|
| |
AOL Chat 2/16/98
This is the record of a "meet the author" conference on America On Line in the Writers Relief area.
DONSSu: Okay - Keith would you just briefly tell us about your current project - or make any comments you would like to and we'll start the Q&A
Note On: Okay. Well, I'm not sure which one counts as "current"...
Note On: My first suspense novel (with funny parts), SHOW CONTROL, is the only one now in stores...
Note On: it was published by Write Way, a small press in Colorado...
Note On: The second -- same characters -- will be out from Walker & Co. in August. It's called COFFIN'S GOT THE DEAD GUY ON THE INSIDE, which is the punchline to an old musicians' joke: What's the difference between a cello and a coffin?
ELEANDER: Is Walker also a "small press?"
Note On: No, Walker is not a small press. They are small compared to Simon and Schuster, but...
RVaug0575: Walker is big on getting books in librarys...pretty good company, actually
Note On: they are well known and respected among the "majors." They do nonfiction and mystery. And I'm about 6000 words into #3, which has only a tentative title right now.
JohnMarco: Can SHOW be purchased on line, keith? Amazon, and such?
Note On: Yes, Amazon has it. And if you access the Amazon page from my site and then buy the book, I get a buck, thus doubling my royalty. :)
DONSSu: LOL
JohnMarco: Great. will make purchase tomorrow. Thanks.
Note On: Not that I'd hint.
RVaug0575: Wow...is that true for everyone?
Note On: RV, no Write Way is a small press with different rules.
Note On: Or... what are you asking?
Note On: Hope you like it, John.
RVaug0575: think you probably answered it
Note On: OK
JohnMarco: Im sure I will.
DONSSu: How did you connect with Write Way Keith - through an Agetn or directly?
Note On: The link to Amazon is on my SHOW CONTROL page, BTW.
JohnMarco: Yes, noted.
Note On: Funny you should ask that. I connected with Write Way and sold SHOW CONTROL in an unusual way. I'm still unagented (which I do not recommend)...
Note On: I had a finished ms. and didn't know what to do with it. I asked the few writers I knew online about the ABA show, which was coming up in L.A. I asked whether it was a good place to sell a book. The answer was an unambiguous no: Do not go to the ABA show as a writer. You will just annoy people. It's for publishers and booksellers...
MaryCP: (that can't mean "American Bar Association".....?)
Note On: American Booksellers Association...
RVaug0575: American Booksellers Associatioin
MaryCP: oh!ok
Note On: So I decided to go. The ABA show was at that time closed to the public, so I volunteered as booth help. Then I talked to every publisher with the word MYSTERY in their brochure blurb. (I didn't yet know that I wrote suspense, not mystery). I pitched directly to editors, and ended up with a dozen ms. requests. I sent the mss out right after the show was done, and got 11 personal rejections and a contract offer from Write Way. ga
DONSSu: ga Dick
RVaug0575: Two things 1)That is the kind of initiative that I reccommend, highly to potential writers...good for you...and 2)Walker is a respected enough company that if you really wanted an agent...you can probably get one now fairly easily.
Note On: Yes, I've already had agent offers. None was right.
ELEANDER: you have someone representing foreign rights etc?
Note On: No, I do not. I do need an agent at this point. (I sold my second book to Walker also unagented.)
RVaug0575: in fact, I admire and respect you for that, as well
Note On: Thank you, RV.
DONSSu: agreed
DONSSu: Keith do you have an on going series with teh characters?
Note On: If anyone's interested, by the way, the story of that sale is in my most recent newsletter. Email me your snailmail address if you're interestd. ga
Note On: I seem to, Don. :)
ELEANDER: Usualy writers roam around ABA like lost souls LOL
Note On: EL, I go to the NAMM show (National Association of Music Merchants) every year. It's like the ABA only about 60 decibels louder, with smoke machines...
RVaug0575: lately there have been fewer editors attend ABA than in the past...but
Note On: The ABA was easy! ga
MaryCP: HA
DZStone: (ya got balls, note )
ELEANDER: Ha!
DONSSu: LOL
RVaug0575: it is still an exciting place to see...I've done about 12 of them.
ELEANDER: one was ebnough for me
Note On: It turns out I'm good at trade shows. [shrug]
RVaug0575: And it is difficult to get in as a writer...though you can generally get a floor pass from your publisher, or...if unpublished....from a local bookstore
Note On: Yes. Or you can do like I did, and find someone who needs help at their booth.
RVaug0575: that you are friendly with. ONce...I phonied up press credentials
RVaug0575: and got in free
Note On: The main thing is just not to try to figure it all out in advance. Finish your book and then try brute force and ignorance.
DONSSu: LOL
Tallon Jke: Have plenty of both, thanks
RVaug0575: some of the big publishers are coming back this year after a few years absense, so
Note On: Me too, Tallon. :
RVaug0575: I have hopes for it reasserting itself
C0MBATSUTR: <---'s strong suites
Note On: The ABA changed. It's now BookFest or BookThing or BookDeal or something. And it's open to the public, so it has changed in nature.
RVaug0575: Open to the public? When? I didn't go last year...but it wasn't open to public two years
RVaug0575: ago
Note On: RV, I think last year was the big change. It no longer bounces between LA and Chicago, either.
ELEANDER: it was in NY when I went
Note On: The ABA was? Well, then, I obviously have incomplete information.
RVaug0575: it used to be all over...Chicago, NY, New Orleans, Atlanta, Dallas, and I went, twice to LA
ELEANDER: about 5 6 yrs ago
RVaug0575: also, in Miami a couple of years ago but it's now settled in Chicago, hasn't it?
Note On: Yes. But it's not called ABA.
JohnMarco: ?
JohnMarco: Note - why no agents right for you yet?
Note On: John, I think it's a combination of things, both good and bad. One agent simply rubbed me the wrong way. I agonized over the decision not to go with her but my decision was borne out later, when I saw how she flaked out with other writers...
Note On: Another, I just didn't feel right about, but I'm also not sure I'm trusting that, because much of the information I got about her was from disgruntled writers (of which there is no shortage) and I suspect that partly I'm just too picky.
JohnMarco: interesting. I think you need to feel comfortable with decision. Very important relation.
RVaug0575: I've had only 3 agents in 41 years
ELEANDER: you gomma stick with this genre or do u have other plans?
Note On: That's the other thing, RV. I don't want to pick an agent only to change later when my career advances. I want a permanent one.
RVaug0575: sometimes they die, though
JohnMarco: (agreed, keith)
Note On: EL, I'm already sort of playing with the genre. It turns out that my writing fits into the crime fiction niche, but not conventionally (I didn't know I was doing that -- I was just writing). So for now, I don't really feel any of the genre's strictures. So for now, I'm happy within it. If I stop being happy, I'll write something else.
DONSSu: ga DZ
DZStone: a question (for not just Note)...but if Note has sold his own books to pubs...why does he
RVaug0575: do you have a background in that? police...law...family connection....intense interest, ex-con?
DZStone: even need an agent yet...and not just a lawyer to cut the deals?
Note On: RV, no none of the above. Just really liked reading it.
Note On: DZ, because I need someone to negotiate, not just someone to check over the contracts...
DZStone: hey RV...no cutting in line
Note On: A lawyer can tell me if the contract's legal, but a good agent...
DZStone: lawyers negotiate
Note On: can tell me if the percentages are industry standard or better or worse...
DZStone: literary lawyers
Note On: DZ, yes, but they specialize in law. I don't need that.
ELEANDER: little Ive read of yr stuff--youre a natural for foreign sales
ELEANDER: an agent with a good stable of foreign sub-agents
Note On: Thank you, EL! My fear is that I'm too American/slang/idiosyncratic for foreign sales, but I hope you're right and I'm wrong.
Note On: Yes, exactly, EL.
DONSSu: ?
ELEANDER: The american slant is one thing that intrigues foreign readers
DONSSu: How did you handle PR with the Pub - or were you allowed in put into the PR?
Note On: Which, Write Way?
DONSSu: yes
Note On: Write Way is very small, so author participation has to be very strong. I had some bad breaks with SHOW CONTROL. It was not reviewed in any of the usual places Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, and Library Journal. I feel as though I've hand-sold every copy that's been bought. Write Way was very receptive to my ideas. ga
DONSSu: What about with Walker?
Note On: My book with Walker hasn't come out yet, so I have no idea. My editor, Michael Seidman, certainly listens. We'll see where it goes.
RVaug0575: Michael's a great guy
Note On: Yes, we get along great.
Note On: He's touting me as "William Gibson meets Donald Westlake." :) ...
ELEANDER: Wanna talk about where u get yr ideas--what turns u on etc?
Note On: Hmm... Well, when asked "Where do you get your ideas?" I usually answer, "I make them up." Exactly what kind of turn-ons are you talking about? :)
ELEANDER: where yr interests lay
ELEANDER: lie
Note On: Music is my biggest interest. I always considered myself a composer first and a writer second. Then my first book sold. So now I need to put some of that energy into music.
DZStone: just curious as to your age...when you started writing seriously...were you working fulltime when you wrote the first book...
Note On: I'm 31. Yes, I was working full time. It took 3 years to write SHOW CONTROL...b
DZStone: did your mother have hopes that you'd get a real job?
Note On: but I would have written faster had I known it would sell.
ELEANDER: ha!
Canids: LOL
Note On: No, my mother was the one who always encouraged my creativity as a kid. My dad's the one who's glad to have a tangible accomplishment he can point to...
DZStone: (nice to hear that about mom)
Note On: I don't think he ever quite figured out what the hell I was up to.
DZStone: thanks. How long have you been composing Keith
Note On: We inherited a piano when I was 5, so that would be 26 years.
ELEANDER: what kind of music?
RVaug0575: have to go folks...Note...good luck to you
Note On: Thanks, RV.
Note On: EL, right now I'm working on two projects. I'm finishing a short film that I scored called "1 is for Gun," and I'm working on a CD of music for my wife, who is an operatic mezzo-soprano. I've got audio samples up at my site. :)
ELEANDER: hmm wonder if my player wil work
Note On: EL, if it doesn't, please let me know.
MaryCP: Am I remembering that you did Nigerian music of some kind?
Note On: Yes, I played for three years with a West African band in L.A. called Kadara.
MaryCP: ok
Note On: Afrobeat, Afropop, reggae, highlife, etc.
DONSSu: Did you play Piano? or what instrument did you play
Note On: Keyboards. Synthesizers. I don't have an acoustic piano right now.
ELEANDER: Is that what you wrote for yr wife??
Note On: Um... I never know how to describe what I wrote for her...
DONSSu: LOL
Note On: The instrumentation is synthesizers and percussion but there are also simulations of acoustic instruments (strings, piano, etc.) mixed in. The best I could do to describe it is invite you to download some.
ELEANDER: Ill try Note
Note On: If it doesn't work, EL, please let me know. I'll fix it.
ELEANDER: thanks
Note On: In fact, I'd like to invite everyone to my site. It's got book excerpts, audio excerpts, stills from my short films, and a bunch of other junk.
ELEANDER: I think we have a link
Note On: Great. :)
PRoss9: You've added a lot, Note, we met online several months ago!
Note On: Hi, PR. :)
PRoss9: :)
PRoss9: No hobbies,eh? LOL
Note On: That's right, I remember you. You're a pianist.
PRoss9: yep
Note On: Nope, no hobbies. Except maybe this &*%&% online D&D game my supposed friend Blake got me hooked on today. I spent all day killing villagers. Got nothing done, but I did go up 7 levels.
