Two nights ago, I did something I've been dreaming of for years. I'm crazy busy already, but I'm never truly happy if I'm not writing, so during a break from school, I acted on something I had thought about since summertime, and I pitched my book to Astrea Press.
They liked my pitch, and asked to see the rest which they also like. So they offered me a publishing contract, which we signed on the second.
They're going to publish my book!
I'm going through the paperwork now, and delving into the exciting world of publishing. Here's to my new adventure.
Sara Burr Books
Saturday, January 4, 2014
Monday, June 3, 2013
Insight, by Terron James, Blog Tour
Today's blog post is a little bit of me, and a little bit of a friend, and a little bit about an awesome new book, Insight, by Terron James.
When Terron started preparing the publicity part of his book release, and he asked if I was interested in receiving an advanced reader copy (or ARC) of his book in exchange for an honest review, I enthusiastically responded yes! I've seen bits of his writing at work before, and it's good, but also, his book sounded awesome, and I really love to collect ARCs! There's something really special, I think, about having something that's never going to be for sale. I feel like I'm in on an exciting secret.
So, his publicist sent me an email, asking me what I'd like to have Terron write about for a guest post, if anything. And this leads to a confession. I'm sort of an author-blog-stalker. Whenever I fall in love with the writing of a new author, I like to find out their back story -- just like I would want to know the back story of a really great character in a book. It's because I'm inspired by them, and by how they became writers.
This was my response to Terron's publicist, "One of the things I like to do when I'm becoming familiar with a new author is to gain a better understanding of their back-story, so to speak. How did they go from a regular job to an author? Obviously, for most first time authors, they still work in their regular jobs, but the adventure of writing your first novel is still an interesting one. And often times, your first published novel is not your first novel. I'd love to hear about that from Terron. How did he get to this point -- the point at which he is officially a published novelist?"
And here is what Terron had to say, "I could write a novel about my writing journey (and perhaps I will some day), so I'll try to keep this post focused on the main points. I'm also going to bare the truth a little, at the risk of discrediting myself. *glances warily over shoulder to see if publicist is looking* Yup, that's what I'm gonna do.
I wrote my first short story in 7th grade. The story itself was blah, but I can still remember the inspiration I felt 21 years ago as I wrote it. Pure euphoria, truly! Unfortunately, I let myself forget. Aside from a few romantic and therapeutic poems that I wrote in the late 1990s, I didn't exercise my creative talent again until 2008, when I first started writing INSIGHT.
*glances over shoulder again, then leans forward and speaks in a whisper*
*glances over shoulder again, then leans forward and speaks in a whisper*
Don't tell anyone, but not only is INSIGHT my debut novel, but it is also the first real story I ever attempted to write. Perhaps that's why I spent 2 years writing, then another 3 years revising. It needed a lot of work from the original draft. That being said, I couldn't believe how my writing improved by the time I finished writing the rough draft of INSIGHT, then even further after the waves of edits. I suppose it shouldn't be too surprising, though. 135,000 words will do that to a fella.
I hope that, rather than discouraging people from reading INSIGHT, my experiences will inspire writers around the globe. Prodigism isn't necessary to become a published author. Come closer and I'll tell you the real secret. You ready?
Diligence!
As you can probably imagine (or maybe you can't, but it doesn't really matter), there have been countless opportunities during the past five years when I could have easily thrown in the towel. The sad thing is, if I had done it then, I would've felt completely justified in my decision. I wouldn't have felt bad about it at all, but I also wouldn't have been able to experience the joy of seeing my book on a international bookstore's shelf last Saturday.
Closing thought. I am a firm believer that our worst experiences in life also become our best experiences, but ONLY if we conquer them. We all love a good "defy all odds" story, full of tension and near failures. "Near" is the key operating word, here; situations where people are pushed to the very edge of their limits, perhaps even past, but they scramble up and stomp on the opposition. Remember this. Success rarely comes packaged in the mail with a pretty, pink bow and a welcome card attached. Usually it requires more blood and sweat than we think we have in us. I'm here to tell you, if I could do it, you can do it. START NOW! Tomorrow is procrastination's best friend. They meet for tea and crumpets every Thursday afternoon."
Do you see how clever and witty he is???
