by Andrea Colasanto
Gary K. Wolf is the author responsible for creating Roger and Jessica Rabbit, and all of Toontown. His groundbreaking 1981 novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit? served as the basis for the $950 million blockbuster film, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?. His newest novel, the highly anticipated third in the Roger Rabbit series, Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? releases in just a few short weeks, on November 29th. This is clearly a guy with some serious and successful writing chops—but have you ever wondered how an author of this magnitude actually writes?
Gary takes some time with Musa to explain his process throughout the years; interestingly enough his first method in the 1970s reflects his exact process today!
I started writing my first Roger Rabbit novel in 1976.
I would write out my passages in longhand on yellow lined paper using a No. 2 pencil. Then I would type them out on the typewriter I got in high school, a portable Remington manual. Portable being a relative term since the thing weighed almost as much as our black and white, tube-type Emerson cabinet television set.
I would edit those typed pages using my pencil. If a passage had to be eliminated, I would cut those lines out of the page and paste the page back together using Scotch tape. If a passage had to be moved, I would cut that passage out and paste it in the proper position, again using my trusty roll of Scotch tape.
This resulted in pages of wildly different lengths. Some only six inches long, some nearly two feet.
I would then retype what I had done, and repeat the process. Doing that over and over and over until the book was done.
I would retype the book one last time in a clean draft using White-Out to cover any typing errors.
Then, to my great delight, along came the miracle of word processing.
I was working as a copywriter for an advertising agency that specialized in promoting hi-tech companies and products. One of my clients was Wang, a major mainframe computer manufacturer. Wang had developed a small computer they called a word processor. They intended to sell it to companies for use by secretaries.
They gave me one of their word processors to try out.
I rapidly discovered that the Wang word processor mimicked exactly the way I worked. I was able to type, cut, and paste. Except without having to physically print, cut, and tape.
My writing speed increased dramatically.
I took nine years to write Who Censored Roger Rabbit? The Wang turned me into a veritable speedball. I pumped out the sequel, Who P-p-p-plugged Roger Rabbit? in four and a half years.
I remember having a meeting with the top execs at Wang. I suggested to them that perhaps they were thinking too small. They should position their word processors as personal computers and sell them to individuals. They looked at me like I had suddenly grown a second head. “Who would want a computer in their house?” asked one of the senior vice presidents. The other executives agreed. What a silly idea.
Which is probably why, today, Wang is a footnote in computer history and Apple rules the world.
But I digress.
I went from the Wang to a series of other word processors and eventually personal computers. I currently use a home-built desktop machine I put together myself with the help of a grade school computer whiz who lives down the street.
I wrote four more novels on those personal computers.
Then I decided to write the long awaited and highly anticipated third Roger Rabbit novel, Who Wacked Roger Rabbit?
For this one I had a set deadline. The previous two Roger novels were published by big New York publishing houses. These publishers were extremely flexible about release dates. Whenever I finished the book, that was when the book got published.
Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? came out as a digital book. The big sales day for digital books is the last Friday in November. What digital book publishers and on-line book sellers call Black Friday. You miss Black Friday, and you might as well consign your book to the digital Buck-a-Book bin because you will have missed the majority of your sales opportunities.
In order to finish the book on time, I had to keep writing it during the eight weeks I spent in China.
Obviously, I couldn’t take my desktop machine.
So I looked into laptops.
Any of those would have worked. Except in my opinion they would have been useless to me when I returned home and went back to my desktop machine.
I decided instead to get an iPad. I could use the iPad with a Bluetooth keyboard, turning it into an ersatz laptop. Then, when I got home, I could either sell the iPad on eBay or use it for whatever people used iPads to do.
To my great surprise, the iPad changed my writing forever.
I swiftly discarded the keyboard. I’m a very fast touch typist, and the keys did not suit my fingers.
Instead, I used the virtual keyboard and a stylus. I wrote the entire novel one letter at a time. I found the experience to be very similar to the way I first started writing, when I used yellow lined paper and a No. 2 pencil.
