Jamie Lyn Smith On Writing Appalachia & Short Stories

Mindy:         Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

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Mindy: We are here today with Jamie Lyn Smith, who is the author of Township, which is a collection of short stories - many of which are set in Appalachia, Ohio. So, actually one of the first things I'd really like to talk about, when people talk about Appalachia, I don't think everyone quite understands how large of a swath that actually covers. A lot of people don't really recognize that parts of Ohio are considered Appalachia.

Jamie: Very much so. And you know the town that I'm from, Mount Vernon, you can see where the Blue Ridge starts. It's kind of cool where the glacier slid to a stop. If you look one way, you see the plains to the west, and if you look east, you can see that lovely hazy blue line that comes from certain flora and fauna that define the Appalachian region. And of course, Appalachia stretches from Alabama to Maine. Communities like the one that I live in and that I wrote about are also comprised of a lot of migrant Appalachians. I'm kind of considered second or third generation because my father migrated, and then my grandparents migrated from my mother's side of the family. So it exists in many places. In addition to being like a physical place, there's also many diverse cultures within Appalachia that exists outside of the actual hills.

Mindy: Where I live it's very flat. I live in farming country, and it's very, very flat out here. I was thinking this morning, actually - I was at the dentist. I'm from a very, very small town. I know you're from Mount Vernon - so much smaller even than that. It's tiny. We have one stop light. I was at the dentist this morning, and I was in the chair, and there were two people in each of the other rooms, and I knew who they were. They hadn't seen them walk in, we didn't see each other in the waiting room, nothing like that. But I was laying on my chair and just hearing them speak or saying whose graduation parties they were going to this weekend, I was like, "Yup, and that's so and so, and that's so and so, and that's so and so." Some things that I run across in my writing that people don't necessarily think are plausible, but are very, very true - I'll be around people that are like, "Well, I grew up in a small town, and it's not true that everybody knows everybody." And I'm like, "Well, then your town wasn't actually small enough."

Jamie: I love that you come up with a measure. I never really thought about defining it like that. I'm actually from Centerburg. I was born in Mount Vernon 'cause there is no hospital in Centerburg. We've got maybe one or two more traffic lights than you.

Mindy: I do have measurements that I use. When people tell me they live in the country, I always ask if there's paint on their road. If you have lanes in your road, you don't live in the country. So that's something that I run into when I'm writing about small towns and small town cultures - people that have never lived that way, not quite understanding the way things work, how small things really are, but also an assumption that everyone is like a redneck or a hillbilly or a racist or sexist or, you know, any collection of bad tropes that we get about country life. So what are some things that you've run into or that you experienced or that you're kind of writing against - that you're writing to push back about.

Jamie: Oh, I love this question. I'm actually working on a panel proposal for the AWP Conference with a couple of other Appalachian writers about this very thing. In it, we talk a lot about querying and dissenting our narratives in ways that we write about people that you wouldn't expect. There are so many surprises in a small area, and I think the other thing that is unique to Ohio, and I don't know if you recognize this as well, but like you can't drive there more than 25 miles in any direction and not hit a college. We have colleges everywhere - and so, you know, little ones, big ones, technical trade schools. And this is a state where you may have kind of a racist redneck-y person, but they're living right next to this professor who's working on the cutting edge of the response to Covid-19.

And I think that those kinds of experiences are rare for people in dense cities often where there's a lot of stratification of wealth and income based on where you live. Those kinds of things I think are really interesting. And also to the idea that people who farm or who are working in trades, whether it's agriculture, whether it's factory work, that they're not smart. That's one of the things that I really push back against. And for me, one of the ways to do that in my writing is through humor. People that are dealing with terrible choices and terrible situations are keenly aware of that, and they're also keenly aware and often employ gallows humor to cope. So when I'm writing about terrible things like the kid who survived his brothers accidental death by auto-erotic asphyxiation, I know that there has to be room in the story, because there has to be room in life, for all of us to breathe. So finding the humor in the surviving brothers' religiosity and his struggle to be both smart and cool and popular and sexy and also Christian - 'cause it's really important to him. Those are the kinds of things that I see every day in small town culture. There's a whole skill set to living out here. If you move from a city, you gotta figure out - how do I hook up a generator? 'Cause you're gonna need it.

Mindy: You would just not have power sometimes. When I was growing up, if a storm came through and you lose your power, you are not high on the list of this road that has two houses on it, three houses on it. They're not in a hurry to get to you. One of the things that I run across is men and boys being described or displayed as not intelligent, but also mean or cruel. One of the things that I really enjoy - somebody shared a TikTok with me the other day, and it was of a guy, and I don't know where he was from - it was somewhere in the south, just by his accent - he'd stopped to get a kitten. There was a kitten on the side of the road, and he had stopped. He had this old work truck, and he'd gotten out of his car and he was videoing. And he got on his work boots and he goes up there and he picks up the kitten. And he was like, "Hey there, you need some help, buddy?" and he picks him up and then all of a sudden there's this - he literally gets swarmed by - somebody had dumped 20 kittens. He's like, "We got a kitten situation," you know, and it's like, he takes all 20 kittens and gets everybody the vet care that they need. That's the men and the boys that I grew up around. And I have never seen that man or boy in popular fiction or TV or movies. Any time you got a guy that's got a backwoods or a country accent, he's an idiot and he's cruel.

Jamie: One of the things that my book deals with indirectly, if you will, I guess, is that kind of toxic masculinity. I think so much about how we coach much of the tenderness out of men and boys. I worked, interestingly, in a domestic violence shelter for several years. What are we doing? And I think that as we look at things that are happening with violence across the nation - what is going on with men? And I think about that so much when I'm writing and I see men in terrible, terrible situations, boxed in by expectations of a culture that rewards violence, that rewards avarice, that rewards the pursuit of power at any cost. From the point of view of an advocate, and as a survivor, I have some limited amount of mercy, in my ability to write with great tenderness about the people that are showing that kind of avarice. It brings me to the last story in the collection, Love is Patient, Love is Kind, and in it, I think this is the hardest character I've ever written because he, Gene, has committed terrible crimes against children, done his time, and wants to come back and be accepted in society as a good guy. What does it take? If there's no redemption for people who, they can't change, they can't ever be anything else? Grappling with that and thinking about the ways that country life, in particular, effects men in rural areas - you're definitely not allowed to be gay. The danger of that. And I write, too, because I would like to see the world that I live in be a better place, find in it ways for us to exist side by side whether we love the same people or not. So that's where a lot of my character studies come from. I force myself into the shoes of the character that I really don't like.

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Mindy: And I wanna talk about writing short stories because Township is a collection of short stories. I'm a novelist, and I have novels published 'cause I personally find short stories to be harder than writing a novel.

Jamie: Everyone says that. And right now, I'm working on a novel. I didn't set out to be a short story writer. I really didn't read that many of them. And I became a huge fan of them when I got into my MFA Program at Ohio State, and that was reading short stories and writing short stories for workshops, became my life for three years. I went to graduate school thinking I would write a novel. I had an idea. I had done a ton of research. I just hadn't had the time to dedicate to it that I wanted, and so that's why I was pursuing the degree. And then, in pretty short order, I realized that I didn't know how to write a story. I put the novel aside and just started working on craft and on my structure. When you have a novel, you can be really forgiving. If you've got a sentence that isn't a Pulitzer Prize winner, it's fine if it propels the story forward. In a short story, you have just a few pages. So you have to be so efficient. And I found that it was a great exercise for me. Many of these stories were part of my thesis - my MFA thesis. I really had to spend a lot of time in a bunch of small worlds and learn how to be much more efficient in my writing and in character building and world-building. I have so enjoyed writing short stories and having my art go in a direction I never imagined. I'm really surprised this is my first book. I really thought it would be a novel. And so I think sometimes as an artist, you have to ask, "Am I so beholden to the idea of what I want to do that I'm not letting other good things happen?"

