A publishing contract!

A long, long road!

A bit of news!

It’s with enormous pleasure that I can finally announce I’ve signed a publishing contract! It’s with Wild Rose Press, for one of my Medieval romances. I have plenty of other stories drafted in that period so here’s hoping I’ve found a home for my Medieval stories. I’m so pleased to join the family of Roses!

It’s been a long old road not unlike when I climbed the Great Wall of China two years ago. (I replicated those happy memories in paint, see above.) However I’m not so naive that I think this is the end of the road: it’s just the start.

Like any other control-freak multi-tasker, I have many projects on the go a the once. This year I’ve been immersed in a Regency series. But I’ve loved revisiting the Medieval world of knights, ladies, battles, sieges and of course, the obligatory Alpha Male.

How it happened aka how I turned into a pile of goo

We all remember what we were doing during pivotal moments in our lives. Getting a contract after all the waiting, submitting and bouts of self-doubt was a key point for me. Here’s what happened when I found out during lunchtime at work…

Still recovering from a dental abscess which had necessitated elephant-strength pain meds, I was in the middle of a business trip to London. A fun part of my day job as an actuary involves being filmed discussing case studies on professionalism and ethics with other actuaries for training purposes. Much less stressful than “proper acting”, we sit on a sofa and chat away. The film crew roll the cameras then edit out the shaky bits until they have something useable.

Having just finished filming my bit, my phone pinged while we were having lunch. Even when I saw it had come from the publisher with “congratulations” written in large capitals in the title, I still needed to read it to be sure. I’d experienced a host of near-misses and almost-there’s. So my cynicism index was pretty high. But when I opened the e:mail I shrieked and started hyperventilating in front of colleagues, the rest of the panellists and the entire film crew.

Half an hour after this was taken I’d turned into a pile of emotional goo…

“Phone home” they said. (Bizarrely enough, a boss of mine from way back in the 1990’s once told me I looked like ET). So I did. I was fine until my children cheered down the phone line at which point I burst into tears.

Cue massive loss of dignity.

Low-key celebrating

How did I celebrate? On my own, in a hotel, with a glass of diet coke and a stackload of edits for another project. I was staying overnight in London and the antibiotics for my toothache prevented me from drinking anything more exciting. Still, the fish supper in the hotel restaurant was very tasty.

It certainly wasn’t how I’d envisaged getting the news but as I’ve realised since taking writing seriously, nothing ever turns out how you expect.

So what’s the best thing so far about getting the news? It’s early days yet and the ink’s barely dried on the contract. But the outpouring of support from friends, colleagues and other writers has been overwhelming.

A big nod to the Romantic Novelists’ Association here. Over a hundred fellow authors took the time to congratulate me within hours of posting on social media. A special nod to the wonderful reader who, under the RNA’s “New Writing Scheme” (NWS) critiqued this book. She assured me that it doesn’t suck and told me to go get it published!

So I’m delighted to say I’ll be freeing up a space in the NWS. I’d urge any aspiring romance authors out there to consider joining. It works. It really does.

Even for me.

Emily xxx

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Oswald and Occupations

There’s a pandemic in the UK of local libraries being closed down. But the silver lining is the community spirit which motivates dedicated locals to band together and do something about it. That silver lining burst into sunshine on a bright, summer’s day earlier this month when, to the lilt of Scottish folk music, our village library was re-opened.

Guest of honour, internationally renowned crimewriter James Oswald, officially opened the library then stayed to sign copies of his books (all sale proceeds to the library) and chat to fans. A generous and approachable individual he was happy to put up with my company for about 20 minutes, sharing our writing experiences, and he even agreed to a photo!

He had an interesting path to publication, but I suspect that path never runs smooth. While unpublished, his first novel was shortlisted in a competition, attracting the attention of publishers. They liked the writing but weren’t keen on the paranormal elements. However, he stuck to his guns and self-published to enormous success & multiple sales, after which publishers came knocking, rebranded and the rest is history.

He writes quickly – his last draft took 11 weeks to complete. When we chatted he was about to start a new draft, aiming to complete by the end of August – that’s 8 weeks. While I metaphorically collapsed in exhaustion at the thought of it, he reminded me that his books are part of a series so his characters and setting are already well-established in his mind.

His writing approach is similar to mine: he doesn’t edit while getting the first draft down. Instead he makes notes if he decides while drafting that something needs changing, then carries onto the end. It doesn’t work for everyone but if, like me, you’re terrified of blank pages, loathe having unfinished projects lying about, and prefer to set out and plan the plot in advance, it’s a good strategy.

He’s also an example to dispel the myth that published authors languish on wicker chairs in orangeries in some kind of literary parallel universe while the royalties roll in, before stepping out for red-carpet events. Like most of us he has a full-time job. In fact, I suspect it’s more than full time. With a 30-acre farm to run, a prolific series of crime novels plus a fantasy series for youngsters he’s an exceptionally busy man.

In fact he told me that he’d sat down wearily one day to talk to his brother about all his writing deadlines and his brother reminded him that writing had always been his dream and he was only getting what he’d wished for!

The ultimate goal for unpublished writers like me is getting a publishing deal and it’s often difficult to see beyond that. I liken it to a professional qualification (I, too, have a day job – as an actuary – and had to sit exams for 7 years before I could call myself one). That ultimate goal is the single most important thing we aspire to where life often takes a back seat (just ask my family!). But when that deal finally comes, it’s the beginning, not the end. That’s when the hard work really starts.

But it’ll all be worth it. If (no, when!) I do succeed and have a novel published, what I’m looking forward to most isn’t a launch party, a book signing, the glitz or glamour – it’s the prospect of seeing my book sitting in the stand of my local library which dedicated volunteers worked so hard to re-open, so I can say that I’m a small part of something our community can be proud of.

Em 🙂

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