The success of Divergent, The Maze Runner and my favourite of the recent trilogies, Hunger Games, will have inspired hundreds of writers to have a go for themselves - including me. And why not? The temptation to build a world with its own rules, populated by a diverse bunch of characters straight out of our heads is very tempting. Add the hope that it may become a best-seller with a massive movie franchise (however remote) and it's too good an opportunity to miss.
But... while I find ideas for settings, characters and plots spilling out of my head, coming up with enough material to justify three books would be a big challenge for me. My previous books have numbered between 80,000 to 85,000 words so a trilogy would mean close to a quarter of million! Phew that sounds a lot to a writer who takes on average 14 months to write just one book. My first book was a young adult cross-over sci-fi slash horror slash paranormal slash alien invasion, plus a little bit of adventure and humour thrown in for good measure. Sky told the story of a teenage boy who discovers the girl he sees in his daydreams turns out to be real and is also in a fight for her life and sanity (in that order). It was originally intended as a one-off book with an ending that left the reader to decide the fate of our young hero. However, after a massive on-line campaign by readers asking for me (okay, I'll confess - I received three emails in six weeks!) I decided to write a sequel, and around a year later I published Stargazers. And I was happy to hear that my readers (now totalling around a dozen) found it even better than the first. Encouraged by this success (well it's all relative isn't it) I decided to commit to the long-term challenge of writing a trilogy. Never mind the thought of creating a best-seller that has the movie studios climbing over each over to offer me a six figure sum to even get my attention, I was curious to see if I was up to the task. I get a huge thrill from finishing a book. To date this includes three non-fiction and two fiction. So if I can write a half-decent trilogy that doesn't fizzle out half-way through the second book, then maybe, just maybe I could start to think of myself as a writer. So I spent my daily run with the dog racking my brains for a story, and thankfully I didn't have to wait too long. I dusted down an old idea a while back, took it to a different place and expanded the story - and hey, I'd got the basis for my trilogy :0) I set myself some rules beforehand.
Two weeks later it was May 2014 and I had something I could work with. But now came the hard part - having to get all those plot lines, characters, twists and subtexts into a coherent story. I had my basic plan, although I have to admit at being so eager to start my masterpiece, that I got going before the plot was fully scoped. But what the heck, it would all work out in the end :0) In March 2015, I finally came up with the title, The Never Dawn, to complete the first book of the three, got it proofed and was ready to go. All I needed was the cover and contacted The Cover Collection to design a bespoke cover. I sat with my daughter and came up with a few ideas, well okay I admit it was my daughter who had the idea of using The Metal Sun (a plot device from the book). She sketched it down and sent it to Laura at TCC. And I have to say I was very pleased with the finished product and was eager to publish. However, I didn't want to put it out there and then leave it to go cold before the next book came out seeing as it would take at least another twelve months. So I bit my lip and left it on the shelf and set to work on the second. I decided to dedicate more time to writing (difficult when you have a full-time job ,kids, and coach athletics in your limited spare time), but I set a target of a thousand words a day, quite a challenge for me, but it does focus the mind. Although I stumbled a few times on book two (due to not having the story fully scoped out) I did manage to finish the draft after several rewrites in December 2016. Wow, a book in just nine months! However, while I can write 82,000 words, I really struggled to come up with just a few for the title. But as fate would have it, I was listening to the radio in my car when I responded to a comment made that 'they were living in cloud cuckoo land' - and bingo! That was it. It fitted nicely with the story and was short and simple. So repeat with proof-reading and cover and I was ready to go. I published the first book, quickly followed by the second and it was out there... always a nervy moment. You've spent all that time and you still don't know if it's any good. Thankfully, the majority of reviews were positive, some being very positive, so I set about writing the third. This one I found the easiest seeing as I'd done most of the hard work with the previous two, and it practically just took shape quite quickly with only a few re-writes. Cover and proofreading done, I published in August 2017 and have to say I was both pleased and relieved to finish. It's a good feeling to have set a target and completed it with some degree of satisfaction :0) I'll blog more in the coming weeks on each book and how I felt about them at the time and what I feel now a year or two later down the line.
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AuthorRoy is an indie author who writes the type of book he would enjoy reading himself. He writes in his spare time and would love to become a full-time author one day. He's also teacher of The Alexander Technique and athletics coach. Archives
April 2023
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