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Got the following VERY sweet email today from a lady named Jo: I’m
a (nearly) 40 year old single parent and you’ve just made me cry. My
soul started to sing to me last March and told me to write. I’ve
written ever since. I’ve been lost and now I’m found. I’m fighting my
way through the rejections that get returned to me. I’m wading through
the stormy sea towards a literary agent. I don’t care if I stay on
benefits for the rest of my life. I don’t care about success and fame.
All I want to do is write. If I spend five years letting my soul sing
then I’ll be happy. My demons and angels live with me night and day.
They tell me their stories and I think the world is ready to hear them.
Thank you for your blog of Saturday 5th April. I wouldn’t have even
thought of reading your genre (I hate that word) but in researching
agents I came across you. Went to the library and read Demon Thief
yesterday afternoon and have started The Vampire Prince. You have made
an old lady very happy. You’ve inspired me to keep going. God(!) bless
you. I’m still crying, not big snot bubble tears, just gentle and lady
like.Aw, gee, shucks -- that makes me feel all warm and
fuzzy inside!!! This is why I try to tell it like it is when I’m
writing my blogs. I know some people think I’m being negative, but I’m
not. Writing is hard, it’s a struggle, and if you’ve made the choice to
seriously go for it, I think it’s important that you hear other writers
talking about the hardships of the job. I think REAL negativity for
young writers would be to read blogs where established writers gave the
impression that writing comes to them easy, that getting published was
child’s play, and that they’ve been living in the lap of luxury pretty
much since day one. That would just be depressing for someone finding
it hard to get their ideas on paper, who’d been rejected loads of time,
and who wasn’t making any money from their writing!!! When you hear a
published author saying yes, it’s hard, but it’s worth the hardships
... I think that gives you encouragement. Bas and I went for a
drive this morning, a walk through the small mountains around West
Limerick in a charming little spot called Ashford. It was chilly but
sunny for most of the walk, but we got a couple of hail showers too. I
like walks where the weather throws a few different things at you -- it
makes the walk more interesting!! Spent the evening adding some reviews of Procession of the Dead
to my D B Shan site. As always, I add every review of my books that I
can find, whether they’re positive or negative. I’m delighted that most
of the reviews so far have been pretty upbeat. There have been a few
knocks and criticisms, as every book will attract, but the general
response from the critics has been surprisingly good. I say surprisingly
because I wasn’t sure what the reaction would be when I re-released my
adult book. I think most children’s authors would agree with me when I
say that there’s a very definite degree of snobbery towards children’s
books in the world of adult reviewers. A lot of reviewers and
journalists tend to look down their noses at children’s books and
children’s authors. I can understand that, and I don’t have any problem
with it -- it’s the way things are, and if you choose to work in
children’s literature, you just accept it and get on with things. But
it can be a problem if you make the crossover from children’s books to
adult novels -- reviewers can view the move with mistrust and
sneeriness, and form an opinion of your work long before they open the
cover. I wasn’t sure if Procession
would be given a fair crack of the whip on the reviewing front. But, to
date, it has, which has left me feeling very pleased. It’s always nice
when you’re treated fairly! If you’re interested in checking out the
reviews, click here: http://dbshan.co.uk/thecity/category/reviews-of-procession/
There was one thing I forgot to say in my last blog (that’s the trouble
with long entries -- it’s easy to forget points which were very clear
in your head at the start!). Although writers should, in my opinion,
measure success based on how happy they are with the stories they
create, there is of course the possibility that any writer MIGHT hit
the big time and make loads of money!!! That’s another thing that keeps
us going when times are hard and the whole world seems to be against
us. If you work hard, you can catch a lucky break at any point of your
career. There are writers like me who got a break fairly early, but
there are others like Anthony Horowitz who took more time to really get
going. My star started to rise with my third published book (i.e. Cirque Du Freak). Anthony had carved out a very nice career for himself over a period of roughly 20 years, but it wasn’t until Alex Rider
came along that he went stratospheric. Eoin Colfer took off early with
Artemis Fowl. Jacqueline Wilson and Roald Dahl struggled to establish
themselves. There’s no way of telling when fortune will smile on a
writer. Sometimes quality shines through quickly and is rewarded --
other times it can take years, even decades. But it can happen to
ANYONE. Honestly. That might seem like an OTT statement, but it’s not.
There are people who’ve written drivel for 20 or 30 years, who suddenly
turn around and stumble across a great story that makes them millions.
