
already chosen for them.
Am I right?
Okay, so the whole idea of checking out the first fifteen
minutes is so your British character doesn’t sound like he’s from the Bronx, or
your plucky heroine doesn’t sound too frail. Also, it gives you a good chance
to check the quality level of the recording facilities that your producer is
using.
We didn’t have to do much adjusting, frankly, because Erik
really nailed the accents without any coaching. He recorded the entire book
over a period of a month, sending me batches of audio files to listen to, and
when we were done catching any errors that might have crept into the files, he worked
on the technical items that needed fixing.
I panicked!
Erik went back to working on the files, and it was at that
point that I panicked. I was trying to upload my book cover art into the
required field on my Tremolo ACX
page, when I discovered that the cover art needed to be a square image.
Square? All of my covers were rectangular, in roughly 5x8
inch format.
I tried to cut the book cover down by cropping it, but there
was no way it was going to work and look proper in a square format.
Finally, like most guys, I used my last resort, and read the directions.
I studied the examples on the webpage of what was “acceptable” and what wasn’t.
Right there in front of me was the botched up cover just like the one I’d
attempted, with top and bottom cropped. Next to it was another stuck in a
square with white borders.
Nope. The cropping or squeezing-it-all-into-a-little-box
approach was not going to cut it!
The “acceptable” cover was designed from the beginning to
fit in a square template.
It was at this point that I started to worry about my rights
again. I would need the layered version of my covers so I could play with the
original art and design it to fit in a square box using Photoshop.
Did I own the rights to my cover art? Would my publisher
object to me using them, since she wasn’t involved in this venture? I helped
with the designs, and yes, many of my own photos and concepts were used, but I soon
discovered I didn’t own the artwork. My publisher was very sweet about it, but
she pointed out that she’d paid an artist to do the designs, and that they were
legally hers. I love my publisher and would never try to cross the line. So,
off I went to create new, square audio book covers.
Fortunately I have used Photoshop for years and knew how to
go about it. I’ve been designing “place holder” covers for years, even before I
submitted my manuscripts to my publisher, so I had lots of images to play with.
I like having a colorful image in my head (and on my websites) that gives a
feeling for what’s coming in the books.
I set about creating new, square covers using my Photoshop
Elements application.
There are specs you need to follow. For example, the cover
must be over 2400 by 2400 pixels, etc.
Here is the original cover for Tremolo and my new audio book
cover and following is an updated cover that I had my cover designer, Kellie Dennis, do for me:
Erik uploaded the final files to ACX, and I automatically
approved them, since I’d already listened to each one so many times and felt
comfortable that they’d be fine.
My first mistake:
I always say, “Double check! Triple check!” and am usually
quite obsessed with being absolutely sure all is good.
Just recently, I received notification from ACX that some of
the chapters were missing or repeated. Both Erik and I had missed the uploading
errors. But thankfully, the Quality group at ACX does a screening up front, and
the errors were quickly corrected. Erik and I worked on fixing it and all is now good!
More auditions came
in!
Meanwhile, in the midst of the Tremolo efforts, I received and enthusiastically accepted an audition
from a Canadian Recording Studio, for The Disappearance of Billy Moore, book 1 in Moore Mysteries, otherwise known as “the
green marble series.”
If you’ve ever wanted to have your books recorded and
available for folks to listen to, give it a try!
www.ACX.com
You can listen to
some samples of all my audio-books here.
NOTE: Part II discusses
many more tips and lessons learned along the way.
Aaron Paul Lazar
(Romantic
country mysteries set in the Finger Lakes region)
1. DOUBLE FORTÉ
2. UPSTAGED
3. MAZURKA
4. FIRESONG
10. LADY BLUES
11. VOODOO SUMMER
(Riveting
country mysteries with time travel and a Native American ghost)
1. THE
DISAPPEARANCE OF BILLY MOORE (formerly Healey’s Cave)
3. FOR
KEEPS
(Sensual
women’s mysteries set in the Adirondacks)
3. SANCTUARY
4. BETRAYAL
5. TALL PINES BOOK SET
PAINES CREEK BEACH Love Stories
(Sensual love stories by the
sea)
1. THE
SEACREST
2. THE
SEACROFT
3. THE
SEADOG
(Romantic suspense involving
kidnapping)
1. DEVIL’S
LAKE
WRITE LIKE THE WIND,
volume 1
WRITE
LIKE THE WIND, volume 2
WRITE
LIKE THE WIND, volume 3
***
Connect with Aaron
Lazar!
