After
The
Sale
TimeLine
After-the-Sale Timeline
[Disclaimer (You knew one was coming, right?):
This is the road to publication my first book traveled.
The path varies widely from publisher to publisher, author
to author, and book to book, so don't be surprised if what
you read here is different from what you've heard elsewhere
or experienced personally.]

In January, 2006, my literary agent negotiated my first
sale. She worked very hard on my behalf, and I did what
every newly contracted author does: I celebrated. For about
a day. Then, less than twenty-four hours after the deal was
made, I sat back down at my computer with one goal in mind:
to figure out what comes next.
I found quite a bit of information in small threads, which I
could probably have woven into a larger tapestry on my own,
had I been so inclined. I also found literally dozens of
stories of "The Call." What I did not find was a single,
detailed, step-by-step account of what happens to a book
between the time it's acquired for publication and the day
it hits the bookstore shelf. Now, for the record, such an
account probably does exist. But I didn't find it. So I'm
making my own.
This is what happened after my very first sale.

The Offer (of
representation)
Agent Requested
Revisions
STRAY Sent Out
The First Offer (to buy)
The Auction
The Sale
First Phone Call
from My Editor
Moved to Mira
Cover Conference
Cover Copy
Cover Concept Revealed
First Deadline Met
Changes...
Contracts!
Second Deadline Met
Dedication and
Acknowledgments
Cover art!

The Offer (of
representation)
November 22, 2005
(Yes, I know this isn't really after the sale, but since I
get more questions about how I found my agent than about
anything else, I thought I'd include these first few entries
even though they're not exactly what I said would be here.)
By the middle of November, I'd completed four novels and was
half-way into my fifth. I'd been querying my third book, an
urban fantasy called STRAY, for a little while, and was
getting almost as many requests for material as flat-out
rejections. At first the requests made me hopeful. But when
the SASEs I sent out with my partials came back stuffed with
form rejections, I started losing my confidence. By the
22nd, I'd already decided not to send out any more queries
for STRAY once all the submissions I had out were rejected.
Then, late that morning, my phone rang. I almost didn't
answer it. Seriously. I was physically and mentally
exhausted from staying up late every night working on
revisions and new material. In fact, I was taking my first
nap in ages when the call came. One of the best decisions I
ever made was to answer that phone call. It was Miriam
Kriss.
She introduced herself, and in my sleep-fuzzy state, I was
only vaguely aware that I was on the phone. Until she said
she was an agent with the Irene Goodman Literary Agency.
That woke me up. Instantly. I'd never gotten a call from a
real live literary agent before. In fact, I'd only gotten
one rejection with my name on it, so at the time, a personal
phone call seemed monumental. It still does.
Miriam said she loved the material I'd sent her, and she
wanted to know if I could please email her the rest. Since
I'm not a complete idiot, I agreed, and she gave me her
email address. Other than that, I can't remember a single
thing about that phone call. What I do remember, however, is
double checking the phone number on my cell phone screen at
least half a dozen times. Then looking up the area code, to
make sure the call really had come from New York. It had.
From Fifth Avenue.
Since I'd told Miriam I would email the rest of the
manuscript immediately, I did what any writer would do in my
situation. I sat down at the computer and spent the next two
hours looking for mistakes. Eventually I had to admit to
myself that it was too late for proofreading. STRAY would
have to go out as is. It had already been rewritten five
times. Apparently that was good enough.
That night, only six hours after I'd sent the manuscript,
Miriam called again. I knew it was her. I don't know how I
knew before I saw the number on the screen, but I did. Of
course, it's entirely possible that I would have thought it
was her even if it wasn't. But I'll never know for sure,
because it was her.
Miriam said she'd finished my novel. My ever-articulate
answer was something like, "Already?" She said, "Yes." Then
she said that she would very much like to represent me.
There was more after that. Compliments and enthusiasm from
her, incomprehensible babbling from me. Then I recovered
enough of my wits to ask for a couple of days to gather my
thoughts and compose a list of questions for her, because I
couldn't think straight enough at the time to do it right
then. She offered to call me the following Monday, six days
later. I told her that would be great.