There are books which go ignored when first released (Foundation by Isaac Asimov, and The Alchemist
by Paulo Coelho spring to mind immediately), which later are
acknowledged as classics and go on to sell phenonemally. Every would-be
writer should bear this in mind -- even if all looks grim, and it seems
like you’re never going to catch that wave of public recognition and
financial reward -- hang in there. Because your moment CAN come. Don’t
bank on it happening -- as I said, make quality your aim, and be
prepared to settle for that if you have to. But don’t be afraid to
dream big either. As crass as it might sound to echo a Lottery slogan,
it really and honestly "COULD be YOU"!!!!!
Finished my first
edit of book 4 of my four book series today. Very pleased with how it
currently reads, although there will be a LOT of tweaking and
fine-tuning to do over the next few years. But for an early draft ...
yes, I think it’s sitting very nicely.
Saw a French film called 36 this evening (original title was 36 Quai des Orfevres).
I was very impressed with it. It had some flaws, but I loved the way it
started out as one movie and then led you in a completely unpredictable
direction. Up to the halfway point, I thought I had it all figured out,
and was settling in to follow it to a fairly normal conclusion -- then
it all changed and I didn’t know what the hell was going to happen
next!! But it did it in a natural, believable way -- a truly difficult
trick to pull off. This, I think, is what more writers should be
looking to do -- pull the rug out from under readers and take them on
an unexpected journey. I’m always looking for the different angle, a
way to suck readers in and then land a sucker punch (in the beginning,
nobody knew Cirque Du Freak was about a vampire until Steve confronted Mr Crepsley quite a way into the book; it was quite late in Lord Loss
before people realised they were reading a werewolf story). There might
be no truly original stories left to tell, but there are always new
ways to tell old stories, and there always will be. You just have to
search hard to find them ...
Don't worry ... be happy!!!
I received the following email from Amy today: I
was really happy to see your last blog entry. I have been reading a
book about writing, and it talks so much about how hard and frustrating
it is to be a writer. I really like writing, but all of this talk of
how being a writer is not all it’s cracked up to be is starting to make
my doubt how much I really like to write. You say that the average
writer doesn’t make enough money to live on, and that kind of scares
me. It’s not the money I care about, it’s the idea that you will write
books and stories, but not many people will fall in love with your
stories as you have. You are successful. You’ve sold many copies of
your stories in many different countries. I don’t understand why
everyone seems to have such a negative outlook on the writing life. I
was at a bookstore the other day, and there was a newly published
author sitting their, selling copies of his book. He said that he’s
been writing for thirty years and he JUST got his first book published.
I know that I love writing, but I need to hear more positive things
about writing! If it’s so bad and stressful, then why do people spend
hours plucking away on their computer every day???Why indeed?!? I think we’re all mad!!!!! 
Seriously, I hope I don’t sound negative when I talk about the writing
process. I’m trying to pass on the best advice I can, to help those who
REALLY want to be writers -- i.e. those who are prepared to walk the
walk, not just talk the talk. The underlying message of all my comments
is about the most positive you’ll ever hear -- "You CAN make your dream
come true!!!" Virtually anyone can become a writer. There’s no magic
involved. No special deals need to be struck with Satan. It’s something
you can do all by yourself, by working hard and not losing faith. But
those are the two main keys, and that’s why I come back to them so
often -- hard work, and keeping the faith. Unless you’re famous in some
other field (e.g. an actor or model who decides to write a book, which
sells purely on the strength of your name), you’re going to have to
work VERY hard to get your work published. That’s a simple fact of
life, and it’s a message I like to stress, because at the end of the
day it separates the wheat from the crap! When I talk about having to
work hard, and spend hours and weeks and months and years locked away
from the world in order to develop and get your work published, poseur
writers think I’m being negative -- I’m denying them "the secret
formula" which will allow them to become brilliant quickly. They
believe in an Andy Warhol and Big Brother universe, where everyone
should be entitled to 15 minutes of fame just for being themselves,
where dreams should automatically come true. I don’t. I
think success can only truly be appreciated if it’s earned. And most
writers think that way too, I’m sure, because like me they’ve had to
work damned hard to get what they have. There are two types of dreamers
in this world -- those who just dream, and those who pursue
their dreams. Those in the latter camp read my blog entries and (I
hope!!!) inflate with positivity and enthusiasm. Because they get it -- if you work hard, and dedicate yourself to your dream, YOU
can be the next Darren Shan, J K Rowling, Stephen King or William
Shakespeare. Hell, you can be the next Jilly Cooper if that’s your
wish!!!! Writers don’t have magic buttons which they press to succeed
-- they get ahead by working hard. Would-be writers who are told that
don’t sit there thinking, "Gee, I only wanted to do this if I could
press a magic button and do it quickly." They think, "Thank the gods
there aren’t any magic buttons -- it means I have the power to do this