Mindy: I think what happens to me is that I'll have an idea and sometimes I don't know if that idea is a novel or if it's a short story. Often times, because this is what I do for a living, I do have to try to only conceive of ideas or only give ideas my time when I know that it's a novel. But I do love short stories and I love writing them. One of the reasons why I don't dabble in it more is, like I said, I do find it to be particularly challenging. Also, for anybody out there, any listeners that do really relish and love that short story format and form, how do you go about writing short stories, if that's what you love or where your talent is, and try to make, not necessarily a living, but make some money in that arena?

Jamie: The capital side of it is really tricky. I mean, the secret to writing, just get your ass in the seat and write. You're gonna write what your heart wants you to write. It's kind of like your sexuality. You're going to love what you love for no reason other than it is what attracts you. If short stories are your thing, there are a fair number of writers who have made quite a tidy living at it. When I'm sending my stories out, I have kind of a tiered submission system. And I can usually tell when I finish something if I'm gonna be able to sell it or not. But I start with the places that I know pay well for short fiction. If it gets rejected by those places, I'll do a rewrite, move it down the list. I do that, in part, because sometimes you get feedback that's like, "Oh, this is great, it's just not right for us right now." And the hard thing with short stories is that if I've written a terrific short story about a working class guy who was out and rescues 20 kittens and what happens but they just published a story about someone rescuing kittens in the last issue, then they're not gonna take your piece. 'Cause they don't wanna become the magazine that only publishes kitten rescue stories. And there are so many variables in the selection process that I'm a big fan of sending it out, sending it out, sending it out. That's the part where I think you only have success with it, if you kind of cast your bread on the water.

By sending work out regularly, I've heard that the average is something like one placement for every 30 submissions. There's a combination of rigor, persistence, love - that goes into this work. And I think too, I mean, I'm really lucky to have an agent who believes in what I'm doing and helps me try to sell it and get my work out there. So if your agent says to you, "I'm not interested in short stories," then you need to find an agent who is. Maybe that person can still represent you on your novel. You don't need to leave them at the altar, but you gotta find someone who can work with you on what excites you and what makes you passionate. I know sometimes it can feel when you're seeking a rep, like you don't have a lot of choices, you need to dance with who ever asks you. But you always have choices. Giving your work the time that it deserves is the best thing that you can do for it.

Mindy: Maybe about five years ago, I was really trying to get something going. I was writing for literary magazines, and I was using Submittable. And I was doing all that. And the amount of research that was required for me to figure out where my work was gonna fit and doing the reading that I had to be doing to understand how each magazine works and everything like that, it was a lot of work. And I don't know that people understand that the amount of work that you put into understanding the publishing industry from the side of someone as a novelist, you almost have to put in the same amount of work to understand the literary magazine and the short story market because it's its own beast.

Jamie: Oh, it definitely is. I think one of the best things that ever happened for my work was I taught a literary publishing class a couple of years ago, and I hadn't taught that particular subject before. I felt like I knew a lot, and it was great to be able to share what I did know, but it was - what was more important was what you talked about getting that coherent sense. I will send this to lit mag, for example, but I'm not gonna send it to story 'cause I know this editor. It's not really gonna be their jam. It is a ton of work, and it's the same like work you do in prospect research when you're getting ready to send out a novel. Or when you're looking for an agent.

Mindy: I subscribe to Poets & Writers, so everyone's looking in the back at the contests and the things that are coming up in submission guidelines and submission windows opening. So what would you suggest to someone that wants to maybe dip their toes into that part of the publishing arena? What's a good first base to start looking and beginning to understand that market.

Jamie: I think Poets & Writers is a great place to start. I think that joining AWP and reading The Writer's Chronicle, the AWP magazine, is another great place to start. One of the things I did my first year in graduate school, because I really knew nothing about literary fiction, I really didn't even know what I didn't know, and I felt so dumb and uninformed in class that somebody mentioned Poets & Writers to me. So I went to their website, and they have a wonderful resource, which is a list of literary magazines. I made a spreadsheet for myself. I got the deadlines in there, what they were interested in, who the current editor was, page length, word count requirements, cover letter, no cover letter - I mean, I had a very detailed spreadsheet. I've shared it with other writers when I'm teaching workshops, because I really think that being open and open sourcing stuff like this - if I can save someone all of that work and all they need to do is go through and update it? Then yeah, I'm gonna share a resource that I have. But putting that together and maintaining it really keeps me on my toes.

I don't do contests very often, like every now and then I do, but I'm not a big fan. I think that you're better off just submitting most of the time, particularly in paying markets. Contests can be good, but they can also be, in the worst cases, they can be just income generating tools for literary magazines. And I know, all lit mags need incomes. I work at one and I run another one, so it's, I get what the economic landscape is like for small publishers. But I also think, especially as I see the fees, the submission fees climb and climb and climb, I can no longer conscionably direct people to most contests. Now, if contests are your jam, go check out CLMP, the Center for Literary Magazines and Small Presses. They are fantastic, and they have a list of contests that are vetted, that are not scams, and it's a searchable, sortable list. You don't have to be a member to access it. That's another great resource. And also NewPages, which is a small non-profit based in Michigan. NewPages had listings every month, and very often those are great resources for emerging writers. If you just are starting out, and particularly for young writers, NewPages is a fantastic resource.

Mindy: Absolutely, I did the same thing. I had a spreadsheet made up with the dates, the submission dates that they were open, what they were looking for, if it was themes, things like that. I know something that people talk about in the short story world and the small press world, submission fees or reading fees. So when you submit a work or if you're entering a contest, you will be most oftentimes paying a submission fee. And it's something that comes up a lot about whether or not that is acceptable, whether you should be engaging with someone that does charge a reading fee. As someone that was coming out of the world of novelists and of hunting for an agent, if someone is asking for money up front, it's a scam. That was just always - that was a red flag.

Jamie: Right.

Mindy: Yeah, but in a short story world, it is a little bit different. So if you could just talk about that for a second. Simply because a lot of the times there are little magazines or whatever, it's like the only way they get income is through something like that. So if you could talk about how someone can differentiate between what would be a legitimate ask or how to, I guess, sort the apples when it comes to that.

Jamie: Totally, and that's where clmp dot org comes in. They are fantastic. You can also check duotrope, another resource to confirm whether or not a contest is legitimate or if the magazine is legitimate. In literary world, I would say probably 80 to 90% of magazines require a small submission fee, and that fee ranges from $3 to $5. If they're asking you for more than that, I would caution you to not pay it and keep moving unless a subscription is included. That's part of me being a good literary citizen. And I also have kind of a magazine subscription problem, and I love getting them and supporting them. And it's also important for me as someone who edits a small magazine to know what is going on, and someone who reads for a larger magazine to know what is going on. So to me it's all in a day's work. If you're a writer just starting out, that would be the range that I think you should feel comfortable with. I would also, and I always encourage my students to submit in groups of 10. So make your list, your 10 dream journals, submit to them. See what happens. Don't submit to 30 places and spend $3 a pop, and you wind up getting your heart broken because your story is not ready yet, right? Submit to 10. See what happens. If you get some good feedback saying, "Hey, we like this, it's not right for us now," or "please send us more work in the future," they mean that. Follow up later. But if you get a bunch of just form rejections, then it's time to look at your story.

