Are you feeling a chill in the air lately? For the first
time in a long time, I'm actually looking forward to snow. See, I've been looking at this festive cover
for months, and it's finally time to share it with the world. Friends, I want to introduce you to the
latest from Red Tash Books, Let It Snow! Season's Readings for a Super-Cool Yule.
I'd love to tell you more about how this collection came
about, too. See, it's kind of Dani
Greer's fault. Over the summer I threw
in a story with several of the BRP bloggers and a few other
regulars of the BBT Cafe. The result, The Corner Cafe, continues to garner great reviews and was a really
fun experiment for me as a writer, as I decided to set my contribution in the
world of my first novel, the best-selling dark fantasy, This Brilliant Darkness. The Corner Cafe was the first of what
would become seven anthologies I would contribute to in 2012.
I quickly realized the value of these diverse collections in
my fiction-writing resume, and realizing I had no holiday release lined up to
boost my brand visibility during what I hoped would be a very busy time of year
for book buyers, I inquired as to whether Dani and the BBT
Cafe crew wanted to do a holiday collection.
When schedules didn't jibe, I dusted off my editor's cap and started
hitting up friends with what I hoped was a unique pitch: rather than just
writing a holiday story, how about if each of us wrote some sort of holiday
story that tied in with one of our own novels?
Everyone has a favorite character or setting or fictional world of
his/her own creation. I mean, isn't that
why we're writers? So we can create and
revisit these places we love? I enjoyed
it so much when writing my story for The
Corner Cafe, I wanted to do it again!
Well, nine of my writer friends jumped at the chance to
write holiday stories centered on Christmas, Yule, Chanukah, Solstice, and the
Mayan Apocalypse of all things.
Remember? The world is ending on 12/20/12, right? Regardless, in the case of writers with
fictional worlds that don't have end-of-year religious/cultural holidays, I
simply threw out the request “Let your story in some way mention snow, how
about that?”
I am so proud of the work that my friends produced in
response to this challenge. Jack Wallen,
Axel Howerton, Jessica McHugh, Marian Allen, T. Lee Harris, Tim Tash (my
husband), Connie Roberts-Huth, Claudia Lefeve, and Mercedes Yardley each sent
me stories that drew me into the worlds of their characters. In a few instances, I was familiar with the
characters, and reading their holiday stories was a joy. Don't you feel like favorite characters are
in a way, old friends? What a privilege
to have a first peek at the doings of these characters. In other cases, the characters and settings
were totally new to me, and reading the stories really gave me a taste of the
worlds these writers were becoming known for.
In all cases, the stories were eclectic, unusual, captivating, and
entertaining. This was just the holiday
magic I was looking for! Santa visited
this editor early, for sure!
While I might have been pleased with what was in my
stocking, I was nervous about how I would be seen by my writer friends. Would I
be “Krampus”ing their style? For some of
these professionals, it was their first exposure to me in an editor-in-chief
role. I might be a pleasant proofreader
and a helpful beta-reader, but having me in charge of deadlines can be... well...
to be honest, I've never been super-proud of my control freak, overbearing
“task-mistress” reputation, no matter how well-earned! My writers were patient with me, and that was
truly another gift in my stocking. It
was never my intention to take on a hardcore editorial role with the creation
of Let It Snow!, so I still consider
myself the “aggregator” of the book, instead of an official editor. We had beta-readers and proofreaders, and the
book has been checked for formatting issues—at this point, in our combined
century-plus of publishing experience, I'm not sure a Big Six publishing team
could have done any better. It might not
be perfect, but we are well-pleased with it.
I thank the e-book revolution that the process of correcting any
mistakes that might have still slipped through the 15+ sets of eyes that
proofed the book will be a speedy enough task.
(Crossing my fingers that we got them all, anyway.)
Despite my aversion to flying my control freak flag, I did
take veto power over the title and the cover.
I had no idea what I wanted for the first and a definite vision for the
second. Everyone suggested names for the
anthology, some ridiculously funny (Fifty
Sleighs of Grey, anyone?) and others very creative, just not encompassing
enough to justify the inclusion of each story. It was tough, this book naming
job! I think I had an easier time naming
each of my children! One morning I awoke
and “Let It Snow!” declared itself
the winner, and I'm so glad it did—frankly I was tearing my hair out waiting
for a clear favorite to be born unto us.
As far as the cover went, I knew from the very beginning of
this project that it would be red and white.
I pictured a white tree—very stylized—against a red background. That was it. I saw it in my mind in thumbnail format. Of course I didn't think there would be room
for the author's names on such an image, but then cover designer and
contributor Jack Wallen sent me his idea for the tree, and suddenly it
clicked. The end result is a sweet,
funky, high-contrast, stylized cover that screams “holiday” and “snow” no
matter what size you view the cover in.
I love it. It fits.
If only all books were this easy to put together! Ironically, now that we're creeping up on
Christmas (or Kindlemas, as I've been calling it on the sly) and I know how
much time it takes to promote a book of any size and any price point, I'm not
sure if I will take on editing an anthology again. Not because it wasn't fun—it
was. Not because I didn't love the
stories—I sure do. I'm even happy to say
all nine of those contributor relationships are firmly intact, and new friendships
were formed between them. Whew! That was quite an achievement in itself, for
this bossy broad! No, the only reason I
might not do it again is because although all the anthos in 2012 were
rewarding, I am ready to move on to a new series in my writing life. Another experiment, another story line. I've got more than a full slate of work on my
calendar for 2013 and I simply don't know if I have the time. I mean, I have sequels to write, too. Sequels, man.
They're not gonna write themselves!
We'll see, though.
Ask me around the summer of 2013 if I'm doing a holiday thing next
year. You never know. I might be feeling
a little Christmasy in July, after all.
In the meantime, whether you're a fan of the holidays or not, may I
recommend my latest production? Don't worry if you're not a big fan of the
holidays. This book will have something
for you in it, regardless. That's the
great thing about anthologies—like a well-stuffed stocking, Let It Snow! has a little something for
everyone.
~~~~~~~~~
Thanks for having me!
ReplyDeleteSounds like you had fun with this project, and that's the most important thing for the holidays. Good luck with it!
ReplyDeleteI've downloaded my copy!
ReplyDeleteDownloaded here, too. It's a thunderstormy, rainy day here today so maybe I can pretend it's winter.
ReplyDeleteWhat a project you took on, Red. And I love the cover.
ReplyDeleteNabbed it and told a bunch of people!
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Morgan Mandel
Twitter: @MorganMandel
Sorry I missed the post yesterday - had it in email this morning, but too late for the free e-book. I'll watch for the three day giveaway dates in december :)
ReplyDeleteI too love the holidays in December, and love reading Christmas stories.
Thanks for putting this set together!
Come visit my holiday work at www.BeyondOldWindows.com !
Thanks for the positive response, everyone. I've edited bigger projects before, but it's been a long time, and you're right, Helen--this one got bigger as it went! LOL!
ReplyDeleteLet it Snow will be free again 12/14 & 15 on Amazon!