Update on My First Novel

Today, I received the page proofs for The First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival. While still a stack of unbound pages, it is a stack of unbound pages on which the words, page numbers and other things have been typeset as they will be see once the book is printed.

There is the title. There is my name under the title. And I’m suddenly all nervous. Why? At this stage, it’s too soon to worry about sales. No, what’s been worrying me lately is the prospect of anyone in real life assuming anything in the book is based on them (uh, rather than all of it being based on me).

I guess the “pure” artist would say, “To hell with what other people think and feel. The novel gets what the novel demands.”

Myself, I think “pure” artists are assholes.

Then again, as I didn’t base any of the characters off of real people, I shouldn’t be worried about it. I guess it’s just realizing I’ve crossed the point of no return. There’s the line in the letter accompanying the stack of papers. “Please be aware that only corrections can be made at this time; text cannot be rewritten at this stage of production.”

Dear lord, it’s set in stone. Except on paper.

So that’s that. Okay. End of nerves. No one likes a neurotic. Especially when the neurotic should be celebrating his good fortune rather than nibbling on his nails.

First Reading for My First Novel Scheduled

So this afternoon I received an e-mail from my editor at Kensington Books asking me to confirm whether or not I’d be able to do a reading from “The First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival” at the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance show in Greenville, S.C., in September.

Um, let me think abou… Hell, yeah! I get to do a reading at a major Southern trade show three months before the book comes out? Most excellent.

Of course, once I agreed, the thought of public speaking got me nervous for something that’s not happening for months. Thankfully, this reading will be in the evening and I’ll presumably be able to knock back two drinks to steady the nerves.

I was in Greenville earlier this year for a conference that involved lots of brilliant people, lots of fancy food and racing BMWs at the BMW Performance Center. The one drawback to that trip was there was no time for barbecue. Not this time around!

Barbecue, booze and book-reading … from my own novel, no less … well, slap my ass and call me fanny. I don’t know if it gets much better than that.

For Your Summer Reading Consideration

Remember the days when you could just sit down and read an entire novel in one sitting? You found a book that just drew you in and excited you, perhaps delighted you, made you laugh or just scared the living crap out of you. And you either had the time — or, as you’ve grown older — made the time. Maybe you blew off work or social obligations. Maybe you just said, “Fuck it. I’m not sleeping tonight.”

I’ve done that twice recently, first with Matthew Quick’s The Silver Linings Playbook: A Novel and just this past Sunday with Luis Alberto Urrea’s Into the Beautiful North

Continue reading “For Your Summer Reading Consideration”

Rewrite? Nevermore!

Rewrite. It’s an ugly, ugly word. Anyone who’s been in grad school or part of the journalism industrial complex knows the power of that word to strike fear into the heart. Rewrite. Then rewrite again. And again. A guy who went to grad school with me … hold on, Googling … this guy, Joe Camhi, wrote a horror poem, in the style of The Raven, in which a grad student’s dissertation adviser sent the student back for rewrite “ever more!”

So you’ll understand my elation when I got the following email from my editor at Kensington Books.

All of the revisions are great, and everything works and looks smooth to me. If not, the copyeditor will catch it. So I’m putting through for the acceptance payment, and the next step will be copyedits in a couple months.

Woohoo. I’m done with The First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival. Well, except for battling with the copy editors (I was once a copy editor, though you wouldn’t know it by my typos). And picking the cover. And the author’s photo. And trying to drum up sales. And worrying that no one will review it. Then worrying that the people who review it are going to hate it. Then worrying no one will buy it.

But other than that, I’m done with the writing bit! And I’m getting paid again.

Though that little bit of money isn’t going to make up for the 10% cut in salary we took at the day job yesterday. Ah, well. such is life.

Now, back to the next book. I’m halfway done with that first draft. Sweet.

Adventures in Book Blurbage

I’m at the stage in the publishing cycle at which we (the editor and myself) go casting about for cover (and inside cover) blurbs, those quotes you see on books by famous authors and other such folks designed to trick you into reading the book.

This can present challenges for the first-time novelist as, well, he’s a first-time novelist and no one’s read his work before. I’ve had a few people in mind from the get-go and two of them have agreed already, so I’m psyched about that.

You’ll have to pick up the book when it comes out to see who’s actually blurbed it, but so far my blurbers include a former NYC drag queen and a newpaper columnist from the Midwest. (Sweet!)

Here’s where it gets goofy. As I’ve said before, the title of the book is The First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival. For the uninitiated, there is a Grand Prairie in Louisiana and, once upon a time, there was a Rabbit Festival in Grand Prairie. But this book is not about that. This book is just a bunch of lies and such. Still, when I announced the title on Facebook a while back, I got a note from a Facebook friend announcing that she was the Queen of the Rabbit Festival and worriedly asking just what this book was about. I assured her that it doesn’t have anything to do with her reign as Rabbit Festival Queen and the book does not touch on pageantry (though talk about missed opportunities!).

