I think it's so helpful to hear from other writers about their process and publishing experience, so I jumped at the chance to pick the brain of author Liz Hoban, who just had her second novel (third book) published last month. Check it out!
I
read your book awhile back for our women's fiction critique group. At the time,
it had a different title- which leads me to my first question: How did the
title change come about? Whose idea was it? How much input did you get?
Thanks so much for your interest in my latest book
TheSecrets That Save Us. The book was
posted on Authonomy as A Fine Pickle – the odd thing about this title was I had
it before I even had a story line for the book - a friend of mine had a later
in life pregnancy and she said, “Well this is a fine pickle, isn’t it.” and
from that point forward her baby’s nickname became Pickle. And a storyline later took hold.
After incredible feedback from the Woman’s Fiction Critique
Group (WFCG) on Authonomy and with several other writers there believing the
title was too light-hearted I was forced to consider a new title. After making the editors desk in July 2014,
I began sending queries out to agents and I received a very positive response
from literary agent Elizabeth Weed. She
was no longer taking on new clients but gave me an encouraging critique of the
first third of the book and when she commented that the title didn’t fit the
heaviness of the material I knew I needed to change it. My son Ryan is my best
reviewer and he had read the manuscript and suggested the title The Secrets
That Save Us.
The input from the WFCG was priceless and the book evolved
from there. The original story was
written in first-person, POV from the two sisters but then after all the
feedback from Authonomites and Elizabeth Weed I switched it to third person
POV. That took months of editing and
even when I received the galleys from the publisher I found a few POV mistakes
here and there. It took a tremendous
amount of editing but I am very happy with the outcome.
Can you tell me a bit
about your path to publication? This is your second book with this publisher so
I'm assuming you're happy with them. How did you find them? How long did it
take? Did you query many agents first or did you head straight to publishers?
I already had two other published books and had heard it was
easier to get an agent with a bit of a writing resume. Not true, I’ve learned, unless you have a
best-seller. I queried about ten
agents, received excellent feedback but no representation. In the end, I decided to go with my
publisher for
The Cheech Room since I knew they did nice work, paid a modest
advance and work very closely with their authors. Part of the decision to take
that easy route is because I have the attention span of a housefly and I really
just wanted to see it completed and in print.
I find it very distracting to move on to a new writing project with
loose ends of another hanging over my head.
Although I have several novels I’ve started – one is currently on Authonomy
– Baby Mac -if the novel is completed, I am compelled to get it in print.
I made a deal with myself years ago that I would never pay a
publisher to publish my books and that the money would go only in my direction
and not the other way.
Old LinePublishing is an independent publisher located on the East Coast in United
States. They print about 20 titles a
year and as I mentioned they work closely with their authors. When I was trying to find a home for The
Cheech Room, I discovered a website called First Writer and it was there that I
came across Old Line. First Writer does
charge a small annual fee but what I love about it is every day I get an e-mail
from them with agents and publishers looking for new clients, along with
contests, etc. Not only did I get a
publisher through them but I have since had a few short stories published with
various periodicals – all from their daily recommendations. After submitting the first time to the Old
Line I heard back fairly soon – maybe a week.
With this second fiction book, The Secrets That Save Us, I heard back
within a day but it’s probably because they already had me as a client.
After I finished the Cheech Room and prior to it being
picked up by Old Line and way before I started The Secrets That Save Us, I got
a writing offer I could not refuse. My
father had an amazing WWII/POW bomber pilot experience that didn’t come full
circle until he was 92. He had saved an
Austrian village and in 2007 our family was invited to see the unveiling of a
monument in the Alps in my father’s honor.
The whole thing was an unforgettable experience and I remember saying to
him on the flight back from Europe how his story would make an excellent book
and he said, “Well then write it.” Of
course, I am not a history enthusiast and have never attempted a non-fiction
book but I decided I would spend the following year interviewing my father
about the story and lo and behold I completed
The Final Mission in two years
(just so you have an idea - The Cheech Room took ten years) Getting this book in print was like a
writer’s dream come true because when I completed the manuscript I sent it out
to ten publishers just to see if there was any interest and I received three
phone calls that same day asking for the full manuscript. We sold the book to Westholme Publishing
because they offered the highest advance and seemed the most passionate about
the project. About a year later the
book was in hardcover, paperback and e-book form. It has currently sold over 10,000 copies and it is required
reading for many colleges across the country as well as high schools. The best
part of the book’s release was going to local Barnes and Noble bookstores and
finding it on their shelves in the front of the store.
