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Paul R   04-24-2009, 10:46 AM
#1
I've just finished reading Aftershock & Others (excellent stuff - it's always great to catch up on your short stories - they're not that easy to get hold of over here in Sunny England) and wanted to ask about something I read in the interstitial material.
In 2003/2004 you mention a 'cozy medical mystery' novel that you weren't able to sell. Two things sprung to mind. First off, why on Earth would nobody buy it? I'm guessing that you wouldn't just throw some chucked-together tat out there and try to pass it off as a sell-able novel, so why was nobody interested? I mean, surely your name alone would be enough to sell a story these days, wouldn't it?
And secondly (and yes, probably somewhat predictably) will this short novel ever see the light of day?
(And a bonus 'thirdly': are there any more unsold novels cluttering up your attic space that need to see the light of day?!)
Thanks in advance.

"I handed in the new RJ novel with the
working title, BY THE SWORD. David says the sales force loved the title at the
pre Turkey-Day sales meeting, so that's what it will be. That means Paul Ramplin
gets a credit line in the acknowledgments.
"
Scott Miller   04-24-2009, 05:09 PM
#2
Paul R Wrote:and wanted to ask about something I read in the interstitial material.
In 2003/2004 you mention a 'cozy medical mystery' novel that you weren't able to sell. Two things sprung to mind. First off, why on Earth would nobody buy it? I'm guessing that you wouldn't just throw some chucked-together tat out there and try to pass it off as a sell-able novel, so why was nobody interested? I mean, surely your name alone would be enough to sell a story these days, wouldn't it?

I was finally able to clear some reading time and I flew the all the stories I hadn't previously read and the interstitial stuff and my first thought was that there was one thread left untied concerning the medical thriller that wasn't going to sell that Paul mentions...when can we expect our greedy little eyes to get a looksee. And is that how to write looksee?

I loved the stories. I found "Lysing Towards Bethlehem" to be particularly disturbing as disease is the scariest 'known' thing to me. I'm curious if you were writing about a specific virus or do they all essentially operate the same? And is this the picture... http://alanmclark.com/shop/catalog/produ...cts_id=421 ?
This post was last modified: 04-24-2009, 05:11 PM by Scott Miller.

Scott

Jesus died for your sins, get your money's worth. Chad Daniels
jmez87   05-04-2009, 07:11 PM
#3
When i read the keep years ago i loved the relationship between roma (rasalom to others) and glaeken. i was wondering if there are any other bouts between the two in other adversary books. Same thing with the twins from conspiracies. they seem to have such an intriguing history that i read about in harbingers. do they appear in any other novels?
Ken Valentine   05-04-2009, 10:16 PM
#4
jmez87 Wrote:When i read the keep years ago i loved the relationship between roma (rasalom to others) and glaeken. i was wondering if there are any other bouts between the two in other adversary books.
Yes, it all comes together in NIGHTWORLD.
Quote:Same thing with the twins from conspiracies. they seem to have such an intriguing history that i read about in harbingers. do they appear in any other novels?
Only the ones you have mentioned . . . so far.

Ken V.
fpw   05-04-2009, 10:26 PM
#5
Paul R Wrote:I've just finished reading Aftershock & Others (excellent stuff - it's always great to catch up on your short stories - they're not that easy to get hold of over here in Sunny England) and wanted to ask about something I read in the interstitial material.
In 2003/2004 you mention a 'cozy medical mystery' novel that you weren't able to sell. Two things sprung to mind. First off, why on Earth would nobody buy it? I'm guessing that you wouldn't just throw some chucked-together tat out there and try to pass it off as a sell-able novel, so why was nobody interested? I mean, surely your name alone would be enough to sell a story these days, wouldn't it?
And secondly (and yes, probably somewhat predictably) will this short novel ever see the light of day?
(And a bonus 'thirdly': are there any more unsold novels cluttering up your attic space that need to see the light of day?!)
Thanks in advance.

I refused to have it published under my name. I still do. I wanted to write as another person. It didn't work. It's my only trunk novel. It will stay in the trunk.

FPW
FAQ
"It means 'Ask the next question.' Ask the next question, and the one that follows that, and the one that follows that. It's the symbol of everything humanity has ever created." Theodore Sturgeon.
Paul R   05-05-2009, 05:57 AM
#6
fpw Wrote:I refused to have it published under my name. I still do. I wanted to write as another person. It didn't work. It's my only trunk novel. It will stay in the trunk.
Fair enough. I guess it's not a bad thing, having only one 'trunk novel' in such a long career.

"I handed in the new RJ novel with the
working title, BY THE SWORD. David says the sales force loved the title at the
pre Turkey-Day sales meeting, so that's what it will be. That means Paul Ramplin
gets a credit line in the acknowledgments.
"
ccosborne3   05-06-2009, 02:34 AM
#7
fpw Wrote:I refused to have it published under my name. I still do. I wanted to write as another person. It didn't work. It's my only trunk novel. It will stay in the trunk.

Send it to James Patterson for a collaborative effort. Big bucks, and he'll sign off on just about anything.

Curious, has anyone else read it? Must be hard to evaluate your own work. I hate to think that you might have some unpublished gold hidden away.
fpw   05-06-2009, 08:44 AM
#8
ccosborne3 Wrote:Send it to James Patterson for a collaborative effort. Big bucks, and he'll sign off on just about anything.

Curious, has anyone else read it? Must be hard to evaluate your own work. I hate to think that you might have some unpublished gold hidden away.
It's not bad. I can see people reading it and liking it but not loving it. I can't see anyone pushing it on a friend as a gotta-read book. Certainly anyone coming to it expecting my usual pacing and plotting will be disappointed.

FPW
FAQ
"It means 'Ask the next question.' Ask the next question, and the one that follows that, and the one that follows that. It's the symbol of everything humanity has ever created." Theodore Sturgeon.
swandy   05-07-2009, 12:52 AM
#9
ccosborne3 Wrote:Send it to James Patterson for a collaborative effort. Big bucks, and he'll sign off on just about anything.

You mean he really does not write ALL those books???:confused::confused::confused:
t4terrific   05-07-2009, 10:42 AM
#10
swandy Wrote:You mean he really does not write ALL those books???:confused::confused::confused:

His best books were written by someone else.
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