Thursday, October 28, 2021

My Writing Journey (continued again)

After the publication of my first novel, Retirement Homes Are Murder, I retired to focus on writing. Previously while still working, I had written my manuscripts using a concept I adapted from Julia Cameron’s The Artist Way. Julia recommends writing three hand written pages the first thing every morning (Morning Pages) as a way to get the creative juices flowing. This can be anything: a shopping list, a journal or whatever is on your mind. I adapted this concept as a way of writing three pages of a manuscript every morning. I’d review where I left off and write three hand written pages to continue the story. Then when I came home from work, I’d do an editing pass and enter the three pages into the computer. This produced two type-written pages. If you do the arithmetic, after 150 days, I’d have a rough draft for a 300-page novel.

 

Once I retired, I started writing directly into the computer. Being a morning person, I’d write all morning and then exercise and eat lunch. This was the program I followed during a very productive writing period from 2007 into 2015. During my Morning Pages days and my productive retirement days, I completed over 30 manuscripts, of which 17 have now been published.

Thursday, October 21, 2021

My Writing Journey (continued)

After selling my first short story, I bridged into novel length material. I began my Paul Jacobson Geezer-lit Mystery Series, and in 2005 submitted the first novel in the series, Retirement Homes Are Murder, to a contest for the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers Conference. I didn’t reach the finals, but I received a lot of constructive feedback from the people who read my submission. I madly rewrote and by the time of the conference, I had a much improved manuscript. At the conference, I had an opportunity to pitch to two agents and two publishers. Deni Dietz of Five Star asked me to email her the manuscript. Two months later, I received a contract and Retirement Homes Are Murder was published in January of 2007.

Thursday, October 14, 2021

Reviewing My Writing Journey

I’ve been thinking about my writing journey lately. It all began in 2001 when I was 56-years-old. One evening I was sitting in my easy chair in the living room and reviewed things that I had enjoyed doing during my life. It included building model airplanes when I was a kid, writing and painting. The common denominator: they were all creative. It was that evening that I decided to prepare myself to retire into writing. First step: I signed up for a fiction writing course at the University of Colorado (we lived in Boulder, CO, at the time). I had learned that anyone older than 55 could sign up for courses for free with the instructor’s permission. I took two semesters of fiction writing to jump start my new ambition. In these courses we wrote short stories and critiqued each others’ work. As a result, I began sending short stores off to magazines and anthologies, I’m happy to report that on my 112th submission I sold a story titled, “New Trust a Poison Dart Frog,” in an anthology “Who Died in Here?” that was a collections of short stories with a death or a murder taking place . . . in the bathroom.



Thursday, October 7, 2021

Good News

I will divulge more information shortly, but the good news is that my publisher has scheduled the first of my Omnipodge Trilogy mystery novels for release in the spring of next year. The first one is titled Old Detectives Home, and all three books in the trilogy take place in the fictional California coastal town of Omnipodge.


Imagine a retirement home populated with residents such as an aging Hercule Poirot and a dementia-suffering Sherlock Holmes and run by staff including Art Doyle, Dash Hammett and Dot Sayers. In this light-hearted spoof of the mystery genre, every character is either a real person from the mystery writing world or a character from a mystery novel. On anything but a dark and stormy night, a dead body is found. The staff managers find themselves unable to control the unruly old detectives. Mix in clues and red herrings galore as the cast of suspects investigate each other to figure out who done it. 


Fans of Sherlock Holmes, Hercule Poirot, Agatha Christie and more, hold on to your rockers  as the top detectives of all time reunite at The Old Detectives Home to solve their most difficult whodunit—but first without killing each other.