R.S. Mellette, Matt Sinclair & Elephant’s Bookshelf Press on Indie Authoring & Publishing

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 today with two guests, and if you recall from a former episode with MarcyKate Connolly, we talked about AgentQuery Connect, which was a forum that was very active 10, 15 years ago, where a group of us all met, came together, and all of us have achieved different forms of success in different arenas of publishing. Today I have Matt and Robert who have had success in the indie publishing arena. That is an arena that I dabble in as well, and I wanted to have them come on and talk because Robert is an author and then Matt runs his own publishing company. So if each of you would like to just begin by introducing yourself.

Matt: This is Matt Sinclair, I'm the president and Chief Elephant Officer of Elephant Bookshelf Press. The company I formed 10 years ago, last month, it was 2012, that was our first anthology and the first short story in that anthology was written by our wonderful host, Mindy.

Robert: And Robert Mellette. I write as R.S. Mellette. The books that I have published are through Elephant’s Bookshelf Press, so I'm very happy about independent publishing as none of my stuff tends to fit in the large commercial publishing world. I'm the author of Billy Bobble Makes a Magic Wand and Billy Bobble and the Witch Hunt, the newly out, Kiya and the Morian Treasure.

Mindy: I think you make a really good point about finding a place for books that aren't necessarily fitting inside those pre-approved niches that the traditional publishing industry likes to use to do their marketing. Robert, why don't you talk about that a little bit, like what you write and why you weren't necessarily finding any traction in the trad world?

Robert: It's really weird, the traditional publishing world because you really do have to thread a needle from miles away. It's so hard, but if you just look at Kiya and the Morian Treasure, it came about because I was working on Xena: Warrior Princess, and I was writing the Xena Scrolls for the website, which was basically a way of recapping the episodes, but with modern day characters arguing about the translations of these ancient scrolls So it was kind of fun and tried to get a publishing deal with Universal. Well, Universal Merchandising was fighting it out with Universal New Media about who would own this, and I lost the fight, no deal was made. So I moved the characters into outer space and that became Kiya and the Morian Treasure.

Now, as I was getting it published, I got an agent. I was going to the editors, this was a good book, but the editors would all come back saying – I love this, but it needs a boy character. What do they always say? The girls will read books about boys, but boys won't read books about girls.  That's the line and they will not change it. No, I think what you're saying is that girls will read action books, but boys won't read romances, 'cause that's kind of what I was getting out of it, and I wasn't sticking to my guns and being all - no, I will not change my work, it's my work! 

I tried, I tried to change it. It would fall apart, I'd put it back together. I tried so hard to meet their standards. It just wouldn't work. I kept getting back – I don't know what shelf it goes on. Middle grade or YA? Its science fiction- put it on the science fiction shelf. Where’s Hunger Games? It's a very frustrating battle, and I don't bequeath those editors. They all have to keep their jobs, they all have to put their kids through school, they've got their things to do, that's their job. But they very much need a Matt Sinclair and Elephant’s Bookshelf Press to relieve that pressure valve. Because I think the audience, they don't want another forced romance, they don't want another, Oh, what boy will she choose book? They want something fresh and something new, and you need Matt to do that.

Mindy: You're right, tat old school mentality that is really entrenched, that won't budge, and there is a feeling that boys don't read books either number one, written by a women or featuring girls as characters. I'm here to tell you that's simply not true. I think trade publishing still believes it, but a lot of my readership is male. My publisher does a very good job of number one, trusting me. Number two, putting gender-neutral covers on my books. Anyone can carry around my book and read it, a boy doesn't have to feel like he's carrying around a girl book. But you're right, there are those... I don't know what shelf it goes on, that's the primary consideration, you're right. They wanna sell books, they've gotta know where they're gonna put it in the bookstore, and if it doesn't fit nicely somewhere that is a roadblock for your book. It is unfair from the creative side, but from the business side of it, it is a consideration. Matt, do you wanna talk about how the indie world can help alleviate that?

Matt: I would also say that they're not wrong. It is hard to identify which shelves books should belong to. I wish Billy Bobble, which is a really great story, I wish I had a better place to put it in terms of shelf myself. The difference is, the vast majority of what we do with Elephant’s Bookshelf Press is sell books online. And so it's a different type of shelving situation, you had Dave Chesson from Kindleprenur on recently. Quite honestly, he saved Elephant’s Bookshelf Press without him knowing it. What was then called KDP Rocket came out, it helped me better identify categories for these books, and I'm still experimenting on every single book. Like I said, we've had 10 years of publishing now, and I recently changed categories on books that I published eight or nine years ago, because there's still ways of getting these books out in front of people. There are some wonderful short stories, and short stories are a hard sell to begin with, but there are wonderful short stories that have barely gotten any readership yet, because I'm still trying to figure out what exactly is the best way to get those books in front of the right readers. 