His book, Insight, will not disappoint.
I won't spoil it for you ... just a taste!
The book centers around three main characters; Lon, his twin sister, Mellai, and his betrothen, Kaylen. From the very beginning of the story, Lon is struggling with powers known as True Sight, which identify him as a Beholder. The True Sight is the power that binds the world together, and as a Beholder, Lon can see it, if in the right emotional state, and he can use it. The problem is, the right emotional state seems to come only when he's frustrated, angry or otherwise upset, and he can't control the outcome. These powers are overwhelming him, and his family has no idea how to help him get them under control. If something isn't done soon, Lon's going to die, or someone he love will be caught in the crossfire.
After an accident hurts Kaylen, Lon leaves their small village in search of help from the very people he was raised to hate the most, the Rayders. Lon's father believes there is one man who will be able to teach him what he needs to know. In order to gain his trust, Lon will need to become a Rayder and gain status among them. The plan is to gain status within the Rayder tribes, and then betray them later on down the line by abandoning them -- much like his father did when he met his mother. But will Lon stick to the plan? Lon hatches a different sort of a plan in the end. You will be surprised by the outcome.
What I loved about Insight the most was the magic. I am a magic junkie, and the magic in this book was COOL! Right from the prologue, James has you sucked in by the magic system, and wondering where it came from and what it is. I also like how rare the magic is. Rather than living in a magical society, Lon is in danger, both by the people who find out about his magic, and by himself because he can't control it. His magic became much stronger as he approached his coming of age. When I write about magic, that's typically how I approach it, as well -- with the magic growing stronger as the character gets older -- so I really identified with that.
I also thought that the relationships were extremely well done, particularly the tender love that Lon and Kaylen shared right from the start. It was so sad, when he had to leave.
It's a sweeping epic fantasy, and all that comes with that. For me, one of the downsides to epics is the length. I tend to like a quicker read. Also, it takes a lot longer to set up the story in a book like this, but the good thing about that is that they usually come in long series, so the second one should be much easier to get into. In fact, I can't wait to dig into the second one! The side stories were good, and he kept them together well.
In the end, I will say that I hope I'm invited to participate somehow with the release of the next book, because it's been really fun to watch Terron's excitement as this weekend approached (the release was actually June 1st). One major reason I hope this is because a big perk of getting an advanced reader copy is that they're advanced. Less waiting! I can't wait for more of this story!
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Book Bomb For Ben Wolverton
I'm about to mix up two of my worlds here. My first blog entry talked all about the privacy afforded to me by my pen name, and I'm going to share something pretty private.
Bron Jones was abandoned at birth. Thrown into foster care, he was rejected by one family after another, until he met Olivia, a gifted and devoted high-school teacher who recognized him for what he really was--what her people call a "nightingale."
But Bron isn't ready to learn the truth. There are secrets that have been hidden from mankind for hundreds of thousands of years, secrets that should remain hidden. Some things are too dangerous to know. Bron's secret may be the most dangerous of all."
In this book, Dave teaches how to analyze an audience and outline a novel so that it can appeal to a wide readership, giving it the potential to become a bestseller. The secrets found in his unconventional approach will help you understand why so many of his authors go on to prominence."
Deep breath.
For two years, my family has been engaged in a hard battle. My 5 year old son is fighting leukemia. He was 3 at his diagnosis. It's been a long, hard road, and we aren't the same people we were before, but we're stronger and braver now, and most importantly we are all more compassionate. I am especially proud to see that in my children.
This calls to me today because in my circle of writing friends online, there has been a call to help a family experiencing medical crisis. It speaks to my soul and I want to help. I hope that the people who are interested in reading what I write will also be stirred with a desire to help. (Besides the fact that we're talking about awesome books....)
What happened?
Ben Wolverton, who is 16 years old, had a major longboarding accident last week. If you don't know what longboarding is, check out this video:
As you can see, these kids get going really fast, and they get pretty tricky. As I understand it, like skiing, if you do it properly, with proper equipment, it's relatively safe. But an accident is an accident, and when they happen, they happen on a big scale. That's what happened to Ben.
His injuries are extensive, but to name a few, he has had trauma to his head, causing him to remain in a coma, and he has burned his lungs, he is covered in road rash, he has broken eardrums, and he has a broken pelvis and tailbone. His recovery will be a long one.