Over the next week, I wrote down every question I could
think of to ask a potential agent. But I was only doing it
because that's what I'd been told to do: ask all the right
questions, and make sure you're happy with all the answers
before you agree to anything. So, that's what I did. But I'd
already made up my mind. I liked her from the beginning. So
after she'd answered my questions and told me a little bit
about herself, I accepted her offer of representation.
Eagerly.
As of Monday, November 28, 2005, I was an officially agented
author. Sort of. My agent/author agreement got lost in the
mail and for more than two weeks I was afraid to call and
tell Miriam I'd never gotten it . When I finally worked up
the nerve, I was half-afraid that she'd changed her mind
about me and didn't want to hurt my feelings. She laughed
(kindly) and said she'd send a new copy. I got them both on
the very same day. I signed one and sent it back. Then I was
an officially agented author.
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Agent Requested
Revisions
November 29th, 2005
I got my manuscript back from Miriam via email, the day
after I accepted her offer. I'd expected lots of complicated
changes, but there wasn't really much to it, which was a
huge relief. She had one question, found one minor
inconsistency and two omitted words, asked for more punch on
the last line of the book, and gave me two compliments. And
she suggested the addition of one new scene. I don't want to
say what scene, because I don't want to spoil anything for
anyone planning to read Stray when it comes out in February.
But I agreed that the scene was appropriate, and enhanced
the story. So I wrote it.
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STRAY Sent Out
Mid-December, 2005
After Miriam approved the revisions I made to Stray, the
book was ready to go out on the first round of submissions.
She already had a list of editors in mind when she called
with an offer of representation, so the submissions process
should have been pretty simple. Unfortunately, I
underestimated Murphy and his pain-in-the-neck law. On my
end of things, whatever could go wrong did.
I was supposed to send Miriam six clean, good-quality copies
of Stray to be sent out to editors all over New York. Even
though I'd never snail-mailed an entire manuscript to anyone
before (I made mostly electronic submissions during the
querying process) I knew without being told that printing
and mailing six copies of a 409 page manuscript could get
pretty expensive. So I crunched some numbers. I got
estimates from two different professional copy shops and
from the copy center inside the local Office Depot. Then I
estimated how much it would cost me to print the manuscripts
myself. Printing at home should have been a lot less
expensive than any of the professional options, so I made a
trip to my local Office Depot to pick up 2,500 sheets of
40lb, paper. I think it was 102 brightness. I also picked up
some heavy duty rubber bands, two HP Deskjet ink cartridges,
and some shipping labels. Then I went home to start
printing.
I have two printers at home, both of them Ink Jet machines
marketed as photo printers. One's the Dell that came with my
laptop, and the other is a Hewlett Packard Deskjet that I've
had more than four years. I started printing on them both,
to speed up the process, and for a while, everything went
well. I moved both printers into the living room so I could
watch TV while I worked, inspecting each page for quality as
it came out. After less than an hour, the Dell ran out of
ink. Dell ink has to be ordered over the internet and takes
a couple of days to arrive, so rather than waiting for it, I
put the Dell printer up and continued production on the HP.
I printed all day, until nearly midnight that night, and got
less than two full manuscripts printed out before the
printer quality began to fail. I should have seen it coming.
Apparently there's a limit to how long you can run a printer
before it starts to overheat, or freak out in some other
equally catastrophic way. The print coming from mine was
tinted blue and hazy, and each line had a blank stripe
running through it.
I stopped printing for the night to give the printer a rest,
and resolved to try it again in the morning. I resumed
printing at nine a.m. the next day, and the pages looked no
better than they had the night before. At that point, I had
two options. I could suck it up and go support my local
Kinko's, or I could find another printer. Fortunately (or
maybe unfortunately,) the decision was taken out of my
hands: I'd already bought the paper, and Kinko's wouldn't
let me use my own. Left with no other choice, I called a
good friend and asked if I could come over and borrow her
printer. Angel that she is, she said yes without hesitation.
On the way to her house, I stopped at Office Depot again and
bought two ink cartridges for her printer. We put her
printer to work all day long, printing until nearly five pm.
