Kathleen Jones: A Fictional Dilemma
A couple of years ago I wrote a novel. Nothing remarkable about that. But when I told my (then) agent, it seemed a species of crime - a biographer writing a novel? Apparently it wasn’t what people wanted from me. But it was a book I loved writing and felt very comfortable with.
The novel is set in the 1930s and is about two girls, displaced by the political and economic shifts that preceded World War 2. Anna Weissmann is the daughter of a Bavarian hotelier and his English wife; Tamar Fell’s mother is the feckless, good-time-girl Sadie and a father who [Tamar’s been told] died before she was born. Both girls arrive in the north of England, with their mothers, at the same time and, although very different personalities, they become friends. Tamar loves books and escapes her dreadful home-life by spending time in the Carnegie library; Anna is determined to become a painter and fights stereotypes and lack of money to get the training she needs. The outbreak of war in 1939 alters their plans and sends them in unexpected directions, Anna into the secret services via an internment camp and Tamar into the Land Army. The novel follows their relationship for about six years, until Tamar’s marriage in 1942.
The elevator pitch goes something like this- ‘Two girls exiled from their homes overcome the dislocations and tragedies of war by a friendship that will last all their lives and replace the families they have lost.’
When I wrote it I felt rather unsure about how others would view the style and content - I felt utterly confident about my narrative technique in biography but wasn’t so confident in fiction. So I sent it to a good editorial agency used by my own agent and others as a reader and literary scout. I got a glowing report and very few edits were suggested, which pleased me a great deal. Friends and family who read the book were equally enthusiastic. My agent less so. It was, apparently, between genres - too well written (I quote) for a saga, and too saga-ish for literary fiction. Not having a great deal of confidence in my own abilities as a novelist I simply accepted her verdict, though it was a huge dent in my writerly ego. Then my agent went on maternity leave, I changed agents and everything got shelved while I finished another biography.
Earlier this year I took the novel out of its box and had another look. And I still liked what I read. Could my former agent have been wrong? The peer review site ‘You Write On’ was having a big trawl called ‘The Next Big Author’ promising referral to publishers for the best novels and I decided to expose my book to readers - anonymously - on the You Write On site.
The result was very interesting. I had to read an enormous number of novel chapters and stories (some absolutely dreadful) by other people in order to earn credits to get reviews of my own first three chapters, but it began to be worth it as I got more and more five star, rave reviews for them, many of which ended with a request to read the whole thing. At the end of the month it was in the top five of You Write On’s ‘bestseller’ chart - which included two other novels (one of them for children) and two short stories - and it's still number four in their saga chart. I qualified for a critique by Orion which I had hoped might be helpful, but it simply said, great story, very well written, good luck with this.
So where do I go now? Do I take my manuscript and my courage in both hands and send it to my current agent? Or do I simply bypass the process and publish myself on Kindle? That’s the dilemma!
www.kathleenjones.co.uk
www.kathleenjonesauthor.blogspot.com
Other books on Kindle by Kathleen Jones
A Passionate Sisterhood: The Sisters, Wives and Daughter of the Lake Poets
Christina Rossetti: Learning Not to be First
Three and Other Stories
The novel is set in the 1930s and is about two girls, displaced by the political and economic shifts that preceded World War 2. Anna Weissmann is the daughter of a Bavarian hotelier and his English wife; Tamar Fell’s mother is the feckless, good-time-girl Sadie and a father who [Tamar’s been told] died before she was born. Both girls arrive in the north of England, with their mothers, at the same time and, although very different personalities, they become friends. Tamar loves books and escapes her dreadful home-life by spending time in the Carnegie library; Anna is determined to become a painter and fights stereotypes and lack of money to get the training she needs. The outbreak of war in 1939 alters their plans and sends them in unexpected directions, Anna into the secret services via an internment camp and Tamar into the Land Army. The novel follows their relationship for about six years, until Tamar’s marriage in 1942.
Cover Idea - working title only |
The elevator pitch goes something like this- ‘Two girls exiled from their homes overcome the dislocations and tragedies of war by a friendship that will last all their lives and replace the families they have lost.’