Facebook (personal page)
Linked
In
GooglePlus
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
How a Rocket Scientist Becomes a Writer
Hi, folks!
Please help me give a warm welcome to Stephanie Osborn today. This is Stepanie's first post on Murderby4, and after reading about her fascinating history and plethora of books, I hope she'll come back to post again soon.
Thanks, Stephanie, for joining us here today!
Aaron Paul Lazar
www.legardemysteries.com
How a Rocket Scientist Becomes a Writer
copyright 2011, Stephanie Osborn
My
first published novel was a SF mystery (I seem to have a fondness for combining
those two genres) published by Twilight Times Books back in 2009. Burnout: The mystery of Space Shuttle STS-281 is a techno-thriller about a Space
Shuttle disaster that turns out to be no accident.
There's
a loooong story behind the writing of Burnout.
For one thing, it took me between 10-15 years from the conception of the idea,
and the published book.
Why?
Simple.
I
was too close to it.
Let’s
back up a couple decades.
I’d
just started working in the field when the Challenger
disaster occurred. The program I worked at the time of the disaster was to have
led to a Shuttle mission, and I would have been a Payload Specialist candidate.
Shortly thereafter, the next phase of my project was cancelled due to the
grounding of the Shuttle Fleet. So I moved into the payload flight control
area.
Over
a couple of decades I worked seven Space Shuttle missions, at least four
increments on the International Space Station, and a number of space defense
programs. You get into some interesting conversations from time to time.
The
seeds of Burnout began as a
conversation concerning certain abilities of the Shuttle. It does have an
autopilot, and a very limited remote control capability. We discussed under
what circumstances a Shuttle could be damaged on orbit and still manage a
reasonably safe descent.
Sounds
morbid. But the first step to preventing a disaster is to figure out what might
cause one, then develop preventive measures and recovery procedures. This means
talking about it, working out the details of the malfunction, then working
backwards to “fix” it.
And
yes, this required considerable knowledge of the guts of a Shuttle. Betwixt us
all, we possessed the requisite knowledge. I don't know that we ever did decide
whether it was possible.
But
that was the birth of the idea. What if I wrote a story about a Shuttle
accident, and the ensuing investigation? What sort of accident should it be?
Should it cause merely a dangerous, or a catastrophic, malfunction?
And
then the idea hit: What if it WASN’T an accident?
And
that was when Burnout was born.
My
first Shuttle mission was the first Spacelab flight after the post-Challenger Return To Flight. So my
research for Burnout included all
of the investigative reports and such for that disaster. But I didn’t want
anyone thinking I was playing off a tragedy, so I changed the scenario. Whereas
Challenger blew during the ascent
phase, I’d make my fictional disaster occur during re-entry. I started writing.
So
here I was, squarely in the middle of a career in the Shuttle program, writing
about a Shuttle disaster. The exact thing that I, as a payload flight
controller, did NOT want to see, at least in real life. Certainly not on my
watch.
It
messes with your head, that.
So
I’d write on it awhile, then put it aside when it got to me. I wouldn’t look at
it again for months. Then the “plot bunny” would bite again, and I’d pull it
out and go at it for awhile.
Somewhere
in there, my husband Darrell introduced me to Travis “Doc” Taylor, best-selling
science fiction author, TV star of National Geographic’s When Aliens Attack and Rocket
City Rednecks and at that time, my husband’s co-worker. Darrell is a
graphics artist and does all of the artwork for my book covers, and had done
some cover concepts for one of Travis’ books. So when Darrell told Travis I was
trying to get published, Travis suggested he introduce us. Darrell did, we
clicked, and I acquired a writing mentor.
With
that encouragement, I pushed on. Darrell got used to stomping up to me when I
was writing: A husband suddenly materializing at my shoulder and saying
something is apt to end up with him peeling me from the ceiling.
Eventually
I finished a rough draft and sent it to Travis, who’d promised to read it and
give me a helpful critique. When he felt it was polished enough, he’d help me
further by submitting it to one of his publisher friends. He said he’d been
helped like that, and he intended to pass it forward. I promised him I would,
too.
