So what's new with the book? It's coming out soon, right?
Well...we kind of hit a speedbump, and the release date might be pushed back just a tad.
Huh? Why? I thought everything was going great?
It is! We just ran into some problems when it came to the cover art. The initial draft of the cover--which I unfortunately can't share with you--got some thing right. It had this awesome grain to it, as if it had been printed on a tapestry. The cover artist, bless zir pointy head, had found a medieval village that was a perfect stand-in for Rivervale, one of the locations in the book.
Unfortunately there were also two male models on the cover who, well, one of them had a lantern jaw and five o'clock shadow, and the other was Shirtless. The capitalization is intentional: this guy had a six-pack, oiled skin, and some truly magnificent delts.
Sounds awesome. What's the problem?
Well,
1. My characters are both in their late teens.
2. One is described as very thin and covered in scars.
3. The other is a grubby village boy who's described as small and wiry.
Which, to be fair to the poor cover artist, I had submitted the story as an adult gay romance novel. That's my own fault, and the executive editor very kindly sat me down and explained about branding and about how a) we couldn't put models who looked like Eiland or Charon on my book cover without visually branding it as young adult and b) if there was going to be explicit sex (which, my original manuscript had one fairly explicit scene), we needed to make that VERY CLEAR on the cover.
Hence, oily nipples.
Bingo.
So what're you doing about it?
I've gone through and taken out pretty much all of the sexual content. It didn't really take long, there wasn't much there in the first place. Really, I should have submitted it as YA, but I just wasn't thinking right. I'm not great at branding and marketing and being mindful of my audience. Thank god I've got editors for that sort of thing.
So when is the new release date?
Not quite sure yet.
Seriously??
These things take time! I'd rather have a good cover and a clear marketing message than release a book in the wrong genre and get all borked up.
However...if it does get pushed back...one of the other dates mentioned was 4/20.
...that would be hilarious.
I KNOW. I could totally talk my bro-dude pothead friends into buying a gay YA novel on 4/20.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Timshel release date
Editor Jen has informed me that the release date for "Timshel" will be in early April! Huzzah! Watch here for links when it goes live!
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
*twiddling my thumbs*
No updates recently as there hasn't been movement on the novel front. Editor Jenn is doing a final runthrough before sending it to copyedits, and is waiting for her boss to nail down a release date.
The time between projects is always strange for me: I work well to deadlines, and the end of a story functions as a kind of finish line, continually spurring me forward. I have a fortunate combination of imagination and discipline, which means that it's easy for me to sit down and write every day.
The problem is, once I start on a project I tend to forgo everything else. When I was little, my mom actually forbade me from readings books until I had finished my chores. She knew that if I picked one up, I would disappear for the rest of the day until I'd finished, and then I'd be hopelessly muzzy-headed.
I'm still that way, except now it's about my own writing. There's a lot going on in my life right now--school, work, academic and scholarship applications, family crises--and if I start writing something new I'm not sure that I'll remember to cover all my bases.
I suppose that's what it means to be a grown-up: you learn to do your own chores. How tiresome.
The time between projects is always strange for me: I work well to deadlines, and the end of a story functions as a kind of finish line, continually spurring me forward. I have a fortunate combination of imagination and discipline, which means that it's easy for me to sit down and write every day.
The problem is, once I start on a project I tend to forgo everything else. When I was little, my mom actually forbade me from readings books until I had finished my chores. She knew that if I picked one up, I would disappear for the rest of the day until I'd finished, and then I'd be hopelessly muzzy-headed.
I'm still that way, except now it's about my own writing. There's a lot going on in my life right now--school, work, academic and scholarship applications, family crises--and if I start writing something new I'm not sure that I'll remember to cover all my bases.
I suppose that's what it means to be a grown-up: you learn to do your own chores. How tiresome.
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