When I wrote it I felt rather unsure about how others would view the style and content - I felt utterly confident about my narrative technique in biography but wasn’t so confident in fiction. So I sent it to a good editorial agency used by my own agent and others as a reader and literary scout. I got a glowing report and very few edits were suggested, which pleased me a great deal. Friends and family who read the book were equally enthusiastic. My agent less so. It was, apparently, between genres - too well written (I quote) for a saga, and too saga-ish for literary fiction. Not having a great deal of confidence in my own abilities as a novelist I simply accepted her verdict, though it was a huge dent in my writerly ego. Then my agent went on maternity leave, I changed agents and everything got shelved while I finished another biography.
Earlier this year I took the novel out of its box and had another look. And I still liked what I read. Could my former agent have been wrong? The peer review site ‘You Write On’ was having a big trawl called ‘The Next Big Author’ promising referral to publishers for the best novels and I decided to expose my book to readers - anonymously - on the You Write On site.
The result was very interesting. I had to read an enormous number of novel chapters and stories (some absolutely dreadful) by other people in order to earn credits to get reviews of my own first three chapters, but it began to be worth it as I got more and more five star, rave reviews for them, many of which ended with a request to read the whole thing. At the end of the month it was in the top five of You Write On’s ‘bestseller’ chart - which included two other novels (one of them for children) and two short stories - and it's still number four in their saga chart. I qualified for a critique by Orion which I had hoped might be helpful, but it simply said, great story, very well written, good luck with this.
So where do I go now? Do I take my manuscript and my courage in both hands and send it to my current agent? Or do I simply bypass the process and publish myself on Kindle? That’s the dilemma!
www.kathleenjones.co.uk
www.kathleenjonesauthor.blogspot.com
Other books on Kindle by Kathleen Jones
A Passionate Sisterhood: The Sisters, Wives and Daughter of the Lake Poets
Christina Rossetti: Learning Not to be First
Three and Other Stories
Comments
Trying again... I'm in total agreement with Simon. I spent 4 years waiting for mainstream publishing to reject 2 novels that are now earning me money and critical success. Why wait for them to learn that just because something is hard to market, it doesn't mean it's uncommercial?
Good luck with whatever you decide to do.
Finally I decided I'd publish it myself. Now I have a novel to my name rather than a manuscript in limbo. And as Linda says, it's earning money and getting great reviews.
BTW, I critique for an editorial consultancy... I wonder if it's the one you used?
I do miss being able to enter my books for awards. It's a useful hook for PR if you get listed and rightly or wrongly, people take you more seriously. I also get cheesed off with how hard it is to get reviews for indie e-books compared with pbs. (A hard copy sitting on the TBR pile will get noticed sooner than something on a Kindle.)
But I think in time things might change. Boundaries will become blurred. Maybe there will be special awards for us one day. Amazon has already recognised Indie Authors in its "Best of 2011" round-up.
But at the moment we're pioneers. :-)
Incidentally, for DWC, I used two editors, Hilary Johnson and Lisanne Radice.
He's very much a genre writer,and a highly successful one but I see many similarities between his analysis of the state of play in the US and what is happening here.
Speaking personally, I gave myself a deadline (last October to be precise.) This was because of a combination of things, but my own advancing years contributed in no small way. I don't feel elderly yet, but I'm no spring chicken, and it struck me very forcibly that I simply can't hang around any longer, with work that is acknowledged to be good - but is doing nothing - waiting for a waning industry to make up its mind. It was quite literally making me ill - and also making me feel 'stuck' as a writer. I couldn't carry on with new work. Now that I've made some fairly drastic decisions, and taken control, I can't begin to tell you how much better I feel. In many ways, it doesn't matter whether or not it's a success - at least I'm in charge now!
One day when I can afford to pay an editor, that manuscript might end up as an ebook original, which makes me a bit sad - but I now realise it's not commercial enough to publish traditionally. Or maybe I'll just have it buried with me? I could have it engraved on my tombstone... "the book that killed me".