I can picture them looking back on this day, two years from now, and being grateful for the compassion that they learned from the compassion that people showed them. That's how it works. People pay it forward.
His dad is a well-known author, named David Farland. He wrote the Runelord books, which have seen lots of popularity, and he has been a mentor to many of the people I, personally, look to as mentors. His books continue to win awards. Unfortunately, right now, his family has no medical insurance. Ben's medical bills are expected to rise above $1 million.
Medical crisis is hard. It makes it feel particularly unfair when it buries you in piles of bills. I can empathize with that, and we were relatively well insured when my son got sick. My heart hurts for what this family must be feeling right now. The worry they must be feeling. In the midst of the crisis, the only thing that matters is the safety of your child, but the reality is that somehow, you still have to feed your family.
What can you do?
The writing communities I belong to came up with the idea of using a book bomb to help. I did a little bit of research on a book bomb, and the gist of it is this: if lots of people band together to buy a single book on the same day, it will boost the sales figures. The rest seems intuitive, but I'll say it anyway -- if the numbers are boosted, that book will appear at the top of the book lists, therefore recommending it when people are searching for a new book to buy, and therefore further boosting that book's sales. Pretty brilliant, if you ask me. A chain reaction that will continue to bless this family during their time of need.
They chose two books for the bombing. Personally, I'm going to buy them both.
The first book is Nightengale:
Here's the book description (it looks AWESOME!):
"Some people sing at night to drive back the darkness. Others sing to summon it. . . .
Bron Jones was abandoned at birth. Thrown into foster care, he was rejected by one family after another, until he met Olivia, a gifted and devoted high-school teacher who recognized him for what he really was--what her people call a "nightingale."
But Bron isn't ready to learn the truth. There are secrets that have been hidden from mankind for hundreds of thousands of years, secrets that should remain hidden. Some things are too dangerous to know. Bron's secret may be the most dangerous of all."
The second book is Million Dollar Outlines:
Here's the book description:
"Bestselling author David Farland has taught dozens of writers who have gone on to staggering literary success, including such #1 New York Times Bestsellers as Brandon Mull (Fablehaven), Brandon Sanderson (Wheel of Time), James Dashner (The Maze Runner) and Stephenie Meyer (Twilight).
In this book, Dave teaches how to analyze an audience and outline a novel so that it can appeal to a wide readership, giving it the potential to become a bestseller. The secrets found in his unconventional approach will help you understand why so many of his authors go on to prominence."
If you're a writer, you should consider buying them both, too. Both are award-winning books, with loads of praise.
If you happen to have both, or don't want or need either one, you can also donate directly to the Wolvertons at http://www.gofundme.com/BensRecovery.
In the beginning, help comes in like crazy. After some time, it wanes. My hope is that since this is the first big push for help, it will be wildly successful. Trust me, it always feels good to help a family in need! And this time, you get a great book or two out of it.
Friday, December 14, 2012
Synopsis vs. Outline
I'm really exhausted from staying up late two nights in a row to write a synopsis of my book. It's the last roadblock left before I'm ready to send it off to the people I hope will publish it.
I keep talking about it on Facebook, but haven't given much detail. A synopsis is a very short retelling of your story. Think back cover blurb, only you have to give away the ending. Potential publishers or agents want to know the whole story, because they want to make sure you can tell a good story from start to finish.
The definition of a synopsis is exceptionally difficult to find - it's seriously like herding cats, or nailing jello to a tree. I've spent months trying to figure it out.
Some people say 500 words or less. To put that in perspective, so far this blog entry is 149 words.
Other people say 3 - 5 pages, with 5 pages being on the very long end. There are undertones to most of those posts that suggest you'll be lucky if a reader (publisher's acquisitions editor, or prospective agent) makes it to a fifth page. If they can't make it to the end, they're very likely to toss the whole submission package. What's worse? They won't tell you they did it, so you're waiting with bated breath, hoping to hear from them, and after 3 months or so, you exhale, feeling deflated, and send it to someone else. My takeaway there? Less is more.
Still more people say that a synopsis should be a certain length for every so many words or pages you've written. The math on those suggestions typically comes out to say that an average first timer's novel (75,000 - 100,000 words) will have a synopsis that runs 10 - 15 pages long.
