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New Day Dawning

April 2, 2024 by J.TODD SCOTT 5 Comments

I waited a month to write this post.

A month after I finally retired from DEA, ending a nearly thirty-year career as a federal agent.

I can still remember my first day on the job like it’s yesterday, scared shitless, carrying a badge and gun for the first time, in Los Angeles.

I loved every new minute of it then, and every minute after.

DEA has a mandatory retirement age, something I was already staring down the barrel of, so whether I left last month or next March, I was facing the end. I’ve been blessed to have a career I loved so much; it exceeded every dream, every expectation. But as I told my three daughters, loving a career so much can be a curse too. Every decision, every choice, I’ve made for the last thirty years have revolved around my career, around that badge and gun.

It’s been a tough life at times for all of us.

Often ex-cops and agents struggle with their identity, their worth, their purpose after they retire. Maybe I will too, but fortunately, I’ve been preparing for this moment for a while…I can finally pursue full-time my other great love — writing.

After six published novels and my screenwriter and consulting producer credits on Paramount’s LAWMEN: BASS REEVES, I get to wake up every day and focus only on creative work. It’s a weird and wonderful feeling, although now that I have the sort of infinite writing time that I always dreamed about, I find myself a little uncertain how to wrangle it. I want all these new unfettered days to be productive (obviously, I want to write a lot), but I also don’t want to burn myself out, something I never had to worry about before, since I could never grab enough hours as it was.

It’s truly a nice problem to have.

But the short term my plan is to keep churning out novels and short stories, as well as screenplays. I’m also going to continue to pursue some TV and film work. I’m no longer a federal agent who also writes, I’m only a writer now, who was once a federal agent.

And my first event as a “full-time author” is ThrillerFest in New York later this summer. My last novel, Call the Dark, made the cut for an ITW award, and I couldn’t be happier. I’ll be the guy at the bar both BEFORE and AFTER the awards ceremony, drinking beer and bourbon, and looking for some career advice…

…for the first time in thirty years…

 

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured

Writing is hard work but publishing is a tough business…

January 16, 2019 by J.TODD SCOTT 9 Comments

I get this question a lot, and most recently when I went to Dallas last year to meet with the wonderful folks at the Dallas Creative Writer’s Workshop:

What’s your relationship with your editor?

And my answer went something like this:

It’s always been great and I’ve been lucky; we’ve never had really had to tear a book apart. Most of our edits together have been pretty minimal.

Cue ominous music…and flash forward two days later, when I got an early alert warning email from my agent:

I think your editor has some issues with your latest book…but don’t panic!

My “latest book” was my first foray outside the comfortable confines of the Big Bend novels I’ve been writing the last few years; another Texas-set crime novel, true, but with all new characters and all new themes. It was a big book (I had a lot I wanted to say) and I’d put a lot of work into it. The pitch was simple – a retiring sheriff has thirteen days to solve the murder of a local drug dealer; a lifelong “frenemy” who’d married a woman they’d both vied for when younger. The working title was THIRTEEN DAYS, but the book actually covered a span of four decades, cutting back and forth across those years as I filled in the relationship between these two men and the woman between them.

It was my masterpiece…or so I thought.

I had a day or so to ponder my editor’s unspoken concerns before I got her editorial letter, and honestly, that was a miserable stretch. I hashed and rehashed where the book might have failed – where I had failed – and what the issues could be. After three books, this truly was the first time I’d turned in one that had even remotely raised a red flag, and despite my agent’s admonishment not to panic, that’s exactly what I did.

Hell, that’s ALL I did.

Worse, I’d just started believing I had a handle on this “whole writing thing.” I’d pitched and sold an original audio series, I was being approached about TV work, and even signed on to co-write a feature-length film!

I was beginning to feel comfortable in my “author skin.”

So, when the letter finally pinged in my email box, I read it with dread…and…well, it wasn’t good. Oh, my editor loved all the usual stuff I do well, but overall the book was simply too dark, too existential. She thought the characters were hard to relate to and even harder to like. The primary issue was balance. I’m a crime writer, and although a particularly brutal crime anchors the story, the crime itself took a backseat to an extended character study, and a particularly bleak one at that.

In short, the book wasn’t “on brand,” and wasn’t publishable as written as my next Putnam “J. TODD SCOTT” novel.

Naturally, my initial inclination was to push back; to pull up a dozen other bleak and dark books for comparison and contrast. I was hellbent to convince my editor that “she just didn’t get it,” and point out all the ways she was wrong (with plenty of page citations).  I told myself that was the natural, expected reaction of any writer or artist who’d sunk months and months into a creative project that meant something to them, but after I thought about it some more (and sat out on the porch with a…couple…of beers), I realized something –

I’d written the book I wanted to write.