PRoss9: Progress!
Note On: Yah.
DONSSu: Keith have you used teh Internet for your promotion a lot?
Note On: Yes, quite a bit. It's a lot of work for unknown return, but I believe in doing what you can.
ELEANDER: howabout yr book for our circulating library?
Note On: Circulating library?
ELEANDER: WR has a small circulating library of members books etc
Note On: I see! Well, I'm unable to feed myself until I get a check, but after that, I would certainly be interested.
ELEANDER: Just one copy
ELEANDER:
Note On: I have no copies right now, not a one. But I will be getting more...
DONSSu: That';s fine EL - we can get a copy
Note On: after I get a check.
DONSSu: It is in hte stores now isn't it Keith
Note On: Yes.
ELEANDER: hard or soft?
Note On: Hard only. There is no pb deal yet.
DONSSu: Okay - we can certainly promote members by buying it - and we will
Note On: Hit me up in a couple of weeks.
ELEANDER: good deal
Note On: Or I like Don's idea, too. :)
DONSSu: LOL
ELEANDER: Ill buy a copy, Don
DONSSu: We'll do that
DONSSu: Any more questions?
Note On: If you're only going to get one, wait for COFFIN in August. Better book.
DONSSu: Okay - would everyone pelase show you appreciation to Keith
DONSSu: and we will go to open chat with him
Canids: thanks Keith!!!!!!!
PRoss9: YAYAYAYAYAY Keith!!!!!!
ELEANDER: Thanks Keith
Note On: :)
MaryCP: thank you keith, I think this was great!
DONSSu: Thanks Keith for a great evening
Tallon Jke: great hotseat.....Keith!!!!!!!
DONSSu:
Note On: Thank you all for having me! I had a good time.
PRoss9: EL is brewing something.....
PRoss9: I won't be here,either :(
Canids: love it when Jerry brews....
PRoss9: Yeah, it's better than Mocha Java!
Note On: PR, I used to get Frappuccinos every day until I calculated my yearly frappuccino expenses.
PRoss9: Keith, I think AOL needs a themesong, don't you?
Note On: Well, all... I'm supposed to get some money for posessions of which I divested myself for our NY move. So I need to get going. It was great being here.
ELEANDER: Note--NY move??
Note On: Yes, EL, my wife is an opera singer, and NY is where opera is.
ELEANDER: note when?
Note On: She's already there, EL, looking for a job. I'll follow when she's found us an apt.
ELEANDER: going to Met for Madam Butterfly, next week
MaryCP: Keith, I was serious, if you guys are coming through SLC, let me know
ELEANDER: Note--we have WR New Yorkers--if we cabn help--say the word
Note On: Mary, I'm driving all my equipment cross-country, so we shall see.
MaryCP: ok
Note On: EL, at this point, anything's a help. We've given up our apt. here and sold our stuff.. Now it just remains for her to get the job and apartment there.
ELEANDER: How is she looking for apt?
Note On: First she's looking for a job, since no one will rent to her without one. Then she's following up any leads anyone gives her; brokers, etc.
ELEANDER: Note rents are out of hand in Mahattan
Note On: Yes, we know.. And so are the deposits.
ELEANDER: unless yr in the chipps, try brooklyn
Note On: She's looking in Brooklyn and probably also in Hoboken.
ELEANDER: Park Slope is a good place to start
Note On: Yes, Park Slope. But it's all academic until she gets work.
ELEANDER: good luck
Note On: Thank you. I'm sure it will all turn out fine; it's just a little up in the air right now.
ELEANDER: what kind of work?
Note On: Well, diva work first and foremost! But she spent a few years as a production manager at a magazine.
MaryCP: "Help Wanted...Diva"
Note On: Exactly. "Will hit high C for food."
MaryCP: HA
DONSSu: Keith, thanks again for tonight. I need to go. I will make sure you get another run down on hte room activities, and a link
<
|