I carried the iPad around with me in a red fabric shopping bag I bought for the equivalent of a nickel in a Chinese grocery store.
I worked on the book whenever I had spare time. In Chinese airports, in Chinese hotels (usually in the lobbies, the only places with Wi-Fi), on Chinese airplanes, on Chinese boats on the Yangtze River, in Chinese buses, once in a Chinese pedicab.
The book came together quickly and well.
My wife, who accompanied me on the trip and was usually by my side when I wrote, told me that I started talking to myself. Reciting the book out loud as I wrote. I was completely unaware of that. Although I was aware of getting strange looks from people around me as I sat writing in bars and restaurants.
When I got home from China, I continued to work on the iPad, even though I could have gone back to the desktop. I carried the iPad with me everywhere. I worked in libraries, coffee shops, college student unions, yoga studios, gyms, wherever I happened to be.
The book came together so swiftly and so easily, that I can’t ever envision myself going back to writing on the desktop machine.
I even used the iPad to write scenes for the new movie I’m writing.
My programs include Final Draft for screenwriting and Pages for novels. Because Pages won’t support the Track Changes program my editor uses, I also use Office HD.
Yes, in case you’re wondering, I’m writing this on the iPad, too.
Just goes to show, you can teach an old dog, or an old rabbit, new tricks.
Read more about Jessica Rabbit in Gary K. Wolf’s novel Who Wacked Roger Rabbit?, available now in digital-only publication from Musa Publishing.
Gary K. Wolf hass written many short stories and nine novels. He is well known for two kinds of writing. His science fiction novels include Killerbowl, A Generation Removed, The Resurrectionist, Space Vulture an old-school, throwback, pulp science fiction novel which he co-wrote with his childhood friend Catholic Archbishop John J. Myers. His newest is newest Typical Day. Both Killerbowl and The Resurrectionist are currently in production as major motion pictures.
His other kind of writing isn't as easily categorized. Gary calls it fantasy fiction. He was told early on by a marketing executive at a major publishing house that this kind of writing wouldn't sell. Because there was no place for it on the bookstore shelves. It's not a regular novel, not crime, not science fiction, not romance. He was wrong. Who Censored Roger Rabbit? did indeed get published. It went through sixteen printings, and became a visual reality in Disney/Spielberg's $950 million blockbuster film Who Framed Roger Rabbit? The film won four Academy Awards and the Hugo Award. Walt Disney Pictures has also purchased film rights to the sequel novel Who P-p-p-plugged Roger Rabbit?
One of his newest novels The Late Great Show! is solidly in the Roger Rabbit style fantasy category. Those who enjoy Toontown tales will most assuredly like The Late Great Show!, too.
Gary K. Wolf currently lives in Boston, but regularly travels around the world.
Showing posts with label Andrea Colasanto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrea Colasanto. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Daredevil Author
by Andrea Colasanto
Sonny Whitelaw.
Yep, that Sonny Whitelaw. Author of the Stargate novels, winner of the Draco Award—and soon to be a Musa published author with a new edition of The Rhesus Factor, available December 20th!
When Sonny’s not writing, she can be found exploring all the wonders New Zealand has to offer. Here she is being awesome, exploring caverns on Fox Glacier.
Working with Musa will give Sonny a wider audience in an e-publishing format. On her website, she mentions her Stargate novels are not available in New Zealand, where she resides. Musa Publishing will ensure that The Rhesus Factor will be available at the fingertips of all who wish to access it, anywhere!
Below is an excerpt from an interview with Sonny—you can read it in its entirety in the upcoming October issue of Penumbra EMag, so be on the lookout!
Sonny, were you a fan of the Stargate television series before writing the proposal for the novel?
