In Borders, do you think they might file alphabetically by first name, just this once?
Sitting in my inbox at this very moment is an email that may very well change my life.
Or not.
It’s a book contract, sent to me by a small publisher who approached me about writing the hard-copy version of The Cheapskate Freelancer tools and tips. He’s been a follower of this blog, that blog and my journey as a freelance writer for several years. And he sees lots of potential.
Ummm. Let me say it again: A PUBLISHER ASKED ME TO WRITE A BOOK! Usually the way this works is that an author writes an in-depth proposal about a nonfiction book she wants to write. She sends it out to agents and big-name publishers and progressively smaller publishers, trading her self-addressed, stamped envelopes for rejection letters. Or that is how I pictured things would work, which is why I was daunted about trying to shop the idea around.
Instead, this guy approached me, and, if things go well in our conversation and negotiations next week, I’ll have a deadline of May 1 for a manuscript and artwork (THREE MONTHS! Argh!). And if things go as planned, the book will come out Nov. 1, just in time to buy your copies for holiday gifts.
I’m dancing. I’m freaking. I’m trying to figure out what to do. See, I had this whole fiction thing planned out, and I started writing every day, and I had interviews set up with local authors to get their advice, and I signed up for an online writing course taught by my former writing mentor’s mentor. I was gonna make that happen, but then this fell into my lap. And this is just too amazing an opportunity to pass up.
This has such opportunity! When the book comes out, I’ll have more credibility as a speaker, and I’ll have the opportunity to sell books during my presentations. I can create special ebooks online as a bonus for buying the book or for sale themselves. I can launch the sponsorship program I want to do on Cheapskate Freelancer and, for the first time ever, actually earn money from the hours and hours I have spent blogging.
So, Beth, what’s the hangup? I’m not sure, but I’m sure there is one somewhere in there. I see a significant challenge in the time/money connection. The way the standard contract is worded, I may not see a payment of any kind until mid-2011. That’s kind of a tough one to swallow. I need to dedicate some serious, serious time to both writing it and developing a stronger network to promote it. Serious time. When most authors add up the man hours it takes to produce a book compared to the amount they make from the book… we’ll let’s just say working at McDonald’s probably pays better.
I’m also concerned about things falling apart. See, I once danced and sang and fretted when I signed a book contract for America on Five Dollars an Hour, the nonfiction account of a 26-state journey my sister and I took together in 1996. After two painful years of demoralizing rewrites, the book ended up being crap, and the publisher and I parted ways. I still have the original 50-page, single-spaced, double-sided, indention-free version that I wrote on a portable typewriter as we traveled around the country, working as dog sitters, airplane washers, housekeepers and carburetor kit assembly people. I also have at least four versions of the thing here on this laptop and several hard copies in the garage. As the book died its slow death and I realized it would never be bound, I was humiliated, depressed and discouraged. I learned a lot about the process, but my grand idea was sacrificed for the lesson.
And don’t think I’m not worried about writing about my fears in public. The publisher reads this blog, of course. He’s a friend on Twitter and Facebook. He’s going to see my excitement and fear and concerns. But I have to trust that he probably appreciates my honesty and recognizes it as part of the process this author ( I can’t speak for others) goes through when presented with such an overwhelming opportunity. I don’t think he’ll back off because I’m a passionate writer and very talented worrywart.
Besides, I’ve vowed to myself that if this contract falls through for whatever reason, I’m going to go forward with this idea. I’m going to write the proposal, shop it around, collect rejection letters and hopefully find a great partner who will love this idea. I’ve already dropped the fiction course in anticipation of a frantic writing pace for the next few months. I might as well crank this out regardless of the outcome of this particular opportunity.
These days I love to write my posts to ask for your opinions, feedback, ideas, experiences and more. I want to hear from you, not just blabber on about my life. But this post is kind of old school. I’m not writing this post to ask you what to do (I’m moving forward) or to collect kudos (let’s not pop the champagne until the Jello sets a little more). I’m simply publishing some exciting news and sharing my reaction, and I’m warning you that this might be a bumpy ride.