When I had to go home for supper, we still had two
manuscripts to go, so she said I could come back the next
day. Thank goodness for good friends, because it took the
entire next day to finish printing, and by then it was too
late to make it to the post office. In all, the printing
took three days, three different printers, and countless
cartridges of ink. And by the time I got the box of
manuscripts mailed, the New York transit workers were on
strike and (almost) no one on 5th Avenue was able to make it
to work. There was no one to confirm delivery of my
manuscripts. With the strike, and the combined Christmas and
New Year holidays, I didn't know for sure that my box had
arrived until the first week of January, when Miriam told me
she was in the process of calling editors about the book,
that very day.
So, Stray officially went out to editors on January 2nd,
2006. I was ecstatic, and very nervous, but knew better than
expect quick results. I made myself settle in for a long
wait, with plenty of disappointment along the way. But as it
turned out, in spite of all my mental preparation, I didn't
have much of a wait after all...
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The First Offer
Friday, January 13th, 2006
I was composing a blog entry late on the morning of January
13th when I got The Call. Sort of. It was the first Call. My
cell phone display showed Miriam's number, and my heart
started beating really hard before I even answered the
phone. When I did, she asked me how I was doing (as she
always does), and I told her I was fine. Then she asked me
what I would say if she told me that we'd gotten our first
offer. I can't remember very clearly what I said after that,
but I know it involved lots of grinning and unselfconscious
jumping around. After a couple of minutes, the specifics of
what she'd said sank in. She'd said we'd gotten our first
offer. I asked what this meant, and she said she'd be
surprised if we didn't get at least one more. And again,
things got fuzzy after that. I gathered enough of my wits to
ask about the publisher and editor, and to write down what
she'd told me. Then, after I hung up, I saved my blog entry
and googled the publisher. I spent the rest of the day
reading everything I could find on-line about the
editor/publisher who'd made the first offer.
I tried to call my # 1 fan, but couldn't get in touch with
him for several hours. But when I finally did, he was just
as excited as I was. And I think he did nearly as much
googling as I did. That night, we went out to dinner to
celebrate. If I'd known what would happen next, I might have
held off on the celebrating for just a little bit.
Nah. Maybe not. ;-)
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The Auction
Tuesday, January 24th, 2006
In the course of my first Call, Miriam told me she was
asking for interested editors to submit their initial bids
by Tuesday, the 24th. At that point, I probably should have
realized Stray had gone to auction. But I didn't. No one
actually said the A-word to me, and I just couldn't believe
that anything so wonderful could happen to me, a first-timer
whose submission had only been out eleven days when the
first offer came in. But my inability to believe didn't stop
the auction from happening. Fortunately.
Unfortunately, however, I had to spend most of Initial Bid
Day out of the house on errands, which meant I couldn't
check my email every half-hour, as I usually do. And in
spite of hours spent staring at it, my phone never rang. By
the time I got back home late that afternoon, I was
desperate for some information. I fired off a quick email to
Miriam, asking about the status of the submissions, and she
wrote me back after agency hours to tell me that we'd gotten
offers from three more publishers, for a total of four bids.
It was a good thing I was sitting down, because otherwise I
would have fallen flat on the floor. I was so surprised that
it never occurred to me to ask who the other publishers
were, what rights they wanted, or anything else. Honestly,
at the time, none of that mattered. I was more than happy
just knowing that someone wanted to buy my book. Four
someones was a little more than I was prepared to handle at
the moment. So #1 and I went out to dinner to celebrate.
Again.
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The Sale
The auction took six days. Six mind-blowing,
can-this-really-be-happening-to-me, unbelievably ecstatic,
so-nervous-I-can't-do-anything-but-eat days. During that
week, I got a flurry of emails from my agent, keeping me
updated on which publisher was currently in the lead. And on
Friday of that week, I called her, mostly because I couldn't
not call her. I needed to hear her tell me that it was all
real. That Stray really was going to be a book. A book with
my name on it, comprised of words I'd written, of characters
I'd created, and of places I'd invented. And I needed to
thank her, as close to "in person" as I could get.
I asked her if she'd had any idea in the beginning that this
would happen. She said she hadn't known, but that she'd
hoped. I had no idea how to respond, so I asked if she
thought it was just about over. After all, it had been four
days. She said that yes, she thought it was almost over. Not
quite, but almost.
Three days later, at 3:00 in the afternoon on Monday,
January 30th (and yes, I know the exact day and time!), she
called me. The auction was over. All the offers were in. We
were ready to declare a winner. We spoke for several
minutes, trying to decide on the best course of action, on
the best thing for me, and for the book. More nervous than
I'd ever been in my life, I made a decision. Miriam said
she'd set it up.
