Interview With Me in Local Newspaper

I’m famous!  I’m famous!  Okay, just a little.

Our local newspaper, which has a circulation around 50,000, ran an interview with me in Sunday’s paper. With a photo and everything.

http://www.statesmanjournal.com/article/20100815/LIFE/8150308/1001/NEWS/A–Getaway–for-young-adults

I think it came off fairly well, though after doing a couple interviews now I’ve realized how easy it is to misinterpret something.  This isn’t the fault of the reporter, who I think did a good job, but more my fault for letting myself ramble a little too much and not realizing that, well, I was talking to a reporter.  For example, you might get the sense reading the article that I can take the whole summers off from my job at the university and loaf around my house in my flip-flops.  Alas, no.  What I meant was that I take more of my vacation days in the summer, when it slows down a bit at the university.    Hope the folks who sign my checks at the university understand that . . .

Speaking of that, it’s been interesting slowly losing my anonymity as a writer.  I’d gotten used to being something of a secret writer, preferring for the most part not to tell many people about my other life even as I started having some success, but the cat’s really out of the bag now.  Which is fine, I guess, it all comes with the territory as you take the next step up the publishing ladder, but it is something I’ve had to come to terms with.

Big News – I Sold My Second Book!

Many of you have probably already heard about this through other channels (isn’t everyone on Facebook these days?), but in case you haven’t, I have big news to share:  I sold my second book!

It’s called WOODEN BONES, and though I sold it to the same imprint as my first book (Simon and Schuster Books for Young Readers), it’s a very different kind of story.  This one’s a fantasy aimed at middle grade readers, and the tag line is, “Becoming a Real Boy Was Just the Beginning . . .”

If you guessed that it’s the untold story of Pinocchio, with a dark twist, then you’re on the right track.  The twist is that Pino, as he’s come to be known after he became a real boy, has discovered that he has the power to bring puppets to life himself — and what happens to him because of this newfound ability.  Since the original story by Carlo Collodi is in the public domain, this gave me creative license to take that story and imagine what might have come later — giving myself free rein to go where the story took me and not be constrained by the original tale.  Rather than an homage to the original story, think of this as taking something firmly rooted in the public consciousness and giving it a twist.  It was a blast to write, a story full of adventure and heartbreak, so I’m hoping that comes across for the reader.

As to when it’ll be available, that’s yet to be determined, but hopefully it won’t be two and half years like my first book.  I created a little logo because I plan to do something fun with this book:  I’m going to do a little more “behind the scenes” posts as this book winds its way toward publication.  A lot of people don’t know all that goes into a book that sells to a major publisher — from coming up with the idea to seeing it in a bookstore — so I thought I’d use this book as a means to shed some light on the process.  Stay tuned.

A Web of Black Widows – Electronic Edition Published

Back in February, the fine folks at PS Publishing released my collection, A Web of Black Widows, which contains six tales all centered around love and loss.  While the print edition is still available as both a signed jacketed hardcover and a hardcover without a jacket,* I’m pleased to announce that Flying Raven Press has just published the electronic edition.  It also bears a different cover:

blackwidows_cover

It’s available right now for the Kindle on Amazon.com and also in various other formats via Smashwords.com.  In the next month or so, it should also show up on the Barnes and Noble site, the Soney e-reader bookstore, and the iBookstore, but if you can’t wait you can get it in those e-reader formats right now over at Smashwords.com.

Here’s the blurb that’s appearing on various sites:

In these six provocative tales, Scott William Carter takes the reader on a journey to places where love and loss intersect: a grieving tattoo artist makes a cross-country trip with a pregnant woman on the run from her disturbed husband . . . a mysterious artist finds a woman washed up on the beach and feels compelled to paint her . . . a young man who made a disastrous choice in wife is forced to crash weddings with his ghostly bride so she can remain on Earth . . .

