How I Became Enthusiastic About Publishing my First
Book
Ever since my Watermelon Letter, I wrote lots of letters
about issues I considered important. I also
wrote short stories about my life for my children and grand-children. I earned a
degree in English and became a teacher, but I had never seriously considered
writing and publishing a book.
After I retired from teaching in public schools, I
volunteered at the Senior Center as a computer tutor. Even though I now had
time, I still didn’t think I’d ever enter the publishing world.
Then two incidents inspired me to think about publishing a
book.
One day eighty-year old Ruth approached me at the senior center
about helping her write a book. She wanted to write about her family memories
and produce a physical book as a present for all the folks who would be
attending the family reunion the following year. She had a vague idea of the
contents—stories and pictures—and needed help in putting it all into a coherent
whole. I gave her a few tips on the spot and told her to contact me when she
was ready to let me proof-read and edit her manuscript. For six months I didn’t
hear from her, so I thought she had given up on her project. Then one day, she
called me. She was ready to put the book together. Her stories had been written
and the vintage black and whites had been sorted.
For a couple of months we worked on editing the text and
scanning and placing the pictures for final printing at a local printshop. We
were both pleased with the result, and her family reunion was a great success
with the addition of Ruth’s “Strolling Down Memory Lane.”
Then there was Alice, also eighty. We met frequently at the
Elks Lodge where our husbands were members. She occasionally mentioned the
manuscript she had written and submitted to a publisher years ago. Because she
had received a rejection from the publisher, she just let it languish in her
files. One day, I asked her why she didn’t just publish it herself with one of
the Internet vanity publishers. At least it would be a physical book that could
be given to her children and grandchildren. Alice thought that was a pretty
good idea.
A couple of weeks later, she called me to tell me that she’d
signed a contract with one of those publishers but that she’d need some help
with formatting the manuscript and uploading it. I gladly agreed to help.
Within a few weeks we celebrated her beautiful book, a young adult fantasy,
called “White Hole in Space.”
After I helped these two elderly ladies publish their books,
I thought, “If I can help others publish a book, I should be able to help
myself publish one.” I gathered all the stories I’d written for my children and
started sorting them chronologically. I filled in missing chapters and added my
correspondence regarding nursing homes and contracted with a vanity publisher.
My memoir, “The Little Girl That Could” was published in
2009 at considerable expense. In 2010, I spent more money publishing “Mindpieces,”
a collection of unrelated shorter pieces that range from whimsical poetry to
serious political letters and fictionalized family lore.
These two expensive books were followed by two self-published books, “Banking,
Bowling and Beethoven” and “Maria Lives!” I chose CreateSpace.com, an Amazon
company, for the printing and distribution of these books. Over the past two
years, I’ve also written and illustrated three children’s books based on my
childhood in post-WWII Germany.
No comments:
Post a Comment