She called me back half an hour later. This time it was
the
call. Mary-Theresa Hussey of Luna had bought Stray as the
first book in a three-book deal. It was real. I was an
author.
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First Phone Call
from My Editor
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Due to an unusual and unfortunate confluence of events, I
had to wait a while after the sale before speaking to my
editor. At first, I was worried that she'd changed her mind
about wanting to buy my books, but if I'd been thinking
logically (which is hard to do right after your first
sale--trust me) I'd have known better. That wasn't it at
all. Lots of things got in the way, including a sales
conference, an illness she caught at the conference, a
take-it-or-lose-it vacation, and a funeral. But I knew
within the first minute of speaking to my editor that she
was worth the wait. She was patient with me (I was so
nervous my teeth were chattering. Literally.) and encouraged
me to ask questions. Unfortunately, though I had tons of
them, I was too nervous to remember most of them at the
time, and they're still dribbling out bit by bit in emails.
She told me how much she loved Stray, which is one of my
favorite things in the world to hear. She asked about my
family, and about several of my local RWA chapter members
she knows (at least one of whom she also edits), told me a
little of what would happen next to my book. Which I'll
write about in chronological order below, as each process
unfolds. And...she offered to send me some Luna books, to
help me familiarize myself with the line. Which was awesome.
Anyone who gives me books is automatically my friend, like
it or not. (I have a similar policy for chocolate, and for
flowers that can be planted, but my #1 fan holds exclusive
rights to those two. ;-) )
By the end of the conversation, I
was relaxed, happy, and excited to get back to work. So, I
dived headfirst into my new book. After all, I'm happiest
when I'm writing.
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Moved to Mira
Wednesday, February 23, 2006
My editor met with some people from the marketing and
editorial departments, to make some decisions about my
books. The next day, she met with my agent (over lunch, I
believe, how cool is that?!) to discuss...stuff. I'm not
sure what went on in either of these meetings, because I
didn't keep very good notes, and now I have to rely on my
sketchy blog entries. But, what came out of these meetings
were the suggested due dates for my three contracted
manuscripts/proposals, and the decision to release Stray and
its sequels under the Mira imprint, rather than in the Luna
line. I'm not exactly sure what prompted the change, but
I've been assured that it was a business decision, and had
nothing to do with me personally. And that the move will
work in my favor. So I'm more than happy to be a Mira
author.
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Cover Conference
Friday, March 17, 2006
(Note: according to what I've heard from other writer
friends, the cover art process seems to differ more than
anything else between Harlequin imprints and other
publishers. I like our process a lot. Harlequin's system
allowed me to have lots of input, not on what actually goes
on my cover, but about the book itself, and the characters'
appearances, setting, themes, cover styles I like, and lots
of other stuff.)
On Thursday, March 16th, my editor called to tell me that
Stray (along with lots of other books) was going to cover
conference the next day. Due to a scheduling conflict, she
wasn't going to be able to attend, but the senior editor for
Mira would be there, and she would let us know what was
decided. My editor said that my books had been loaded into
the Harlequin on-line editorial system. She asked if I could
try and log on, to make sure everything was working, and to
enter the necessary information about Stray on the cover art
fact sheet.
It was really cool. I was already in the system when I
logged in, and it was absolutely amazing to see my name, and
the names of my books (the third didn’t have a title yet,
but was already up) on such an official-looking database.
And they had an “on sale” date and an ISBN listed. I had no
idea either of those had been assigned yet, so seeing them
was awesome. I answered several questions about the book
(themes, symbols, imagery, and stuff like that), entered a
short synopsis, described the major characters, and included
an image my agent had found for me on the internet.
The next day, the senior editor for Mira met with
representatives from the art department (And maybe the
marketing department. I'm not sure who all was there.) to
discuss possible concepts for the cover art. But it would
still be several more weeks before my editor and I actually
saw the design chosen.
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Cover Copy
Monday, April 3, 2006
A couple of weeks after the cover conference, my editor
emailed me to show me what she was working on for Stray's
cover copy (the blurb on the back of the book, which tells
what the story is about). She was tinkering with three
different ideas, each of which focused on a different aspect
of the book. I found it fascinating that there were so many
different ways to describe my story accurately.
