It took me years to
write, will you take a look?”
--The Beatles, “Paperback Writer”
When I was about 10 years old—give or take a year or two—I
started a neighborhood newspaper. Well, I use the term loosely. I wrote out the
neighborhood “news” in pencil on notebook paper, made a couple of copies and
handed it out to family and friends. I may have sold it for a few cents, but
more likely I just gave it away.
The one-page flat sheet probably included such breaking news
as who got what for his or her birthday and who won the day’s baseball game in
the Hawkins’s side yard. I think the number of editions topped out at…let me
think…one.
It wasn’t much, I’ll admit, but it started me on a writing
career that has spanned more than 40 years, including 13 as a newspaper
reporter, sports writer and editor; 20 years writing public relations
materials; 10 years as a freelance communications consultant; and three years
as a blogger. During all of that time, I had one thought residing deep in the
back of my mind:
“So you think you’re a
writer? Then why don’t you write a book?”
That idea started to become a reality about 20 years ago
when I was mowing the lawn at our new house in Hagerstown, Maryland, and my
mind began to wander. A day or so earlier, if I recall correctly, I had
struggled to plant an eight-foot pear tree in our barren back yard, which was
hard as concrete and full of rocks, and I wondered, “What if a man was digging
in his yard and found something he didn’t expect?”
Spoiler alert: It was
a time capsule.
I started thinking about writing such a story and in 2004
began to commit the book to paper—or rather to a keyboard. I began by writing
down the first thoughts that popped into my mind, then began to develop the
story and eventually incorporated some short stories I had written previously
by linking them into the main thread. I thought it was a good secondary plot
line and also a sneaky way to make the book get longer.
In the intervening years between then and now, I finished
the first draft of the book, edited it, didn’t like it much, rewrote parts of
it, shared it with my wife and a friend, accepted their constructive criticism,
made more changes, set it aside, wrote some more, realized it didn’t make sense
chronologically and put it away for several years until recently, when I
decided to give it one more look. I fixed all the parts I didn’t like,
straightened out the timeline and improved some of the characters…and sent it
off to a publisher for an editorial review.
When word came back that the publisher liked my work, we
began the process of turning my Time
Capsule manuscript into a novel.
Not only that, but Beth and Tim Rowland at High Peaks
Publishing liked my first effort well enough to encourage me to keep writing,
and asked if I had anything else to show them. I had started a second book several
years ago but had only written all of three pages, so I set out to make a book
out of them and in three weeks had completed a second novel. I have since
written a third one and have started to write a fourth.
So today as I write this, the finished draft of Time Capsule—after one last round of edits—is
in the pipeline for publication and work will begin soon to design a cover and
format the manuscript into paperback and e-book form. Actual publication is
still weeks away, but it occurs to me that before long, I’ll be able to hold in
my hands a book that I wrote from out of my own head, and that nearly 60 years
after scribbling out the first and only neighborhood newspaper, I have finally
done what actual writers do—I have written a book…or three.
Eventually, all three will be published and maybe even more.
At least, I hope that will be the case. I will be able to call myself an author
and you can carve that on my tombstone when I die. I only wish I had started
all of this 30 years ago, but I guess it’s better to have started late in life
than never to have started at all.
Did someone important say that? As a writer, I feel like I should
know.
looking forward to reading them!
ReplyDeleteThanks. I hope you will enjoy reading them as much as I enjoyed writing them.
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