myself!!!!" So, in short, I will always stress the need to work hard, because it’s the sort of encouragement REAL young writers need. As
for keeping the faith ... Well, again, although some of my comments
might seem to paint a bleak picture of despair and economic doom, I
continue to point out the monetary pitfalls of being a writer because
it’s important that you know what you’re getting into -- and that you
know you’re not in that boat alone. Thousands of books are published
every year, but most of us only read the more popular books. I read the
occasional out-of-field novel by an unheard of writer, but for the most
part I go for successful writers whose books I enjoy. I don’t think I’m
unusual in that. I imagine most of you reading this are similar to me
in that respect. But that can create a seeming imbalance for youong
writers. If you’re only reading work by established, top-notch writers,
that’s all you’re going to be aware of. If every writer whose work you
like is successful, sells millions of copies, and makes loads of money,
you might think ALL writers are like that. And if you set out to become
a writer, and find that you’re not one of the lucky few who crack the
big time, you might think that you’re a failure, since you’ve falled
short of the standards all your favourite writers have set. But
let me tell you this -- NO writer is a failure. It takes a hell of a
lot of guts and imagination and bravery to become a writer. You set out
on a task to create something out of nothing, to pluck ideas from the
air and weave them into a story which has never been told before. The
financial rewards for most writers are pitiful. Most don’t earn a
legion of loyal fans. Most have to work in other jobs to support
themselves. Most have trouble getting their work printed. Most writers’
works that ARE printed don’t sell very well and go out of print long
before the writer dies. Most are unloved, not respected, not
acknowledged. And you know what? It doesn’t matter a damn!!!!! Amy
asks why people spend so long plucking away on their computers if it’s
all doom and gloom. The reason is -- we work in the dream industry.
When you write a story, you create. You bring a new form into the
world. Even if it’s not a very good or original story, it’s unique.
It’s something you’ve created that nobody else can do in exactly the
way you did it. It’s like giving birth to a child, except you can do it
dozens or hundreds of times over the course of your life -- and you
don’t have any nappies to change!!! Writing is a buzz, a wonderful
feeling. It’s like playing your favourite sport or game -- great fun.
It’s harder than most sports, because you have to put so much into it
-- you can’t just have a writing "kickabout", the way you can play a
casual game of soccer at the back of your house with your friends. But
that means the rewards are so much greater. The reward of following
your dream. Of doing something unique. Of daring to show your inner
soul and imaginings to the world. Of saying "I’m special, I’m an
individual, I’m not afraid to step up to the mark, I’m not afraid to
fail, I’m going to go out on a limb and chase my dreams until death
robs me of them." Money isn’t the REAL reward about being a writer.
Fame isn’t the REAL reward about being a writers. You can be an
apparent failure in the eyes of the world, as most writers are -- but
still be one of the greatest success stories this world has ever
produced, as ALL writers, by the very act of writing, are. THAT’S what I’m trying to say. Night night folks. Keep on dreaming.
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Wednesday, April 02, 2008 |
The Authors For Autism Research auction has just finished, and I’m
absolutely delighted (and, truth be told, a little bit amazed!!) to be
able to report that the winning bid to have your name featured in one
of my books was ... £1020!!!
To break the thousand pound mark was incredible -- the only other
author in the auction to do that was Lee Child, whose auction made
about £150 more than mine. In fact the next highest bid for an author
after mine was £424!! Which officially makes you guys some of the best
fans in the world!! But then, that’s no news to me!!!!!! 
Thanks to everyone who participated -- you’ve helped raise some
much-needed funds, which will go towards a very good cause. The
organisers of the auction will be contacting the winning bidder and
putting them in touch with me, so that they can confirm what name they
want me to use, and in which novel. I’ll also be sending them a signed
copy of the book when it comes out. Advice to would-be writers
-- keep it short and sweet!!! I’ve noticed with my blogs that when I
post a really long entry, as I did yesterday, I usually get far few
responses than if I post a shorter, snappier one! This is completely
understandable -- people lose interest if they have to plough through a
lot of long paragraphs, or lose track of what the point is, and just
... tune out!! It’s the same as when you’re in class and your teacher
drones on and on and ON about the same old thing -- you just want to
scream, "Enough already!!!!" With my books, I re-write and edit them
several times, tightening up, to try and ensure readers don’t get bored
or side-tracked in the middle of a chapter. But with my blog I’m more
stream-of-consciousness -- my readership is tiny compared to those who
read my books, and you’re getting these entries for free, and it’s
meant to be a diary more than anything else, so, yes, from time to time
I ramble -- and I make no apologies for it!!! As I often say, it’s
important to write LOTS, to get in as much practise as you can, so that
you get to learn more about words and how to express yourself. So in a
way this blog is a kind of testing ground for me, a way to play around
with my thoughts, to keep in the habit of writing something most days.