So
I sent him the Word file and sat back, glad I’d finally gotten the thing
finished.
And
then, the unthinkable happened.
Columbia went down. And I had a
friend aboard.
By
that time, I was into military work, or my emotional response might have been
even worse. As it was, I put the manuscript away for six months or so. I'd lost
TWO friends at one go: KC, and Columbia;
because that was the Shuttle with which I'd worked the most.
I
talked to Travis later; he said it kinda freaked him too. He went over the
whole manuscript in detail, and sent me back a list of compliments, critiques,
and suggestions. Unfortunately I wasn’t in any kind of emotional condition to
use them. And wouldn’t be for nearly a year.
I
seriously considered trashing the manuscript. I downloaded the Columbia Accident Investigation Board’s
report and studied it, looking to see if I was way off in left field with my
scenario. If I was, then I should probably trash the manuscript anyway. If I
wasn’t…
I
wasn’t. I didn’t have to change a word.
In
the end, I went forward and dedicated the novel to Kalpana and the Columbia crew. I dug up Travis’ notes
and printed them out. I had to double the size of the manuscript, which meant
essentially writing a whole ‘nother story. So I wrote several stories, and
intertwined them in a series of subplots.
I
also wrote an afterward in which I basically swore up and down that the book
was written BEFORE the accident. I didn’t want anyone prone to conspiracy
theories thinking that, as a NASA insider, I’d written the real story of Columbia under the guise of fiction.
And
THEN… I sent it to Travis.
The first
publisher he sent it to rejected it. Not for any particular flaws in the book;
it turns out that 1) they weren’t taking on newbie authors at that time, 2) it
didn’t fit the type of book they usually published. That was hard. But I was
thankful I had a mentor, because Trav wouldn’t let me get down about it.
Instead he sent it to Twilight Times Books. I clearly remember his email going
out on a Thursday. On Sunday, the editor in chief, Lida Quillen, sent me an
email outlining the standard contract for accepting a book. By Monday, I had my
very first book contract in my hands. I was about to become a published author!
Next
came a year of reviewing, editing, honing, adding, subtracting, finding a
rather large plot hole and plugging it, galley proofs, and being asked to write
a book with another author. The Y Factor,
co-authored with Darrell Bain, the 2nd book of the Cresperia Saga
begun by Bain and Travis with the award-winning Human By Choice, came out in ebook the same day Burnout came out in ebook and print –
Tax Day, 2009. Both hit best-seller lists with various sales groups, and both
were favorably reviewed by a syndicated columnist in the New York Times.
Burnout has done rather well in the time it’s been in
publication. It’s been nominated for awards in four different genres – ebook,
science fiction, mystery, and thriller – and has garnered some interest from
Los Angeles. I already have the contract in hand for the sequel, and a
screenplay is written for a feature film project.
Burnout’s sequel, tentatively titled Escape Velocity, is in work. The master
script is nearly finished (though the shooting script isn’t even begun), and
hopefully some producers will be interested in bringing my imagination to
cinematic life in the near future. The Y
Factor’s sequel, The Cresperian
Alliance, is out; I’ve written a book with Travis titled Extraction Point. And I have an entire
series, the Displaced Detective saga,
in work, with the first story in two volumes, The
Case of the Displaced Detective: The Arrival and At Speed, just released.
I
left the space program shortly before Travis submitted Burnout for me. Now I write full time, and have 10 books,
novel and anthology, under my belt. From rocket scientist to author in a couple
of years’ time.
Not too
shabby, I suppose.
Stephanie Osborn (www.stephanie-osborn.com)
is a former payload flight controller, a veteran of over twenty years
of working in the civilian space program, as well as various military
space defense programs. She has worked on numerous Space Shuttle flights
and the International Space Station, and counts the training of
astronauts on her resumé. Of those astronauts she trained, one was
Kalpana Chawla, a member of the crew lost in the Columbia disaster.
She holds graduate and undergraduate degrees in four sciences: Astronomy, Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics, and she is "fluent" in several more, including Geology and Anatomy. She obtained her various degrees from Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, TN and Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN
She holds graduate and undergraduate degrees in four sciences: Astronomy, Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics, and she is "fluent" in several more, including Geology and Anatomy. She obtained her various degrees from Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, TN and Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN