Saturday, May 22, 2010

Synopsis

So, since I've been gone for a minute and we've just joined Facebook (like button us!), I figure I should put up another post -- this time, with a little background and a short synopsis of exactly what it is I'm asking you to support.

The Lost Testament started as a conversation between me and my then-girlfriend/now-wife Heather, who had just come back from a plane trip home. She spoke of a woman she sat next to on the plane who had the most interesting life. She had interviewed members of the Aryan nation (particularly brave since she's part Hispanic) and victims of crucifixion. She also mentioned a "Last Testament of Jesus Christ" and wrote down a verse of it on Heather's notebook, which she still has. This woman helped inspire the character of Violet October.

I think it was an issue of a magazine where you can start off a good story by asking "What if?" So, I asked myself, "What if this 'last testament' was written AFTER the resurrection and someone found it?" "Wouldn't that erase, beyond a shadow of a doubt, Christ's divinity? (probably not)" "What if the man who found it was a preacher passing for white?" You get the point.

Simply put, "The Lost Testament" is the story of Darrion James, a minister who leaves his home, divorced and penniless, following a public scandal. En route to starting his life over over down south, Darrion meets an enigmatic Jewish writer who hands him a notebook. She claims they are scriptures written by a resurrected Jesus Christ. He becomes a believer, but not soon enough to save her from a grisly demise.

Darrion translates the words, which he comes to call "The Lost Testament," and spearheads a spiritual revival with them reminiscent of the 1906 Azusa Street revival meetings. As a result, lives are saved, transformed, destroyed, or lost.

I'll keep you updated with the latest. God bless.

Great Nation Publishing

So, it's been a while. . .

I have had quite a few people come up to me and say the "The Lost Testament" was already a book. I've previously mentioned knowledge of this. I don't think it'll be a problem, as the other book is in a different genre. You'd like to come up with a brand that's all your own, but, at the same time, I don't believe I would have had this vision for so long if it was going to ultimately fail. Call it optimism, or whatever.

Great Nation Publishing is now officially on the map. In deciding to become my own publisher, I believe I have been called to start my own company. We have an EIN, registration with the state, a business license, a DBA, a bank account, a seller's permit, and a mailing address, so we're ready to go. That's why this blog entry has been so delayed. It's a tremendous amount of work for one person to do part-time or even full time. Right now, I am searching for a PR person to help me promote, and I believe I've settled on a web/logo designer. I've seen the proof and it's SICK -- almost exactly the way I pictured it in my spirit.

June 29 is the release for intimate friends and family, which is also when I will start media promotion, with a wide release and launch party a month later. I'll keep you posted.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

The Lost Testament?

It's official.

After some prayer and careful consideration, I have come to the conclusion that renaming "The Last Testament" to "The Lost Testament" is the right thing to do.

Another fiction work recently released called "The Last Testament" has a "Da Vinci Code"-style plot and, according to the synopsis on Amazon.com, very little in common with my novel, except the archetype of a hidden scripture authored by Christ. "The Book of Love" is close too; same archetypal hidden scripture and action packed.

And, there is actually "The Lost Testament," written about 14 years ago with, you guessed it, a plot surrounding a hidden scripture by Christ.

It happens. Someone comes up with a hot plot, genre, or topic and everyone jumps on it. Perhaps, if I had stayed the course, you'd be reading my Last Testament years ago instead of "The Lost Testament" this summer.

I believe it had to happen this way. Only a few people saw the early drafts of this book, and trust me, they were not good. One of my good friends and former co-workers Bob Yost said the original version was detestable and, he being a former minister at the time, called me onto the carpet as a Christian for writing such filth. I've always carried that with me, Bob, as a motivating tool to write a book free of much of the garbage in books today.

Besides, none of those books are Christ-centered or African-American, which I believe will prove to be the difference. I believe some Christians are tired of reading how Christ supposedly didn't rise from the dead and that the church is some large, multi-media, secret society-laden conglomerate bent on controlling the world through intimidation and secrecy. This "Lost Testament" is evidence Christ did rise. . .and while there's no explicit secret society involvement, it leads one to wonder: what REALLY happened to Violet October and who did it?

