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Alicia wrote: "Best of luck. I like to hear of other people whose books have a long incubation period, as I travel in that boat.Possibly you could post a bit more of what the book is about?"
Hey, Alicia.
Thank you for your kind wishes. I'm glad to say that I don't normally leave it so long between writing and publishing. It's always a good idea to let a story rest before editing, but 17 years is taking it a little far.
The book is about a man in his early thirties yearning for something more and, thanks to a combination of unfortunate circumstances, stepping out to look for it. He thinks, for a while, that he's found it. Funnily enough, I was in my early thirties and longing for something more when I wrote it., but that's the extent to which it's autobiogrphical.
That paragraph is elusive itself - not much in the way of info. I went to look at your book description, which tells me much more - should have done that first, I guess.All this 'ad copy' information is so confusing to get right! Struggling myself to get something that catches the attention of readers and doesn't give away the whole story - but also gives enough information so someone can decide it is or isn't their cup of tea.
I left it 15 years between starting to write the one, and publishing it, but every minute of that time was necessary, some to learn to write, more to learn graphics, more to learn self-editing and formatting...
What do you want? I'm slow.
I wrote this one, edited it, accumulated rejections, all 17 years ago. There was such a gap because the e-book revolution happened without my noticing. I didn't write another novel after this one until 2013, but now don't intend stopping until I'm no longer breathing or capable of stringing words together on a page.And you're right - it's tricky to give a flavour of a story without giving too much away. I'd rather err towards the enigmatic than the explicit. Don't know if that's the best way to approach it, but that's my instinct.
Very best of luck with your writing.
Thank you.With a book that's 167K words, it's hard to think I could give enough away to be a problem. But most descriptions are supposed to be 200-300 words (depending on what you put in), and you get 150 characters for an ad...
The bigger problem is getting someone to want more when the sample is so small. Covers, titles, subtitles - all help, but you're still trying to sell a battlecruiser with a snapshot on a flip phone.



Possibly you could post a bit more of what the book is about?