I had intended to write my blog on Tuesday, but somehow my dippy
blonde brain got muddled between US and UK time. So I am now writing this on
Wednesday, except it is almost 2pm here in Cathy Helm’s living room in hot and humid North
Carolina (thank goodness for efficient air conditioning). Back home in the UK
it is now nearly 8pm. By the time I get to post this I’ll have no idea what the time is where-ever you (the
reader) happens to be reading this. So I give up. It might still be Wednesday,
it could be Thursday – it could be, well, whenever!
I think suffice to say I am having a great time. (Although missing
home, family and animals very much.)
BleeBear in his holiday bed |
The flight over was somewhat bumpy. In fact I think it might have
been smoother by sea…. Even before I got on the plane I hit problems. No one
told me I needed a Visa to enter the US. Not even the airline website said so.
In fact I DID look it said ‘Visa not necessary if visit under 90 days or as
vacation only.’ Turns out I did need one.
The airport staff were very helpful (which makes me think they know
perfectly well that there’s no information saying a visa is needed) apparently
they have to deal with this issue on a regular basis. All I had to do was fill
in a form, pay $x and hey-presto I would have my Visa. A really nice young man assisted
me –unfortunately he was also on duty at baggage check-in so couldn’t give me
his undivided attention. It was a task that eventually took us a mere 20
minutes to accomplish. Pity my flight had already taken off.
Again, the Heathrow staff were helpful they booked me into a hotel
and re-arranged the same flight for the next day. No idea how I kept cool and
calm. I just kept telling myself that my flight had been delayed for a reason.
Missing home - Devon on the morning I left |
Sunday, everything went fine and there at Charlotte Airport was
Cathy, her mom-in-law Julianne and mom Lynn to meet me. First stop: the ladies
restroom.
Jet lag didn’t seem to be a problem, and BleeBear gave his
approval to our guest bedroom bed. (Yes he came with me. Ideal neck-rest
cushion for long flights.) (see photo above)
Hot and humid here in North Carolina. I do miss sitting outside in
fresh, cool, Devon for morning coffee, but better to enjoy indoor air conditioning
rather than frizzle outside.
Wednesday, Cathy and I set off for the Historical Novel Conference
in Denver, Colorado (sound of John Denver singing in my head ‘Rocky Mountain High! Colorado….!’
Very disappointing to discover that although Denver is the ‘Mile
High City’ it is also quite a few miles from the mountains. I could just about
see them. Never mind, on one of my previous US trips I took the train from Salt
Lake City to Chicago – which involved going alongside the Colorado River and up
through the mountains. Incidentally, we also stopped for about an hour at Denver
Station.
First night, TV were announcing a tornado warning. I was
interested (all good research and the hotel looked safe and solid enough). Well
I guess the storm was on the other side of the hotel because beyond a few
half-hearted lightning flashes and a couple of low thunder grumbles nothing
much happened. (I think there was severe flooding in downtown Denver) From
where I stood at the window though – Devon beats Denver as far as thunderstorms
go. It didn’t even rain on our side of the building. There was a super rainbow
afterwards though. Sadly not a very super photo to go with it :-)
Denver Rainbow from our hotel window |
Thursday and most of Friday Cathy and I ensconced ourselves at a
table in the hotel’s outdoor café, nice and cool, and we could see all new
arrivals – including Geri Clouston and husband Bob of Indie B.R.A.G the main
Conference sponsor, and Alison Morton, Anna Belfrage – and several other treasured Facebook friends.
Breakfast: l-r Alison, Johan, (waitress) Anna, me, Cathy, Geri |
Friday evening – the reception and buffet dinner. Probably a very
little thing to most people but the delightful author and actor C.C. Humphreys
(read his books, they’re good!) opened the Conference with a poem…. Which is
here “We are Historical Novelists, Fiction is our Game”
The lovely (and somewhat handsome) C.C. Humphreys (now unashamedly my favourite author!) |
Saturday: in between meeting so many wonderful people (mostly Facebook
friends -fabulous to now put faces to names) I was co-speaker for one of the
panels talking about the brass tacks of indie
publishing with Geri Clouston, Alison Morton, Anna Belfrage and Dan Willis. We
had a rapt and interested audience – hope we managed to answer most questions.