Honestly? No. Not because I didn’t like it, but because I didn't see a television for two decades (aside from the odd trips overseas). But when I saw the movie, I loved the premise because back in the 1970s, I’d been intrigued by how the nineteenth century alien-gods-built-the-Egyptian-pyramids notion had escaped eighteenth and early nineteenth century science fiction and insinuated itself into pop culture and pseudo science. Back then, I thought it would make a great modern science fiction tale (after all, James Cameron turned Pocahontas into Avatar). The storytelling potential of Stargate was unlimited because it could capture every mythology from every culture for the past 10,000 years of human history, plus any number of aliens on unlimited planets. So yeah, when offered me the chance to play in their sandpit, I leaped at the opportunity.
Why do you think speculative fiction is so successful?
I wrote my second Masters thesis, The Attraction of Sloppy Nonsense, on that very question! (If by any chance anyone is vaguely interested, just Google the title). By its nature, speculative fiction explores and often challenges the human condition. It pulls apart what we believe, including our mythologies, and exposes the potential moral quagmires that science and technology are creating. That’s the storytelling side of speculative fiction. When it comes to movies and television, mind-blowing special effects breathe life into stories that many people would never normally read, if only because they don’t have time. Gaming takes it a step further: take great stories, add science fiction and a user interface, and even the most unadventurous can become immersed in fabulous tales set in realistic worlds without leaving the safety of their room.
As an author, what is your take on e-publishing and what it means for a changing market?
E-publishing has certainly come of age. I haven’t read the latest statistics but the last time I looked, around 60% of sales through some of the big name international print publishers were e-books. And many are struggling to compete with e-publishers who’ve been around for a while and have embraced the market and technology and run with it. Indeed, a top New Zealand publisher has just been forced to close, citing competitive pressure from e-publishers, and particularly self-publishing. While self-publishing is certainly taking a chunk of the market by virtue of the sheer volume of works out there, there is little or no quality control in the finished product. Readers quickly learn that if they want a quality product, they’ll buy from quality e-publishers.
What can you tell us about the upcoming The Rhesus Factor?
I'll let two reviewers explain:
Cause and effect, and for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Those principles are commonplace and indisputable. The Rhesus Factor by Sonny Whitelaw demonstrates with painful clarity that we ignore cause and effect at our peril. Perhaps the most frightening book of recent years, Whitelaw's thriller builds an all too plausible scenario of what might happen should our ecosphere decide to apply an equal and opposite reaction to our actions.
Fast-paced and grounded in solid research, the book charts not only the breakdown of ecosystems in the wake of global warming, but the breakdown of society that will be an inescapable result. It is precisely in the devastating detail of the wreckage of everyday life that the book is at its most explosive. While Joe Voter may dismiss global warming as a theory that doesn't affect him, the very real prospect of losing home, livelihood, educational facilities and medical care is bound to strike a chord. - Dr. Sabine C Bauer
Although fiction, I now know that some of the events in the book could happen in the future. The effects of global warming are evident, as is how this has put stress on the world, leading to world events that include terrorism, environmental vandalism and a lifestyle that we do not want for our future generations. I encourage all members to buy this book when it becomes available. - Barbara Stone MP for Queensland, Australia. (Excerpt from speech to Queensland State Parliament).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Check back again for more information on the new edition of The Rhesus Factor by Sonny Whitelaw releasing December 20th!
Sonny Whitelaw.
Yep, that Sonny Whitelaw. Author of the Stargate novels, winner of the Draco Award—and soon to be a Musa published author with a new edition of The Rhesus Factor, available December 20th!
When Sonny’s not writing, she can be found exploring all the wonders New Zealand has to offer. Here she is being awesome, exploring caverns on Fox Glacier.
Working with Musa will give Sonny a wider audience in an e-publishing format. On her website, she mentions her Stargate novels are not available in New Zealand, where she resides. Musa Publishing will ensure that The Rhesus Factor will be available at the fingertips of all who wish to access it, anywhere!
Below is an excerpt from an interview with Sonny—you can read it in its entirety in the upcoming October issue of Penumbra EMag, so be on the lookout!
Sonny, were you a fan of the Stargate television series before writing the proposal for the novel?