Again, contest that don't charge fees, they are out there, and lots of literary magazines have an option where they have an open submission period where there is no fee. So put that in your little spreadsheet and keep track of it. I also use calendar reminders to tell myself like, "Hey, don't miss the deadline for Ploughshares." There are certain magazines that only open for submissions for one month once a year, so you don't wanna miss that window. So I use technology shouting at me a lot to keep myself on track. Another red flag for me is when - Google is here for a reason, right? You can look up a contest and see if they are legit. If they're not posting who the winners are, or they're extending their deadline over and over again, I would avoid that contest. Those are always red flags for me.

Mindy: Last thing, why don't you let listeners know where they can find you online and where they can find your collection of short stories - Township.

Jamie: Thank you so much. You can find me at Jamie Lyn Smith Square Space. I have a website there and I have a contact form if you wanna send me a comment or if you would like that spreadsheet I mentioned. I will send it to you. Like I said, I'm always happy to share resources. And I'm on social, I'm on Twitter and Instagram usually, and Facebook sometimes. And that's at Jamie Lyn Writes J-A-M-I-E-L-Y-N W-R-I-T-E-S. You can get Township anywhere that books are sold. So I encourage you to go to your local indie bookstore or to bookshop dot org. But if you get it from a larger retailer, I'm just gonna be so thrilled that you did that, that it's cool.

Mindy:            Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Angela Engel On Knowing Your Options For Publishing -And Your Why?

Mindy:         Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

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Mindy: So we're here with Angela Engel, who has more than a decade of experience in sales strategy. She has worked for companies like Chronicle Books. She also has launched the Collective Book Studio, which provides authors with a middle ground between the benefits of self-publishing and the art of the well-crafted book. So Angela has a full-service publishing studio. You're here today to just -- First of all, tell us a little bit about the Collective Book Studio.

Angela: Yeah, so we actually started as what in the book publishing industry we call as a book packager. You create a book and usually try to find another imprint to put it on a list with mass distribution. That's how we started, and we did a project that was on a small independent publisher called Tri Publishing which has distribution was Simon & Schuster. And then we did a big custom project into Costco, and eventually I decided, pandemic hit in 2020, and instead of waiting for packager books to be bought by traditional or larger houses, I decided to launch my own imprint and have full distribution. So we have several parts of our business. We can create a book and someone can do a self-publishing, they can take care of the sales distribution, and we can just make them a beautiful book, or if we feel it's something trade-ready, we will also put it on our own imprint.

Mindy: When we talk about the Indie world and we talk about self-publishing, traditional publishing, indie publishing, partner publishing, I know that it can be really overwhelming for people that are first coming on to the scene. There's so much information out there. And I mean, I know myself that when I first entered the publishing world, indie publishing basically didn't exist and self-publishing was kind of a bad word, and that has changed quite a bit. So if you could just kind of break down what some of those differences are and maybe the pros and cons of partner publishing, self-pub, traditional publishing, like what am I looking for? The similarities and the differences between those things.

Angela: Mindy, it's such a big question, and I actually have over 20 years of experience in the traditional publishing space. Not only Chronicle Books, but I have sold Moleskine, I have worked at Ten Speed Press, which now is part of Random House, done strategy for Abrams, which is an amazing press with Cameron and Company, that's part of Abrams now. So I have a very interesting view. I'm often called a disruptor as an insider. So I'm really not actually familiar with the indie or self-publishing space. What I do know is that it has boomed in the last 10 years, especially in the last eight. I have mixed feelings, to be completely honest, I understand indie publishing, and there are certain genres that it really can work for. I'm thinking of Insta poetry. I'm thinking of romance novels and certain aspects, but when it comes to full color lifestyle, Children's, Food and Wine, I still have a very hard time with the way that the machines work because ultimately, I do believe that a book is a product and a really beautiful one that you wanna make. So I founded the Collective Book Studio with the concept that I heard this sort of need in the market to give access and break through some of the traditional publishing barriers, one being distribution. We just wrote about this on our blog. It's really interesting because I do think that often times what happens is you might create a book, but then you're really kind of locked into a certain distribution, which is really online sales, and the Amazon platform. Maybe you have some incremental sales at Barnes & Noble or target dot com or Walmart dot com, but that's not real sales. I'm also very, very wary of publishing companies that say they can get you into bookstores through IngramSpark. It's still all on the author. So I'm very clear about this hybrid or partnership publishing space to really talk about what is their mass distribution? Do they represent at trade shows? Do they have tables at the Annual Library Association, at the Public Library Association, at the regional independent bookstores associations? Like I would really dig into those presses and understand who's running them, and how deep they understand sort of more of the traditional model.

Mindy: Lifestyle books, particularly like the ones you are talking about, cookbooks, craft, any kind of book that you want to have with you while you're doing what you're doing, I think I agree, you need to have a physical book. I don't think an e-book personally, I would not find that useful. The kitchen is not where I excel, but if I did, I don't want to have my Kindle sitting there. I would very much prefer to have a physical book. And when it comes to the production of that, that gets expensive fast when you're talking about color and page and paper quality and all those things that you mentioned. So yeah, knowing the depth and the scope of a hybrid or an indie publisher that you're working with is super important.

Angela: Yeah, absolutely. And so my press, we do non-fiction and lifestyle and children's books. That's really my expertise, but I'm not actually familiar with the other genres. And I think that indie publishing definitely has a space, but I also am really wary if people say, "Oh, I only am gonna spend $200 on an editor." Are there typos in there? Have you really thought about it? What's really important is still to invest in your work.

Mindy: Your name came up recently on an issue of the Hot Sheet from Jane Friedman, which is a newsletter-style publication that you can sign up for. Listeners, if you're interested, Jane Friedman runs the Hot Sheet, and she's an industry insider, and you can just kinda know what's going on in publishing right now. And there was recently a study about hybrid publishers and possible predatory practices. And this is something that it can be if you're new to the arena, and even if you've been around for a while, it can be difficult to kinda sort out the bad apples from the good ones when it comes to hybrid publishing, and there are a lot of ways to get got as a writer. So if you could talk about some ways that new writers and even established authors can make that distinction between a publisher that is actually grounded and going to be able to help you, or someone that's just kind of trying to take you.

Angela: I saw that Jane Friedman quoted me saying that a traditional contract doesn't mean it's wholesome. I wrote about this actually as an op-ed piece in Publishers Weekly back in September, and that's not pay to play. I literally wrote this interesting editorial piece for Publishers Weekly in our industry magazine on this sort of debate, which is hybrid versus self-publishing versus traditional. It's like wheeling in the universe right now. And I sort of am one of those people, it's like, let's throw this out of the window now, and instead ask truly what is the author's or the entrepreneur, or the restaurateurs or the brand, why. Why are you publishing a book? If you can answer that question clearly as an author, then you're gonna figure out your right publishing path for you. I talk about this because I come from a space where custom publishing or paying into publishing is part of the traditional model. Meaning - Top Chef Cookbook, for example, when that first came out that show, the network bought 10,000 copies of that book. That helps offset so much cost, right? When you have a client that's already buying 10,000 copies of a book, of course, it's gonna be able to get published. Traditional contracts have traditionally always done something - the author, the brand, Disney Publishing - you think about already what they're going to be buying already for their employees or for their corporate sponsors, and so those types of books are always continually gonna be published. If I can just call a spade to spade and launch a company saying basically, the Collective Book Studio, why it's called The Collective Book Studio is that we are from Weldon Owen and Chronicle Books, HarperCollins, Random House. We are from these companies. We understand the art of the book. We understand the trade market. We understand how you look and feel, how you add embossing and foil and glitter, how we do typography. That art form is not something, to be honest, if I wasn't part of the publishing world, you would know. If you were a doctor and you wanna write a children's book, don't say I can all of a sudden become a production artist and an artist and a book designer. And yet self-publishing has towed that line. 

What I'm kind of saying it's too nuanced. Brands have been buying into publishing for a very long time. What I'm trying to say is that if someone wants to invest in their work, they should feel entitled to do that, that is what self publishing is, that's what a lot of hybrid models are, that's what partnership - and yet, they should also deserve to get more money from their royalties. So that's the first thing. What's the royalty structure? I would probably be asking, what is their distribution? And it should not be the answer, "I get you on IngramSpark and KDP." The answer should be, what organizations are you part of as the publishing company? Are they part of PubWest and PPN, which is a professional publishing network. Are they members of not only IBPA but some other publishing organizations? Are they exhibiting at trade shows? Reps that actually go out and see book stores? Those are all the questions the authors should be asking, because there are very good hybrid publishers such as SheWrites Press. I'm pretty impassioned about this subject actually, as you can tell.

Mindy: Good, I'm glad. And I think it's important because when you say things like yes, if a publisher says, I can get you distribution through IngramSpark, I can get you on to KDP, the only thing that you need to do to be able to have those things is an internet connection and a slightly functioning brain. Any individual can do that.

Angela: I don't actually know how to do KDP because I've never trained myself. But that's not my business model. So when people come to me and they say, "What about indie publishing?" I'm like, I don't know, I don't know. And so, just like I would expect, they would say to me, they don't really understand how to get books into retail. Which is what I do. Right now, for example, we have a book called The Us Journal. It's such an amazing book, and we're testing the book right now in Michael's Craft stores. Those are things that I've been trained to do for 20 years, and it's not just because I went and called Michaels. It's because the amount of work we did to really make a really good product that can work for a certain customer base.

Mindy: I mean, I can say, because I do write underneath a pen name and I self-publish under a pen name. If anybody, any hybrid publisher says, we can get you distribution through IngramSpark, it simply means that IngramSpark will print that book for you. It doesn't mean that it's going to be on the shelves at Walmart. It just means IngramSpark will print it for you. I think a lot of the times when you're looking at hybrid publishers or indie publishers, you gotta do your homework. There are presses out there that aren't offering you anything you can't do on your own.

Angela: Yes, and I think that is where you need to be careful. Now, I do think it's worth it for all authors, even if you wanna do everything on your own, please, please hire an editor. Hire a book designer. Hire people. Because ultimately then what you're doing is like you could have a fourth grader upload it like you're making a year book. That honestly, to me, is why when people are like, Oh, I have this book and I don't understand, it's not in libraries, it's not in book stores. Imagine this. A librarian and a book seller, they get bombarded by the number of titles. There was over one million titles, including the self-published titles, in 2021. And so you can't expect them to read every book, and so there has to be quality control. I'm a proponent of some of the services that are out there that are providing quality control. So when that report is done, it's just knowing the services because indie publishing has boomed so much. And I don't agree with someone just uploading a PDF. They're not a trained book designer. I've gotten these books from Amazon and they literally have extra white pages in the back meaning that someone's not designing it in a 16-page signature.

Mindy: And there are those things that you do notice if you're in the industry, but also as an author, you can see a self-published book just by the way the barcode looks. You know what the barcode looks like and you're like, yeah, that's a self-published book. And that's like the general readership probably isn't going to know that, but there are different things that you can do to make sure that your book doesn't look self-published, which is important.

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Mindy: So I know that you've got a list of three to five easy things authors should do to make sure their book doesn't look self-published. So what are some tips for that?

Angela: I mean, obviously, I want to make sure they know how to get a bar code and an ISBN. You need to make sure you have a spine. I really, really cannot tell you how many children's books come and there is no spine on them. The title is not on the spine. Really take the time to get a book designer to actually design you a spine, a back cover, and a front cover. There's many levels of editing, and there's a difference between a developmental editor, a line editor, a copy proofer, and a proofreader. And what I see way too often in self-publishing is that you're cutting corners and you're only hiring a proofreader for a few hundred dollars. And that is a mistake because really it's the developmental editor, the copy editors, the line editors that are going to help you with tone and structure. And I highly recommend you do that. You're gonna have a much better book, and ultimately, hopefully, if you look at the success of self-published authors, very few, very few sell more than what, 2,000 copies.

Mindy: Yep. And I think that that is kind of a harsh truth that people don't want to hear. I mean, I know so many people that say, yeah, I'm gonna self-publish, and they think that that's gonna be like an avenue of income and possibly even a job replacement. And it's just like, Oh no, I'm sorry, it's not. It's not meant to deflate anyone's bubble or to break dreams or anything like that. It is a simple, fundamental truth. For one thing in self-publishing you have to spend money to make money, and you also have to just be aware that this is not a you're gonna quit your day job situation. And then as soon as you make a comment like that, you hear, well, but then there's Hugh Howey and they name millionaire self-published authors, and I'm like, yes, that's true, but that's the same experience that you're gonna have in trad publishing too. If you publish a book that does not make you Stephen King. You are not going to be making Stephen King levels of income simply because you got published, and there's no guarantee you're going to continue to get published. And I think that's true across the board, but I think in self-publishing, that's the arena where you can actually lose your shirt if you don't know what you're doing. Because you can trad-pub a book and hopefully you're going to get an advance, and so you're still going to have something to literally put in the bank. Self-publishing, you can bleed yourself dry and not get anywhere if you don't know what you're doing.

Angela: I think that's a really good point, and why I think that report was sort of very one-sided that came out on hybrid publishers as predatory. 'Cause listen, there are so many self-published authors that I have met personally that are spending tens of thousands of dollars on Amazon advertising. And so you're seeing them get number one best seller, right? And they can claim it. So they're basically giving away their eBook. They're spending a ton of money on ads, yes, for what? A number one seller on Amazon. That's not even their physical book, mind you, it's the Kindle. I just ask society to say, what does that really mean? And really sit back from that and say, You know, should I have spent that tens of thousands of dollars that I spent and really work with a company that can make a crafted book try to back list 10 years from now? It's a really good quality book, and I maybe sold only a couple thousand out of the gate but then I went back to reprint for another couple of thousand, and another couple of thousand, and that's where the money really is. Just like in a traditional publishing house, the money is in the reprint. All authors, no matter how you're published, have to do this. I guess that's one of my biggest tips - is publishing even when you get an advance, that is a loan essentially. You have to sell that amount of books to even recoup that advance and then make money. And often, you are asked to use that money often to hire a publicist, create your platform. All authors do have to invest back in themselves. They have to create website, they have to reach out on their social media, they have to think about a blogger campaign, and that is just the way the publishing world is. So it is an investment to become an author. And some of the most successful authors primarily in non-fiction, 'cause that's really my genre space, understand that it's through their speaking gigs, when they have a book, is how they're really gonna make a lot of money.

Mindy: I can say that from the trad point of view, I'd always heard, and I don't stick to this by any means, but I imagine if I broke it down, it's probably accurate that for your advance, you set aside one-third for taxes, one-third for marketing and promotion, and then one-third is which you actually consider profit.

Angela: Probably, but then think about your time, right? 'Cause you've spent a third of that writing and working. Listening to one of your podcast episodes, it was really funny, you brought your writing into your doctor's office as you were getting a pap smear and it's a lot of work to write. Yeah, so it's profit, but it's your time.

Mindy: Oh yeah, I mean, if I broke it down to what I get paid by the hour, oh man, it would be, it would be really bad. I'm talking maybe $2 an hour. That might even be generous. I've never tried to keep track or anything like that, because I think it would just be super depressing. Yeah, I actually, I was getting my oil change today, I live in a really, really small town, and I was sitting in the waiting room working while I waited for them to change my oil, and the lady was like, "Mindy, we just changed your oil, not that long ago, but your mileage - I know we do need to do it again. Have you actually been traveling that much?" Glancing up from my laptop, and I'm like, “Yep.” And she's like, "Are you working right now?" And I'm like, "Yep." And she's just like, "Oh my God, do you ever take a break?" And I'm just like, "Nope." I mean, it is something that you have to be entirely invested in, and it's a joke, but it's kind of not. People ask me all the time, because obviously, I put a ton of time and work into the podcast and the blog and everything that I do for other writers. I write under my real name and under my pen name, and I speak and I travel, and I offer editorial services. And I do all these things just to keep my head above water. And people ask all the time, "How do you do this, you do so much? How do you accomplish all of these things?" And I always say, 'Well, it's at the expense of my personal relationships,' and it's a joke, but it's also not. I mean, I work and I exercise, and then I work. I wake up in the morning. I work until it's time to go to the gym, and then I come back home and then I work some more. And that's just what life is.

Angela: You really nailed it on the head. You've become a professional writer. But it's a lot of work. And you do it, 'cause you love it. It's your art form. It's your calling. I was just listening to one of our authors, Sara Blanchard, she said that she's so lucky because she has a job that's not a job, it's a calling. Right? She's an author and she's a podcaster as well, called Dear White Women. It's unbelievable, both her podcast and the book. What I'm saying to you too is when I hear you talk, when you embrace the fact that a podcast or a writer, a coach, a speaker, that's a calling, that is, I think, what people have to understand often times about this avenue - the Danielle Steels and the Stephen Kings of the world, that is a very small percentage.

Mindy: So how else are you going to make money?

Angela: Right, so I often say, is it because this is gonna elevate your speaking platform? Published a book called 52 Shabbats, we went back to press, we printed another 10,000. As soon as it landed, right away, we get another couple of thousand. I mean, the book is just doing phenomenal on BookScan. It's elevated Faith Kramer as a food writer. I mean, she has been in the New York Times and LA Times and the Washington Post. And she now can get paid honorariums to speak at different places across the country. And so often times what I say is your book is a calling card for you to do cooking classes and other things. So you offer editorial services, that was part of my point with even Indie authors, work with somebody who's a professional. We're not all writers.

Mindy: As someone that does self-pub, you hire an editor, you hire a copy editor. Well, I do the design myself, but I use vellum. Full disclosure, vellum does support the podcast, they are a sponsor of the podcast, but I also use it. So it's like, I love vellum, and I use that to handle all of my design, but, you know, I had to spend money on the program to get it. You gotta be willing to give money, but man, you're right, it's gonna be your time more than anything else, and it is also going to take time. You don't upload your book and post a tweet once and share it on Facebook and then watch your sales come in. No, it's just like it is the constant slog, and it can be miserable. I actually just hired an assistant, just to handle answering some of my emails. That's just where I'm at. She's gonna be answering my emails, 'cause I'll spend three hours a day just setting up interviews like this one, but blogging and doing the podcast transcripts and doing the social media posts, saying, hey, new podcast is up, all that, it takes so much time away from me and I have to write. Like, at some point, I have to write. I mean, you just have to know that there's no guarantee of success.

Angela: Can I ask you a question?

Mindy: Sure.

Angela: How come you decided to become an indie self-published author?

Mindy: Because I am traditionally published and with Harper Collins, I think I have 12 books out now, and all of my books are published under my real name, are really dark and fairly focused on usually some social issue topics. I have written across a wide variety of genres. I've written a thriller. I've written fantasy. I've written historical. I've written all kinds of different genres, but everything that I write is fairly dark. I've done a good job of branding myself, but it also means that the other side of myself, which is humorous and fun and happy-go-lucky, doesn't have a place under my real name. If I published some things that I publish underneath my pen name that are just flat out silly - fun and humorous and nice little beach reads - it would skew my branding so badly. I write fast. I can write a book in two or three months, and even faster if I'm churning. Trad-pub only has room for one book a year. And so I had some friends approach me and they were like, "Hey, we want to self-publish some stuff, and we'd like to have you in on this with us." And so we just started up a little business together and we write to the trends and to what the self-published readers are reading. And we just churn and get stuff out that is humorous, silly, paranormal, not too much on the dark side, not too much with language, fairly clean, the kind of stuff that isn't gonna fit underneath my real name. And then also because I write YA, I write for young adult, if I wanted to write something in a paranormal romance, that's steamier, which is, if you wanna make money, quite honestly, you kinda have to go there, I can't be marketing that underneath my real name as a YA author.

Angela: That's so interesting to me. Exactly what you're saying is exactly why I'm really excited about the company that I've launched. So for example, I have traditionally published authors on on my list. I have Fran Hauser, she wrote The Myth of a Nice Girl. It came out about four years ago with Houghton Mifflin. We just launched her new workbook called Embrace the Work, Love Your Career. She called me, I actually reached out to her about a giveaway on Instagram 'cause I love her, and I had no intention of publishing her book and she said "Angela, can we have a call? I wanna talk to you about this project." And she knew that she could not do that herself, and she wanted a new way. She wanted a book published within a year, and she wanted to own the art work, which also my authors own their RP. So I would say, this is also what I want all authors to hear who are listening to your podcast, if publishing offers you a contract, and has a real submission process, and they offer you, like my company does, or SheWrites Press, or Green Leaf has been around for a really long time, they're another hybrid, that's a real publisher. They're giving you a contract versus there's really no contract. There's money exchanged. That's the people I would really be wary of, and also like, look what other authors are on their list of traditional authors. Like Fran, she knew that it would take a very long time for it to get traditionally published. And all we had to do is have her agent talk to Houghton Mifflin and make sure that it was okay. And they did. They okayed it 'cause it was a workbook, right? That we could do. Again, I have another author on my list, Lea Redmond, who has tons of books published with Chronicle Books, with Work Bin, with Andrews McNeal, she has a deal with Harper Collins. We're publishing two books with her in the fall, and it's because like you, she's such an incredible creative and she runs Kickstarter campaigns. And she runs Kickstarter campaigns even for her traditionally published books, so she makes money to market them. What is a person's why? If your why, right, Mindy's why is to write and fall in love and figure out other avenues to make revenue and like then why not do both? Do traditional publishing and do indie publishing. And for Lea Redmond, it's like, why don't I do both? She understands the limitations of indie publishing in the genre of lifestyle and children's gorgeous books with stickers and die cut board books and all this stuff that really Amazon can't do.