I almost never know what I’m going to write when I sit down to compose
an entry, whether it will be short or long -- I just go with the
moment!! I received the following email from Jack today: I’m
15, and I love reading. I’ve read The Saga of Darren Shan and they’re
my favourite books. However, as I’m getting older, I’m pondering taking
my interest further and becoming a writer. I
know I’m creative enough, and my teachers tell me I’m bright. English
has always been my strong subject. However, I have reservations about
the idea. From what I can tell, writing is a very sink or swim
business. You can spend months, years even, writing a book and either
it does’nt get published or it isnt successful. I’m
not going to go into too much detail, as like I said, I doubt this will
even get read. If however you do read this message, and if you have the
spare time, could you give me your advice? Could you sum up in one
message all of your writing experience and knowledge? This is something
thats really bothering me, and hearing advice from my favourite author
would really put things in perspective for me.Sum up all
of my writing experience and knowledge in one message ... Jack, you’ve
made one of the fundamental errors of young writers worldwide -- you
think there’s a secret formula. As I often state on this blog, there
isn’t. It all boils down to hard work and lots of experimentation. My
best advice is to stop looking for advice -- just crack on and write!!
And I say that in a totally friendly, helpful way -- I too believed
there was a secret to writing when I was your age. But it’s important
to be told that there isn’t -- the sooner you realise that YOU have the
power to decide whether or not you become a writer, by actually writing
and not thinking about it and looking for shortcuts, the sooner you can
make headway and take real steps towards realising your dream. Jack’s
right about it being a very sink or swim business - and the sad fact is
that most writers sink, quickly and messily and horribly! Have no
delusions if you want to be a writer -- from a financial point of view,
life sucks for most of us!!! I read a statistic recently that the
average annual income of writers in the UK under the age of 35 is ...
£5000. You read right -- five thousand pounds. A year. And that’s the average
-- which means it includes the high-rollers. So some of the those
writers are earning hundreds of thousands of pounds a year -- which
means a lot of others are making far LESS than £5000. Can you imagine a
teacher in the UK working for £5000 a year? A doctor? A butcher? A
sales assistant in a discount store? A server in a fast food restaurant? Most
writers can’t afford to write full-time. They do it as a hobby, at
night after work, at the weekends, in their holidays. Only a small
percentage can afford to support themselves by writing. And only a tiny
percentage make what would be considered a considerable sum -- there
are VERY few rich writers!! You have to do it because you love it. You might
get lucky and sell millions of copies and make bestseller lists all
over the world -- but the odds against that are similar to having a
very good win on the lottery. Some truly excellent writers never make
much from their books -- quality, alas, doesn’t always guarantee a good
income. But if you work hard, apply yourself, stay true to your dream
and push yourself all the way, you WILL learn to tell the very best
stories you can tell. And THAT is the secret of what being a writer is
all about. To write a story and be able to look at it and say, "That’s
the very best I can do, and it’s taken a hell of a lot of hard work to
do it that good" -- that’s where real success lies. Creating something
you can be proud of should be the goal of every writer. It’s great if
others like it too, and lots of people buy it and you make lots of
money. But that’s always a bonus. Write because you love writing. Go
work in a bank if you love money. Hmmm .. this has been another
of my rather lengthy entries, hasn’t it? I guess I won’t have to spend
too much time tomorrow sifting through replies ...
Went to a quick in my local pub last night, with Bas, an uncle of mine
called Mike, and a neighbour called John L. I like a good pub quiz and
have entered a few in recent years, always just for fun. But last night
we almost won! We came second in the end, just 2 questions behind the
winners. In a weird way it’s almost worse finishing so close behind
than it is to wind up mid-table -- you go away cursing the answers you
should have got right (such as when the Chernobyl Disaster happened, or
the year of the Great Fire Of London). If only you’d thought a bit
harder, you could have been top dog!!! True, it was only a small
village pub quiz, but I’ve got quite a competitive nature once I get
going, and to me it was the same sort of feeling as if one of my books
got to second place in a chart but only sold a few less copies than the
top-placed book. I was pleased to climb so high, of course, but
dagnabit, when you get that close, it’s a pain in the butt not to go a
tiny bit further and WIN!!!! Oh well -- maybe next time ...
