Thursday, January 29, 2009

No future for books? I think not!

Tonight's James River Writers' Writing Show featured Joshua Kendall and Alan Cheuse mulling over the topic "The Future of Fiction." Both Josh and Alan shared their professional backgrounds and experiences. Neither of them, which may have been the non-directive style of the moderator, Brandon Reynolds, actually focused on the future of fiction. Tangentially, as a side bar to relating their experiences as editor (Josh) and reviewer (Alan), they touched on the future of the printed fiction book.

Alan's contention was that even though there are more people, the number of buyers of printed books appears to be stuck at the same number it has always been. His suggestion was that we proselytize readers. No one mentioned the evolving alternative avenues for fiction, like for example podcasts, or that fiction is the basis for most movies. It is standard industry practice for movie companies to review new fiction even before it is printed. Little mention was made of how fiction is consumed by movie goers and TV viewers. No one brought up podcasts or those who read books online.

They talked about the horrendous practice of refunding money to booksellers for unsold books. No one mentioned that Print on Demand (POD) might be an alternative to that. Perhaps books printed right at the book store? Neither did anyone mention distribution of electronic books as a way to avoid that refund.

Another issue raised was bricks and mortar booksellers running out of books and not keeping up with demand. Here, again, no one mentioned that POD might be a solution.

The most futuristic notion came not from the panel but from an attendee who raised the possibility that editors may need to partner directly with booksellers (rather than through a house) to get books out. Alan then mentioned the potential for sponsorship of books by commercial concerns, joking that perhaps a vampire book could be sponsored by the American Red Cross.

Josh mentioned the increasing number of independent publishers which Alan corroborated by indicating that a large number of the books sent to him for review came from independent publishers. While both men discouraged authors from taking the lone ranger unedited and unvetted route of self-publishing, neither of them considered that the ubiquitous online access to self publishing houses makes it easy to set up an independent publishing house (if you happen to be an editor and have a team to work with).

It seems to me that we have fiction, we've always had fiction and we'll always have fiction. Whether it's a printed book, an electronic file or a podcast. The future of fiction is absolutely brilliant. There are so many more avenues for distribution and so many more mediums that are derived from fiction books. Who knows where fiction will go next?

An audiobook or podcast though not in the same format as a printed book can still be mulled over. Not everyone listens to books in the car during the morning commute. So, it is possible to have an in depth experience with an audible piece of fiction. It's even more possible to get into the whole fiction experience in a wider way because of the online availability of the author and the dialogues authors and readers can have by way of blogs and email. This adds a whole new dimension to fiction. A dimension that needs to be developed.

Perhaps the printed book market is developing into just one niche of fiction consumption. If the number of readers stays the same, then printed book publishers will be lucky. What they need to look at is the rising number of fiction consumers who are not book readers. The digital age hasn't shown us everything yet. There are still a lot of good potential fiction products to be invented and consumed.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

completing a novel draft is just the first step

As I think about my three novel drafts and compare their completeness to what I see other authors do, I am realizing that my drafts are a lot like very detailed outlines with dialogue, events and description. Whether I do a lot of research and make a lot of lists or not, I still have much to do when the draft is finished.

The first novel I've edited three times so far. I moved things around and got them to where I thought they should be. Then I started editing. No edit round so far has taken me all the way through the novel. After my third attempt, I found I needed to move a section further to front. I've also learned that even though the first three pages are critical (and first sentence and paragraph), I can't write that way. I have to put in the first few pages what needs to be there.

As I wrote my third draft, during NaNoWriMo last November, I realized I was just making work for myself. Although I completed the draft in 30 days, that's just the beginning. After that comes cooling off, reading (I can't really read when I'm writing – it slows me down), and editing. Not to mention adding left out plot points and fleshing out characters. And, in the case of my second novel, figuring out how it ends. Yikes!

My first novel I wrote while hurriedly researching for and tracking with diagrams the complex web of societies and cultures I had created. I made lists, bookmarked web pages, and put any stray papers into a folder. Writing the third novel I just made it all up. I did the minimal amount of research fearing I would get sidetracked and keeping in mind David Robbins admonition that "you are the artist - you decide how it goes" (probably paraphrased). So, I just made up whatever I didn't know. I guess that's why it's called fiction.

Either way, researched or not, diagramed or not, what I have at the end of the process is a very rough draft that now needs a lot of love and attention. And a lot more than 30 days.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

My New Man

I've jumped into the vampire craze with Kaeel and some other parts I got for free at Daz3D. Even though it wasn't raining today, I spent the afternoon inside making this scene. He's even got a sort of young Darth Vader thing happening. Darth as vampire, I guess.

He still needs proper lighting and framing. I'm working on candles and I'll probably change his pose. Not sure why turning on the lighting shadows makes everything black. Have to figure that out. He's also a little fragile and too finely tuned for me. I suppose vampires need to look wasted. Would like to beef him up and age him a little. Still. Fun.
Song of the Day: Ultraviolet (Light My Way), U2 U2 - Achtung Baby - Ultraviolet (Light My Way)
(It's so much easier to play a song repeatedly in iTunes as opposed to the old vinyl way. No worries about wearing out the groove, no getting up and replacing the stylus, etc. 'sgreat.)

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Repurposing My Blogs

Since this blog (journal) left AOL, it's been a lot easier for me to post in and personalize. I find I'm writing more posts relevant to creativity here. So, this journal (blog) will be the repository for my creative efforts. As in, my creative work and what's that's like and other related subjects.

Here are some writing posts from my alien drifter blog to get started.