Showing posts with label Delia Latham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delia Latham. Show all posts

Monday, February 18, 2013

A Novella Approach




March 2010
I was a bit disappointed
when Yesterday's Promise
was contracted as an e-Book.
It's just under PBG's required
length for a print book.
Novellas are a new thing for me, as a writer. I’ve read many through the years, usually in anthologies such as the Barbour Christmas collections. But it never occurred to me to write one myself until I was contracted by White Rose Publishing, and I have discovered that I truly enjoy writing these shorter works.


That said, please don’t misunderstand: I did not say they’re easier to write. They’re not.


What they are is less difficult to plot. At less than half the length of a full-length novel, these stories simply don’t have room for an excess of sub-plots and cliffhangers. However, it can become quite a challenge to fit all the elements necessary to the storyline into 20,000 words—or less, depending on the project. So the novella becomes an exercise in brevity—a challenge to find ways of saying a thing less wordily, but with equal impact.

“Why should I write a novella, when I can write a novel that’ll actually go to print?”


December 2010
Admit it, that’s what you’re thinking. I know you are, because that’s what I used to think…and I’m not all that different from everyone else. (At least, I’d like to think I’m not.) Getting a book into print seems somehow more like legitimate publication than having an e-Book contract. Books are real…you can hold them in your hand, and folks can buy them—you can sign those babies!

But a very wise woman who happens to know a great deal about publishing convinced me that these shorter stories have their place in the industry and that they can be a boon to an author’s career. She may not even remember the conversation, but I do.


I probably won’t be able to quote her word-for-word, ‘cause my memory’s not that good. I left the half-century mark behind a few years ago, so I hope Nicola Martinez won’t come back with, “I never said any such thing.”


April 2011
If I'd been on my toes,
and clued in to the benefit
of novellas, I might
 have avoided the long
gap without a release
between this book and
the next one...
Here’s what I remember her saying: “I’ve seen a direct correlation between authors who consistently have good sales and the ones who write novellas for release in between their full-length novels.”


I’ve thought about those words a lot. And I’ve come up with a few reasons for that “correlation.” Just my opinion, but that’s what this blog is for, right?


1.         The author’s name remains out there in the public eye, so readers don’t forget a writer they like in between books.


Let’s face it…the length of time between contracts for full-length novels can be daunting. And that’s not even counting the wait between “the call” and seeing the book in print. I was averaging a book every couple of years up until Solomon’s Gate. That’s long enough for a reader to forget they ever read a book with my name on the cover.

2.         The author continues to write.


The temptation to rest in between books is almost irresistible…but a bad idea. Having shorter projects in between keeps the imagination active and the writing skills honed.


March 2012
3.         The author takes home more of the book sales profit.
 
‘Nuff said.

4.         E-publishing is the wave of the future. Why not get in on the ground floor?

Although it still has a ways to go as far as convincing the public to embrace it, e-reading has gained considerable ground in recent years. Almost everyone owns an e-Reader of some kind. Which says to me that e-Books are becoming recognized as “real” books. Readers are learning to appreciate the ease of purchase (order, pay, and be reading within a couple of minutes—and all from the comfort of their recliner); compact storage (yes, I love bookshelves, but they’re never big enough for an avid reader, which means books overflow into every area of the house); ease of transport (ever tried to pack ten Summer reads into a suitcase small enough to fit overhead in a jetliner’s coach class seating—along with all your clothes and toiletries?); and cost-effectiveness of e-Books.


4.         They’re fun to write.

And who needs any better reason than that?


by Delia Latham




Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Interview with Delia Latham

























Today, we’re interviewing a multitalented author who wrote Yesterday’s Promise. Not only is this woman an amazing writer, but I recently learned that back in the 90’s she had a Country Western band where she was invited to Nashville! There she met stars like Reba McEntrie and Garth Brooks. Would you welcome with me, Delia Latham, one of the new authors at White Rose Publishing…

Delia, could you tell us where were you born? Well, technically I was born in a hospital in Bakersfield, California…but my family lived in a tiny agricultural community called Weedpatch at the time. That’s where I grew up.
Ah, a sense of humor. Speaking of which, what is the funniest thing that ever happened to you or you witnessed that made you laugh so hard you couldn’t catch your breath?
I know this has happened to me many times, but my memory is only bringing one such instance vividly to mind (probably because it was the most recent). My family was playing a game of charades, and my daughter-in-law’s mother was trying to communicate "Michael Jackson." Let’s just say her moonwalk was highly amusing…

Name some of your most favorite things.
I’ll name four: Blake, Savannah, Logan and Aidan - my perfect grandchildren.

Questions about your writing:
What or who inspires you to write?
First and foremost, from above. Without God’s prompting and inspiration, His little mental nudges and gentle shoves, I couldn’t write a word. I’m inspired when I witness emotions and the situations that cause them: love, sadness, joy, miracles and tragedies. Given the world that God provided, and the millions of varied persons and personalities He filled it with, ideas really are all around us. But sometimes they’re pretty chameleon-like, and you have to be looking for them to discern their presence.