Mindy: Well, with that in mind, last thing, why don't you let my listeners know how they can find you and the Collective Book Studio online and how to connect with you and the company there.

Angela: On Instagram it's just at thecollectivebookstudio. Very easy. I'm Angela Engel on LinkedIn. We have a Collective Book Studio on LinkedIn, but I'm much more active as the publisher and founder. Our website is really easy. It's just the collective book dot studio. Sign up for our newsletter. We do a lot of industry stuff. We are a lot of industry insiders, so if you guys are interested in kinda what's happening, not just with our books and our authors, but within the industry. Mindy, that's how you can reach me. Thanks.

Mindy:            Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Katie Henry On Writing Humor During the Pandemic

Mindy:         Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

Mindy: We're here with Katie Henry, who is the author of multiple books. Her most recent release is Gideon Green in Black and White, which is actually her first mystery. So you have jumped genres and even switched mediums, which is, I think really important to being a writer and surviving in the industry is the ability to be adaptable. So why don't you talk a little bit about where you've been and what you've done, and how you've changed over the course of your career. 

Katie: I started out my writing life as a playwright back in high school because I was a theater kid, but I was a mediocre singer, dancer and actor. So you gotta do something. I decided what I would do was right plays, and I had a fantastic time doing that. I ended up going to college for playwriting, which if anyone is considering that, was a lot of fun, but not a whole lot of job opportunities after graduation for that. I had a fantastic time being a playwright, and I think the experience of going to art school and having that workshop experience was invaluable in learning how to take feedback and also give feedback that would be helpful to others. So I graduated with a degree in Playwriting. Job opportunities were limited there. I realized that I had been, throughout the course of college, I had only been writing about teenagers. Most of my classmates did not exclusively write about 16-year-olds in their plays. But I did. I've spent all this time writing about teenagers, maybe I should try writing for them. And I loved YA when I was a teenager, so I started reading it again, fell in love with it all over again, and decided that I wanted to try writing YA. And I wanted to try writing novels. That is basically how I got here.

Mindy:   I had to laugh a little bit to myself when you were talking about following what you love and doing what you want and getting your degree in the thing that matters to you, and then finding out you can't get a job. That's a real thing. My listeners are probably hearing this. I double majored in English literature, philosophy and religion. I learned so much, I am over-educated and unemployable. I had no desire to teach, no desire to go into any type of teaching English or any type of ministry. Both of those degrees without going on for your master's are fairly useless. I say that like tongue in cheek. Communication and empathy and all of the things that are absolutely critical to being a good writer, were all buried in there, but on a resume, I am not qualified to do much at all.

Katie: It's funny you bring up religion and philosophy, my first two books were about religion, which again, is not a super marketable topic for YA. Though I think that's changing, there are a lot more books that talk about faith and have religious protagonists or people figuring out their faith. But just like you said, doing what you love, and even once you are in a writing career, leaning into the stuff that really matters to you makes all the difference.

Mindy:   It can be hard and it can be discouraging. I actually had a long conversation last night, so I just read a book called Like, Comment, Subscribe by Mark Bergen. It is essentially the history of YouTube, and I read it out of curiosity. It was sent to me as an advanced copy and first of all, it's incredible. Everyone should read it, it's fascinating. Secondly, my initial reaction to it, my emotional reaction to it was that I got very angry. And it's not that there's no talent involved, there is talent involved, but when your job is to do un-boxing videos, this is my kid playing with a toy… I'm not saying that there's no talent involved in this, and it certainly is a time suck, but early adopters to YouTube, they were making 7 million a year. Why aren't I doing that? 

And those people get burnt out and they're working very hard and their entire private life has to be public, so I understand that there is an exchange. Don't get me wrong, but I was talking to someone about mediocrity kind of being the king of content these days and producing new content over and over and over, something just slightly different. I was just having a particularly pessimistic day as well, so I will add that, but I was definitely hitting a point where I work every day and I work so hard, and I'm sure that you do too. And I feel burnt out, and I am always trying to say the right thing or find an important topic, or be meaningful, or create art for lack of a better word, and it's like… I should just have a foot channel on Only Fans because I have great feet. I could make so much more money. Very often when we talk about the things that we love, like, these are our degrees. We wanna create art, and we want to do something meaningful. But at the same time, man, being a sell-out sounds awesome.

Katie: Yeah, it would be so great if what we found personally meaningful was also extremely lucrative. That hasn't happened to me yet, but fingers crossed. Here's hoping.

Mindy:   Is it something that you struggle with as a writer, where you sit down and you write one sentence and you're like… is that sentence right and you're just kind of staring at it?

Katie: It definitely is, and I think it is a lot more so now, when I know that a book is going to be out in the world. When it's part of a larger deal, and I know that not only does the sentence exist on my computer, but it may very well exist in a real book that actual people will read and write reviews of on Good Reads. That definitely makes me think in a way that is sometimes kind of paralyzing about - is this right? Is it doing enough? Is it saying enough? 

Mindy:   Me too, I'm very critical of myself, but I think that is of course what makes us get better all the time, continuously. When you're writing, do you write out of a place where you want to alleviate what I feel is a pretty low bar these days for entertainment, but also art? Do you want to write to that? Or are you writing for yourself? Are you writing for your readers? What are your goals personally, when you're creating?

Katie: I think I definitely write for myself first 'cause I have experience writing for someone else, it's just not as much fun and it's not as fulfilling. And if you were gonna sit down and write a 80,000-word book, you better be getting something out of it, or that is just gonna be a slog. I definitely am always writing the kinds of things that I enjoy, the kinds of things that I would want to read. Going back to what you said about writing now, this is a particularly hard time. I feel like I'm also writing with a sense of, How can I make the world just a little bit better? A little bit less bleak, in this time? All my books have varied in tone, they've all been funny or... I hope they’ve been funny. That's been the intention. And so particularly when you're writing humor, that's what you're setting out to do. I am always looking for, How could I make someone’s day a little bit more enjoyable in a time that seems particularly hard?

Mindy:   I write super dark. I write issues, I write to topics, my goal is to reach the person that also thinks about these things or experiences these things to get that feeling of, Oh, okay, I am not a freak for thinking this way, or I am not alone for feeling this way. And that brings its own form of relief. But I wanna come back to talking about humor because I think right now... Yes, we need it. It's so important. People need to laugh. And so when I say disparaging things about social media, YouTube, TikTok, whatever... Believe me, I'm on it, don't get me wrong. I am a consumer, so I'll watch cats missing their jumps for three hours, this is me.

Katie: There's nothing better.

Mindy:   My hang-up comes from the incredible amount of money that can be made that I can't. I think that's where my anger comes from.

Katie: It's not an even distribution.

Mindy:   So anyway, coming back to humor and Writing humor, I think that's the hardest thing to do. I can make someone cry. I can make you cry pretty easily, making someone laugh–I feel like that's always a pot shot.

Katie: You know, it's so interesting that you say that 'cause I felt the complete opposite way. I discovered that I liked writing humor when I was a teenage playwright. And when you're a playwright and you're sitting in the back of a theater, it's really hard to tell how the audience is experiencing your work unless they are audibly crying or unless they're laughing. It was much harder, at least for me, to make people cry, and a lot easier to make people laugh. I love that instantaneous reaction that lets me know that I have communicated with other human beings through my words. I think that's why I have always gravitated towards humor.

