The First Book Blog

After recently selling my first book to Simon and Schuster, it dawned on me how many first-time novelists are published each year — over ten thousand, according to some estimates.  Most of these books get very little exposure.  To help, I decided to create a blog called The First Book:

http://thefirstbook.wordpress.com/

Along with basic info about the book, there will be an author interview. I’m going to try to do two a month, more if I can.  If you know of any debut authors, send them my way.  The only criteria is that their second book can’t have appeared yet. 

The first interview has appeared and the second one is lined up.  Check it out.

It’s a very tiny bit of exposure, but every bit helps.  How long can I keep it up?  Who knows, but I’ll try to at least do it until my own first book appears in print.  Maybe then I’ll hand it off to another writer — someone like me, who has sold a book and is awaiting its publication. 

I’m on PM

Something neat . . . My book got listed on Publisher’s Marketplace, which is a sort of clearinghouse that editors, agents, and writers use to keep up with industry: 

Scott Carter’s THE LAST GREAT GETAWAY OF THE WATER BALLOON BOYS, in which two teenagers make the daring choice to steal their principal’s ’67 Mustang and end up on a life-changing road trip, to David Gale at Simon & Schuster Children’s, for publication in spring 2010, by Rachel Vater at Folio Literary Management (world).

Pretty stoked.  The good thing about the book coming out in 2010?  I have plenty of time to try to spread the word . . .

Writing, Politics, and Obsessive Tendencies

I’ve been following the Presidential election closely. In fact, I’ve gotten a bit obsessed about it — reading every article and blog out there, following the polls, even animatedly talking back to the radio spinheads when they say something I think is blatantly false (which, unfortunately, is quite often). This obsessiveness is a trait that can sometimes serve me well — like, with writing novels, which requires a certain amount of obsessiveness to be able to stay with a project of such magnitude — but it can also hurt me in other ways. Lately, I’ve found myself thinking about politics more than writing, which is a sign that it’s time to put on the brakes. And that means engaging in a media and Internet blackout of anything related to the election. Cold turkey, in other words.

But first, before I do, I want to go on record with something. I’m not a registered Democrat, but I’m fairly progressive by nature. After having read his book, The Audacity of Hope, and following his career closely the last few years, I believe Barack Obama is, indeed, the real deal. He’s the best hope that America has for turning the page on the politics of the past and really charting a new direction for the country. Yes, he has a knack for oratory which is inspiring. But if you do the research, you’ll see that there’s a real man of substance there as well. Behind the lofty speeches, he’s also a pragmaticist, and after the last seven years, the country desperately needs a little more open-mindedness.

I wouldn’t even feel compelled to say this (I’m reticent to talk about anything related to politics here in Mutterings), but there’s a lot that’s happened in the campaign lately that makes me feel I should. That I should go on record. Maybe this is the childish part of me that wants to someday be able to say, see, I told you so, but it’s also a defiant act in a sense. Because until very recently, I thought if Obama failed to win the nomination, I could still vote for Hillary Clinton. But their actions the last few weeks have made this possibility go from probable to less likely to almost zero. Why? Because I think the Clintons believe the Democratic voters are too dumb to see through what they’re trying to do — which is to engage in Karl Rove style politics, smear Obama with anything that sticks whether it’s true or not, and then win ugly. If you think I’m exaggerating, you haven’t been following this closely.

I have really tried to give the Clintons the benefit of the doubt, since I do want to support them if they become the nominee (and see, I find myself referring to them as the Clintons even without realizing it, as in plural, which should tell you something), but even the mainstream media is finally starting to call them on their game. Not everyone, of course, because they’re pretty adept at playing the victim, but at least a few people are getting a clue.

Jonathon Alter at Newsweek makes this case much better than me in his article, “The Clintons’ Patronizing Strategy.”  Read the whole thing. You’ll see what I mean.

I’m betting Democrats are smart enough to see through their distortions. They’re betting that Democrats aren’t — and judging by the number of people who still believe Obama is a Muslim, because, gosh darn it, they saw it in an email, they may be right. I hope not. There were five glorious days between the Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire primary that gave me hope that the country might be finally ready to turn the page on the politics of the past. I want that feeling back. I hope come November 2, I get it.

But now that I’ve gotten that off my chest, it’s no more politics for me. I’ve got to save my obsessiveness for other things. After all, I have a novel to write.

Look, Ma, I Sold a Book

Got the word from my agent that I can now officially share the news . . . I sold a book!

The Last Great Getaway of the Water Balloon Boys, my young adult novel about two teenagers who steal their principal’s car and end up on a life-changing road trip, will be published by Simon and Schuster.  Edited by David Gale.  Expected publication date of 2010.  Kudos to my fabulous agent, Rachel Vater at Folio, who’s been great through this whole process. 

You can read more about the book here.  In the coming months, I’ll add sample chapters and other tidbits to the page.  I’ll also have some more Mutterings about this whole process down the road a bit.  But for now I just want to say one thing.

Whoo-hoo!