Wednesday Woodworking – more shop cart

I haven’t been in the workshop much this month.  I do have plenty of excuses though: We have house guests, it’s been hot, work’s been busy, and there’s this book editing I’ve been doing…

Still, I’ve made some progress on my shop cart. The top has been installed and I put on the dowels to hold the hose and extension cord.  Here are a couple of pictures:

Air hose and power cord now have a home.

Air hose and power cord now have a home.

Side by side with my table saw.  The cart is the same height and can be used as a out-feed/in feed/side feed for the table saw.

Side by side with my table saw. The cart is the same height and can be used as a out-feed/in feed/side feed for the table saw.

Someday this will house a set of drawers for my nailers and supplies.  Someday.

Someday this will house a set of drawers for my nailers and supplies. Someday.

You can see that the cart has already been put to use.  I am building a planter box for the back garden and this cart is coming in very handy for that project.  Planter pictures next week.

If you need me – I’ll be in the shop,

Andrew

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Editing Blues

A writing teacher once told me, “All writing can be improved.”

That means editing and rewriting.  A process that strikes terror into the hearts of writers.  The many layers of this process can be an emotional nightmare for the sensitive writer.  It’s especially difficult if you don’t have confidence in your abilities, or have doubts about your work.

If you’ve read The Artist’s Way, you’ll have taken a number of steps to silence your inner critic and to just write.  This is a great thing for the first draft.  Move past the, “This won’t work,” and just get you ideas flowing.  Sadly, at some point you do need to take a critical eye at your work and polish it.

The question for me always gets down to, “How polished is polished enough?”  For my weekly blogs, I edit them, Heather edits them and I post them.  In woodworking terms this would be the “Satin” finish – intentionally not glossy.  Intentional, sightly dull.  It’s work saver as the result is intended to be, er dull.  Most of the time this is good enough as my audience here knows that and is willing to spend a little time reading something with a few rough edges.

And in any case, next week there will be another post, so if this one doesn’t work, maybe the next will.

However, there are things that deserve a high polish or that “Glossy” finish.  If you’ve ever tried this with wood finishes you’ll know how hard it is to get that varnish to shine bright without a single scratch.

Some writing deserves this level of editing polish.  My poetry is one piece of my writing that I feel needs this level of effort.  I have struggled over how to achieve that polish.  One question I really struggle with is, “Is this polished enough?”

As a writer I can become blind to my own mistakes and my own omissions.  There are poems in my collection that are meaningful to me and make perfect sense in my mind, but when read by someone else, are confusing and flawed.  There is no way for a writer to know when he’s failed to communicate, except by taking the words he’s crafted and giving them to others to read and comment on.

It’s easy for me to give someone a copy of my book, but to listen to what they have to say is difficult.  It’s far too easy to take a bit of criticism personally and feel I’ve failed.  The feedback often reinforces my basic insecurities and doubts or triggers that old feeling of rejection that can be soul crushing.

Still, the one thing I am sure of, is that to properly perfect a piece of writing I have to let it leave my hands and let others react to it.  I’ve been doing that with my book.  So far Heather has read through it twice and one trusted has friend read it.  Both have provided detailed notes and suggestions.  I’ve read through it again and again trying to see the defects and correct them.

A few of weeks ago I decided to send the work to a professional editor for copy editing, feedback and criticism.  I received the editor’s edits and notes this week.

Wow, what an eye opener.  I must have paid by the edit.  Few, if any lines are untouched.  Emotionally it could bring on an overwhelming feeling of failure and wanting to give up.

Except, that I know this is part of the process and when I can push my emotional reaction aside, I know that what I am being told will improve the work.  In the edits there are changes in punctuation, tense and other things I do badly.  In the notes, are comments questioning what a line means, pointing out redundancies, and even a note suggesting that a whole poem be deleted.

Now that I have this, it’s time again to revisit the words and see if I can improve on the story I am trying to tell.

Till next week,
Andrew

Posted in General, Writing | Tagged , | 42 Comments

Thoughts on Self-publishing

I’ve announced that I’ll be self-publishing my cancer poetry book.  Somedays I feel good about that decision.  Somedays I think it’s a horrible idea.

There are days when I think, that I think too much.  Today is an over thinking day.

