Comfort Zone? That's the McQuestion

Karen:
In 2009, after many years of not being able to get published traditionally, I uploaded my unpublished manuscripts to sell as ebooks on Amazon's Kindle. What happened next still blows my mind. Call it timing, luck, or whatever, but in the year that followed I had sales in the tens of thousands, received a contract to option my novel, A Scattered Life, for film, and finally, offers of publication from AmazonEncore, Amazon's new publishing division.
At this time, three of my books, A Scattered Life , Easily Amused , and my children's book, Celia and the Fairies , have been published by AmazonEncore in paperback and ebook. Next spring, two more of my books, Favorite and Life On Hold, will be released by the same publisher. I am in writer heaven.

Honestly, I could keep up this schedule day after day, week after week, and not mind at all. In the last few months though, I've been invited to speak to various groups about writing and my publishing journey. Doing so requires me to leave my house, dress up, and interact with others.
No matter how nice the people are, or how wonderful the event is, I never want to do it. Ever. While I appreciate the opportunity to connect with readers and get the word out about my books, part of me dreads it.
And then I go and absolutely love it. Library groups, book clubs, students, writers' groups—they all have different reasons for wanting to hear me speak. I tailor my talk to the group, and afterward there are questions. The questions are my favorite part.

Book clubs ask about the characters and whether I outline my novels ahead of time (I don't). They also want to know where I get my ideas (everywhere).
Library crowds are true book people. They ask a lot of questions and often recommend books to me, and then I'm the one jotting down notes.
Today I spoke to students at a local high school. I talked, they listened. They were attentive but not overly enthused. I drew names and gave away a few of my books. The winners took the books, but didn't seem overjoyed. Afterward though, one girl came up to me and had me sign her book. She said she was excited about winning and that she was a writer too. Then one of the guys in the group came up and said he had one more question for me. "In your opinion," he said, "in a battle between Lord Voldemort and Darth Vader, who would win?"

Just for the record, I said Lord Voldemort. My older son has since told me that I'm wrong and that Darth Vader could definitely take Lord Voldemort. Live and learn.
I still love my quiet days at home writing, but I'm getting more comfortable doing public speaking. I think it's good that I'm being forced to venture out into the world. Sometimes the questions alone make it worth the trip.
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Published on November 09, 2010 05:30
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