April 22, 2024
How many unpublished and half-finished books do you have?
I wrote four or five books before I felt ready to publish one.
It was part of the learning process. The first book I attempted went through numerous drafts and several changes in the point of view. But the story line was overly derivative of someone else’s story, and there was no fixing it. Still, it felt like an accomplishment. I’d written a book.
Actually, that wasn’t my first attempt at writing a book. At the tender age of 19, I wrote a book without knowing any of the rules. The story stunk. I have no idea how bad the grammar was, and didn’t count words. It was written by hand and typed on a typewriter-this was before the computer revolution. I still have a copy stashed somewhere.
But back to my later-in-life reengagement with the goal of writing books. I wrote three more books before I found my voice and wrote one I was satisfied with. Two of those books have plots that are worth reworking. One of them is the inspiration for the current work in progress. (Tentatively titled ‘The Edwards Investigations: Book One, The Rimer File). When I started, I thought I’d rework and update the old story. Instead, It turned into a whole new plot.
There’s one story I wrote after publishing my first book that I finished but will never publish. Truth is, I’m not any good at writing romance and that book proved it. Oh, I can include romance as a subplot, but I’m better at action stories.
There’s one more.
I’ve long wanted to add another story to my Free Wolves series. Yes, four is an odd number for a series, but it is what it is. What I didn’t know is whose point of view to write it from. I’ve made at least three attempts to get a feel for the story, and got nowhere. My newest attempt is 2000 words in and the story is heading in a direction I didn’t expect. It’ll take every bit of skill I’ve developed to take it where it wants to go. What threw me for a loop is I’m writing from a man’s POV instead of a woman’s. It’s been 10 years since I’ve done that and wasn’t prepared.
So, the first version of the first chapter is done and I’m busy formulating the beginning of the second.
Let’s tie this up in a neat little package.
So far, I’ve published 11 books. Three in the Free Wolves’ adventures, six in the Harmony Duprie mysteries, and two Jake Hennessey stories. I’m editing one book, starting the first draft of another, and have five books in my archives. One of those has the potential for revisions and publication. (It’s a romance written from a male point-of-view, so I’m not sure I’ll revive it.) I’m not the most prolific writer out there, but I’m happy with what I’ve accomplished.
How about the other authors on this hop? Do they have a backlog of unpublished books? Find out by following the links below.
Of course, as always, please stay safe until the next time.
April 22, 2024
How many unpublished and half-finished books do you have?
I get enticed away from my part finished stories by the shiny new ideas I’ve just had. Not long after that, the process repeats. And repeats.
I have a hard time stopping in the middle of a story. The only reason I have 2 going now is because one is in editing.
I wrote a book when I was thirteen when I didn’t know the rules. Wrote another book during my high school years. My main problem with those two stories was I had characters and a world but very little plot.
I didn’t even understand the concept of a world back then. I had a bit of a plot, but nothing worth reviving.
Worth working on or need to be scrapped. ?
Twelve years ago, fiction had to take a back seat, thanks to work-work and more. So far, books I’ve revised and published as e-books had all cleared a few hurdles before rejection.
If they’d cleared hurdles only to be rejected,, that should tell you they are worth something.