WinR Stuff

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

The Birth of a Book




Jacqueline Vick is the author of over twenty published short stories, novelettes and mystery novels. Her April 2010 article for Fido Friendly Magazine, “Calling Canine Clairvoyants”, led to the Frankie Chandler Pet Psychic mysteries, Barking Mad About Murder, and A Bird's Eye View of Murder.  Her latest mystery, Civility Rules, comes out this February. To find out more, visit her website at www.jacquelinevick.com. 





THE BIRTH OF A BOOK









I've never had the privilege of giving birth, so I can't speak from personal experience, but I think the event has been captured in enough books/movies/conversations that I don't feel unqualified to compare the novel-writing process with a that of a full-term pregnancy. Both are exercises only attempted by the delusional, and the mistakes made along the way range from comical to painful, but the results are original and, one way or another, extraordinary.

I will make the author in my example female because writing "his or her" and "he or she" over and over again is a pain in the side.



The Spark of Life 


BABY: The minute the couple finds out they are expecting a baby, joyful laughter follows them wherever they go, because they are telling anyone who will listen that they are having a child with the expectation that the good news will bring forth reactions of awe and wonder. In their excitement, they seem to forget that billions of people have accomplished this same goal.

BOOK: When the author comes up with a killer idea, her first instinct is to share the idea, though often with more reticence than the happy couple. The author might toss out the idea to a group of friends or a writer's group with the hope that her peers will be stunned into speechless envy. In her excitement, she forgets there is no such thing as a completely original idea and that her writer friends have probably have had similar ideas and tossed them out.

The Excitement Grows

BABY: Lacking sense, the happy couple will NOT keep their dreams for their child to themselves. For example, Uncle Sam, who once had hopes of becoming an All-Star baseball player until he tore his rotator cuff, won't appreciate hearing over and over how this little wonder will someday be a member of the Hall of Fame. Foolish comparisons are made. "He's going to be an athlete, just like his father," even though the only reason the patriarch of the family wears sweats is because they have an elastic waste band. Mom will pipe in that their little girl will surely be at the top of her class, because Mom is still proud of the passing score she received on her dissertation about the effects of cow flatulence on the ozone. Then, to ensure their child receives a good head start, they will immediately apply at an elite preschool.

BOOK: The author, still under the delusion that her idea is original, witty, and worth millions, will start preparing her acceptance speech for the Academy, because, naturally, producers will fight to put her best-selling book on the screen. She has clear ideas of who should play her lead character. This taints her selection process of agents to whom she plans to submit her finished manuscript (which she hasn't started writing), causing her to narrow the field to representatives of New York Times best-sellers.

The Feedback 

BABY: They asked for it. After turning every conversation  back to the subject of their upcoming child, and even flashing pictures of the ultrasound at startled relatives, the couple is surprised when their listeners fight back. They begin to receive advice, and their every movement is monitored. Subject that were formerly considered private are now everyone's business, from gastrointestinal difficulties to their lovemaking habits.

BOOK: Everyone's a writer! After testing out ideas, plot points, and characters on strangers in the grocery store line, the author is surprised when her listeners fight back. Advice ranges from suggestions that she include graphic sex scenes to an insistence that she pepper the story with zombies, even though she's writing historical fiction.

The Hard Work


BABY: Morning sickness. Back pain. Strangers asking,  When are you due?  The mother's overwhelming desire to have this alien life form removed from her body.

BOOK: Writer's block. Grammar errors. Strangers asking, When does the book come out? And will there be a cheaper ebook available? The overwhelming desire to delete the entire  manuscript from the author's computer hard drive.

The Final Push


BABY: This baby is coming. After nine months, the mother finally reclaims her body, but the next 18 years are booked. I'll never do this again!

BOOK: The book is finished.  After nine months, the author types THE END. Now it's time to market the manuscript. Maybe I can get a job as a receptionist at the car dealership.





12 comments:

  1. I so enjoy your wit, in your books and your posts. Thank you for putting a smile on my face this morning. So glad you have a new "bundle of joy" arriving in February! Your books are a delight to read, Jackie, your "kids" do you proud, as they say!

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  2. I thoroughly enjoyed your post. Great comparison and love the humor of it.
    Marja McGraw

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    1. Thank you, Marja. I should have put a disclaimer. "The parents and authors in this post are purely fiction."

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  3. Oh, this made me laugh (and perhaps cry a bit at the bite of truth in your words.) Great post!

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  4. Ah... The birth throes of a book. Even men go through it. But the finished product is always our little darling and we can't wait to have another and go through all that again. But ask any parent and they will tell you it's worth it... Of course there are exceptions... But not MY child... Fun read, Jack. We missed you at lunch.

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    1. I missed you gals, too. Maybe I should have made the writer a man, just to make that point!

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  5. Well, I've never written a book, but you got the baby part right. Hmmmm, I guess it is a wonder that the "mom" ever has another book after the first one.
    Thanks for explaining the process in such a clever way.

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    1. Hmmmm. Maybe we should have collaborated, since I've never had a baby but have written a book.

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  6. That's because they are both our "little darlings"!

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