Today
I finished editing the third book of my four-book series. I also put
together the April edition of the Shanville Monthly, and sent out an
email to everyone who subscribes to it. The emails are still flowing
out as I type -- there are over 16,000 email addresses in my database,
so it takes a LONG time for my system to process them all, at least 12
hours, sometimes a lot more if the system hits a glitch along the
way!!! I’ve been doing the Shanville Monthly for close to 8 years now,
and even though the internet has come on in leaps and bounds since I
first started (I used to send out the monthly emails using Outlook
Express for the first few years!!), and there’s probably a better,
swifter way these days to keep readers up to date with all the latest
news, I like the old-fashioned feel of the monthly. It’s like a
magazine or comic that comes out once a month. I look forward to
bringing all the news together and sending it out in one big monthly
lump, and I hope you guys do too.
If you read the April Monthly,
you’ll see that I mention a new series that I’m tentatively edging
towards making a start on. I can’t say anything about it yet, mostly
because I don’t know much about it -- hell, I don’t even know if it
will come together, if I’ll even start on it at all!!! But I think it
has the potential to be a multi-book series, something on the scale of The Saga or The Demonata.
I’ve been playing around with ideas for it for a few years, teasing
away at the few scenes and ideas which have been knocking around my
mind. It’s been slow, hard going, but I think it’s coming together --
in recent months I’ve been thinking about it more and more, piecing
together different parts, running various plots and ideas through the
mill of my imagination. I have the sense that I’m ready to push it
further, to sit down and start putting ideas on paper.
This is
the part of the job that’s hardest to explain, and the part that I
think is of most interest to other people. It’s the creative maelstrom
that comes before the actual beginning of a book. Right now I have
scraps of ideas and story-lines which might one day form the core of a
long series. But they’re nowhere near complete. There aren’t just gaps
in the structure -- there are black holes!!!! I’m going to try to pull
enough of those ideas together to get me started, to set me on the path
of what will hopefully work out. But I can’t fully explain how I’m
going to do that, because I don’t really understand the process myself.
All I know is that I have to work on those ideas, bounce them off each
other, ask questions of them, sniff around them. What happens if I do
this? What happens if I do that? Will I throw in a bit of sci-fi to see
what happens? Where do I want to set it?
So many questions. So
many ideas. So many possibilities. If I sat down and thought about the
scale of embarking on such a project, I’d be terrified and I wouldn’t
have the courage to begin!! Something I often say to young writers is
"Don’t think too much!" Writing can be a scary prospect if you brood
about it. You just have to get stuck in. Of course you can’t actually
do that until you have SOME idea of where you want to go. But a sliver
of an idea is usually enough. Inever have all the answers to a book
before I start it. Getting a few key facts straight is normally enough
to get me going -- after that I just have to trust that the story will
suck me in and reveal more of itself to me there further along I
stumble with it. I said before on this blog that the trigger which made
me sit down and write my four-book series was a scene set on a ship --
I saw the scene unfold in the cinema of my mind, and knew I had to
start writing ASAP. In this case the trigger seems to be a personal
trait about the main character. I had an insight last week, nothing
major, but as soon as it flashed through my thoughts, I knew it was
RIGHT, and it made me want to start writing. I think a lot of writing
is like that. You ask questions, consider all sorts of answers, and
wait for one to strike you as RIGHT ... as TRUE ... as MOTIVATIONAL.
The answers are different for each writer, and in each instance, but
once you stagger across it, you KNOW. I don’t know HOW you know. You
just KNOW. And that’s when you begin to write, or at least begin to
seriously prepare to write -- because something about a story (maybe a
key scene, maybe a trivial detial) compels you to.
I don’t know
how much sense all that makes to you guys -- or even how much sense it
makes to me! Writing is both very simple and very complicated. When I
try to go beyond the most basic advice, I always feel as if I’m skating
on hair-thin ice. Anyway, the long and the short of it is, I’ve a germ
of an idea for a new series, which may or may not happen, depending on
how much mileage I can wring out of the idea over the next few weeks or
months. Once I know more, you guys will too. Until then, like myself,
you’ll just have to wonder.
Almost three-quarters of the way
I started editing book 3 of my 4 book series yesterday. (I often work
on Sundays. I used to stick to a Monday to Friday routine years ago,
which I liked, but I do so much travelling these days that I need to
maximise my time at home and work whenever possible.) I was grinning
all the way through the first few chapters. They’re an exceedingly dark
part of the storyline, but feature a couple of twists which I know are
going to have readers smiling BIG! It’s always nice when you can work
in an unexpected but, in retrospect, perfectly obvious twist, something
that will make readers gasp with surprise, but, when they think about
it later, kick themselves for not seeing it sooner. Edited more
of book 3 today. I’d planned to finish it, but lots of other stuff
popped up, not least of which was a photo shoot for a newspaper
interview. It will be appearing in the Irish Independent this Saturday, April 5th (fans outside Ireland will probably be able to find it on the Indo web site, at http://www.independent.ie/
-- although I can’t guarantee that). I did the interview a while ago,
but the photographer only came today. I normally don’t like photo
shoots but this was more fun than usual -- the photographer was fast
and efficient, and came up with a few unusual shots. Most cameramen
take the same old shots -- Darren at his desk, Darren with a book --
but, in their defence, that’s usually what they’re asked for. This guy
did the normal stuff, but some artier pics too. It will be interesting
to see if the editor in this case goes with a few of the more
experimental shots, or with the regular, standard type snaps. I know
where I’d be placing my money if I was a betting man ...