Mindy:   There is an amazing reward in making someone laugh. Yeah, you're speaking about your audience. I do public speaking, and even though I talk about my books and my books are not funny, my presentations always are, because I think, especially when you're speaking to teens, you have to be entertaining. And what amazes me is that I can take the same presentation and I've done them hundreds of times, I can deliver it the same way, I have the same slide saying the same lines and delivering the same jokes, nothing is changing. And there are days when I am murdering it and everyone is laughing and I'm getting DMs and tweets and emails, and people are like, Oh my God, that was amazing. You're fantastic. And then there are times when I'm up there… and there's nothing worse than pausing for the laugh that doesn't come.

Katie: Oh, yeah, absolutely. I think I almost thrive in that kind of chaos. Humor is so subjective and chaotic in that way, where you just do not know, it is hard to figure out what is going to be objectively funny and whether it's going to hit with anyone, much less a larger readership. I kind of like that challenge to be like, How can I take something that I think is funny and punch it up so that the greatest number of people will possibly find it funny? And just knowing that you can't get everyone, you will never get everyone, and sometimes people will hate your humor so much. It's actually gratifying in a different way because you have made a connection, just not the one that you intended to. 

Mindy:   I agree completely. If I can make you feel something, and I get emails, 'cause my books are hard and people die, and I get emails all the time, and people will be like, I am pissed at you. And I'm like, That's cool. The tagline for this podcast is, our job is to make people care about things that never happen to people that don't exist. And if I can make you very, very upset over the death of a person that never was alive in the first place, and if you're pissed at me about it. That's awesome, I've done my job.

Katie: Yeah, that is such a victory.

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Mindy:   Starting out with humor, that's where you were, and then you've moved forward into writing a mystery, which of course doesn't exclusively mean that you're not including humor anymore. But talk to me about that jump, talk to me about changing up there.

Katie: So it definitely is a comedic mystery. I actually think it's one of my funnier books. That was really important to me to include because something that I find is that the two genres that I feel are closest connected, and this is going to sound very weird, are horror and humor. And so thriller and mystery is included in that too, but they're both based on the element of surprise. Things make us laugh when they surprise us and things scare us when they surprise us too. And human beings love being surprised, even if we say that we don't. We love it. I went into that knowing that I wanted it to be funny and knowing that I wanted to carry some of the other things that I had done previously in more straight contemporary novels into this. But really working with the mystery element, it was really, really difficult to transition. I really love mysteries, I love reading them, and I very naively thought that that meant that I would be good at writing one. And I think eventually I did just get there, but it was a struggle. Mystery makes you level up, I feel like, and that is one of the reasons that I wanted to do it.

This is my fourth book, and I always wanna be growing as an author. If I'm lucky enough to have another book, I always wanna be doing something new and challenging myself, and I felt like every aspect of writing a mystery from the plotting to making sure there's still a character arc, and particularly in revision, when changing things, it means everything changes and clues have to be completely rearranged. It just asked me to be a better writer, a better collaborator with my editor, too. While it definitely was a challenge, I ultimately feel like I'm a much better writer for having tried it.

Mindy:   So talk to me about your process. Are you a planner? Are you a pantser?

Katie: I am such a pantser, which is another reason that a mystery was a real challenge because you can't just go into a completely flying blind. I mean, you can... And I definitely did. But at some point, you have to know where you're going. I always pretend that I'm a plotter. I feel like I lie to people, particularly my editor about that. I turn in the five-page outline, and then by the time he gets the first draft it is completely different, which he's always very cool with, which is nice. Pantsing entirely, it does not quite work for Mystery. In the same way though, I'm glad I kind of did that as a first draft because it allowed me to discover aspects to the story and to the characters that I might not have gotten if I had plotted it out more carefully as I probably should have.

Mindy:   So for the sake of the listening audience, Kaite and I actually share an editor. Our editor is Ben Rosenthal of Katherine Tegen Books. I think he's probably very accustomed to this kind of working relationship because I have turned in synopsis and outlines, and he just knows that that's just kind of what the concept might be, and I'm gonna turn in something similar in the same vein in about six months. 

Katie: And you'll have to stop me or This will turn into the Ben Rosenthal appreciation hour, but it sounds like we have a pretty similar working relationship where he gives us authors just a lot of space to discover what the book is without locking in too early. And is generally just very adaptable in what a story can be and where it can go, which I really appreciate. I feel like I don't figure out what the book is about until, I don't know, the second draft, at least.

Mindy:   I think that's fair. And I agree, Ben is wonderful. I've worked with Ben on, I think nine or 10 books now. Yeah, so we have a really good working relationship. I actually bristle when people ask me what my editor makes me change and I get almost angry about it. No, my editor is awesome, and that's not what an editor does, and you are misunderstanding the role of an editor. And for anybody that questions that, there are plenty of horror stories about editors out there, but I can say I've worked with three or four, and Ben the most often, and I've never had the experience of sending a book off and having it come back to me and the editor saying, Okay, this is what's wrong, and this is exactly how you fix it, or I fixed it for you. That's not what an editor does. And Ben is particularly good at saying, you gave me this, these are your strengths and this is the strength of this manuscript, these are the areas where it needs to work, and here are some ideas from me that I think could be utilized, and of course, I realize that you can just absolutely ignore everything I have to say and find your own way.

Katie: Yeah, yeah, I think a lot of aspiring authors or early stage career authors think of editors and even agents as sort of their bosses, and what you really quickly discover is they're not your boss. They are your collaborator, they are here to help you achieve your vision and that ultimately, this is your book, because when it's on a bookshelf, it's gonna have your name on the cover, and no one else’s.

Mindy:   I agree, ultimately, it is a team effort, and you're the author. Every editor I've ever had has always said, It's your book. You make the final decisions. I will say, in addition to what we were talking about in terms of being absolute pantsers in many ways, I enjoy the flexibility that it gives me. Yes, there is some panic and yes, there are some days when I'm just like, I have no idea what I'm doing, I have come to trust my process because I've been doing it a long time, and I haven't had it fail me yet. One of the reasons why I do enjoy being a Pantser is because it allows for so much elasticity. So in my book, that will be coming out in 2023, a murder mystery in a small town, and it is a pairing - the unlikely duo of the valedictorian, and then the girl who is going to be the first person in her family to ever even graduate from high school. When I started writing the book and when I had written the synopsis, I turned it in with my main character, the good girl, being very much like a straight arrow and I follow the rules and I'm always doing the right thing, and there is value to being perfect. And I started writing it and man, she was angry, she was an angry person.

And I was like, Dude, this is not what I expected out of you. And she was just moving through the world with a very different internal monologue than what she was showing to people. She was a good girl, and she was behaving in that manner and checking all those boxes, but her internal monologue is like, No, fuck you, fuck you and fuck you. And I was just like, Wow, girl. So, you know, she changed and it ended up, I think, in so many ways, making the manuscript so much better, making that allowance and not having a lock in for even myself about what I'm gonna do or where I'm gonna take things. That's why I really enjoy being a panster.

Katie: Yeah, and I do think there is a benefit, particularly with mysteries, to being a little bit of a pantser, because so often your protagonist doesn't really know what's going on either. In Gideon Green, he is a former child detective who is coming out of retirement to solve a case with his former best friend. Part of his character arc is realizing that he does not know everything, and as the mystery takes them on twists and turns, I think it helps get me in the headspace of not really knowing what was going on, to legitimately not really know what was gonna happen.

