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I've written most of my life,
first published back in high school in a state poetry book of all things. Being
a chamber of commerce professional consumed most of my writing for many years
and it is just the last six or eight years that I've been able to try my hand
at fiction. The stories of my mother and her mother before her prompted me to
try my hand at it, the 3rd and 4th generation storytellers.
My favorite writing is
inspirational, though my love for westerns makes a western setting a favorite.
Daily prayer
and Bible reading. I'm well aware than any success I have is the
Lord's doing. I very often include the
Prayer of Jabez into my prayers, and firmly believe if I use my writing gift
out of my own ability, it will be small, but if I am a vessel for God to use
that it can be mighty. I believe He has
used it, and hope he will use me even more in the future.
Well done, good and faithful
servant. What more could any of us ask?
I think it'd be nice to be able
to plot or storyboard and I envy those who can do that, but I am what is known as a "seat of the pants writer." What
that means is, I really don't tell the story, my
characters do. Once I flesh them out and they become real to me they take over
the story and tell it to me, often going places I may not have intended, or
knowing things I do not know until I am inside their head. Often Saundra hears
me laughing and when she asks me what is going on I say, "You won't
believe what these people are doing over here."
Sure. Most of the time it seems
to be because I am trying to make a character do something that is not in their
nature. Stories are a series of crossroads taken, and I find if I'm blocked
that I have to go back to the last place I was happy with the way the story was
progressing and look to see what I can do differently.
When I read this, I thought of your approach to your writing career. Being an author not only means diligent writing requirements, but also being able to network and market your work. What percentage of your career is given to these two areas? To an aspiring author, what would you have to tell them about this side of the business?
Getting published requires
persistence and marketing research. There are good writers who never publish
because they take rejection personally and give up before they do what is
required to get where they are going. Successful publishing means finding out
who our readers are, who is writing books for them, and who is publishing those
books. So many do not do this legwork and are just shot-gunning queries all
over, often burning bridges to markets that with the right approach could be
successful. We'd all like to stay home and write and leave the selling of
manuscripts and the ultimate selling of the books themselves to others, but it
just doesn't work that way. Being successful as a writer demands total
involvement, at least until we reach the point where we are a household
word. That'd be nice, but I'm sure not
counting on it.
1. I noticed that your wife, Saundra, assists with your online newsletter. It’s fortunate to have a spouse so involved. Does she travel with you when you attend conferences, book signings, and such?
We're partners, and though
she has a career of her own as a massage therapist, Saundra acts as my business
manager when we are on the road. She is so wonderful with people that I would
be foolish to try and compete with her in that arena. She doesn't do line edit
for me but is very good at finding things in my work and particularly good at
telling me when something is working and when it isn't. I wouldn't be much
without her.
I seldom have a book signing or
event where people don't tell me they are writing a book or want to write a
book, and I always tell them to get on with it and quit talking about it. All that is required to be a writer is to
place your posterior in a chair and write, carve out the time and stay after
it. True, being a writer and being published are two separate things, and not all writers have it in them to have a career
as an author. But what's the worst thing that can happen? We have great stories
to pass down to our family, and I have some of those from family members who
did not make it as a writer, but who gave us wonderful stories to keep and
cherish. There are too many things in our lives where we look back and say
"I could have done that," but we'll never know if we don't try, will
we?