1 / 24

Publish Your Book

Publish Your Book. Catherine Condie. Introduction. This week is a celebration of reading, writing and publishing books; Building your story; Different ways of getting your book published; Things I’ve learned along the way. Where I began. Queen Edith Primary School, Cambridge;

tavi
Download Presentation

Publish Your Book

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Publish Your Book Catherine Condie

  2. Introduction • This week is a celebration of reading, writing and publishing books; • Building your story; • Different ways of getting your book published; • Things I’ve learned along the way.

  3. Where I began • Queen Edith Primary School, Cambridge; • Writing poetry and short stories – creative writing; • Composing songs with my guitar aged 9 and performing at the youth club aged 11 • 30 years later I began to write Whirl of the Wheel.

  4. What interests me about writing • What interests me most is the feeling that a pattern of sentences or collection of words gives you; • Stories, short or long, and poetry are no different to pieces of music – from Vivaldi to Jessie J and each composed the same way.

  5. Stories – where do you start and what should you write? • Write what you know or what interests you; • Think of a great plot; • Create your characters and their voices; • Show the action, don’t tell it; • Imagine your story as a film – changing scenes, different atmospheres; • Use Post-its on the wall or in a notebook to order your scenes or ideas.

  6. Whirl of the Wheel • A story for 8 to 12-year-olds led by a heroine who happens to be in a wheelchair; • Light-hearted time-travel adventure into World War II – time portal is a potter’s wheel; • Historical account of evacuation; • With goodies and baddies.

  7. The Switch • Young teens’ thriller about a girl on a French exchange trip who witnesses a raid at a bar from an apartment window; • Set in Paris, with some spoken French;

  8. HOORAY!High point of the story Almost there Mystery solved 3 2 OH NO! Rug-pulling moment 1 Lull THE QUEST BEGINSMain event or discovery that starts the story off Building your story In a children’s book the hero will be a child or animal that has to overcome a challenge to reach a goal. Challenges or scenes that build the story Tension Time

  9. Becoming a good writer • Read lots of different styles of books, plus you can read books about writing books; • Have a go and see what you like to write! • Ask your English teacher’s or your parents’ advice; • Start up or become part of a writing group in or outside school; • Find out about local writing workshops or courses (you might consider scbwi.com); • Enter a competition.

  10. My story is complete! • Fantastic, take a break and celebrate! • Ask friends, family, teachers to read and comment; • You could send it to a literary consultancy for comment but there is a cost www.cornerstones.co.uk; • Think about posting it online via critique sites like www.authononomy.com or www.youwriteon.com; • Look again at your story in the light of what you have learned.

  11. ‘Local’ writers’ networks

  12. Critique sites

  13. I’ve finished . . . what next? • Editing – read and re-read, making notes by hand or by making changes as you go, on-screen. Go through your writing a final time – line by line to look for mistakes, or ask someone to help; • Think about publishing – you could show your work to a recognised agent or publisher to see if they are interested in taking you on as an author . . . or you could self publish.

  14. Traditional publishing • Look through the Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook (published byA&C Black); • Choose agents and publishing companies suitable for your genre of writing; • Each agent or publishing company has a different set of submission guidelines. Most ask for a few chapters by post; • Check for errors in your work, send off your chapters and wait . . .

  15. What is self publishing? • Using reputable online sites to produce any number of printed books or e-books via your netbook or home computer.

  16. Why self publish? • ‘I have always disliked writing to order; I write to please myself.’ Beatrix Potter • Creativity is a personal thing – self publishing is one answer to keeping it that way.

  17. Seeing my book in print • You can take an electronic copy of your work to a local printer where you pay up front, for example, for the print of 250 copies; • Or start a free account with one of the major online suppliers of printed books (print on demand) : www.lulu.com or www.createspace.com. Order one or two copies – they cover costs by taking a percentage of each book.

  18. Print on demand • Lay out your pages using the guide at Lulu or CreateSpace; • Upload the document and use the cover wizard to create front and back covers; • These companies will put your book on their websites and distribute to Amazon.com and selected online shops for free; • Think about a selling price for your book.

  19. Seeing my book as an e-book • You can do this via Lulu or Createspace or independent sites e.g. Freado/Bookbuzzr , Bibliotastic and Feedbooks; • Kidpub (American organisation) • or set up a free account with Kindle Direct Publishing. Note that e-books are laid out in a different way to printed books; • KDP makes its money by taking a percentage of each book you or others buy. It sends your e-book for free to 5 international Amazon sites.

  20. Spreading the word I’m published! • Friends and family, school fetes or your local bookshop – Waterstones and Heffers; • Facebook author page; • Blog/blog interviews; • Twitter; • Goodreads www.goodreads.com; • Free online press releases prlog.org; • Make a book trailer; • Printed leaflets/postcards.

  21. Let’s publish a book Lulu publishing wizard

  22. and finally. . . • . . . there is no hurry; • so have fun! • and enjoy forming your plot and creating characters; • practise writing a few chapters and see where your story goes; • if or when you finish, you might now have a plan for what you can do next.

  23. Any questions? • This presentation Publish Your Book for the Linton Children’s Book Festival 2012 is available at Slideshare.net or via www.catherinecondie.wordpress.com

More Related