This week, my second novel will be released. It’s an exciting time, even though my day-to-day life is the same as when I wrote nothing but ads and occasionally, the school newsletter. Still, there are books with my name on the spine in libraries, and that feels great – because books matter.
Every book is a story in itself. How the author got the idea, how it came to be published and how well it’s doing.
This is the story of my first book:
It started life as a TV show. I’d spent years in ad agencies, and when I was home with my first baby (watching a bit of telly) I started thinking, ‘Advertising isn’t as hard as agencies make out.’ So I worked up an idea for a reality show that had two teams of regular people coming up with ads for a real product. I made it look pretty with Word Art and sent it off to the networks. One liked it. Big excitement. The idea was developed and a pilot was made. I was going to be rich, RICH, I tell you! But it died in the arse because advertising agencies (the network’s bread and butter) hated it. In my show, regular people were making decent ads for five thousand dollars. Ad agencies charge … a bit more than that. Oh well.
I went back to watching Oprah, but the idea wouldn’t go away. ‘I know!’ I thought, ‘I’ll write it as a book. About kids who make their own ads.’ I got cracking. Then I got bored. Books are loooong. What if it’s no good and I’ve wasted all that time? I needed some expert advice, so naturally I turned to Google. I found writer Rebecca Sparrow’s website (I’d been a fan of her novel The Girl Most Likely and enjoyed her newspaper column), so I sent her this email:
Top Comments
erHq0v Enjoyed every bit of your blog.Really looking forward to read more. Much obliged.
When I wrote my book, I self published. Mainly because I simply couldn't find an agent or a publisher to answer my query letters. I could have handled being rejected but I found their attitude of 'only submit to me and I will choose if and when I respond' arrogant and rude.In this day and age where there are multiple options for publishing the traditional publishers need to sharpen up their act. They no longer weild all the power.