It said all the things I’d wanted to say. I’d told the story just the way I’d envisioned it…and nothing in my editor’s concerns or her letter could change that.

But…but…in the end, that didn’t mean anyone had to like it, much less publish it that way. And I think that’s one of the defining differences between being a writer and a (traditionally published) professional author.

The writer in me had achieved my goals with the book, now the author in me had to decide if I could re-work or revise it to meet the expectations of my publisher and my audience.

Now, I get it, some people don’t want to make those compromises, ever, or even face them. That’s a reasonable position, I guess. And others might see that calculation as forsaking some sort of “artistic integrity.” But I see it as the cold, clear-eyed business reality of professional publishing – a publishing career – which means you gotta pick the hills you’re willing to die on, and you can’t die on all of them.

If you do, that’s an awful short career.

A day later my editor and I had a great call about the book where we picked apart her concerns. It was a deep, engaged discussion about what didn’t work and those things that did. I decided I probably could re-balance and re-focus the narrative, but it would take time (I write consistently but not necessarily rapidly), and I knew it would be tough to get it done fast enough to lock it in for a 2020 release, which was very important to me.

I had zero margin of error and I was staring at a lot of work in a short amount of time, with still no guarantee I could get it done or the book would be any better for it when I finished.

But, remember I said I write consistently? Well, I’d just finished up another book (in fact, I was already a third of the way through the book AFTER that), so I asked my editor if she might just want to take a look at that one? I was really happy with it (of course, I’d been happy with THIRTEEN DAYS as well…so…), but I knew it didn’t hit any of the landmines THIRTEEN DAYS had tripped over. I suggested that if the new book was closer to being ready, maybe we could just, you know, swap ‘em? I didn’t have any idea if that was even possible or routinely done, but since it was otherwise just sitting there on my hard drive, it made sense to me that if she liked it, that might give the time I needed to figure out if I could reshape THIRTEEN DAYS in a way we’d all be happy with.

My editor said she’d be happy to take a look at the other manuscript, as long as I went on ahead and started breaking THIRTEEN DAYS apart too, with an eye toward doing whatever I had to in order to get it ready for 2020.

And as I started that deep work, as I started to really re-examine the story and the characters, I did see a path forward. It wouldn’t necessarily be the story as I’d originally written it, but that was okay, it could still be a story, a book, I’d be just as proud of.

But my editor came back and said the new book, tentatively called LOST RIVER, was in great shape, and with some small adjustments (much more in line with what we’d done on my previous Big Bend novels), it’d be ready to go.

In fact, she wanted to move LOST RIVER ahead of my revised THIRTEEN DAYS, so it’d be a win/win. My publisher would get a book they’re thrilled with, and I’d get a more reasonably paced “do over” at a book I’m not quite ready to give up on.

Writing is hard work but publishing is a tough business.

I think publishing is where art meets commerce, and if all you care about is writing what you want, however you want, you can do that. But if you’re working with a publisher, and you’re being paid for that work, then I think it pays to be flexible and open-minded. You’re not always going to have “another book” waiting in the wings, but that doesn’t mean you can’t adjust, when it’s called for.

Anyway, just a few thoughts. And as always, YMMV.

2018 was a great year professionally, and I can’t wait to see what 2019 brings. I have two works coming out, so keep an eye out for them. First, I have a story in the wonderful charity anthology, GATHER AT THE RIVER, and then the big release, the third Big Bend novel, THIS SIDE OF NIGHT!

Also, the paperback version of HIGH WHITE SUN hits stands.

See you around, JTS

 

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured, The Business, Writing

Release Day

March 20, 2018 by J.TODD SCOTT 24 Comments

Two years ago, when THE FAR EMPTY released, I took the day off work… [Read more…] about Release Day

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured, Writing

Enough is Enough?

November 27, 2017 by J.TODD SCOTT 2 Comments

I write long books… [Read more…] about Enough is Enough?

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured, The Business, Writing

The Far Empty is just like Game of Thrones

September 5, 2017 by J.TODD SCOTT 1 Comment

We’re six months from the paperback release of The Far Empty… [Read more…] about The Far Empty is just like Game of Thrones

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured, The Business, Writing

High White Sun!

July 4, 2017 by J.TODD SCOTT 3 Comments

I’m thrilled to release the jacket copy for High White Sun… [Read more…] about High White Sun!

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured, The Business

One Year Later

May 30, 2017 by J.TODD SCOTT 5 Comments

About a year ago, my debut novel – The Far Empty—hit shelves… [Read more…] about One Year Later

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured, The Business, Uncategorized, Writing

2017

December 20, 2016 by J.TODD SCOTT 1 Comment

Just a quick year-end note… [Read more…] about 2017

Filed Under: Blogging, Featured, The Business, Writing

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