The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Writer

26th January 2012
Blog
2 min read
Edited
8th December 2020

The journey begins ...

... or, to be more accurate, the next stage of the journey begins.

A publishing contract has been signed and so the first leg, writing the thing, is over.  I now must treat it as though hewn from stone, rather than the waters of creativity.  No more tweaking, time to move on.  It's been with me so long that it might be hard to let go ... but let go I must!

So what are my hopes and fears for ‘Grosse Fugue’?  Should I reveal my innermost thoughts?  Perhaps not yet.  As any author knows, the greatest hunger is for an audience, preferably one as large as possible.  Of course, there's a revenue attraction to that.  But for many, it's just the notion of our work being read by many hearts and minds.

A few may love it, many may loathe it.  A handful might be moved, others offended.  With any luck, no-one will be indifferent, the true mark of failure.  But I hope that some may be tempted for the first time to delve into the music that permeates the novel - Bach, Beethoven, Schubert - and then perhaps relish the consolation, inspiration and transportation that I have sought to communicate.  And if one or two are stimulated to think about the Holocaust, its meaning and legacy, then I might just begin to think that the journey was worthwhile.

There, the context is set.  The purpose of this blog series is to share the experience of writing a novel and seeking a publisher, and to explain the process of getting the work out there in print and digitally.  It will be a serial of excitement and frustration, bloody-mindedness and compromise, highs and lows, hopes and fears.

My next post will return to the very beginning.

Ian Phillips is a freelance writer for businesses whose first novel, Grosse Fugue, will be published by Alliance Publishing Press this Spring

Writing stage

Comments

Hi Ian, looking forward to reading your series of blog posts!

Interesting that you say you didn't do a specific number of redrafts - I'm the same! I keep redrafting certain bits and I haven't even written my ending yet. I don't understand how some writer's can count the number of redrafts because my way of writing is nowhere near that structured! Couldn't imagine writing a novel from start to finish without redrafting certain bits as I go along.

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Gayle
Bentham
330 points
Developing your craft
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Gayle Bentham
28/01/2012

Thanks, Venkatesh!

I'm looking forward to sharing the journey and really hope that it might help fellow writers see all the opportunities that are out there!

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Ian
Phillips
270 points
Practical publishing
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Ian Phillips
27/01/2012

Ian, It will be good to learn about the evolutionary journey of a published writer ... looking forward to it!

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Venkatesh
Govindarajan
270 points
Developing your craft
Venkatesh Govindarajan
27/01/2012