Demand Growing For Print-On-Demand

There’s an article on CNN.com today about the growing demand and popularity for web-based print-on-demand services.  If you remember, late last year Faraway published the novella Doing the Dead by K.C. Wilson via Lulu.com.  Now, because of the economic downturn, more and more people are turning to services like Lulu and Author Solutions.

Traditionally, self-publishing has been looked down upon by professional publishers and agents, not to mention readers.  For one thing, turning to self-publishing usually meant that the author could not find a professional publisher willing to publish their work–in other words, their book must not have been very good.  There was also a stigma attached to what the CNN article terms “vanity publishing” where authors would pay to have their books published in bulk and then try to market them by themselves.

Sites like Lulu and Author Solutions are now turning this old thinking on its head.  There are many benefits to self-publishing now: total control over the look and marketing of your book, less stress in trying to find a publisher or being rejected, no up-front cost (as opposed to vanity publishing), and now, according to the article, literary success.  Although most self-publishers don’t sell a whole lot of their books (most books in general don’t sell very well), some are achieving literary fame and success and are doing away with the old stigmas attached with self-publishing.

Something to look into?  Read the rest of the article here.

With many thanks . . .

I want to draw attention today to our many supporters, whose donations keep this journal up and running.  We’ve recently received much-needed financial help from Alfred Scolari, Kyle Hernandez, owner of Second Story Books of Claremont, and Gay Degani, Michael Woodcock, Vic Fortezza, and Joseph Grant, all of whom have stories or art appearing in the latest issue of Faraway.  I received the following letter from Joseph Grant, which I wanted to share with you all:

Thank you so much for including my story in your fine review.  I am honored to be included in it.  The typesetting and graphics look great.  Keep up the good work. . . .  I believe in what you’re doing, so keep doing it.  Therefore, here is a small contributions towards the next issue.  Best of luck in your literary efforts.

Sincerely,
Joseph Grant

To contribute to Faraway and help keep this independent journal alive, please click here.

And remember, we are currently serializing the novella Doing the Dead – 1983.  We just published the first chapter, with the second chapter to follow on the 13th.

Chapter I. The Life and Times of Baby Brenda

Click here to download the first chapter of K. C. Wilson’s novella Doing the Dead – 1983, presented by Faraway!

 

 

 

            That book was never going to be written, not by me. And I was Brenda’s one hope of ever being remembered.

            I sat by her hospital bed and listened to her snore, remembering how that snore had trained me to endure it, to protect and serve it, to tune my ears to its nuances and to love the perverse and tender duty of watching over it.  I used to lie awake next to her wondering how she ever made it through a night alone. The sound her shallow breathing made was a pitifully faint wheeze until her chronic sleep apnea disorder kicked in. All through the night, at irregular intervals, sudden constrictions in her throat would block the fitful rhythm of her snore. Her lungs agonized and strained, expanding and contracting with­out drawing breath while she slept on, oblivious, until by some angel’s hand or a nudge from me, she’d gasp in one more breath through the blockage and resume her shallow breathing pattern.

Click here to purchase a copy of Doing the Dead – 1983, or click here for complete coverage of the publication of this new novella.  And be sure to return on December 13 for chapter two!

Support independent publishing: buy this book on Lulu.

An Interview with K. C. Wilson, Part 1

            Recently, writer K. C. Wilson, whose novella Doing the Dead – 1983 is being published this month by Faraway, took some time to answer some questions about his work, his writing process, and his experience in publishing.  Part 1 of the interview is below.  (Click here to read a review of Wilson’s novel The Route, and here to read about the upcoming publication of Doing the Dead – 1983.)  Doing the Dead – 1983 is now on sale!  Click below to buy it now.

 
Support independent publishing: buy this book on Lulu.


 

Part 1

 

About the Author

 

K. C. Wilson is fifty-five, and has been married six years.   He has a five year old daughter and lives in North Florida in the beach town where he grew up.  He lived at various times as an adult in California, Hawaii, Louisiana and Georgia, but eventually settled with his family in Florida.  He graduated from FIU in Miami in 1976, and studied poetry under James W. Hall, before he became a famous novelist.

            Wilson’s publication history is varied.  He wrote an article on hydrogen energy in 1978 for a local business journal.  He was very forward thinking then and more idealistic than now.  He also wrote a magazine article about historic preservation, some book and entertainment reviews in another local magazine, then in 1989, his first fiction story appeared in Cavalier under a pseudonym.  According to Wilson, it was trash.  “Funny, but nothing I could show my mom.  It’s not like I wasn’t also sending out what I considered my ‘good stuff.’  I had a couple of novels and some better stories going around, but nothing else hit.  At that point, though, I was convinced I’d turned the corner.”