Back in the deep dark past of the 1980’s I took some classes on how to get published.  The process at the time involved writing for the Writer’s Market, a thick tome with names, address, types of material sought, and so on.  Then, you’d send a SASE with a note asking for the writer’s guidelines.  Then you’d wait.  Then you’d prepare a cleaver cover letter, another SASE and you’d send in your story.  The rejection normally took two to three months.

In those days, self-publishing existed and was often referred to as, “The Vanity Press.”  Apparently only extremely vain people publish their books without the benefit of a publisher.  There were also veiled threats that if you went to a vanity press you’d catch some kind of leprosy that would prevent you from ever being able to get a real publisher to print your work.

Word on the street was that you needed to receive the blessing of an editor of a “real publisher” to be considered a “real writer.”

I was never a real writer.  I was some imaginary person who sent out SASE as a hobby to prove to the world that I was in fact a second-rate hack in need of a restraining order.  At least that’s how it felt.

Then we in the computer business figured out how to build the internet, wrote web browsers, and thought that a place where you could buy books on-line rather than the local book shop, was a good idea.  Yes, I’ll take my share of the blame.  Just wish I’d received a larger share of the profits.

Today the publishing world is in the throes of radical change as a result in the shift from a paper world to an electronic world.  Submissions are done on-line.  Rejections, while still slow, are sent via email.  Writer’s guidelines are found on websites and the whole process is streamlined.

But there are also millions of blogs, Facebook pages, and twitter accounts that give us mere mortal writers an outlet for our writing without the blessing of high priest editors in New York.  These communications channels give writers something that they’ve lacked in the past, a way to talk directly to their audience without needing the publisher’s marketing machine.

Now it’s very possible for a person to write a book, get it listed on Amazon, and using their personal social network find an audience for the book.  Today there are many examples of authors self-publishing books and getting good sales.  In rare cases, some of these books have even garnered contracts from “real publishers.”

No doubt these successes have some people thinking, “Why do I need a traditional publisher?”

Well, as evil as some people think publishers are, they do bring useful things to the author’s table.  Start with money.  Printing, editing, marketing and other things cost money.  When you get a book contract the publisher picks up those costs.  Then there is their experience with editing, marketing and so on.  Skills and expertise that many authors lack.  They can sell lots of copies of books.

Which brings me to my little book.  I did think about trying to find a publisher to print my book, but I ran into a few issues.  Almost no one publishes poetry. Some small presses and literary presses do, but they are few. Likely it would take one to two full years to get it placed and I’d be forced to rewrite and edit more before that could happen.

Then the realization hit me that my little book isn’t likely to survive that world as at best it has a very limited market.  Likely the world-wide market for a depressing book of cancer poetry is about 250 copies (okay, that’s a wild guess, it might be closer to 25) – mostly among my family, friends and fellow cancer victims.  I know all those people so the marketing effort is mostly going to church and saying, “Hey, Bob, here’s your copy of my book.  Ten bucks.  Thanks Dude.”

Watch out, I could set the world on fire with sales.

So why?  I don’t have a good answer, but it’s not about sales.  It’s not about setting the world on fire with my words.  It’s not about carving out a piece of immortality with my words.  It’s not about anything the publishing world stands for.

It’s about me completing a work of art.  It’s about telling a story.  It’s about a transition in my soul.  It’s about giving voice to an event that has transformed my world and turned me from a wannabe to a real writer.

Till next week,
Andrew

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Saturday Gardening – Man vs. Shrub

It’s been very hot around here.  Over 100 for the last four days so I haven’t been out in the workshop.  Last weekend I did manage to finish digging out that shrub in the front yard.  I am proud that I managed to complete the task without needing a visit to the doctor.

At first I wasn’t sure it was going to work out, but the new pick axe worked very well.  Here are a few pictures.

Tools of the trade.

Tools of the trade.

I received a visit from the inspector:

Spotty kitty making sure I am doing it right.

Spotty kitty making sure I am doing it right.

With great satisfaction I through the stump out on the street (our trash company picks up yard trimmings and composts them):

The carcass

The carcass

Well, no more stumps to dig out.  The next project is building a planter box in the backyard.

If you need me – I’ll be in the shop,

Andrew

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