I’m back home from my short holiday to Krakow. Had a nice final meal,
and did a bit more sightseeing on our last morning there, before flying
back to Shannon. We had to go via London Gatwick, and wait a few hours
there for our connecting flight, so it was a LONG last day, but
everything was on time and it didn’t drag too much. Still, it was nice
to fall into my own bed at the end of it! I received the following email from a guy called Tim in America, who has got wind of the fact that I will be coming to the States on tour in October: I’m
the Teacher-Librarian at a Junior High School in the state of Arizona.
At the start of every school year I book talk 3 novels to each English
class (we have grade 7, 8 and 9) to create a book buzz on campus right
off. Last fall CIRQUE DU FREAK was a smashing success on our campus!
Our school district is the largest in the state and our Library has the
most copies of your novel: 20. We have a ton of the follow up books as
well (more than anybody in the district too)! Last August the wait list
for CIRQUE hit over 80 students long and stayed steady clear till
February -- that’s astounding! Anticipation and word of mouth-peer
recommendations created an awesome buzz. The
students loved CIRQUE DU FREAK. I promoted it because I loved it as
well, and I recognized -- near instantly, like page 3 -- that it would
be great for reluctant readers, which are what I’m all about. The
cartoon vacuum cleaner, and then, the real vacuum and the real
tarantula, what a sweet hook -- you hooked me! With this novel you have
enticed a lot of Fremont boys to read! THANK YOU! Teen boys are hard to
pair up with a book they’ll like. Don’t fret though; you’ve plenty of
girl fans too!I
understand you’re visiting Arizona next October and I talked with
Arizona people setting up your visit. My initial conversation with them
severely disappointed me in that I think you and my students would get
on so well -- I mean, you have a cult following on campus! The problem
seems to be numbers. Your publisher wants you to meet 500 students
minimum. Even though we’re the largest Jr. High in Arizona, we only
have an auditorium that fits 450 people, but if you include teachers
and book club we could nearly make the quota. You’ll miss the
excitement your novels bring to our campus if you don’t visit. So
PLEASE, consider requesting a visit to Fremont -- in fact, how about a
pizza lunch with 10 prize draw winners before or after your talk? You
have to eat at some point of the day anyway!That
last bit made me chuckle -- Tim’s obviously heard that I’m an easy man
to bribe when a few slices of pizza are waved around under my nose!!!  But, seriously, as I told Ti m, I
don’t get directly involved in the mechanics of my tour schedules. It’s
a complicated process -- it costs my publishers a lot of money to bring
me over, so they’re always looking to create a tour that will maximise
my impact -- and because I’m never in the States more than 2 or 3
weeks, they also have to look into flight connections, how to get me
from A to B, what will physically work and what won’t. In an ideal
world I’d go to schools in every state that wanted me -- but the
reality doesn’t work that way. Having
said all that, in my experience persistance and imagination usually
pays off in the end. I told Tim that 450 isn’t far off the 500 mark,
and if he could guarantee those sorts of numbers, he’d increase his
claim -- one of the frustrating things about touring is that many
venues promise big numbers but don’t deliver on the day, so if he could
say he would definitely have XXX many students
(perhaps with a supporting vote of confidence from the school’s head
teacher), he’d score over those who maybe have bigger crowds but can’t
guarantee all the kids will be there on the day. I
also suggested he could make contact with other schools or libraries in
the area and see if they’re interested in having me visit, or perhaps
in using his school as a base -- if he could come back to LittleBrown
and say he can do big events for me, featuring not just his school but
a number of others, that will tempt them -- and in this game it’s all
about temptation!!!! I know it’s not always possible for a school to
let in other students on a day visit, but if it IS possible, it gives
that school the advantage of being able to set itrself up as a host for
others -- exposure to a number of different schools is a powerfully
tempting carrot ... The
most important thing, I stressed, was not to lose his temper, to
persist gently and politely, and keep trying to make his case as
persuasively and temptingly as possible. Publishers, like most people
in life, respond best to polite enthusiasm -- rude pushiness can sink
even the best of pitches.