            Wilson has a story due to appear this year in the December issue of Delivered.  He also is an editor for the journal Conclave.

 

The Route and Doing the Dead

Describe for our readers what The Route is about, and your process for writing that novel.

 

The Route is about a man who is a failure in the eyes of the world and in the eyes of his family but in the eyes of his friends he is heroic.  I wrote that novel because I knew a man who was immensely gifted and tragically flawed.  He was a great friend to me and I admired his determination, especially when he knew it was futile.  I loved him.  And I knew his story would never be told unless I told it.

 

A man passes among us through the neighborhood, wearing old clothes with a dignified, oddly aristocratic bearing.  Who is he?  Why is he homeless?  Why is he sleeping on my floor?  To answer these questions, I started writing from his point of view.  He supplied the anecdotes, the string of eccentric characters, the theme.  I was just a scribe.

 

In the rewriting process I used a cassette recorder.  I’d read a chapter out loud and play it back and edit it until it sounded mellifluous to me.  That process really helped me smooth out the flow.

 

Describe Doing the Dead, and your process for writing it.

 

Doing the Dead came out in one sitting, in a flood, actually, the rough draft did, on a long car ride to a Grateful Dead show in Virginia.  My intent was to write about the Dead concerts in Hampton and Morgantown, but I had to get all this preliminary stuff off my chest before I could even begin to think about the shows.  It started out as a journal entry and just kept going and going.  Eventually, I did write about the Dead shows, but that was all Part 2, and had very little to do with Part 1.

 

Over the years it’s been edited and polished but essentially, the story’s the same as it was.  I call it fiction because I changed the names.  It’s a slice of my life that turned kind of golden brown around the edges over time.

 

I’ve noticed that many of the same names, if not necessarily the same characters, appear in both The Route and Doing the Dead.  Can you explain how the two works are connected?

 

Doing the Dead – 1983 is part of a collection of related stories called Best Man Complex.  I grouped these stories together because there is a running theme throughout that links them.  Certain characters in some of the stories also appear in The Route.  Certain characters also appear in my other novels, Goat Island and A Decent Marker.  By linking these stories and novels through certain characters I’ve drawn a larger picture on a larger canvas than I could have if they were all unrelated.  A lot of it is William Faulkner’s influence that caused me to model my fictional little North Florida town of Shadville Beach after Yoknapatawpha County.  I peopled it with some familiar characters who show different sides of themselves in different stories.  I like to think they all fit into the big picture without conflict.

 

The Route and Doing the Dead both take place in Florida, quite different from typical modern settings like Los Angeles or New York City.  Can you describe Florida as a setting, how it differs from other places, and why it has been important for you to make that the setting of your work?

 

John D. McDonald provided all Floridians with the definitive fading memory of Florida as it was in forties, fifties and sixties.  Every Florida writer wants to pick up a piece of his legacy and carry it a step or two onward.  In the eighties and nineties, South Florida was the hottest new literary landscape in the world.  It seemed like every other crime novel was set in the Keys or Miami.  Charles Willeford, James W. Hall, Carl Hiassen, Elmore Leonard and later, lots of others, were all over the lower half of the state, redefining the Florida crime novel.  It was rich territory.  But North Florida remained the hinterland.  Nobody had a clue what went on up there and if they did, they didn’t care.  I figured the region was mine for the taking.

 

Pete Dexter and Clifford Irving both wrote novels set in North Florida but neither of them were locals.  Harry Crews, a Florida writer from Gainesville, wrote a novel set in Jacksonville, but surely, he wasn’t going to be the last one.

 

I had a story that defined North Florida in the early eighties, a tale of counterculture misfits running hard and fast toward epic tragedy.  It was a story, again, based on real events, a story that fell in my lap that I couldn’t ignore if I wanted to, a story no one would write if I didn’t.  I may have overestimated my ability to make the story work.  At the time I blamed it on the publishing world’s lack of interest in North Florida.  Goat Island turned out to not be my breakthrough novel, but I wasn’t about to relinquish my claim on North Florida.  It was only a matter of time and rewrites.

