Please welcome today's guest blogger David Jones.
How do you spell
naive?
I am a story teller. It shouldn’t be too hard
to write a book—right? I have made sales presentations to groups from two to
fifty, and kept them in the palm of my hand for an hour. I can spin a tale
about my desire to go back to sea so convincingly you’d feel the beat of the
engines rising from the steel plates of the deck, through your shoes. You’d
feel the rise and fall of the swells in a gentle sea, and thrill at the
glorious colors in the sunset. I’ve
addressed an assembly of two thousand people and had them on the edge of their
seats for a half hour. It’d be easy to write a book—right? How do you spell
naïve?
There had been a story in my head for twenty
years that I thought would make a good book. Finally I sat down and started
writing. It’s a good story and will keep your attention. Half way through the
book I was found by a lady who is an editor. All was good, she’d slap her ok on
the writing and off to the publisher I go, carrying a bucket to hold all the
money they’d give me. How do you spell naïve?
She started with sentence and paragraph
structure, went to the punctuation, and then got to the technical things.
“You’ve got misplaced modifiers here, passive voice there, and you use too many
participial phrases. “Huh! I was last in a high school English class over sixty
years ago. If they taught me about participial phrases, I was either looking at
a girl or thinking about baseball.” I didn’t know a participial phrase from a
dangling modifier.
My work was filled with mark outs, cross outs,
cut outs and lines. I started over. My editor is a former teacher and she
went back to teaching, turning me slowly from a story teller into a writer.
“Every word you write is important,” she repeated often. The young boy in the
story didn’t want to take off his shoes after a day of hiking—he yearned to take them off.
My book is now published. Sales are moving
along rather nicely. I am now an author, and in the eyes of the uninitiated, an
authority. Recently a young lady approached me to discuss the writer’s craft. She
was thinking of writing a book. “Do you have an editor?” I asked. “Oh”, she
replied, “I just graduated from the University with a degree in English. I
don’t need an editor. How do you spell naïve?”
About David:
D. Lincoln Jones
After a thirty-year
career working for two Fortune 500 companies, D. Lincoln Jones ventured into
the world of private business. As an entrepreneur, he has founded and served as
the president of two corporations.
Always seeking new
horizons, he has toured the West by motorcycle on his Honda Goldwing. When he
settled, he became a student of art, excelling in working with pastels and
colored pencil. His work is displayed in homes and small collections across the
country. He is most proud of a sketch of Raggedy Ann and Andy, a gift to his
granddaughter that she treasures.
Jones has been an avid reader since childhood, so his desire to
write has come naturally. Among his favorite books are Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry, Shogun by James Clavell, and The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara.
High Grade is his first novel. A second is in progress.
David’s website: www.dlincolnjonesauthor.com
6 comments:
Engaging tale. I'm in the last throes of my first draft, so I can relate. I have a question for your guest though - at the beginning he spoke of his longing to go back to sea, so I figured him for ex-Navy - but in his bio, it says nothing of him ever going to sea. Maybe a fictional sea-longing?
Great article. Lots of fun reading it. They say the truth hurts, but it can also make you laugh.
Really enjoyed the article, especially because there is a bit of naivety in each of us. LOL>)
I enjoyed today's post. I'm always amazed when someone tells me their novel is ready for publication -- without a bit of editing from an outside source! "I used Spellcheck," they say. Arrrrgh!
I'll visit David's website to find out more about HIGH GRADE. By the way, Larry McMurtry is one of my favorite authors too.
http://iousex.blogspot.com
You were lucky to find an editor and publisher! Congratulations! I'm still looking for an agent.
I had to laugh at this tale...I think we are all naive when we set out to write a book. It siounds so wonderful in our head doesn't it. And unfortunately, when we read it to ourselves, we blithely ignore the fact that it doesn't sound so good on paper. It's only after the editor's red pen has bled all over it that we suddenly see the light. But how lucky were you to be found by such a thorough and knowledgeable editor? I think you must have a touch of the Irish in you David!
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