History was my favorite subject in school. Westerns were my favorite TV
shows. My favorite books ranged from mystery to historical romance.
Every movie on my favorite list is a historical. So when I began my
first novel, guess what? It was a 19th century historical romance epic
that took years of research, spanning several states I personally had to
visit.
Birthweight was more than a ream of paper. And when I
was told by agents or publishers that it was too long, or “sorry, try
again,” I wrapped it in cellophane and boxed it up in the garage
freezer. For years. Thirty to be exact. Thin-skinned over rejection?
Hubby eventually scanned all 700 pages into his computer and then onto a
thumb drive that is now in our safe deposit box. But I still have that
initial freezer baby—lingering now in a warm file cabinet—waiting to be
edited into two, maybe three books.
Fast forward to
present. I’ve attended a dozen writer conferences in the last four
years, and even pitched the freezer book at a few of the early ones.
Still too long. But the advice I was given paid off. Write a shorter
book first, build a platform and presence. Then bring out the big one…or
divide it into a series. Meanwhile, I had been writing shorter stuff:
stories and articles for the local paper, national anthologies and
magazines. I entered contests…and placed or won. Good sign. Skin
thickened.
When I received an award at a Women Writing the
West Conference in Kansas City for a short story, Publisher Rhonda
Penders was in the audience. We connected over dinner and she told me to
contact her if I expanded the story to novel length as the judge had
suggested. A year later, The Accidental Wife was in galley at Wild Rose
Press.
My inspiration for the time-travel romance was Diana
Gabaldon, whom I met at two of the HNS Writer Conferences. (The only
author I know who can get away with creating thousand page books, though
each one takes her three years to write.) The Accidental Wife was a
Golden Quill finalist—ironically for best FIRST book. The Accidental
Stranger was released two months ago and I’m researching now for book
three in my “Accidental Series.”
So what about that real first
book—put on ice? It could be a good prequel to the present series. But
living in Minnesota, I’ve grown accustomed to ice…and skating into
opportunities when they arise. I’m on a roll now with thicker skin and a
series agenda. My ice age is history.
by Cj Fosdick
http://www.cjfosdick.com
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