When we met, I, just a teenager at the time, gazed up in awe at this beauty in her prime. Her youth behind her, my parents convinced her that an alteration of attire would benefit her greatly, and so it did. She went from the entirely inappropriate coloring of pink accessorized by baby blue to a more stately, perhaps even regal off-white accented with warm green, her strong iron jewelry all in black. This matched her terracotta bonnet, and she complemented her entire neighborly entourage.
My family loved her fiercely. We groomed her inside and out, restoring all those little corners and great rooms in a soul that people sometimes misinterpret. After all, her conception had brought together all the best that creative humanity could offer at the time; we would recover all we could of where she had begun.
For over forty-five years we loved her, depended on her, trusted her. Sometimes she let us down, but in the end it was we who brought her to where she lingers now. Unkempt, disheveled, she stands on her hill, filled with memories, more ours than those of anyone else she’s known. I sit with her on Sundays as I prepare to abandon her completely, and I remember. Oh, my dear God, how I remember. It halts me in my work.
Here we once put the Christmas tree, in front of the great, paned window in the massive living room for all to see.
And there, we painted the master bedroom on March 15, 1964, my parents’ twenty-third anniversary and the day that Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton married for the first time.
My balcony, a Romeo-and-Juliet balcony if ever there were one, turned out to be not nearly as well connected to her skeleton as it should have been. They had to tear up the floor in my bedroom and cable it to support beams in the far wall to make it safe.
Then there was the Sunday right before our first Christmas all together. I headed down to the basement to wash my hair and smelled the smoke. The Fire Department discovered the wooden framing for the cement catch below the fireplace, placed there thirty-five years earlier, had never been removed. An ember had caused the wood to smolder. The nice firemen put it out, then spent the next hour or so feeling walls for heat. Problem was that forced-air-heating ducts riddled the thick walls. Luckily we’d lived there just long enough to know where all those ducts belonged, and soon the gentlemen fire fighters departed, leaving my father to announce that not every kid gets a real fire engine for Christmas.
I feel her observing me as I think back. She remembers far more than I do, despite her dilapidated and slightly addled state. She watched as we moved in, and she’s watching as we prepare to walk away. It’s the right thing to do, I know. Her wounds and genetic defects will be healed once we are gone, and she will rise, a phoenix from the fire, unbearably beautiful in bright new feathers yet with a weathered eye. I will miss her terribly. I already do. But she will be the better for our departure. We have no money to maintain her. We cannot pay her taxes. It’s time to let her go.
Writing
Are We There Yet?
The rewards of all my work on my book, Fractured, flow towards me slowly, but they do flow. I don’t know how to make the process move more quickly. If I had more friends on Facebook, I’d probably be better off, but I don’t and that’s just the way I am. And yet, the word moves, a person at a time, and I am being read, just not by millions. Yet.
The interesting thing about marketing a book by an unknown author that appears to be just like any other young adult fantasy novel with a female hero but really isn’t—the interesting thing is that the few people who have read it are committed to it. Admittedly, they are all friends, or friends of friends, or relatives of friends, so they took the risk on the book out of friendship. But they come away with a real sense of my vision, and they care. This means I’ve succeeded. The words I put down on paper (or into the computer) have connected appropriately, as has my hero, Lisen.
Case in point. One reader, a woman whose vocation I can only describe as somehow connected with helping people in third world countries because I don’t know much about what she does, admitted that while attending a conference (or seminar or some such), did something she never does; she missed a meeting, and she did so in favor of finishing my book. That’s an amazing sacrifice made on behalf of a book by an author she’s only met once, an “unknown author” who is still struggling to get someone, anyone, to read her book.
Something in Lisen’s soul speaks to the reader. Something in her journey stands out and offers readers a voyage of discovery. Which is great! It’s everything I wanted, and more. Well, it’s almost everything I wanted. I’d hoped to have a few strangers joining the rest of us on this road by now, but it’s possible that the strangers will show up after the second book is published.
Fractured blew the people I know away because they really hadn’t expected it to be quite that good. The second book with its prohibited romance, life-threatening situations, murder and mayhem, and eventual clinging-to-the-cliff-by-the-fingernails ending should catapult my few very devoted readers into conversations with their friends and the young women in their lives about this gem of a storyteller and Lisen, the girl who does what she must to survive even when it may not be the most honorable path.
My reviews on Amazon—all four of them—are fabulous, and not because they are five-star reviews. (One reviewer offered to give me four stars instead of five, even though in her mind I deserved five, so it wouldn’t look like what I believe she referred to as the “friend effect.”) These reviews amaze me because each of these individuals GOT it. They got why the book is titled Fractured. They got Lisen’s broken state and how the mending is what this story is about.
One other thing these reviews have in common. They want more. All my readers want more. They ask, “What happens next?” They bug me to finish the second book (which is likely to leave them even more frustrated). They keep me going when I feel like I’m getting nowhere. Like children on a road trip, they keep whining from the backseat of the car, “Are we there yet?” Soon, I’ll pull to a halt, put the car in park, set the brake and let them out to enjoy the next stop on the tour.
(With thanks to N. for the whining-kids-in-the-car metaphor.)
It Took Ya Long Enough
Yeah, I suppose it did. In fact, I’m surprised I’m here. For thirty-five years, admittedly with several multi-year breaks, I’ve put all I could into writing the story of a young woman now named Lisen who learns that the destiny she’d envisioned for herself has dissolved into dust in favor of a far more ambitious fate. This was always the heart of the story, always its thrust. The fact that she now has seven years’ experience as a Southern California teenager behind her changed nothing. In fact, that change in the initial setup only enhanced Lisen’s accessibility and the poignancy of her journey.
