Friday, May 11, 2018 was a big day for me and my writing
career. After almost ten years of
writing and weeks of studying self-publishing and related topics, I published my
book, Storm on Savage Mountain,
through Kindle Direct Publishing(KDP).
It is now available at the Kindle Store and on Amazon. I
have been working on this book for almost ten years. I was awake until 2:00 A.M. Saturday,
trying to complete the KDP process. I also designed and printed a small marketing handout about
the ebook to let people know that a
paperback version would be coming soon.
I have been writing all my life and a good part of my career
was as a journalist. I also had published a chapbook and taught some classes on
writing, but many people don’t think of you as a real writer unless you have
written a book. So now I have and was ready to tell people about it.
I was up early Saturday morning to participate in
Westminster’s Flower and Jazz Festival with other writers in front of
Eclecticity, across from the library. It was a beautiful, sunny day and Main
Street was packed. I enjoyed talking to people about books and art available at
Eclecticity and especially about my books if they were interested.
I wish I could have stayed longer, but Michael Downs was
speaking at the Carroll County Chapter of Maryland Writers’ Association. His
topic, History and its Mysteries:
How Fiction’s Imagination Works with
History’s Fact, sounded interesting and I didn’t want to miss it.
Like Michael Downs, I was a former newspaper reporter and
like him, I like to fill in the gaps between the facts. So far, I am publishing
fiction, but also am writing some non-fiction books.
Downs is writing non-fiction. His most recent book is the
novel, The Strange and True Tale of
Horace Wells, Surgeon Dentist, about the man credited with discovering
anesthesia. He also published The
Greatest Show: Stories, inspired by a 1944 circus fire, and House of Good Hope: A Promise for a Broken City,
which won the River Teeth Literary Nonfiction Prize.
He discussed his approach to studying history and writing
about it. First he looks at
what he knows.
When
he has found a subject that interests him, he looks into various sources of
information. He does remind us that information can still be unreliable. Next, he looks for the mystery or what hasn’t been mentioned, such as
the “whys” a person did a certain thing.
Michael Downs
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You find the mystery or contradictions in the story and go
from there, he said. Imagination can help you
fill in the gaps. You must use reasoned conjectures, seek patterns and consider
evidence. He studied 19th century paintings and researched 19th
century language so he could better understand their world and their words.
Downs stressed that history isn’t story. A lot more is
needed to make that information into an interesting book or story.
He has received fellowships from the National Endowment for
the Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council, and the Greater Baltimore Cultural
Alliance. Downs is an associate professor of English at Towson University.
For more information, check out http://www.michael-downs.net