Honestly? No. Not because I didn’t like it, but because I didn't see a television for two decades (aside from the odd trips overseas). But when I saw the movie, I loved the premise because back in the 1970s, I’d been intrigued by how the nineteenth century alien-gods-built-the-Egyptian-pyramids notion had escaped eighteenth and early nineteenth century science fiction and insinuated itself into pop culture and pseudo science. Back then, I thought it would make a great modern science fiction tale (after all, James Cameron turned Pocahontas into Avatar). The storytelling potential of Stargate was unlimited because it could capture every mythology from every culture for the past 10,000 years of human history, plus any number of aliens on unlimited planets. So yeah, when offered me the chance to play in their sandpit, I leaped at the opportunity.
Why do you think speculative fiction is so successful?
I wrote my second Masters thesis, The Attraction of Sloppy Nonsense, on that very question! (If by any chance anyone is vaguely interested, just Google the title). By its nature, speculative fiction explores and often challenges the human condition. It pulls apart what we believe, including our mythologies, and exposes the potential moral quagmires that science and technology are creating. That’s the storytelling side of speculative fiction. When it comes to movies and television, mind-blowing special effects breathe life into stories that many people would never normally read, if only because they don’t have time. Gaming takes it a step further: take great stories, add science fiction and a user interface, and even the most unadventurous can become immersed in fabulous tales set in realistic worlds without leaving the safety of their room.
As an author, what is your take on e-publishing and what it means for a changing market?
E-publishing has certainly come of age. I haven’t read the latest statistics but the last time I looked, around 60% of sales through some of the big name international print publishers were e-books. And many are struggling to compete with e-publishers who’ve been around for a while and have embraced the market and technology and run with it. Indeed, a top New Zealand publisher has just been forced to close, citing competitive pressure from e-publishers, and particularly self-publishing. While self-publishing is certainly taking a chunk of the market by virtue of the sheer volume of works out there, there is little or no quality control in the finished product. Readers quickly learn that if they want a quality product, they’ll buy from quality e-publishers.
What can you tell us about the upcoming The Rhesus Factor?
I'll let two reviewers explain:
Cause and effect, and for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Those principles are commonplace and indisputable. The Rhesus Factor by Sonny Whitelaw demonstrates with painful clarity that we ignore cause and effect at our peril. Perhaps the most frightening book of recent years, Whitelaw's thriller builds an all too plausible scenario of what might happen should our ecosphere decide to apply an equal and opposite reaction to our actions.
Fast-paced and grounded in solid research, the book charts not only the breakdown of ecosystems in the wake of global warming, but the breakdown of society that will be an inescapable result. It is precisely in the devastating detail of the wreckage of everyday life that the book is at its most explosive. While Joe Voter may dismiss global warming as a theory that doesn't affect him, the very real prospect of losing home, livelihood, educational facilities and medical care is bound to strike a chord. - Dr. Sabine C Bauer
Although fiction, I now know that some of the events in the book could happen in the future. The effects of global warming are evident, as is how this has put stress on the world, leading to world events that include terrorism, environmental vandalism and a lifestyle that we do not want for our future generations. I encourage all members to buy this book when it becomes available. - Barbara Stone MP for Queensland, Australia. (Excerpt from speech to Queensland State Parliament).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Check back again for more information on the new edition of The Rhesus Factor by Sonny Whitelaw releasing December 20th!
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
The Price of a Book
by Andrea Blundell and Andrea Colasanto
I know, I know. We’ve all read the stories about e-book pricing versus print book pricing. We know that Big Six hardcover books can cost almost $30. We know that those same books in trade paperback can run almost $20. And their digital versions? Well, e-books often cost less than the print book, but they still average in the $10-$15 range. But why is this? Why do e-books have to cost so much most of the time? The answer is that they don’t. And Musa Publishing is out to prove it.
Celina Summers, one of the founders of Musa Publishing, a digital-only publisher, recalls an early conversation between the four founders about e-book pricing. “We said at the time that our readers would be able to rely 100% on the pricing set by word count limits we’d put into place here.”