Once the tour is at a more advanced
stage, I’ll be publishing contact details for my publisher, so that
other schools, libraries and shops can "pitch" for me. I’ll also be
providing more advice and info about how you should try to arrange for
a visit. But the schedule is still in the VERY early stages, so please
don’t write to me about it until I announce more info in a few months
time. I just wanted to use this opportunity to give fans in the States
advance warning that I AM coming back!!! It will be in the second half
of October, and will maybe run into early November. We haven’t chosen
States or cities yet, although it looks like Arizona will be on the
itinerary!!
The way these things work is that my publicist will
put together a rough tour schedule, based on requests that have come in
to her in the past (which is why Arizona is currently being considered
so early on), along with recommendations from the LittleBrown sales
team and other people out in the field. Then, when we have a better
idea of where I’ll be going, I’ll provide a window of opportunity for
schools, libraries and stores to make a pitch and argue the case for
why I should pay them a visit. I’m not sure when that will be -- you’ll
need to keep an eye on the Shanville Monthly for updates, and be ready
to act swiftly when I make the announcement!!!
I've been in Krakow in Poland for a few days holiday with Bas and my Mum and Dad. It's my first time here, and we've tried to see as much as possible, although as with any city, there's only so much you can cram in over the space of a couple of days!!! The weather has been VERY changeable -- lovely and sunny one moment, then furious snow storms the next! But for the most part, although it’s been cold, it’s been good for getting around, so we’ve been able to make our way around the tourist sites without too much hassle.
We walked around the main square on our first evening here, and had a yummy Polish-type meal. On Wednesday we went to the castle and Jewish quarter, and had perogi for lunch -- one of my favourite Polish dishes! In the afternoon we went to the famous salt mines on the outskirts of Krakow -- they were outstanding!!! Beautiful and funny sculptures, all carved out of salt, along with a full-size cathedral!! I always enjoy trips below the surface of the earth, and this was one of my most impressive subterranean adventures yet.. Hugely recommended!!!! We finished the night by eating in a local shopping centre, and this time had the more globally recognised food of KFC!!
Today we went to Auschwitz -- and there ain't nothing funny to be said about that! A grim reminder of just how brutal, sickening and viciously inventive we humans can be. We visited both camps, Auschwitz, which was a concentration camp -- the prisoners were mostly worked and starved to death there -- and Berkenau, which doubled up as a death camp -- that's where the Nazis offloaded people (mostly Jews) by the train carriage load, and then gassed and cremated them. The vast body of the exhibition is in Auschwitz, but Berkenau got under my skin worst -- the sheer size of the place is staggering, and when I looked at those infamous railway tracks running into the heart of the complex, a shiver ran down my spine, and not a shiver of the delightfully scared kind, but of the "Thanks the gods I didn't end up in a hell like this" kind.
While there, listening to the stories of what the victims had to endure, faced with the very real evidence of how they'd been tortured and beaten and frozen and starved and executed and experimented on ... I found myself wondering if I would have survived. I think it's one of the reasons people are so fascinated by horrors of this kind -- it's human nature to put yourself into the position of others, to see things from their point of view, to roll play. I did that here and I honestly don't know if I would have made it through -- or, worse still, if I would have WANTED to survive. In a way, the luckiest people in these places were those who were killed quickly. Survival was a horrific, brutal, heart-rending affair. I can only begin to imagine what life must have been like for those who came through it. To have to suffer for months or even years ... to see those close to you murdered and fed to furnaces ... to live in freezing cold conditions, starving, treated worse than animals, no hope, no certainty that this would ever end ... It would have been a lot easier to let yourself be shot, or throw yourself on the electric fence, or ... I like to think I wouldn't have done that, that I'd have fought for every breath and clung to life no matter how bad things got, but I truly don't know. I don't think any of us can, not for sure. And I hope none of us are ever put to that horrendous test -- some questions in life are better off not answered.