Mindy:   I really enjoy that. So tell us a little bit more about Gideon Green.

Katie: This is an idea that I had a long time ago when I was a teenager myself. I was thinking about how much I loved Encyclopedia Brown as a kid, those books with that wonderful child detective. But I was thinking about how long would that be cool? Because everyone in the Encyclopedia Brown universe thinks he's like the coolest kid ever. But that has an expiration date at some point. That becomes a lot less cool and a lot more off-putting and weird. I had this idea for a one-time child detective who is now 16, and because no one thinks the whole child detective thing isn’t particularly cool anymore. He has retired and instead spends most of his time in his room watching noir, which he is fully obsessed with, until his former best friend who ditched him in middle school appears at his door, wanting his help on an investigation that she's doing for the school newspaper. So reluctantly, he comes out of retirement and chaos ensues. Which is how I feel like all of my books eventually get to the place where, just chaos ensues. 

Mindy:   Chaos ensues is the best way to pitch anything. You wrote this during the pandemic, right?

Katie: I did, I did. I was going back in my email trying to find the actual date that I pitched it, but I couldn't. To the best of my recollection, I first pitched this book to Ben on maybe February 28, and then a couple of weeks later, the world completely ended. I live in Manhattan. And the world felt like it completely collapsed from underneath me as I was just starting to write this book. And my memory of writing the opening chapters of this book is sitting in my tiny New York apartment and outside the streets are completely empty, which is very weird for New York and just constant, constant sirens. That's my memory of it. And obviously, I would have preferred to be writing under pretty much any other condition, and it was horrible, a really difficult experience to be writing what almost felt like a fantasy book. I would write a sentence about how two friends hugged in the cafeteria and just burst into tears because that felt so far away from the life that I was living and I didn't know when that life would come back.

It was very difficult, but I feel like having written it during that particular time fundamentally shaped the book and what it is about. Gideon starts off as a kid stuck in his room with really nothing going on in his life except watching movies, and that's pretty much where I also was in March 2020, not through my own choice. Over the course of the book, he realizes just how much you need other people and just how valuable and magical and life-giving human connection is, and I'm not sure that it ultimately would have had that focus as a book if I had not been writing it during that time.

Mindy:   And what were the difficulties for you in trying to write something, so it's a mystery with a very deep roots in humor, when you yourself are probably really not feeling all that chuckalicious?

Katie: It was tough, but in some ways it was really nice to just say, Okay, you're going into another headspace. You are inhabiting a world that does not resemble your own world at the moment. It was a form of escapism where it was like, Okay, everything sucks right now, life is not going well, put on your headphones and for the next hour, two hours, three hours, you can be somewhere else. That was really valuable for me, and something that I'm so glad that I had, and I'm so glad that I basically had to force myself to find the joy in this book and the humor.

Mindy:   My books of course are very dark, but they also have moments of humor because you can't just hit your head against a wall all the time, you have to have a break. I always have those flashes of humor. When I hear back from people about my books, very often what I'm hearing is - they spoke to me or thank you for writing this, and I appreciate any outreach whatsoever that anybody gives me. But when I know that I made someone laugh, especially in this environment like you're talking about, I specifically tried very hard with the book that will be coming out in 2023, called A Long Stretch of Bad Days, I tried very hard to make that one funny and not just in surprising moments. There's a particular character, any time she's on the page, you know that she is going to make you laugh, and I'm like, This is what we need right now. I'm still gonna be Mindy McGinnis and I'm still going to give you a book with lots of horrible things happening, but I'm gonna try to help you laugh a little bit, too. 

Katie: I feel like in some ways YA leans more heavily towards the dark and the issue books, and obviously those books are completely needed and so important. But teenagers are also some of the funniest people I interact with ever, and I think that they want humor, they deserve humor too. It just shouldn't be just for middle grade books or just for chapter books. Humor in YA is a much needed component.

Mindy:   I agree, it's funny because I was talking to, at the beginning of the month, Marcy Kate Connolly. She was telling me that I should write middle grade and I said, That's a horrible idea. And then, but you know, I can really write a fart joke. I'm really good with farts. And she was like, then you've got it. Like, you're good. You know what I'm also really good at is dick jokes. I don't know how many dick jokes you are allowed to write, I mean none in middle grade, but I'm sure there's also a cap on YA. My mind goes weird places sometimes. So, I don't know, Teenagers can be difficult because they want dick jokes, they want sex jokes. That is the funniest thing when you're that age and raunchy humor, and believe me, I am here for it, but I also can't write a whole book of dick jokes. Much like I can't write a whole book of fart jokes for middle grade, you gotta have a little more substance there.

Katie: I have not yet found what the limit is for dick jokes. I've always wondered if I'm going to approach it, but haven't yet. My first book, Heretics Anonymous has an extended dicke joke that I cannot believe anybody let me keep. And it so divides the room like I have had people tell me, it is the funniest part of the book, and I have also seen people abandon the book at that exact moment, which is also a compliment.

Mindy:   Well, you know what, that's okay. When that happens, I always say, You know what, I didn't write it for you then. A buddy of mine, his name is Kurt Dinan, he is from Ohio. He writes humor, his book with Sourcebooks is called Don't Get Caught, and it's about a prank war in high school. And it's fantastic, so fine, but he's got a running joke, it's kind of like the equivalent of... That's What She Said, but it's -  like my balls. So if somebody is picking something up they’ll be like, Oh my God, this is heavier than I thought it would be. And they'd be like, Yeah, like my balls. 

Katie: That is great. Just like inappropriate enough, I think that's the kind of stuff that teens are gonna laugh at, their parents might not, but you know. I will say that I've never had a teenager complain about language or dick jokes, I have had many parents complain and one time, a parent found my third book, which is about stand up comedy, in the public library. And she circled every single swear word or a reference to drugs. Posted it on Facebook, and it's just like, you know what, I am so sorry. Your child has heard all of these words before, I am not the one showing this to them for the first time. Your child watches Euphoria and Riverdale, like none of this is my fault, calm down. And also who writes in a library book? Like, Come on. I don't even mind her hating swearing. But she did it in pen too, if you do that to a library book, what's wrong with you?

Mindy:   Once again, if you hate that, then I didn't write this book for you and you are not my audience. You can be angry over there by yourself and go find someone that fits what you wanna read a little bit better. I don't want to read happily ever after romances. They piss me right the hell off because I've been divorced like twice. This projects an unrealistic view of monogamy.

Katie: You're not highlighting every kiss in the book, and returning it to the library. 

Mindy:   This is misleading people about the size of most men's penises as well. We should do that, we should just start a Facebook page where it's like things that are just so inoffensive, no one would have a problem with. Me, I got a problem with the size of dicks in romance books, because you know what, not the case. Danielle Steele really set me up to be disappointed that's all. Her and Jude Devereaux.

Katie: No one is still listening. This has been like five minutes of talking about dick jokes.

Mindy:   Alright, last thing, why don't you let listeners know where they can find you online and where they can find any of your books, but especially Gideon Green?

Katie: So you can find all four of my books, including Gideon Green in Black and White most places that books are sold. You can find me at my website, which is Katie Henry dot com. You can also find me on Twitter and Instagram. I have not yet gotten on TikTok, but you can find me on Twitter and Instagram.

Mindy: Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.