Our main emphasis was ‘if you are going to publish as indie/self-publish do it
properly and professionally’.
Alison, Geri, Anna, Me |
I made mistakes when I first went indie - Big Time mistakes, which
is one of the reasons I want to help new writers who go down the indie line
with 'lessons learnt' advice. It saddens me (and frustrates) that there are
still those who sneer at or mock indie writers - especially those who use the
derogatory "they are only indie because they can't get a traditional
contract".
For a kick-off I am what
they term 'hybrid' : traditional in the US, indie in the UK. I was traditional in the UK but because of
a useless agent I was dropped by Heinemann. My choice? Give up writing (not an
option) or go indie. Thank goodness I DID
have that choice!
I know quite a few well-known traditional authors who are turning
to indie for their mid- and back-list novels which have been dropped by their
(short-sighted) mainstream publishers. And maybe one of the main reasons many
of us go indie is because, yes the publishers do not want to publish our books
but quality of writing has nothing to
do with it... traditional publishing houses like to put their square-peg books
into square-peg holes because of
marketing. Many indies are cross-over subgenre - my own Sea Witch Voyages are
historical fantasy/ nautical adventure. I received rejections because the publishers
said the books would be hard to market as they were not clearly one genre or
another. When I took over as Managing Editor for Historical Novel Society Indie
Reviews I was determined to ensure we only review the better books (sadly there
are some not very good indies... but there are also more than a few not very
good traditionals!) and this is one of the reasons I introduced the HNS Indie
Award. As far as I am aware we are the only genre-specific group to have such
an award - very few even review indies, let alone give awards. I do not want
the award to be a competition, I see it is as a goal to achieve where all
historical fiction authors have a chance of being longlisted/shortlisted. All a
writer has to do to be considered is to write a darn good story and produce a
quality novel.
Anna and me (and other authors) signing books that's Stephanie Dray on my left |
It saddened me that there were a few, shall I say, ‘unpleasant’
remarks about Indie authors at the conference. I bit my tongue and smiled
sweetly. I put these remarks down to authors who feel threatened by us though!
I would have liked to have turned round and said ‘look what Indie has done for
the music industry. No one sneers at the many, many top groups who produce
albums independently because the record companies were not broad-minded or
far-sighted enough to produce material that fell outside the normal market.’
Well, the same applies to us indies.
My only caveat to all that is Indie writers MUST prove we are just
as good as traditional mainstream – if not better!
Anyway, for the HNS award, congratulations to runner-up A Day of Fire by
E Knight, Stephanie Dray, Ben Kane, Sophie Perinot, Vicky Alvear Shecter and
Kate Quinn, (some of whom are mainstream authors. Does the ‘not good enough for mainstream
apply here?) and our winner, unanimously agreed by our judges, Vivien Crystal
and Amy Bruno – Anna Belfrage’s Revenge and Retribution the sixth book in the ‘Graham Saga’.
Commiserations to our two other finalists Marschel Paul’s theSpirit Room and Tristan and Iseult by J.D. Smith Both judges said it was very hard to choose between the four books.
HNS Indie Award |
Amy Bruno and Anna Belfrage |
Sunday morning I had a very brief chance to chat with a few lovely
people, but I had a plane to catch and the cab came early: I promise I will be
emailing you all soon but
Tomorrow (Thursday) I’m off to celebrate us Brits giving the
Colonies away. 4th July in Williamsburg! Looking forward to it!
See y'all next week! (Hopefully on TUESDAY!)
Wonderful post Helen- we indie people have a long way to go to acceptance but we have taken some major steps forward. There are self-published books out there that are deemed as good, if not better, than many mainstream books and contests such as the ones honored at the HNS conference proves that!
ReplyDeleteGeri
indieBRAG
thank you Geri - and thank you again for sponsoring our Award!
ReplyDeleteGreat column, Helen, and great to meet you at the conference. Thanks for your wise words there and your wise words in this blog post. ��
ReplyDeleteWonderful to have met you too Elaine!
DeleteA fabulous post, Wench Helen. Great that you kept us all up-to-date with your 'adventure' across the pond.
ReplyDeletestand by for tomorrow (Tuesday 7th's) entry IF I get a chance to do it!
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