Oy. How are you supposed to know who's right?
Without fail, they all say to research the publisher that you're querying, and they will be specific about what they want. You may need multiple versions of your synopsis - some short and some long. Some publishers or agents aren't specific, so you have to guess if they'd rather have more detail, so they can see the diamond in the rough a little bit better, or if they're very busy people and they just want the bare bones to see if it's interesting to them.
For me, the cherry on top is this: some also ask for an outline.
Uhhh, well okay. Can someone help me define an outline please? If you google it, you're going to find tons of information on outlining before you write your story. Well, that's not how my story grew. It was pretty organic, and grew a life of its own over the years, with very little guidance from me. Honestly. The story presented itself, I just recorded it. To outline after the fact causes me to write this monstrosity that is half of the story. If five pages will make a busy editor throw away my query, what on Earth will this gigantic document make them think?
So, I've been hung up on writing this one document for months. Months, I tell you. My book was all the way finished maybe half a year ago, but every time I try to write my outline, I take a wrong turn and have to start over. In my defense, I did get sick for a few months, and couldn't sit at a computer for a while, but still... this is out of control.
Well, this week, I decided to regain control. I started over not one, not two, but three times! I made it almost half way through the book each time, too. I spent hours reading about how to construct a good synopsis, and trying to understand the difference between a synopsis and an outline, and I finally came up with some answers of my own.
I am not published, and am by no means an expert in this matter, but in the hopes that this will help at least one person, I want to share what I learned.
Here are links to the things I found online that I found to be the most useful:
http://www.beccawilhite.com/blog/2012/01/25/the-query-zone-and-hard-things-and-what-makes-them-possible/
http://www.publishingcrawl.com/2012/04/17/how-to-write-a-1-page-synopsis/
http://www.writersbeat.com/showthread.php?t=38268
In the end, what I did, was I found a blurb I had written a long time ago, and I added to it, until it got me into storytelling mode, and I just told the shortest version of my story that I could. Creating a logline and a blurb will be very helpful to you, even though they're hard to write.
I keep talking about it on Facebook, but haven't given much detail. A synopsis is a very short retelling of your story. Think back cover blurb, only you have to give away the ending. Potential publishers or agents want to know the whole story, because they want to make sure you can tell a good story from start to finish.
The definition of a synopsis is exceptionally difficult to find - it's seriously like herding cats, or nailing jello to a tree. I've spent months trying to figure it out.
Some people say 500 words or less. To put that in perspective, so far this blog entry is 149 words.
Other people say 3 - 5 pages, with 5 pages being on the very long end. There are undertones to most of those posts that suggest you'll be lucky if a reader (publisher's acquisitions editor, or prospective agent) makes it to a fifth page. If they can't make it to the end, they're very likely to toss the whole submission package. What's worse? They won't tell you they did it, so you're waiting with bated breath, hoping to hear from them, and after 3 months or so, you exhale, feeling deflated, and send it to someone else. My takeaway there? Less is more.
Still more people say that a synopsis should be a certain length for every so many words or pages you've written. The math on those suggestions typically comes out to say that an average first timer's novel (75,000 - 100,000 words) will have a synopsis that runs 10 - 15 pages long.
Oy. How are you supposed to know who's right?
Without fail, they all say to research the publisher that you're querying, and they will be specific about what they want. You may need multiple versions of your synopsis - some short and some long. Some publishers or agents aren't specific, so you have to guess if they'd rather have more detail, so they can see the diamond in the rough a little bit better, or if they're very busy people and they just want the bare bones to see if it's interesting to them.
For me, the cherry on top is this: some also ask for an outline.
Uhhh, well okay. Can someone help me define an outline please? If you google it, you're going to find tons of information on outlining before you write your story. Well, that's not how my story grew. It was pretty organic, and grew a life of its own over the years, with very little guidance from me. Honestly. The story presented itself, I just recorded it. To outline after the fact causes me to write this monstrosity that is half of the story. If five pages will make a busy editor throw away my query, what on Earth will this gigantic document make them think?
