Showing posts with label a new novel part one. Show all posts
Showing posts with label a new novel part one. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Once again I'm way late posting. So it goes (if that phrase seems familiar, you probably read Slaughterhouse Five).

I'm beginning a new novel, and it occurs to me that folks might get a kick or even something practical out of reading a weekly (ideally) log of a fellow who's completed 14 novels (published 6) as he wades, runs, staggers, soars, and grovels through the obstacle course he hopes will lead to his 14th (7th).

I don't have a title yet. Or a real outline. I believe in outlines. I just rarely use them, being the impatient sort. What I have is a about 500 words of summary, which I wrote as a kind of organized brainstorming and to send to my editor at Poisoned Pen Press. The summary gives the crime that starts the story in motion. An early morning walker finds a black fellow hanging from a tree, apparently lynched, in a park in Los Angeles in 1926 or so. The summary gives the reason the detective, Tom Hickey, gets involved with the case even though he hasn't yet become a detective. It gives some of the clues Tom will follow, some obstacles he'll need to overcome, and the solution to the mystery.

I sent it to my editor. She gave it thumbs up. I gave her a tentative time line, 100 pages by the end of 2008, the whole novel by mid-summer 2009. She gave me a publishing date, Spring 2009.
 
So I'm ready to type page 1, though I wish I had a title. An friend once told me she never started a short story unless she had a title. That's wise, I think, because a good title can offer focus, which may be the primary ingredient of compelling fiction. But I'm impatient. 

I'm feeling the story should open with the fellow hanging from the tree. I wonder if that image would make a good cover. Knowing I'd  feel more confident if I knew what park he was hanging in, I emailed a friend who lives in LA, gave a few details, and asked what would be the most likely park. He kindly replied.

So I'm ready to go, except I need to boost my gumption. It takes gumption to start a new novel, even after you've written a few.

9-30-08