Lisa on 04 Feb 2010 at 10:16 pm #
So Exciting! Looks like even if this deal falls through it’s gotten you motivated to take on the project. I can’t wait to read it!
Mark McClure on 04 Feb 2010 at 10:38 pm #
Congratulations! According to all the marketing experts a ‘real’ book is a credibility creator. I can just see you now…. freelance writing consultant and with the products and services to match!
Best wishes for however you decide to proceed with this>
Craig on 05 Feb 2010 at 9:17 am #
Congratulations! What has fallen into your lap is really what we all want. I want a book contract, too.
I have several ideas for novels knocking around in my head. One is for a horror novel I am SLOWLY outlining. However, I also have a day job that occupies most of my time and energy.
Back to you. This contract obviously excites you. Make it happen. You will regret it if you don’t.
Best of luck. You know you can do this. Your cheerleaders are right here! Grin.
Now get started!
Barbara on 05 Feb 2010 at 1:00 pm #
What a wonderful opportunity for you. Congratulations!
To me, every new project reminds me of having a baby. There’s the initial excitement, then months of worrying about the outcome, and the fabulous thrill at completion. You’re going to be a proud book-mama.
Paul on 05 Feb 2010 at 1:34 pm #
Awesome! Congratulations! Should be a good read. Keep in mind the immortal words of Abraham Lincoln (and coach Gurujan): “If I had 8 hours to chop down a tree, I’d spend 6 hours sharpening the axe.” Start sharpening your axe!!
Also don’t forget your taxes need to be filed a couple weeks before that deadline
Roy Moses on 05 Feb 2010 at 7:26 pm #
Hearty congratulations, Beth — I’m green (not Mean Green) with envy, but think you deserve whatever breaks come your way.
Just remember your old friends and even teachers when you get a foot firmly in the door, and maybe I’ll dig deep into my closet and dust off that novel manuscript that I co-wrote so many, many years ago. Or maybe a story of our trials and tribulations with agents would be a better choice.
If I didn’t dislike the phrase “go, girl” so much I’d probably end with Go, Girl.
Roy
Mark on 05 Feb 2010 at 8:14 pm #
That’s wonderful news, Beth. One word of advice: don’t sign over the movie rights – at least not yet.
Wendy on 06 Feb 2010 at 7:36 am #
Beth, don’t be afraid! Don’t go into this with the idea of it falling through, or collecting rejection letters. Block out that inner editor, the evil one! Have the confidence in yourself that we all have in you. You’re a good writer and you’ve got good tips and advice, and even on her worst days a good writer can’t write poorly. There’s a place for you in publishing and this publisher sees it. This opportunity didn’t come along for someone else, it came along for YOU. You’ll find a way to make it work. Go forward with it knowing it was meant for you.
Jennifer on 06 Feb 2010 at 9:19 am #
It’s wonderful to hear about your passion and effort being recognized! I look forward to them being memorialized in a book I can purchase. You’ll be the book mama; I’ll happily be the book auntie and show you off to everyone! Congratulations, Beth!
Charlotte Rains Dixon on 06 Feb 2010 at 10:11 am #
Congratulations, this is great news. And, thanks for sharing your fears about the book contract also. I have a feeling you’ll figure out a way to balance writing the book and creating an income.
SimplyForties on 08 Feb 2010 at 12:12 pm #
Congratulations Beth, that’s scary fantastic news! I’ll be looking for that book around November!
Lun Khead on 10 Feb 2010 at 5:16 pm #
Damn!!!….. Maybe I shoulda thought a little harder about that whole dumping thang….
Congrats Beth. You rock girl!
betty on 02 Mar 2010 at 3:54 am #
please visit it custom term papers
Gimme, gimme, gimme? | Life on Avenue Z on 19 Mar 2010 at 2:16 pm #
[...] case you haven’t heard, I’m writing a book of reviews of my favorite free and low-cost online tools. Now I, too, have to deal with an [...]