So, I've been hung up on writing this one document for months. Months, I tell you. My book was all the way finished maybe half a year ago, but every time I try to write my outline, I take a wrong turn and have to start over. In my defense, I did get sick for a few months, and couldn't sit at a computer for a while, but still... this is out of control.
Well, this week, I decided to regain control. I started over not one, not two, but three times! I made it almost half way through the book each time, too. I spent hours reading about how to construct a good synopsis, and trying to understand the difference between a synopsis and an outline, and I finally came up with some answers of my own.
I am not published, and am by no means an expert in this matter, but in the hopes that this will help at least one person, I want to share what I learned.
Here are links to the things I found online that I found to be the most useful:
http://www.beccawilhite.com/blog/2012/01/25/the-query-zone-and-hard-things-and-what-makes-them-possible/
http://www.publishingcrawl.com/2012/04/17/how-to-write-a-1-page-synopsis/
http://www.writersbeat.com/showthread.php?t=38268
In the end, what I did, was I found a blurb I had written a long time ago, and I added to it, until it got me into storytelling mode, and I just told the shortest version of my story that I could. Creating a logline and a blurb will be very helpful to you, even though they're hard to write.
Monday, November 5, 2012
Blog Chain
One of my favorite authors is Amber Argyle, the very talented writer of Witch Song and Witch Born. She has lots of great things going for her, and she's right here in Utah, to boot. I found her on Facebook, and it turns out she's really down to Earth and friendly, too. So when she posted an opportunity for friends to join in on a blog chain, I jumped right in. Here is a link to her blog entry about it.
Basically, it works like those chain letters we used to exchange in Jr. High. Apparently, everyone has a different version of this, but in my school, it was a letter that you had to copy 10 times, and give to 10 people, or you'd have bad luck for 7 years, or some nonsense. This chain, however, is without lame ultimatums. Amber got the request from another writer, and when that writer answered the questions on her own blog, she included a link to Amber's page. Then Amber, answered the questions on her blog, and added links to some other writers' (mine included) blogs, and we are all supposed to do the same. And so on...
What I really like is that it gets me talking about my book. Not the process of writing it, or how soon it will be published - business-like details, if you ask me - but my actual characters and story. I also like that it connects me to these other amazing writers, and that we can help each other spread word of mouth about our stories.
So, let's get to it. This is the interview with my own answers about my book.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What is the working title of your book?
Underground Rose
Where did the idea come from for the book?
I knew who my main character and her best friend were before I knew anything else. I knew the first crazy thing that would happen to them, which is the catalyst for the rest of the story, but I had no idea what would happen after that. So, I started writing. I made it through 3 chapters, and realized I still hadn't figured out what would come next.
I put a lot of thought into it, and one night, as my head hit the pillow, it was like the answer was inserted into my head - a thought that was not my own. "Underground Railroad," it said. Those two words gave me the rest of my plot.
What genre does your book fall under?
YA Urban Fantasy, which just means that it's set in the world we live in now, and I didn't create a different world for my story. I'm still not positive I love that label. It's more like YA Rural Fantasy, since more than half of the book is spent in cabins in the mountains, riding horses, or tending to farms.
Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
I thought hard about this, and even did some research, and I just couldn't come up with anyone. Rose is a 14 year old girl, with wild, flaming red hair and flawless freckled skin, who is a tomboy, but is very beautiful and doesn't realize it. I have a picture on my Pinterest of how I picture her ... sort of ... but I couldn't find the name of the girl in the picture. I didn't even get to the part of looking for Amber or Megan.
What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Running from witch hunters was never in the plan for fourteen-year-old Rose Wilson, but when her best friend is mortally wounded, Rose discovers she has an ability to heal and is thrust into a world of magic and war, sending her on a dramatic journey to a safe haven on the sea.
Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
That is the question isn't it? I would sure love to have my book published traditionally. I intend to seek publishing with one specific label, but if that is not successful, I will seek out representation by an agent.
I think self publishing is a viable way to sell books, and some of my favorite books were published that way, I'm just hoping for more help with the business end of it, which you can get more easily through a traditional publisher.
How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?
Two years. I know, that's crazy long. I was learning as I went, and editing all the time, but this is how long it took for me to write an actual ending to the book. Then, I tore it apart and rewrote it, so I don't even know if I should count it as 2 or 3. It's been 4 now, and I'm really, really, really sure it's done. Until an editor tells me to fix it, that is.