I'm a little nervous, as I replaced a character with another villain, upped his villainy, and added the interesting-to-write character of Violet October. But hey, isn't that what editors are for? See you soon.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Countdown to publication

FINALLY! The rewrite is finally done. I think it adds a degree of greater depth to all of the characters. The only people to notice the difference would be me and my wife, who has read all of The Last Testament's previous incarnations -- including the one no one should ever have to read.

Now, onto self-publication. I've found a company that I like, but, more than likely, I'll have to look for a marketing company independently -- or do the marketing myself. When you get down to the basics, you can make decisions based on a number of variables. How much do you want to spend? How much you spend will help dictate how much you sell. What kind of money do you want to make? Most places offer about 35% or so in royalties, which isn't bad. . .until you realize large trade publishers deduct between 40%-55% of the retail price and that DOES NOT include the printing cost. For my novel, it'll probably go for about $15 or so less the $6 it takes to print. As much as I'd like to see you buy my book from one of those places (I love seeing my name in print; it's my own personal hubris), I'd rather have it happen from a direct website.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Decisions. . .decisions

So, going shopping for a self-publishing company is a lot like buying a new car. You've got to kick the tires on them. Of course, you could always do it on your own, soup to nuts. It's less desirable and a la carte the entire way, but you own EVERYTHING. That's a plus.

I'm thinking of cover art ideas. Typically, aesthetics are the last things I think about. Ability to function and then bells and whistles are the priorities and, of course, cost. Problem is, anything I can think of would totally look homemade. That's why there are professionals, but that's also why they charge what they charge.

I'm not looking for something that sits in my basement and I give away as stocking stuffers or a book that ends up being an impromptu coffee cup coaster. I don't believe that's what I've been called to do. Any ideas, shoot me an e-mail on how the process goes.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Self-Publishing Myths and Legends

So, I decided to pick up this book, "The Fine Art of Self-Publishing: The Contracts and Services of 45 Self-Publishing Companies Analyzed, Ranked and Exposed." Seriously, if you ever have or are considering self-publishing, you should definitely read this book.

I have several self-published books, some of which are very good. I also have a few that have very noticeable typographical errors that would alert your inner English teacher too. Don't pretend you haven't ever read something where a period or a comma is out of place and it didn't secretly bug you. OK, maybe I AM the only one.

Yet, I digress.

I'm not into slamming the businesses of others, but from what I've read so far, the more advertised self-publishing places are also the ones more than likely to rip you off. You get what you pay for, and sometimes, you don't even get that. I applied to a self-publishing outfit that said for a modest investment of around $4K, they would put up to $20K worth of promotion, publishing, and marketing into my book.

The introductory letter itself set off an alarm. The acquisition editor made a typographical error in the letter. Who does that? And would I want someone who makes a simple spelling mistake in a letter supposed to be professional publish my book?

Secondly, the $20K made little sense to me, especially the stipulation that while they claimed they would spend that much, they didn't/wouldn't account for it. I could write you a check for $20K and tell you it's good, but would you take my just word for it in a business relationship ?

Exactly. I tore up the contract. If anything is worth doing, it's worth doing right the first time.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Introduction

Welcome to my blog for The Last Testament, the period Christian fiction novel I am currently in the process of refining and self-publishing.

For a long time, I thought of the self-publishing world like that of the street mixtape industry -- it has merit in certain arenas, but by and large, goes unrecognized by the majority of society.

The message of redemption and fulifilling a call of God is too important to only reach my warm market of friends, family, and former students, so I shunned the idea of self-publishing for a LONG time until I spoke personally with Stephanie Perry-Moore.

Perry-Moore, for anyone who does not know, has written more than a couple dozen Christian fiction books targeted toward the teen audience, including the Skky series. She advised me to "cast a wide net" by self-publishing with a target of 2,000 copies and then query more agents with a proven audience.

I believe in the vision God has given me for more than just 2,000 copies. Will you? Time will tell.