My journey, on the other hand, has followed a somewhat circuitous route. I’m not going to lie down on the couch here and confess my innermost workings, but the truth is that my father was a great one for cautioning me not to get my hopes up and my mother—well, she lacked the ability to love. I grew up incapable of finishing what I started, especially when doing so could bring me any sense of accomplishment. And yet, the one thing I’ve never given up on—despite giving up on it a dozen times a day, sometimes for weeks at a time—is the tale of Lisen, the young woman of destiny.
When I realized this a few years back, I asked myself why. It was my very first novel. The sage advice is to toss that first attempt. Or, at the very least, pack it away never to see the light of day again. I tossed the first version, no problem. Then I rethought it—re-envisioned it, if you will. I dumped that version, too. And then, once more. Why? The fourteen-year-old inside of me wanted me to tell her the story, to tell her the story the way it was meant to be told. I think that’s when I truly committed my all, what I had and what I’d have to dig up from somewhere deep within. Whatever it took, I had finally promised that inner teen and the outer me that I would never hold back again.
And I haven’t. I decided to independently publish Fractured because I couldn’t seem to write a selling query letter. I couldn’t afford to pay someone to prepare the book for printing. I couldn’t afford to pay someone to design my cover. I kept hitting the rocks in the road, sometimes allowing them bring me to a dead halt, sometimes jumping over them with glee. But I overcame all the obstacles, and I am very proud of the finished product—the writing, the story telling and the package it comes in.
So, to anyone who aspires to a personal goal, I say this. Success does not come from the number of people who know who you are or the amount of money you make. Success comes from within and the satisfaction of knowing that, given your limitations, whatever they may be, you did your very best and never gave up.
Beware of Falling Rocks along the Learning Curve (Part 2)
As a too-poor-to-pay-them-to-do-it independent publisher, every decision was left in my hands. Some indies say this is one of the main reasons they chose this route. Others will tell you that it had more to do with royalties, typically a much higher percentage when dealing with a POD than a traditional publisher. I made this choice, as I wrote previously, because I wanted my book read and that wasn’t happening via the query-and-wait process.
But here’s the thing I discovered on the way to doing it all myself—I like making those artistic decisions. For one thing, a traditional publisher would likely have balked at my using two separate fonts. It’s a lot of extra work, and the way I had it set up originally (for a manuscript) did increase the work on my end. I had used Times New Roman 12 pt for the great majority of the text (what I call my “Garlan” font) and Century Gothic 10 pt for the “Earth” font.
CreateSpace, my POD publisher, provides advice on a multitude of publishing topics, and one of them is font choice. The font I wanted for the Garlan font was Book Antiqua 11 pt. I liked how it looked. It was not one of the fonts CreateSpace recommended. But it did, in my opinion, fit the criteria they laid out for a good book font. One problem solved.
I then began looking at fonts for “Earth.” I had my own criteria for these. First, the font I chose had to look dissimilar enough to Book Antiqua to be discernible as something different. Second, it had to match Book Antiqua size-wise at 11 pt so the reformatting from one set of fonts to the other would be simplified for me by one step, allowing me to change an entire chapter to 11 pt before proceeding with other formatting changes. And third, the italics in the “Earth” font had to stand out from its own regular version and look like italics when standing as one or two words in the middle of the “Garlan” font. In addition, the space between lines had to match between the two fonts. (You’d be surprised how many fonts leave huge amounts of space between lines.) Kabel BK BT fit the bill.
So, if I haven’t totally bored you with all of that, let me move on to the cover. I’d had a very unsatisfying experience with the cover of my book with my first POD publisher back in 2000. Their first design—mind you, for a fantasy novel with a medieval/almost Roman setting—looked like the cover of a psychological thriller, all reds and blacks and harsh images. I cried. They offered to redesign it.
The second cover had my shero in a long flowing dress looking quite distressed as a young man, presumably her brother, threatened her with a sword. Clearly a heroine in need of saving, not a strong young woman capable of saving herself. This time I begged them to take mercy on me and try again, admitting that if I must, I would accept this cover, but must I?
I did eventually accept their third attempt, a nondescript, stock photo of a small Greek-looking ruin on a hill—but only because it didn’t offend the crap out of me. It said nothing about the inside of the book, but it didn’t lie about the inside of the book either, and for the $99 I’d paid for them to do everything, I couldn’t ask them to do it again. I just couldn’t. I also couldn’t market the book. How can you get enthusiastic about something so mundane and boring. Here it is:
See what I mean?
This time I didn’t want to end up with something I couldn’t live with. I wanted to give it my all. But I was flummoxed. I can’t paint or draw. I don’t know how to make a photograph look like a painting or modify it to get rid of boobs on a female model (you’ll understand why that was important when you read the book). I looked at fantasy book covers on Amazon and looked for the name of the artist inside. Perhaps I’d be able to Google one who didn’t charge an arm and leg for a good cover. Then I came across one I liked, and it turned out it was an old painting. Public domain! Find a painting by a painter who died more than 70 years ago and I’m home free.
But what painting? I sat at my table and looked around my living room. Van Gogh? No. Picasso? Not dead long enough. Then, I remembered. Over my right shoulder behind me hung a print my sister had given me a very long time ago. “The Lady of Shalott” by John William Waterhouse who died in 1917 one month before my father was born. That was 94 years ago.
It was a painting of a woman clearly fractured emotionally. She had red hair like Lisen—long and curly like hers, too. It wasn’t until later (but before I finalized all my decisions) that someone pointed out one minor problem. She had breasts. But I hadn’t chosen this painting because she looked like Lisen; I’d chosen it for the emotions it evoked. And for the way it popped on the cover I’d designed with the help of CreateSpace’s template. I liked it and I kept it.
And that’s how I made sure my vision of Lisen and her story was maintained throughout the final product.