And readers can. Musa’s e-books are priced based on their word count. Period. And because of this, when Gary K. Wolf’s much-anticipated Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? releases in November, at about 91,000 words, it will sell for $4.99. Yes, you read that correctly—just $4.99 for a major new release.
When asked about the decision to publish Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? as a digital-first and digital-only book, Summers had this to say: “Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? is proof that you don’t need to spend thirty bucks on a hot release, and you definitely don’t need to spend twenty bucks to get the digital version. You can buy digital first and spend the rest of that money on other outstanding books.”
So let’s put her claim to the test and compare Musa publishing pricing to some recent New York Times bestsellers in the most popular formats:
Hardcover fiction:
The Cuckoo’s Calling, by J.K. Rowling (Little, Brown) $26.00
And the Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead) $28.95
Inferno, by Dan Brown (Doubleday) $29.95
Average price: $28.30
At Musa, you could buy The Indian Shirt Story (just released), by Heather Lockman, for $5.99, Typical Game, by Gary K. Wolf (author of Who Wacked Roger Rabbit?), for $3.99, and Finding Grace, by Rhea Rhodan, for $4.99, and still have $13.33 left over.
Trade paperback:
The Casual Vacancy, by J.K. Rowling (Little, Brown) $18.00
Joyland, by Stephen King (Hard Case Crime) $12.95
Alex Cross, Run, by James Patterson (Grand Central) $15.00
Average price: $15.32
Again, if you spend that money at Musa, you can get The Disciple, by Jemma Chase, for just $1.99, Drowning Cactus, by Carrie Russell, for $4.99, First Love, by Kieran Woodhall, for only $0.99, Pearls of Water, by Richard C. White, for $1.99, Michaela’s Gift, by Cordelia Dinsmore, for $2.99, Suburban Gnome Invasion, by Julie Jansen, for $1.99, a collection of free reads, found here, and still have $0.38 to spare.
Mass-market paperback:
Magic Rises, by Ilona Andrews (Ace) $7.99
Three Little Words, by Susan Mallery (Harlequin) $7.99
Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card (Tor) $7.99
Average price: $7.99
At Musa, you could buy Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? plus a second amazing book like Another Journey, by Michael Sutherland, for only $0.99. Purchasing both would be under six dollars.
And then there are e-books. If we look at the e-book versions of the hardcover books listed above, these are the prices:
The Cuckoo’s Calling $12.99
And the Mountains Echoed $10.99
Inferno $12.99
Average price: $12.32
At Musa, you could purchase Killers, by John B. Rosenman, for $0.99, and Time Will Tell, by Mary S. Palmer, for $4.99. Add in a copy of Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? and you still are paying less than the price of one of the above e-books.
So Musa’s pricing strategy may seem unusual, and even low, but it is, and will remain based on word count.
“There are no surprises with Musa books. Not ever. We believe that avid readers should be rewarded for their loyalty with the ability to buy more books for their money instead of less. We are proud of the books we produce at Musa, and we are determined to give our readers real value for their money."
Look for the digital-first and digital-only Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? when it becomes available for pre-order on October 22nd.
And be sure to look for these other upcoming releases on November 29th from Musa Publishing:
Rescuing Lady Rose, by Marguerite Butler
DEAD Santa, by Lizzie T. Leaf
Kissing The Tycoon, by Dominique Eastwick
Reunited, by Helen Hardt
The Ditzy Chix, by Sharon De Vita, a USA Today Bestselling Author for her previous book, The Estrogen Posse.
And don’t worry about waiting for pay day to buy these books, you can just check under your couch cushions and scrounge up enough change to buy one … or two … or three of them.
I know, I know. We’ve all read the stories about e-book pricing versus print book pricing. We know that Big Six hardcover books can cost almost $30. We know that those same books in trade paperback can run almost $20. And their digital versions? Well, e-books often cost less than the print book, but they still average in the $10-$15 range. But why is this? Why do e-books have to cost so much most of the time? The answer is that they don’t. And Musa Publishing is out to prove it.
