Welcome back to another edition of What I’m Working On. Mostly guaranteed to come out sometime in the first half of every month, I talk about what writing projects I’m doing, editing steps, behind-the-scenes business parts of said writing, and probably whine about something. You have been warned.
As the title suggests, December has been the month of dreams meeting reality. I have probably mentioned before that I have a problematic tendency to try to do All The Things. Like if I decide to bake a cake from scratch there is a part of me whispering in the back of my mind, “Is it really baking from scratch if you didn’t go out and grow the wheat and grind it into flour and—” etctera, etcetera. So I know this about myself and have gotten better at not setting my sights on too high an unachievable thing, but every now and then I still overshoot.
I overshot with the whole audiobook thing. I did record the entire book. Since this was my first time doing it, I suspected, on going back to listen to it, that I would want to redo the first few chapters, and this was case. I loved how the last half of the book sounded, once I’d found my rhythm and character voices, but the first half would need to be re-recorded. I. . . delayed doing this. If you look up how long it takes to produce an audiobook, they will tell you generally anywhere between 3 to 5 hours per finished audiobook hour (this estimate includes things like retakes, editing, and engineering). It can be less if you’re really experienced, more if you’re really not.
The finished time for Siren’s Song was a little over ten hours. I would need to re-record about five hours, which doesn’t sound like a lot but there is setup, the fact that I record at home and don’t live in the quietest neighborhood, so sometimes when I have time to record, conditions are not ideal. I would then need to edit and engineer all of it, which I had already spent a lot of time doing on the initial chapters before I realized I’d need to re-record them.
Turns out I do not have time to work a full time job, write a book while editing another book (or two), do the formatting for the upcoming book that’s coming out, upkeep this site, record/edit/engineer an audiobook, AND care for an equine and spend time with my husband. Shocking, I know, but I’m me so I was convinced I could do it all. I had a fair idea of just how much time it was going to suck out of me to finish the audiobook, and my stress level was at epically high levels (I would just like to take this moment to thank my personal lord and savior Taylor Swift for releasing YET ANOTHER surprise album in 2020 and basically saving the last shreds of my sanity with her Evermore album).
Ahem, so anyway, I had to make a choice between releasing the number of books I wanted to release next year, or getting the audiobooks out. I chose to let the audiobooks go for now. I wasn’t getting wordcount in on new projects. I first decided to publish because I wanted to do more writing. For the hope that some day, this job can support itself and become my full time job, so I can write even more. It’s very difficult to make money in this business without a solid backlist of titles. Even then, it’s difficult. And I at least need the books to pay for themselves in terms of what I spend on editing and cover design, etc., or I can’t afford to keep doing this, much less continue to dream that one day it could be my full time career. Which means it’s more important to finish writing the Aspect and Guardian series than it is to record their audiobooks.
The perfectionist in me is still not happy. But I know I made the right call. I’m writing 2 to 3k a day on Valkyrie’s Call now, and I hadn’t realized how unhappy I was not having time to write until I got back into the groove. It helps, of course, that Random and Valkyrie are one of my favorite couples. They’ve been bouncing around in my head for a decade now, and I’m glad to finally tell their story. Random never fails to make me laugh, and when I need to soldier through something, I channel my inner Valkyrie.
If you’re an audiobook fan, I promise the audiobooks will eventually come out. But unless I magically get more time (i.e., win the lottery I don’t play), it’s probably not going to be until 2022. On the upside, without the audiobooks to worry about, Siren’s Song will likely come out much, much earlier than the slated release date of February 2021. It’s likely that Guardian of Chaos, the first in my contemporary fantasy series, will also come out much earlier than its currently-slated release date of June 2021. Which makes me very happy. I love my characters and can’t wait for you all to meet them.
So to sum up, I’m working to finish the first draft of Valkyrie’s Call, finish learning the ins and outs of formatting Siren’s Song for ebook and print distribution and. . .publish my first novel. Very exciting.
And that, more or less, is What I’m Working On.