What was your favorite book growing up that inspired you to try your hand at writing?
I read everything I could get my hands on, from the time I picked up my First Reader. I’m not sure I had any one favorite book-there were too many wonderful stories out there to choose just one! I loved Carolyn Keene’s Nancy Drew stories; I read Trixie Belden and the Hardy Boys. Probably the most significant author, as far as influencing the direction I took in my own writing, was Grace Livingston Hill, during my teen years. I loved her inspirational romances, and read everything with her name on it. Some I read more than once. Now, I quite often come up with a turn of phrase, or a situation in my storyline that makes me realize how much this gracious lady influenced my writing style.

What do you find most rewarding about writing?
When someone tells me something I’ve written made a difference for them, that they were uplifted spiritually, encouraged in some way, or that they renewed a relationship with Christ. Because I consider my writing a ministry, those are the things that make it "worth it."
Have you experienced writer’s block? And if so, how did you cure it?
(a) YES! Oh, yes! (b) On my knees.
:)
I hit a major, devastating block midway through my historical romance, Goldeneyes. It was set in Weedpatch, where I grew up, and I simply did not realize how hard it would be to separate the fictional story from the reality of its setting. I was overcome by memories-good and bad-and I simply could not get past them enough to write anything worth reading. I spent a lot of time in prayer, because I knew that story needed to be written. When God finally gave me the release, He also gave me the inspiration. The second half of the book flowed beautifully. It will always hold a special place in my heart, because it was like birthing a child!

How did you come up with your premise for Yesterdays Promise?
I wish I had a better answer for you, but the truth is, this story was unplanned. It happened during that grueling block while I was writing Goldeneyes. I came across the website for National Novel Writing Month (Nanowrimo) just days before their annual writing marathon was to begin. The idea grabbed me, and since I wasn’t making any headway on Goldeneyes, I simply laid it aside. The morning of November 1, 2005, I opened up a blank page and started writing. I had no idea what I was going to write about, but a dear friend of mine had only recently moved to Oakhurst, which is just down the mountain a ways from Yosemite. I was captivated with the beauty of the area, and so…I had a setting. But the rest truly happened as I wrote-no outline, no plan, no character chart. Just me and God.

So now you have me wondering about Goldeneyes… I’ve always wondered what it would be like to participate in Nanowrimo, but I’m too chicken. I’m so glad you did though! For those who are not familiar with this story, would you please give us the blurb?
A whirlwind romance amidst the natural splendor of Yosemite National Park. A spur-of-the-moment wedding. A young bride who awakens the morning after to find her new husband gone with the mountain wind.
Songbird Hannah Johns supports the child born of that ill-fated union by singing in a dinner lounge. Her dream of someday owning the elite establishment and turning it into a venue more suited to her Christian values is shattered when an unexpected transaction places it in the hands of Brock Ellis, the handsome biker who abandoned her in their honeymoon suite.
Ensuing sparks fly high, revealing buried secrets and forgotten pasts. Seeking to find peace with her painful past, Hannah returns to Yosemite, only to have Brock show up hard on her heels. Back where it all began, she finds herself in danger of losing her heart yet again to the man who shattered it the first time around.

I loved reading your story. Are there any fun tidbits about this story you’d like to share with us?
When my Oakhurst friend found out that I was writing a book set in Yosemite, but I had never been to the Park itself, she absolutely would not let it be. She insisted I come up and spend a week with her-turned her office over to me to write at night, and she was my tour guide during the day. I knew from my research about Yosemite that my heroine, Hannah, would spend a couple of weeks in a cabin in Curry Village. Reta took there. She wanted me familiar with the area, and I must confess to being properly awed by it. One thing I wanted was to see inside one of the cabins, but shyness overcame me. I couldn’t bring myself to ask, but Reta could. She marched up to one of the busy housekeeping staff, explained the situation, and obtained permission for me to go inside and look around. It made describing Hannah’s surrounding in her Yosemite cabin so much easier! And because I wrote this book during a 30-day period (not counting all the editing and rewrites, of course), I was writing many hours every day. I came to know Hannah and Brock so well that I genuinely missed them when I was finished with the story.

Thanks so much for being here with us today, Delia!

Yesterday’s Promise is available in e-format only. You can buy it at White Rose Publishing http://whiterosepublishing.com/ or Amazon.com http://www.amazon.com/Yesterdays-Promise-ebook/dp/B003CT32HE/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=digital-text&qid=1270854571&sr=8-2
The cost is $4.75.

Now, are you ready for some fun?
Delia is on a blog tour, and this is one of her stops. If you comment on this blog , or any other stop on her tour (see below) You’ll be entered into a drawing for: Two (2) $10 gift certificates to White Rose Publishing will be awarded after the tour. The winners will be drawn by a random drawing generator on Tuesday, June 1. (Please leave your e-mail address on the comment so she can contact you.)
Every comment generates one entry. So if a reader follows me from blog to blog and leaves comments at several (or all) of them, each comment gets their name in the drawing again. Chances of winning can be increased by touring with me and leaving comments at each blog stop.




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Susan Holloway
Journeys of Love…Inspired by Faith http://susanhollaway.blogspot.com/
http://susanhollaway.blogspot.com/

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