A couple of emails and an actor's post
A couple of emails came through over the past day or so which I felt worthy of pointing out, along with a post from one of the actors in the CDF film. First, Richard in the USA wrote to say: Our family visited New Orleans last week. Our hotel window looked out onto an alley in which "Cirque du Freak" is being filmed. Thus we discovered your books, and my oldest daughter is reading the first one now. John C. Reilly looked really cool in a red coat and red hair. I'm going to read the book after Rachel finishes it, and we look forward to the movie.I've posted here before about the positive effects of having a book filmed. No matter how the adaptation goes -- even if it turns out to be a REALLY bad film -- it virtually always brings some new fans to the book. For me, writing is all about personal pleasure, creating something unique and intriguing, which will satisfy me -- but publishing is all about trying to take your story to as many people as possible. Writing should be all about creation and inventiveness, but publishing should be all about business -- I'll never understand writers who seem reluctant to help promote their books, who take a stand-offish, almost sneering approach to the people who buy their books, who have nothing but contempt for the selling side of the industry. I'm not saying you should ever write FOR money -- but you certainly should take the business of writing seriously if that's what you plan to do for a living. It's very difficult alerting people to the existence of a book. All publishers struggle with the problem of finding new fans, new readers, of convincing people to take a chance on a writer they've never read before. Movies help. People read interviews with actors, or see the filming take place, or catch a trailer, etc., and go and read the book -- so even if a film sucks, it can still bring new readers to a book!!!! But according to reports emanating from the set, the film of Cirque Du Freak doesn't look like it WILL suck -- which will hopefully mean even more readers come on board!! While I'm not directly involved with the film, the reports I've been getting have all been positive. Ray Stevenson, the actor playing Murlough, posted this revealing comment on his site recently: "Filming here in New Orleans is going very well indeed. I love working with John C. Reilly, he's a real gentleman. My character is bringing me a lot of fun. First time I've ever played an absolute bad guy, although I consider him a misunderstood vampire hell bent on complete domination of his world. Paul Wietz is just great to work with. He has a vision for this movie which is very exciting, very dark and carnival like with a palette of fair ground lights and circus costumes. ... Again I feel blessed to be involved with a project that I believe will entertain a lot of people. ... He's pretty unsavoury and not exactly easy on the eye. But I like him and on many levels he's just a bit too hungry, all the time, for anything he can get, especially blood !! (he regards people, especially children, as 'bags of blood')"
Sounds good!! I've been keeping my fingers crossed that it turns out well, even since the start, but it seems like maybe it won't need my good wishes ... Finally, Emma Foster sent me the following email about the Authors For Autism auction which I'm currently involved with (people can bid to have their name featured in one of my upcoming books): Great to see you doing so well in the Ebay charity auction already, some of the rest of the authors have no bids as yet, and you already have 10 bidders! I had a look myself, and would have had a bid, but unfortunately the amount is already more than I earn in two weeks, so I will have to wait until I am earning a bit more cash! Excellent thing you are doing for charity though, and hopefully the bidders will get as much as possible for that next gory death.As Emma noted, bidding is high -- the auction has been live less than 24 hours as I type this, and already the high bid stands at a staggering £460 -- about $920!!!!! And it isn't due to finish until April 2nd!!!! I'm delighted that bidding is so brisk, since all the money will go to charity. I know it means a lot of you reading this won't be able to take part, which I feel bad about, but the whole point of doing something like this for charity is to raise as much funds as possible. If any of you have a healthy bank balance and fancy your chances (or if you have a rich relative -- the winner can choose any name they want to appear in the book), click on the following link to place your bid: EBAY AUCTION LINK
Took my cousins to the Tower Bridge Experience on Friday -- you get to
walk across the two top sections of the famous tower, learn a bit about
its history, and see the engine rooms in the basement. The views are
great, and it’s nice to wander through, but I wouldn’t class it as one
of London’s must-see attractions. The tower itself is amazing -- if you
ever go to London for one time only, make sure you make time to go see
it -- but the experience is only so-so. But at least it’s short, so you
can squeeze it in neatly into a busy day!! We went for dinner at TGI’s
after that, relaxed back at the flat for a while, then went to see Avenue Q. We’d all seen it before (I’d seen it 3 times!), but we all still enjoyed it -- easy to see why it’s been such a hit!!
On
Saturday we went to see Spurs playing Portsmouth. Not a great game, and
it was VERY chilly, with showers of sleet whipping across the pitch
every now and then. But we ground out a 2-0 result, which was pleasing.
Bas had been on a ski holiday for the past week, and got back to London
in the afternoon, so we met her on her way to the flat and helped her
lug her bags back. We went for a Mexican meal in the Texas Embassy
restaurant just off Trafalgar Square (a regular haunt of ours) with my
friend Maiko, then staggered back to the flat, full but happy.
Today
we slept in. Then Maiko came over and we went for lunch to the Inn The
Park restaurant -- it’s inside St James’ Park, and despite being in a
great location to sting tourists, it’s actually a first-rate dining
place, with delicious organic food. We ate well and heartily, and once
again huffed and puffed our way back to the flat. We tried to work off
some of the food by going for a swim and sauna. Then I set my cousins
on the train to the airport, popped over to see my grand-aunt Nora, and
now I’m going to have a quiet night in.
Oh -- and Happy Easter, everybody!!!!!!
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