Reading these and three other stories, you will be intrigued, moved, and troubled as Carter’s clear and engaging prose takes you on a guided tour of the darker corners of the human psyche. But as he writes in his introduction, “There’s hope in there, too. There has to be. Otherwise, why write at all?”

“Scott William Carter makes it look easy. But if anyone thinks that writing good, intriguing fiction with a clear, plain voice is easy . . . Well, they should try it sometime.” — Chizine.com

“While it may be small in size, A WEB OF BLACK WIDOWS is as powerful a package as dynamite.” – Gnostalgia

“The title story is a stunner.” – Fright.com

*Copies of the signed hardcovers were limited to 500 copies, and they’re running out, so if you want to own one of these fine books as a collector’s edition, I encourage you to buy one soon.

Summer Update: Playing the Long Game

With a book and two collections published in the span of a couple months, this last spring was one of the biggest periods for my writing career.  Unfortunately, no, Oprah hasn’t called, but since over 75,000 novels are published each year just by major presses, I can’t say I’m too surprised.

How do I feel about this turn of events?  Pretty darn good.  And yet, I can’t say life has changed all that much.  Some family, friends, and coworkers may see me in a slightly different light — it’s one thing to tell them you’re a writer, and another for them to see your book on the shelves at Borders — but life for me continues pretty much as it was before:  Help people with technology issues at the university by day, be a good husband and father by night, and squeeze in the writing wherever I can.

My daughter’s seven, just completed first grade, and is having a blast riding her bike without training wheels.  My son’s four and we have hopes he’ll survive childhood, yet his indefatigable ability to put himself in harm’s way never ceases to amaze us.  Though my wife’s foresight in putting rubber padding on the edge of the fireplace — seven years earlier — finally paid off the other day.

Did all the publishing doors open in New York after I published my first book?  Sadly, no.  I’ve had a lot of near misses with some other books lately, which can be frustrating, but it’s also a reminder that I’m writing well enough to attract the attention of major editors.  The temptation is to rush out there and self-publish, especially now when there’s so many opportunities for writers to do just that and actually make some money (check out J.A. Konrath’s blog for more info on this), but if  you want to reach a wide audience, that’s not always a smart move.  It’s a smarter move than it was ten years ago, but it’s still not usually the best move.

Often the best move is to keep putting your manuscripts in front of major NY editors because they’re the ones who can give you access to the widest possible readership.  This may not always be true, but it’s still true now, and it’s certainly true for the kind of novels I’m writing. However, because publishing continues to change at a rapid clip, I’ll probably have to re-evaluate this decision fairly often.

I keep focusing on the long game.  I keep focusing on keeping productivity high, on striving to write the best I can, and placing my trust that in the long run that if I keep reaching for the widest audience possible, good things will happen.  That’s all you can do as a writer.  I recently finished my seventh book, a little fantasy with a very unique hook, and it’s now in the hands of editors.  I’m already well into my eighth, a young adult novel with a very distinct voice.  I continue to toss in short stories here and there, but most of my focus has been on the novels.

What else?  I’m dramatically curtailing the time I spend online.  I don’t post on this site all that often, or on the social networking sites either, but still, I realized recently that far too much of my reading time has been devoted to the Internet, particularly the most shallow and insidious form of it.  While there’s lots of good stuff out there, it’s come at the expense of spending that time with good old fashioned books.  Since books, and novels in particular, are my creative fuel, that’s something I have to change.  To use an analogy, it basically feels like I’ve been consuming too much junk food and not enough stuff that’s good for me.

The Internet can be a powerful tool, to be sure, but that big flowing mass of information can be terribly addictive.  Before you know it, you’re checking your email every fifteen minutes and worrying about whether Lindsay Lohan has gotten out of rehab.  Not good.

I’m not sure how other writers feel, but for me, there is a refreshing clarity of thought that comes when I disengage a bit from the hive mind, when I stop worshiping at the Altar of the Now and work at my own pace and in the solitude of my own thoughts.