What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
I have a hard time comparing it to anything, to be honest. I can tell you that, as a kid, I was inspired to write by Lois Duncan, and I've passed my love of her books on to my kids. I do think Underground Rose is something like her work, only 20 or 25 years newer. I also think the style has similar elements to the YA books from Maria V. Snyder, or Lisa Mangum.
Who or What inspired you to write this book?
When I first started writing my book, I spent a lot of time researching authors. I wanted to know their history, their story, specifically how they got into writing. Ultimately, I found that most authors were doing some other career or job before writing finally became their career. That process inspired me the most, and I researched dozens of authors.
I was inspired the most by 2 writers. First there was Brandon Mull, who wrote Fablehaven. He lives in Utah (I am big on supporting local authors) and he spoke at my kids' school. I decided I wanted to find out more about him, so I dug around on the internet, and I found out that Fablehaven was actually his second novel. The publisher who did Fablehaven told him the first one wasn't quite there, but if he wrote another book, they'd look at it. So he wrote Fablehaven, which spawned a phenomenal series of five books, and in the end, it landed on the New York Times Best Seller list. Pretty amazing for a guy who had a completely different job before that.
The next is pretty cliche, so please don't flog me. But I'm from Utah, and Twilight was big here. Stephenie Meyer got her education here, and it was pretty sensational that she was having such huge success. Her books really took off about the time I started writing mine, so she was on my mind. I read her story, and found out that Twilight was inspired by a dream. She wrote from the middle of the book to the end, and then from the beginning to the middle. And she did the whole thing in like six months. She was offered an enormous advance on her book, and the rest is history. She went from stay at home mom to household name in a matter of months. Although she went to school for it, she never really planned to write, she just couldn't get that dream out of her head.
Before they were famous authors, they were regular people. I decided if they could do it, maybe I could too.
I still check out the author before I ever read a book. I'm just as curious about the people who write the stories as I am about the stories themselves.
What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?
Rose really grapples with her decisions about her powers. She doesn't want them, because they make her different, and she just wants her life back. She wants to be normal. It takes saving a second person from serious harm for Rose to finally begin to accept her healing power as a part of herself. I think we all have something about ourselves that we feel this way about, and it's important to recognize that we are all unique, and our uniqueness is what makes us valuable and interesting.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The next person in my chain is the fantastic Deborah Bryan, who has written a number of things, but the two on my Kindle (so far) are The Monster's Daughter, and Memos From Your Closet Monster. You should definitely check her out. I think you will enjoy her wit and depth. See her blog here.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The next person in my chain is the fantastic Deborah Bryan, who has written a number of things, but the two on my Kindle (so far) are The Monster's Daughter, and Memos From Your Closet Monster. You should definitely check her out. I think you will enjoy her wit and depth. See her blog here.
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Fun With Words
I learned a new word this week that made me smile. I thought I'd share.
Kerfuffle.
It means commotion.
In a sentence, you could say, "The neighbor's dogs are constantly barking, but when the fire engine goes by, it really causes a kerfuffle."
See? That's fun. You're welcome.
Kerfuffle.
It means commotion.
In a sentence, you could say, "The neighbor's dogs are constantly barking, but when the fire engine goes by, it really causes a kerfuffle."
See? That's fun. You're welcome.
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Welcome to Sara Burr Books
Well, here we are, standing at the cusp of a new beginning.
The beginning of Sara Burr, the writer. I am Sara, yet I am not. I have another
life outside of Sara’s life. Sara is a stand in, you see. The technical name
would be pseudonym or pen name.
Do you ever feel like you have this one thing about yourself
that defines you to people? Like the amputee with a prosthetic limb, or the
young girl with a bald head. When people meet you, it’s the elephant in the
room. You can never move on to the person that you are, behind those things
that define you, until you’ve addressed the elephant in the room. Only after
you’ve talked about it, will it be possible to move on and develop a
relationship in a normal way. You just have to get them to see past that one
thing about you first. For the same reason as the amputee would cover the
prosthetic with clothing, or the sweet, fighting bald girl would wear a wig, I
want to write under another name.