Celina Summers, one of the founders of Musa Publishing, a digital-only publisher, recalls an early conversation between the four founders about e-book pricing. “We said at the time that our readers would be able to rely 100% on the pricing set by word count limits we’d put into place here.”
And readers can. Musa’s e-books are priced based on their word count. Period. And because of this, when Gary K. Wolf’s much-anticipated Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? releases in November, at about 91,000 words, it will sell for $4.99. Yes, you read that correctly—just $4.99 for a major new release.
When asked about the decision to publish Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? as a digital-first and digital-only book, Summers had this to say: “Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? is proof that you don’t need to spend thirty bucks on a hot release, and you definitely don’t need to spend twenty bucks to get the digital version. You can buy digital first and spend the rest of that money on other outstanding books.”
So let’s put her claim to the test and compare Musa publishing pricing to some recent New York Times bestsellers in the most popular formats:
Hardcover fiction:
The Cuckoo’s Calling, by J.K. Rowling (Little, Brown) $26.00
And the Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead) $28.95
Inferno, by Dan Brown (Doubleday) $29.95
Average price: $28.30
At Musa, you could buy The Indian Shirt Story (just released), by Heather Lockman, for $5.99, Typical Game, by Gary K. Wolf (author of Who Wacked Roger Rabbit?), for $3.99, and Finding Grace, by Rhea Rhodan, for $4.99, and still have $13.33 left over.
Trade paperback:
The Casual Vacancy, by J.K. Rowling (Little, Brown) $18.00
Joyland, by Stephen King (Hard Case Crime) $12.95
Alex Cross, Run, by James Patterson (Grand Central) $15.00
Average price: $15.32
Again, if you spend that money at Musa, you can get The Disciple, by Jemma Chase, for just $1.99, Drowning Cactus, by Carrie Russell, for $4.99, First Love, by Kieran Woodhall, for only $0.99, Pearls of Water, by Richard C. White, for $1.99, Michaela’s Gift, by Cordelia Dinsmore, for $2.99, Suburban Gnome Invasion, by Julie Jansen, for $1.99, a collection of free reads, found here, and still have $0.38 to spare.
Mass-market paperback:
Magic Rises, by Ilona Andrews (Ace) $7.99
Three Little Words, by Susan Mallery (Harlequin) $7.99
Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card (Tor) $7.99
Average price: $7.99
At Musa, you could buy Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? plus a second amazing book like Another Journey, by Michael Sutherland, for only $0.99. Purchasing both would be under six dollars.
And then there are e-books. If we look at the e-book versions of the hardcover books listed above, these are the prices:
The Cuckoo’s Calling $12.99
And the Mountains Echoed $10.99
Inferno $12.99
Average price: $12.32
At Musa, you could purchase Killers, by John B. Rosenman, for $0.99, and Time Will Tell, by Mary S. Palmer, for $4.99. Add in a copy of Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? and you still are paying less than the price of one of the above e-books.
So Musa’s pricing strategy may seem unusual, and even low, but it is, and will remain based on word count.
“There are no surprises with Musa books. Not ever. We believe that avid readers should be rewarded for their loyalty with the ability to buy more books for their money instead of less. We are proud of the books we produce at Musa, and we are determined to give our readers real value for their money."
Look for the digital-first and digital-only Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? when it becomes available for pre-order on October 22nd.
And be sure to look for these other upcoming releases on November 29th from Musa Publishing:
Rescuing Lady Rose, by Marguerite Butler
DEAD Santa, by Lizzie T. Leaf
Kissing The Tycoon, by Dominique Eastwick
Reunited, by Helen Hardt
The Ditzy Chix, by Sharon De Vita, a USA Today Bestselling Author for her previous book, The Estrogen Posse.
And don’t worry about waiting for pay day to buy these books, you can just check under your couch cushions and scrounge up enough change to buy one … or two … or three of them.
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