What If Duty Calls but Doody Lies in Wait?--Reb MacRath
Doody goes by many names: kaka, poo, poop, dog do or shite, to give just a few of the faves. And one thing we all have in common is that we come to fear it throughout our lives in different ways. When you’re trying to write a first novel, you’d damned well better fear going out to market it with doody all over your shoes: typos, grammos, hackneyed phrasing, slothful pacing, etc. Then, when it’s time to pitch the book, be sure: it’s frighteningly easy to send off a query that’s reeking of poop.
Enough of
generalities. Here’s my true scary story.
For over thirty years, I’ve had a thing for the ancient Roman and Greek classics. As I wrote in last month’s blog, I grew more and more intrigued by the study of different translations and theories on the subject. Okay. This year I stumbled back onto one of the more obscure and difficult Latin poets, one with a passion for filling his poems with mythical allusions that drive today’s readers elsewhere. I saw a way to simplify and streamline his work in a bold and original way. Not all of it. Maybe 6-9 poems with critical sidebars.
To what end? I faced a veritable minefield of shite.
--No mainstream publisher would touch it because past versions, by
experts, have failed. This isn’t one of the hotter Roman authors.
--Despite my three decades of interest, I lack a degree in the
Classics. Scratch any hopes for an academic press edition.
--A home Latin student, I’m not even fluent in Latin.
--As for my writing credentials, I’m a genre fiction writer.
--Etc., etc., etc.
Then
again, despite all that and more, I couldn’t stop myself. I found myself on
almost a mythological quest: to give a long-dead writer new life—not through
boring literal translations but through what I saw as a pocket-sized rock
celebration of the essence that no one had seen.
But even if I scored, and I believed I could, what then? Would I
publish it on Amazon where three readers with 10 years of Latin amongst them,
would demand their money back because I’d done exactly what I’d said I’d do?
And worse:
--There’d be no attracting online reviewers.
--And giveaway books on Amazon tend to attract trolls.
–Pricing it would be a problem, considering its small size: 50
pages, maximum, including an Afterword, Notes, and a long Bibliography. A $.99
price point usually signifies trash. Anything more for a pocket-sized special
edition could be taken as a rip-off.
After
spending a couple of months on just two short poems by this author, I began to
feel that the odds against me were insurmountable. It would take me a year to
complete this short, maybe unsalable book.
But
something kicked in within me: the memory of how I promoted my first published
novel when the publisher failed to list it in their catalog. I went to
marketing war, designing a promotional post card and obtaining extra author’s
copies to gift wrap and send out to writers I liked in my genre.
Though the particulars were far different now, had the ruling
principles changed?
1) Identify the readers most likely to get the word out. In this
case: classics students.
2) Identify the powers that be who might be willing to read and
blurb an outrageously different book in their field. This time: notable
instructors and/or department heads.
3) Devise a high-class postcard that introduces me and my
project, providing a short teaser of the rock celebration in store.
4) Find a new, ingenious way of sending out free copies with no strings attached.
5) Show respect for the academics' standing: a bibliography showing that I've done my homework: top studies and Latin trots and other translations consulted.
Color
me on fire again in a dual blaze of creativity and marketing wizardry. My heart
is pure. I want one thing: to get this tiny book in the hands of those readers
willing to be blown away by something entirely different...and yet right as
rain in its way.
This
is my report.
*****
Comments
You have to do what makes YOU happy. Too many people follow the trends, and trends change. Do this because you want a challenge or something different, or for all the reasons you may not have listed here.
When you're no longer fulfilled by this, then I'm sure you will move on, but there is definitely value in following your bliss.
I'll stay tuned to your progress! :D
eden
Yeah, we spend so much time thinking of the payoff of our efforts, sometimes it's good for the soul to cut loose and go for the bliss.
Do stay tuned. I think you'll like this itty-bitty one.