The opening of The
Secrets that Save Us is such a great hook. I dare anyone to read it and not
need to read on. Tell us what the book is about and what genre it would fall
under.
Although the book is fiction –contemporary literature genre
- this book is very much steeped in the collapse of the World Trade
Center. My brother was a first
responder – he survived that day and then the next day was able to get me to
Ground Zero because I have a military ID and a medical license. The devastation I saw 24 hours after the
collapse changed my life and I knew that someday I would figure out a way to
write about it without trivializing the experiences in a fictional
account.
The Secrets that Save Us is about two sisters who miss their
train to their jobs in the World Trade Center’s North Tower on the morning of
September 11th 2001. Both
are harboring deep secrets that will radically alter their lives. The storyline revolves around the aftermath
and there is a twist at the end the reader will not see coming which of course
links to the start of the book you mention in your question. It was selected as
One To Watch by Harper Collins whose editors described it as “…shades of Gone
Girl and Before I Go To Sleep.” The
Cheech Room had also been a One to Watch and the nice thing about that is even
though Harper Collins didn’t take-on either book – I was able to use the
editors comments on the back cover of both books.
I've heard rumors
that your first book, The Cheech Room, might be made into a movie. Can you talk
about that?
The Cheech Room was released in 2012 and is now in the
process of being written as a screen play through my publisher – eventually it
will go to auction and bidding in Hollywood.
It would be very nice to see this book made into a movie but that
process takes years. I was fortunate
with The Cheech Room, (even though it took ten years to complete) that it was
released the same year as The Final Mission so it sort of sailed on those coat
tails.
How long have you
been a writer? How much time do you typically spend working on a book? How do
you know when it's done?
I have always loved writing – kept journals as a teenager
but it wasn’t until my sons were born that I began to get paid for
writing. For several years in my late
twenties and early thirties as a stay-home mom I wrote magazine articles and
newspaper columns. It wasn’t a lot of money but enough to make me feel good
about what I was doing.
Of course, my boys became teenagers and in 2000 I began
writing The Cheech Room which is based loosely on something tragic that
happened in my neighborhood. The
Cheech Room took a decade, The Final Mission was two years in the works, and
The Secrets that Save Us was about three years. It is difficult to say how long a book takes to write because so
many other things can get in the way like employment, raising kids, family,
etc. My goal at this point is to write one novel a year. I have a Young Adult
series I am working on currently however my personal yearly deadline is
December and I am behind schedule. I
try to write at least a page a day but occasionally fall short.
Finally, here's a
more philosophical question to end with: Why do you write?
It is very difficult to spend so much time on something and
not see it in print and/or make any money so why do we do it? I write because I
don’t know how not to is probably the
best answer. I was at a lake party this
past weekend and there was a constant niggling in the back of my head that I
needed to get home and get writing. I do not watch television although The Voice
is my guilty pleasure. I have a
full-time job as a nurse practitioner at a college so there is no way to get
any writing done at work which relegates the evenings and weekends. It is easy to get distracted with writer’s
sites and forums, etc. I allow myself a
half hour a day to surf writing forums and such but then I get down to
business. I also am an avid reader
which makes writing a bit easier because it is studying the art of writing when
you read other’s works. I have a
commute everyday so I do audio books, about two a week. If I hear a turn of phrase I really like or
I wish I wrote, I pull the car over and jot it down. I have written things on
tissues with an eyeliner and even went as far as to write on my hand if it is
something that inspires me. Unfortunately, writing is a very lonely business
but if you are compelled to do it, you will carve out the time. I am sure over the years my family got tired
of seeing me behind a computer screen while they were having fun but just the
other day I was thrilled when my oldest son who just turned 30 told me he had
written a short story he’d like me to take a look at. I wanted to say something like, “Are you sure you want to venture
down that highway?” But I told him I’d
love to read his work – after all, if he’s been bitten by that bug there is
only one cure - to write.