My editor asked if I had any thoughts about any of the
ideas. She didn't have to do that. I was excited just to see
the copy that early in the process, but the chance to help
work on it was really great. I wrote out my thoughts and
sent them in a reply email. After that, my editor and I sent
it back and forth several times, tweaking some phrases and
adjusting the wording until she had a version we both really
liked.
However, in the end, Mira decided to go with a different
version altogether. So I didn't actually have any input on
the final draft, but it meant a great deal to me that my
editor let me be a part of the process. Things like that go
a long way toward helping a new author get comfortable with
so many things coming so quickly, and I feel very fortunate
to be working with an editor who goes out of her way to make
me feel involved.
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Cover Concept Revealed
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
About a month after the cover conference, my editor sent me
one of my all-time favorite emails, containing a digital
copy of the cover concept Mira chose for Stray. I absolutely
loved it. Loved it. I couldn't stop looking at it. It was
dark, and sexy, and...it had my name on it. My name. Because
it was for my book. Somehow seeing the cover concept made
the entire process seem more real to me, and less like a
wonderful dream.
The only down-side was that I couldn't share the image with
my internet friends and blog buddies, though I sent it to my
agent almost as soon as I got it. I wasn't allowed to post
the image, because a cover concept isn't the actual art that
will go on the front of a book. A cover concept is “a
mock-up of art, design and type” to use my editor’s words.
It’s made by the in-house art department and used as a guide
for the artist commissioned to do the cover. It conveys the
general pose and feel desired for the actual cover. I
believe the art department uses stock images and
photographs. The font types and sizes aren't final, and the
text (cover quotes from other authors, or a short blurb
about the story) are only present in the form of
"place-holder" lines, so the artist knows to leave room
there for them.
At this point, I still haven't seen the actual cover. I
don't expect it to be done until sometime in/around August.
But seeing the concept has made me very excited to see the
real thing. I'll post it as soon as I'm allowed.
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First Deadline Met
May, 2006
My very first edit letter came in on Monday, May 15, 2006,
not quite four months after the sale. From what I've heard
from other author friends, the length of time it takes for
revisions to come in varies wildly. Seriously. It varies so
broadly that I couldn't even come up with a ballpark figure.
I know one author who got hers in about a week, and another
who had to wait six months. It all depends on how early you
turn the book in, how busy your editor is, when the book is
due to be released, and any number of other factors. All
that really matters is that you have enough time to make the
changes before your deadline.
My first deadline was June 1, 2006, so I should have had two
weeks, which would have been more than enough time.
Unfortunately, I had a schedule conflict. I'd been planning
for nearly six months to attend the Romantic Times
convention in Daytona Beach, and my edit letter arrived less
than forty-eight hours before I had to leave for Florida. I
was at the convention for five and a half days, from
Wednesday of that week, until late Saturday night.
I took my edits with me, but only took them out to show
everyone I met what a genius my editor is, as evidenced by
the insightful questions in her letter. So when I got home,
I took Sunday off to relax and recuperate from the trip.
Then, on Monday, I got down to business. I was determined to
meet my first deadline, no matter what.
And I did. I worked 12-14 hours a day for the next eight
days, only stopping for short food and bathroom breaks
(thanks to my #1 fan for making such a grueling schedule
possible) and to sleep. A little. I finished the revisions
on Monday, May 29. After that, I took the next two days to
read over the changes one more time for continuity and
coherence (and trust me, coherence is a concern after eight
days in a single chair, subsisting on coffee and fast food),
then sent the manuscript in. A day early.
Regarding the revisions themselves, each editor does things
differently. I asked around about what to expect, while I
was waiting on mine, and discovered that...well, there was
just no way to know what to expect, short of asking another
of my editor's authors. Which I didn't do, because I didn't
know any of them. But from the authors I did know, I found
out the following:
Some editors send hard copy letters, making reference to
specific page numbers and lines.
Some send revisions via email.
Some call their authors and discuss the book over the phone,
mentioning over the course of the conversation what all
needs to be done.
Some editors send a hard-copy of the manuscript, with notes
in the margins, as well as line edits.