 

The Route came along between rewrites.  I had a unique friend, Bruce Kerr, a character who was the king of procrastination.  Bruce was like Scheherazade, telling stories to stay alive one more day, only in his case, it was to keep living in my house.  Through him I came to see into the microcosm of the neighborhood.  Behind every door was another world, complete unto itself.  He would enter those worlds and pass through them in a slow walk and bring their stories back to me.  I had attempted to write about him before, but when I started trying to see through his eyes and to write from his perspective, I knew I was onto something.  It freed me from my own voice, which was a victim of too many other voices.  In the ethereal egoic realms of my “voice,” stentorian echoes of Faulkner and Nabokov wrestled for supremacy with the jocular flourishes of Henry Miller, the clipped cadences of James M. Cain and the lurid Southern nastiness of Erskine Caldwell.  I was all over the place, voice-wise. My voice changed with every book I read.  And I didn’t really feel particularly obligated to be consistent.  I wanted to keep my options open.  And so, I made about every mistake there was to make, some of them chronically.  But then I found a different voice, the voice of a narrator who was definitely not me, and I was able to settle into it.  From the very beginning, the tone of voice in The Route felt right to me.

 

 

Be sure to come back December 19 and 26 for parts 2 and 3 of the interview.  And visit tomorrow for the first chapter of Wilson’s Doing the Dead – 1983. 

The Route by K. C. Wilson Reviewed

After K. C. Wilson submitted his novella, Doing the Dead – 1983, for publication in Faraway, he sent me a signed copy of his novel The Route.  I was blown away by both pieces of writing.  Throughout December, Faraway will be serializing Wilson’s Doing the Dead – 1983, but as a preview of Wilson’s talent, read my review of The Route below:
 
          In The Route, author K. C. Wilson brings 1980s North Florida alive as he follows would-be writer Peter Foster on an unending quest to see his screenplay turned into a movie.  Foster, divorced and long estranged from his children, is a failure in the eyes of the world.  But as Wilson weaves a delicate tapestry of friendship, music, comedy, and tragedy, Foster is developed into a lovable, memorable character.
          As Wilson explains, “the ‘route’ presents a series of distractions from [Foster’s] long range plans. . .”  These distractions range from the mundane to the tragicomic: begging a place to sleep each night from his friends, wrestling with his conscience over snagging money no one will miss, wrestling with a deranged neighbor over a gun.  But as he travels the route, Foster learns valuable lessons about his life, his friends, and his children.
          What is perhaps most interesting about Peter Foster is that he is based on a real person, Bruce Kerr.  Wilson described him as “Scheherazade, telling stories to stay alive one more day, only in his case, it was to keep living in my house.  Through him I came to see into the microcosm of the neighborhood.  Behind every door was another world, complete unto itself.  He would enter those worlds and pass through them in a slow walk and bring their stories back to me.”  And this is essentially The Route, a Floridian Arabian Nights in which Foster plays a part in all 1,001 stories.
          Many of the tales are inconsequential or even embarrassing for Foster.  But at times they are transcendental, and can leave the reader on the brink of tears.  And through the lowly Peter Foster, author K. C. Wilson skillfully reveals truths about time, disappointment, success, failure, and even love.
Wilson’s writing is superb.  The Route is humorous but bittersweet, vulgar but sublime.  The writing is simultaneously reminiscent of the works of Kerouac, Vonnegut, and, to this reviewer, the films of Wes Anderson.  Wilson paints a world in which there are many non sequiturs (a fish falling from the sky) but within that world, everything seems to make sense.
 
          The Route is available from Amazon.  Faraway is also proud to publish K. C. Wilson’s newest original novella, Doing the Dead – 1983.

Doing the Dead – 1983 by K. C. Wilson

Dearest Readers,

Join Faraway as we ring in the New Year with a bang.  Throughout December  we will be serializing the first-ever novella presented by Faraway!  By Florida-based author K. C. Wilson, Doing the Dead – 1983 is a superb piece of writing about a man turning thirty and recognizing the entanglements that made him who he is.  Along the way an unforgettable cast of characters deals with murder, betrayal, love, friendship, music, and loss.

At least one chapter will be published each week, along with interviews with the author on writing, publishing, and his work.  Below is a publication schedule.  Visit www.FarawayJournal.com on those days to read the latest chapter.  Or, visit http://www.lulu.com/content/5219379 to purchase the novella in full for the bargain price of just $10.  It will make the perfect holiday gift for the literature-lover in your life!  You can also go to www.FarawayJournal.com/Doing-the-Dead anytime to see all the chapters and interviews published to date, or www.FarawayJournal.com/k-c-wilson for more information on the author and his work.

Publication Schedule
December 7: The Route Review
December 8:  Interview with the Author – Part 1: About K. C. Wilson
December 9: Chapter I. The Life and Times of Baby Brenda
December 13: Chapter II. Take a Number
December 16: Chapter III. Painter’s Eye
December 19: Interview with the Author – Part 2: Publishing
December 20: Chapter IV. Susan
December 23: Chapter V. Ingrid
December 26: Interview with the Author Part 3: Writing
December 27: Chapter VI. Dawn of the Dead
December 28: Chapter VII. Daybreak On the Land