As I mentioned in my last blog entry, I am at a quandary over my next book project and the perplexity continues. This interim period for me between books is an odd time. As I close out the editing process on my
latest two titles, Hiking Alabama 5th Edition and Space Oddities:Forgotten Stories of Mankind’s Exploration of Space, I get the bug. It’s a
feeling that I really need to write another book. These last two books have led
me to a thousand new ideas for other titles. They are rushing around in my head,
each one shouting at me that it needs to be the next one I need to pursue.
Unlike big name
and world famous authors, writers like me are not under long term book deals.
It’s a fight to get the attention of a publisher and have our book ideas get
past the dreaded Acquisition Editor. We do this through query letters first
where on a single page we have to describe our idea by making the words jump
off the page and smack the editor in the face making them sit up and take
notice and say, “Hm, interesting idea.”
I have been
very fortunate since my first book, “Hike America Alabama” (later renamed “Hiking
Alabama”) was published in 2000. That book offer came to me by chance when I approached
the publisher, Beachway Press (later Falcon Guides) with another project. They
declined my idea and offered me the Alabama book. Sweet. My third career was
born and ever since, I have been able to skirt around the query letter step.
When it comes to
my outdoor recreation books, since I have been with Falcon so long, they usually
come to me when it’s time to update my previous titles or to ask if I would be
interested in writing this book or that book. That has been the case with PaddlingAlabama, Best Dog Hikes Alabama, Hiking Through History, Hiking the Gulf Coast,
and Hiking Waterfalls Alabama. For my non-fiction history books, that is
another story.
For my history
titles, I make the bold move and skip the query step and go right to the
proposal. A proposal is the blueprint of a book that outlines every detail,
every nook and cranny of what I envision a book to be complete with a detailed
outline of each and every chapter, how it should be marketed, and so on. Not to
pat myself on the back but my proposals usually hit the mark and spur the Acquisition
Editors to call, ask questions, and sign me on. That has been my experience with Baseball in Mobile, Hidden History of Mobile, and my latest, SpaceOddities: Forgotten Stories of Mankind’s Exploration of Space.
That last
title, “Space Oddities”, was the most fun I had writing. The researching and
writing was everything I believed writing should be and it spawned a dozen
different ideas for future books, each one more exciting and interesting to me
than the first. That is where my problem lies.
As I said in
the beginning, each one of these ideas are shouting at me, “Write me! Write me!”
I literally have five proposals started for different titles. While researching
the proposal for one book I’ll stumble on some interesting facts for another
that sucks me into the proverbial rabbit hole and the next thing I know, I’m
working on that proposal instead of the first one that I originally started on.
But this is a
good problem to have. With retirement from my day job imminent, I see a whole
new world opening up. I can’t wait for that adventure to begin. But before that
time, I have a proposal to finish writing. Oh, wait. Look at that over there.
That would make a good book.
The journey
continues.