I would never want my name to be the elephant in the room. I
love my writing, and I’m so proud of it, but I don’t want it to define me to
every new person that I meet for the rest of my life. I want people to like me
for me, not because I wrote a book
that they think is awesome. Although, I do still want them to think my books
are awesome. I just think of J.K. Rowling or Stephenie Meyer – I doubt either
one of them realized what kind of changes were about to happen in their lives,
but imagine the way people must act when they meet. I just want to be a normal
person who happens to make a living writing books. I’m not looking for fame.
When I first got serious about writing novels, I was shy to
talk about it. I was afraid people might think I was a crazy dreamer. Maybe I
would never be good enough, and then I’d be embarrassed that I told all of
those people. It was something that was really private to me. I wrote to
express myself in a deep, abstract way, and it worked. It was the best therapy
I could have asked for, during dark times in my life. Almost like a journal. In
fact, the first 3 chapters of my book were written by hand. I still have the
notebook. Very little of what is in that notebook still exists, but I like it
because it reminds me of the humble beginnings of this venture.
Because it was so private to me, when I finally started to
open up and talk to people about it, I felt vulnerable, raw, extremely exposed.
My online writing profile still has the following quote in
my signature: “And I feel like I’m naked in front of the crowd ‘cause these
words are my diary screaming out loud, and I know that you’ll use them however
you want to.” (Anna Nalick – Breathe)
To equal amounts of delight and horror, as I started to talk about it, I discovered that people wanted to read what I had written. It took a lot of courage for me to show those first pages of those first drafts to close friends. And then something amazing happened. They liked it! They wanted to read more. And I came to the realization that if I truly wanted to write a novel, in the end, my hope would be for thousands of people to read it and love it.
To equal amounts of delight and horror, as I started to talk about it, I discovered that people wanted to read what I had written. It took a lot of courage for me to show those first pages of those first drafts to close friends. And then something amazing happened. They liked it! They wanted to read more. And I came to the realization that if I truly wanted to write a novel, in the end, my hope would be for thousands of people to read it and love it.
So, I got online and found a writing community where I could
participate in discussions about writing, and critique other writers’ work.
When I was brave enough I posted bits and pieces of my own, and they liked it
there too. I became a real part of that community, and developed some deep
friendships there. No one understands a writer like another writer.
Oh, I had a long way to go, from that first draft. They call
them rough drafts for a reason, and mine was particularly rough! Thankfully, a few people who had seen some success were
willing to give me some tips. I’ll never forget one, in particular, from a
previously published writer. He said he rarely gave critiques to anything this
poorly written because the writers were so often very defensive. But he saw
something of promise in what I had posted, and in the hopes that I would take
it all in stride, he tore apart my chapter. I was crestfallen. But after a day
or two, I was able to look at it objectively, and learn from it. I still
consider him to be a great teacher to me, because he wasn’t afraid to tell me I
had a long way to go.
So I studied, and learned, and revised. Then, I rinsed,
lathered, and repeated… a few hundred times. In the end, I can now say I have
written so many drafts of my book that I have lost count. Once, I even used the
then current draft as a guide and rewrote the whole darn thing. Each draft
became more frustrating than the last, because I just wanted to be done,
already. But I learned so much! And now, when I write something new, it comes
out much smoother. I understand the rules a lot better. Editing comes easier.
I’m proud to say that I have completed my book. It’s sitting
on my hard drive, in all its electronic splendor, waiting for me to tie up all
the little loose ends (query letter, outline, fancy printing job, etc...)
before I can begin querying publishers and/or agents. There have been so many road blocks
along the way, but I have been, and continue to be determined. It feels good to
be on this end of the first book. I’m sure when a publisher picks it up I’ll
have plenty more to edit, but for now, it’s done.
And those people who I trusted to read it? They really do
like it – from start to finish. And they can’t wait for what I write next. That
gives me the courage to move forward to the next stages in this journey. I
dream of becoming a published author, and I dream of holding my book in a hard
cover with beautiful art on the front. I also dream of the other books I will
write, and I have all sorts of notes stashed here and there with ideas I want
to expand on, someday.
Even though I don’t want it to define me, I love the part of
me that it is. The writer part of me. Her name is Sara.
Welcome to Sara Burr Books!
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