Finally! My first novel is out in the world!
I've been sitting on the announcement for weeks because of the time it takes for the upload and distribution process.
You can now find Tempus House on iBooks, Barnes & Noble, Diesel, Smashwords, Sony E Reader, and Kindle. Getting it from Smashwords is probably easiest - it's available in all formats there.
Even if you don't have an e-reader, many of these vendors have e-reading software for desktops and laptops. The book is the same price on each vendor's site. (It's $0.99, so if you don't like it, you're only out a buck.) You can download a sample for free.
The teaser:
Jillian Luell is a photographer with an unwanted habit of seeing things other people miss, even when she’s nowhere near a camera. When she inherits a house from her aunt and uncle, she discovers there’s more to her inheritance than just a creaky place full of a lifetime’s worth of other people’s stuff. A long-buried story of tragic young lovers requires an ending from beyond the grave, forcing Jillian to wrestle with reality giving way to impossibility in her new home. However, a mysterious man with connections to the lovers is doing his best to get in the way and keep the secret hidden.
This book has been six years in the making. (I cringe writing that.) I wrote the first draft in October 2005 for my first attempt at National Novel Writing Month. I put that draft aside for a long time, not sure what to do with it. I brought it out again and revised it for my master's degree thesis in 2009. I shopped it around to agents and publishers for more than a year with no bites.
I decided to try self-publishing since I was hearing and reading so much about it. So far, I've found Smashwords to be a decent e-pub site. They have a detailed style guide to help you format the final manuscript and cover image, and they can distribute it to all the major e-readers (and even to some I've never heard of). Within an hour of going live on Smashwords, people started downloading the sample and actually buying the book. That floored me.
The only bug I've encountered on the site is the cover image issue. You have to upload an image file, which is used for the book blurb, and is also automatically inserted into some, but not all, of the e-book formats. They insist that having a cover image makes the book look more "professional," and that if you want to be sure the cover image shows up in all formats, you should insert the image on the first page of your manuscript. This makes sense, but it also means that some versions will show the cover image twice, depending on if the software auto-inserted it or not. Can't really win that conundrum.
I've only had two hiccups with self-publishing this novel:
First, I had to change the title. There's a film that came out recently that had the same title as my original one. For such an unusual word, this surprises me. Since they "published" first, as it were, I had to come up with a new title. It was hard to let go of the old one, seeing as I'd been carrying it around with me since 2005 when I first had the twinkle of an idea for the story. My fault, though. If I'd published it sooner, I could have kept the original title. However, the current title will do. It's easier to pronounce and spell at least.
The second reason is also my fault. Due to the title change, I did a mass search-and-replace in the manuscript, and then went through the final draft to make sure the house name didn't read weirdly anywhere. As I did so, I started editing, and therein lies a trap. Every time you re-read something you wrote, you get the urge to revise it. I changed a lot more than I intended to. And then when I formatted the manuscript and went through it again to make sure nothing wonky had happened, I did yet another edit! You'd think I'd learn...
Also, because I'm so good at overthinking, I started doubting whether I should publish it at all. Maybe I should re-write the whole thing. Maybe some of the descriptions would work better as scenes or journal entries. Maybe this. Maybe that. In the end, I reminded myself that trying to tell three generations of story in a novel without slowing the story down too much isn't easy, and in all my drafts I was trying to do that by balancing full-on scenes, quick descriptions, and journal entries. Some days, I think it more or less worked. Other days, well, we won't talk about those days. A benefit of finally publishing this story is that I can't revise it anymore. I've had to let go of it once and for all.
Over the many versions of this book, I've learned a lot about novel writing, and it's clearly showing in the upcoming books that I'm going to release. More detailed outlines to work from (I've tried pantstering, and it just doesn't work for me; I need some structure to start with, darn it), more scenes, more conflict, and less description, for starters.
Go read it. I hope you like it. I have more stories in me. They are coming soon. (The next one is a children's story!)
P.S. If you do find any typos or wonky formatting, please let me know and I will do my best to fix them. Since Smashwords distributes the manuscript in various formats to accommodate all the different e-reader platforms, things can obviously go pear-shaped in one format or another, despite their auto-vetter, which tries to catch errors before the manuscript goes live.

6 comments:
Big, big congrats! I'm so excited for you! I can't wait to read the final!!! :)
This is so exciting! Well, done! I can't wait to download it this summer when I am stateside!
YAY!
Congratulations Cate! I knew you'd take the plunge sooner or later...
Congrats Cate,I'm a friend of Emilys, and enjoy reading and will be reading this next :)
Thanks, all! I hope you enjoy it.
This is awesome, congratulations! I will be downloading and reading, definitely, not only to support you, but because the story line grasped me. Good for you! Also, I'm telling Nathan about Smashwords, he has three complete manuscripts that he's given up on so far. He's so discouraged, he hasn't written a word in about two years. I'll let you know what happens!
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