My editor sent me a letter via email. It was five and a half
pages long, single-spaced, with lines between the
paragraphs. It consisted entirely of questions from my
editor about the book/characters/plot, which I was to answer
any way I saw fit, within the scope of the manuscript. More
about my revisions can be found here, in the May 24, 2006
and May 25, 2006 entries.
I've read that some authors are surprised or disappointed by
their first round of revisions, and I can understand why. A
long list of mistakes/weak points can be a serious blow to
anyone's ego, and we writers are not always the most
confident bunch. But I knew going in that the manuscript
wasn't perfect, and I was eager for a chance to improve it.
And improvement is an editor's goal. Always. It should be
the author's goal too.
I was very happy with my edits, and with the changes to the
manuscript. It's a much better book now. I can't wait to see
it on the shelves.
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Changes…
Thursday, June 22, 2006
Two calls in quick succession from first my agent, then my
editor revealed that both the release date and the format
for Stray had been changed. It was originally scheduled to
come out in trade paperback (those tall, sturdy-looking
paperbacks) in February, 2007. Instead, it’ll be coming out
in mass market (the regular paperbacks you’re probably used
to reading) in June, 2007. The date change was a little
upsetting for me (like delaying Christmas by four months),
but I was thrilled with the format change. Mass market books
are less expensive and have a much broader placement,
meaning they can now get my book into more places in greater
numbers. And that made me smile. ;-)
Once the date change was explained to me in a phone call
from my editor, I was happy with that too. There was too
much competition for a debut novel in February, so the date
change was made to benefit my sales, which I consider worth
the four-month delay.
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Contracts!
June 28, 2006
My contracts came in almost exactly five months after my
books sold. If I understand correctly, it doesn’t usually
take quite so long, but since this was a first contract,
there were many points to be ironed out, very few of which I
understood or even asked about. I’m content to let my agent
handle the business side of it. In fact, I’m grateful for
the fact that she’s there to do it.
I read through my contracts and signed them the day they
came in, and sent them back to my publisher the very next
day. All three copies. Someone there signed them then, and
they kept one copy, sent a second to my agent, and a third
to me. It was official. I was truly a Mira author. ;-)
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Second Deadline Met
June 29, 2006
I turned in the revisions for Stray on the last day of May,
2006. Then I took a day off to catch up on some housework.
Then, on June 2nd, I dove right into the revisions for the
first sequel, Rogue, the second book in my three-book
contract.
Fortunately, Rogue was already in completed rough
draft form when the books sold. Technically, the proposal
for the second book (a synopsis and three chapters) was due
on June 15th, but since I already had the book finished, my
editor asked me to turn the whole thing in then.
Unfortunately, I knew I couldn’t get it polished in only two
weeks, mostly because of a new element the revisions for Stray added to the story, so my awesome agent procured an
extension for me. I would turn in the entire manuscript on
June 30, rather than a proposal on June 15th and the full
manuscript on Jan 1st, 2007, which was the original due
date.
I had my work cut out for me, but I made it, thanks to four
more weeks of very long days. Fortunately, I love the work.
;-) In the process of rewriting, I excised 94 pages of
original material and replaced it with 100 new pages. Nearly
30,000 words of new material, if I remember correctly. I
turned in the rewritten version of Rogue on June 29, 2006,
six months and one day ahead of my original due date. I was
exhausted, but pleased.
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Dedication and
Acknowledgements
August 18, 2006
Okay, I have to confess, I actually wrote most of my
acknowledgements and dedications way back in January, before
Stray even sold. I was that excited about the possibility of
a sale. But I didn’t actually have anywhere to send them
until mid-August. So, I dug them back out and reworked them
over the next few days, adding the people who have worked on
my book since it sold. Then I sent them off via email. I
can’t wait to see them in print!
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Cover Art
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
Four days after my editor requested my dedication and
acknowledgements, I sent them in. Three hours later, she
called my cell phone while I was in the car to tell me she’d
just emailed me my cover art! Two weeks earlier than
expected! It wasn’t the final version, so I wasn’t free to
share it with the world (and the internet) at large just
yet, but I was free to stare at it as much as I wanted.
Number 1 printed it for me on photo paper, and I slept with
it on my nightstand. Then I took it to lunch to show my
in-person friends the next day. Here’s the blog entry I
wrote about it at the time. Can you tell I was excited? ;-)
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