Earlier this week, though, when casting about for more blurbage, the editor had a stroke of genius. “You should get the real Rabbit Festival Queen to read the manuscript and blurb it.”

BRILLIANT!

I was a little worried she’d be nervous, but happily she’s agreed, adding:

Me nervous? Come on.. I traveled around Louisiana with a banner across my chest that said, Le Festival du la Lapin and I also walked along side a float in a parade that I was suppose to grand marshal … but my co-marshal happen to be David Duke! Nerves of steel baby!

Yeah. That David Duke. Better yet, this particular Rabbit Festival Queen has an Asian background. So how did the former Klansman respond to co-marshalling with a non-whitey?

David said something to me like “I find Asians interesting.”

Awesome.

Hey Ken, What’s Going on With Your Novel?

Glad you asked! Well, things with The First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival are moving apace. Hopefully January 2010 will get here sooner rather than later and people will still have money left to buy books. Just last week, the editor asked me for my author’s bio for the book’s cover. (He made me cut out my claims of being the real Batman.) Haven’t taken the author’s photo yet — will likely ask Lisa “Homesick Texan” Fain to do those honors. And haven’t picked out cover art.

In other news, it looks like I’ve got a Hollywood-type agent to complement my literary-type agent. So I’m pretty psyched about that. Granted, I don’t know if there’s a huge market for a mildly humorous story about a straight Cajun priest who DOESN’T molest anything, but we shall see. Hell, if Wild Hogs can get made, anything can. I’ll be talking to the Hollywood-type agent this afternoon hopefully.

Meanwhile, my literary-type agent is leaving the agency for exciting new opportunities. I like the guy and aside from, you know, getting me a book deal, he was also a pretty good editor. So hopefully when the second book is done this summer, he’ll either tackle it or send me in the right direction.

So that’s what’s going on with all of that.

Check Out The Subway Chronicles

I’m adding my good friend Jackie Cangro’s blog to ye olde blogroll. I’m probably not going to make it a habit to announce additions, but since Jackie was the first person to publish me in book form, I owe her. Big Time. While you’re at it, order a copy of the book she edited, also called The Subway Chronicles. I’m in it, so you know it’s good! (It’s also very cheap.) Also featured in the book are Calvin Trillin, Jonathan Lethem and some other people.

Just Call Me ‘Novelist’ (but only for today)

I write and edit for a living. I’ve been blogging in some form or fashion for five years. But I don’t think I’ve ever walked around calling myself a “writer.” It just always struck me as something embarrassing to say. I’m sure there’s some guy standing outside a Brooklyn cafe smoking a cigarette — someone who’s never been published outside of the family newsletter — who’s calling himself a writer at this very minute. And, god bless his skinny-jeans-clad ass, I guess he is.

I know I’m not the first to say this, but I’d just as soon proclaim myself a pervert as a writer. Maybe it’s where I’m from. Sure, Louisiana and the South has a strong literary history, but that doesn’t make “writer” sound like an honest day’s work, like farming, doctoring, lawyering or such. While other people are out making things, providing services, a “writer” is holed up in a room playing with his pen and paper, which does sound kind of perverted. Or he’s holed up in a room playing with his computer — considering the likelihood that he’s procrastinating by surfing porn, that IS perverted. When asked what I do, I usually respond “I work at a magazine.” Sometimes, I’ll even say I’m a “journalist,” which — to me — doesn’t smell much better than “writer” if you ask me. (I guess this makes me a self-hater of the worst sort.)

But I do get paid to toil in the fields of journalism (which, yes, does include writing). With a few exceptions, I’ve rarely been paid for writing fiction or memoir or anything of the sort. Mentally, I’ve always considered a “writer” someone who writes books and stories that are actually published. While I’ve had the odd story published here or there, it’s certainly never paid me anything more than enough to buy a can of tuna fish and a six-pack (of Natural Light). And the first novel I wrote still sits forlorn and unpublished.

Ah, but the second one is to be published in early 2010 by Kensington Books thanks in part to Jeff Moores over at Dunow, Carlson and Lerner. The acceptance of this nameless wonder (my editor and I are working on the title) was not only the realization of a dream of mine, it made me almost feel like walking around calling myself a writer. Then I heard my wife refer to me as a novelist at a party (she told them I wake up early in the morning to do it) and I felt dirty and ashamed all over again. (If only I could have been an Air Force pilot!)

But today I received the first half of my advance. Granted, it’s only enough to maybe pay off a credit card or so (and that’s without subtracting taxes), but if I wanted to pay my half of the rent with it, I could! For a few months, too!

So, for today, yall can call me Ken Wheaton, novelist, or Ken Wheaton, writer. (Or carry on with “snaps,” “monkey boy,” “that fucking Republican,” “tiny,” “Drunky McDrunkagain” or whatever it is you usually call me.)