I finished my first book very quickly - it was easy to write, and only took a few months. Of course, the editing process was painful, but certainly worth it, and I learned a lot. It is now with a great agent, and she is getting ready to pitch it to publishers, probably starting next week (eek!).
The book is technically literary fiction, only because it is not genre fiction - it is a very light, dead-pan humor type of story about office politics at a University. While there are some "important" bits, it is NOT a SERIOUS book. It's meant to be a quick and amusing read. Nothing grandiose.
Now, I am ready to start working on the second project. I have a long list of ideas, and I just can't decide. I can think about multiple projects, but I can only commit myself entirely to one, so I have to choose.
1 - A light and humorous story about geek culture and a girl who tries to escape from it, unsuccessfully.
2 - A light and humorous book about a happily married couple from New York City, who move to a small town in Upstate NY after they both lose their jobs - there they open a sex-toy-shop, much to the dismay of the conservative small-town-type of folk who live there.
3 - A close adaptation of Gogol's "Inspector General" - a University Dean gets word that an Auditor is coming to campus. You know the story, and if you don't, you've seen the Danny Kaye movie.
4 - A science fiction story about a hive mind that doesn't have a clue. (More Adams than Asimov, but still, a completely uncharted genre for me).
5 - A serious novel about the Russian-Jewish community in Brooklyn in the early 1990s; a loose adaptation of Isaac Babel's Benya Krik stories, with a different period and settings, obviously.
The first three seem to be natural genre successors (especially #3 - but I am sort of tired of writing about University politics), and 4 and 5 are completely different. I think I'd hold off on #5 until I have more skill as a writer anyway.
So, what do you all think?
(Sorry for the long rant).
The book is technically literary fiction, only because it is not genre fiction - it is a very light, dead-pan humor type of story about office politics at a University. While there are some "important" bits, it is NOT a SERIOUS book. It's meant to be a quick and amusing read. Nothing grandiose.
Now, I am ready to start working on the second project. I have a long list of ideas, and I just can't decide. I can think about multiple projects, but I can only commit myself entirely to one, so I have to choose.
1 - A light and humorous story about geek culture and a girl who tries to escape from it, unsuccessfully.
2 - A light and humorous book about a happily married couple from New York City, who move to a small town in Upstate NY after they both lose their jobs - there they open a sex-toy-shop, much to the dismay of the conservative small-town-type of folk who live there.
3 - A close adaptation of Gogol's "Inspector General" - a University Dean gets word that an Auditor is coming to campus. You know the story, and if you don't, you've seen the Danny Kaye movie.
4 - A science fiction story about a hive mind that doesn't have a clue. (More Adams than Asimov, but still, a completely uncharted genre for me).
5 - A serious novel about the Russian-Jewish community in Brooklyn in the early 1990s; a loose adaptation of Isaac Babel's Benya Krik stories, with a different period and settings, obviously.
The first three seem to be natural genre successors (especially #3 - but I am sort of tired of writing about University politics), and 4 and 5 are completely different. I think I'd hold off on #5 until I have more skill as a writer anyway.
So, what do you all think?
(Sorry for the long rant).
Last edited: