It’s a funny old world... by Alex Marchant
As Captain Jack Sparrow says in Pirates of the Caribbean, ‘It’s a funny old world, innit?’
And isn’t it strange how much can change in just a couple of
weeks? After all my worries and fears charted in last months’ blog – about readers’
expectation of that tricky second novel, of whether I’d finish everything I
needed to in good time for publication day, whether I’d manage to have any sort
of launch – everything seemed somehow to come together. Very suddenly. Or,
perhaps I should say, just in time, despite my tendency to do everything at the
last minute (...like this blog. Less than 12 hours until I’m due to post it. But
it has been a busy week – or three.)
To backtrack... My second children’s novel, The King’s Man, was due to be launched on 26th May – a date chosen for one very good, and another less sensible, reason. The former – because it was the Saturday at the start of the UK spring bank holiday weekend, and therefore the school half-term holiday throughout the country. This would mean that, if any of my big ideas for a launch came to fruition, it would be a good time to stage an event that children could attend. The latter – well, it’s a personally significant date for two reasons (one family-related, the other football-related), and I thought it would be nice to add a third!
Arsenal clinching the Championship in the final minute of the final league match, 26 May 1989 [Photo copyright FourFourTwo] |
A week before and I was all set for publication: the button was
pressed for ebook preordering on Amazon, all paperback proofs had been received
and approved, a bulk order made for sending out review copies and for private
sales. And that was when I realized – I didn’t actually have a launch
arranged. My big ideas hadn’t come about, of course – and I didn’t have any
small ideas for back up.
Cue the start of panicked arrangements for a virtual launch.
‘Panicked’
particularly because, though I’d heard of such things, I’d never actually attended
a virtual launch, let alone arranged one – and frankly I had no idea where to
start! And it’s at times like that that you discover just what a fantastic,
collaborative bunch of people authors are.
I created an event on Facebook at only a few days’ notice
and asked a few fellow writers for advice. And before long, not only did I have
plenty of ideas for how to run the event, I had four (yes, four!) guest authors
lined up to take a slot (and also take some of the pressure off me). As a
result, I extended the time from the original two hours to three – and on the
day, the time passed so quickly and the discussions were so lively that it
seemed not nearly long enough. Although it has to be said I was more than ready
to crack open that waiting bottle of bubbly as the event drew to a close...
The event guests – of whom there were around 50 – also
seemed to enjoy themselves, being very complimentary and very much getting into
the swing of things – entering competitions, posting questions, entering into
lively debates about my characters (mainly King Richard III of course). One had
even already read the ebook (16 hours after publication) and offered up my
first review. Another (one of my fellow authors) even put together a fantastic video for The King's Man (https://onedrive.live.com/?authkey=%21AMsySH0rQRDRTgY&cid=D2B4571C552D0578&id=D2B4571C552D0578%2114603&parId=D2B4571C552D0578%2114602&o=OneUp)
And my worries about how the book would be received were
soon laid to rest. All the reviews on Amazon are five star to date, with my favourite
headline so far being ‘A brilliant, gripping, heart-wrenching sequel!’ Reviewers
acknowledge that it’s a very different book to the first, but seem to ‘get’
what I’ve tried to do.
Oh, and then, three days before my virtual launch, what
should happen? Only the sudden, unexpected flowering of one of my 'big ideas'. An
email arrived from the King Richard III Visitor Centre in Leicester - where King Richard was buried for more than 500 years and where his grave was rediscovered in 2012. Apologizing for the late
reply, it asked whether I was still interested in launching the book there. And would the
second weekend of the school holiday be OK – to give a little more time for
publicity? What do you think was my reply?
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