To Robert’s point and to your point, I publish what I love, and the advantage is I have a small little publishing company, and I can choose books that might be difficult to place on the shelf. It might be difficult to market, but I really enjoyed them. I'm literally reading Kiya to my kids at bedtime right now. It is a real issue. I'm glad that I'm fitting a niche, as Robert and Mindy are saying, but I would also like to sell more copies of these wonderful books. My chief objective right now is to find more ways of getting these wonderful books in front of the readers that want them and deserve them. 

Mindy: And that is the trick when you are an Indie, because I write underneath a pen name as you know, and I think that the pall that kind of hung over self-publishing and Indie publishing for a long time has gone away. There is a lot of really good stuff out there, equally as good and some of it, if not better, then trad stuff that I come across. But the problem becomes visibility and marketing. So Robert, if you wanna talk about how that comes into play for the author on the author’s side of marketing. When you're an Indie author, what are some of the things that you have found that will work on the Indie side, and what are some things that might work for trad and don't work for Indie?

Robert: It's all the stuff that everyone has said before, you know, if you're researching how to sell your book, you've heard everything I'm about to say. But I'm telling you it's true, you have to find your platform. I 'm lucky–lucky and I worked really hard. There’s still a huge Xena fan base out there. They're fantastic. So a while back, I started joining all their Facebook groups and just saying Hi. That's the other thing. You have to be honest, you're selling a book, you've gotta get in there and say, Hey, I'm selling my book. You can't get on there and go, Hey, I'm one of you guys! Unless you are. I'm actually a fan of the fans, so I get on and say things about that, and I've been posting on there for a while. In Hollywood, this isn't a big deal, I was a featured extra on Star Trek Enterprise, so I went on to the Star Trek Enterprise fan base on Facebook and said, Hey, I'm selling a book. And this was like a year ago, two years ago. I posted about being on Star Trek and people were like, Oh my God, you're a star! And it's like, no, I was just unemployed and I have a SAG card, so I signed up.So on Enterprise, I became a thing. 

Now, it was interesting, if I tried to post about my book on the Enterprise Facebook page, it would get rejected. So I would go to my initial posts that said, Hey, I'm here to sell my book, and I happen to have been on Enterprise, and I put notices in the comments, and that would push that up to the top and then people would be able to see what was going on in the comments. So there's little tricks like that. I did spend some money, I decided, you know, if I was a deep sea fisherman, that was my hobby, deep sea fishing, and I went out and bought a boat, everybody would be fine with that. That's your hobby. I went out and bought a boat, not expecting to make any money… maybe I could become a commercial deep sea fisherman, I don't know. I went out and spent quite a bit of money on a PR firm. That's actually going pretty good, but if you're hiring a PR firm - one, you are setting money on fire. You're just hoping somebody sees the freaking fire. Please see the smoke from the fire that I have set with his money.

Now, everybody complains, Well, I hired a PR firm, but I'm doing all the work. They're doing a lot of work too. Half of their job is to just get you to a place where you can do the work. I say it's like hiring a Sherpa, they're gonna carry a lot of stuff up the mountain with you, but you have to climb the mountain. That's helping a lot. And you just have to keep at it. It's a job. I get on Facebook, my wife's like, What are you doing? You're on Facebook. Well, I’m working.

Mindy: I'm working as a substitute, and I will be in the school and a kiddo can come to my desk, and they’ll be like uhhhh, you’re on Facebook. And it's like, I'm working. We're gonna do sustained silent reading for five hours, kids. I'm really curious about your experience with PR, because I think that you're right, people misunderstand what it is and what it's about and how it works. I think it's very similar to an agent because it's your agent's job to get you in front of the editors, but your work still has to sell itself. So I feel like with PR, it's their job to get you in front of people that can get you noticed, but then you have to produce the content or the video, or do the interview, or do whatever it is that's going to get attention.

Robert: That's exactly the case. You're also the one that's getting yourself in front of things, but you've got the PR back up. And that's the other nice thing about having the subtle difference between self-publishing and independent or small press publishing. Matt's a traditional publisher. He's a traditional publishing house, he's just a very, very small publishing house, he's not under one of the Big Five. So for me, it's kind of nice to be able to say, my publisher’s doing this, or my Publicist is doing that. Somebody just reached out, I think on Instagram, and was like, Hey, do you need to help promoting your book? I'm like, Sure, talk to my Publicist. I’m on Facebook working, and somebody said, Hey, I need a novelist to sit in on a panel at WonderCon. I message the guy and gave him my credentials, and he's like, Yeah, let's do that. He was another AgentQuery person. Two cool things happened. 

One is that I was at an artist booth, and I was telling them about the book and somebody standing next to me got this weird look on her face and said, I've heard of that. She had not been to the panel, we couldn't figure out how she heard of it, whether she heard of it because of me doing stuff, or whether she heard of it because of the PR doing stuff. I just love the fact that a complete stranger had heard about my book – so something's working. Also, I sat in on another panel and there was a guy from SciFi radio, and he said, if anybody's got an audio book, come up and talk to me. I just finished editing the audio book, which about killed me. And so I went up and I got myself a gig. A lot of writers would say, Well, my Publicist didn't get me that gig, I got that gig. Yeah, but when I emailed the guy, I’m gonna copy my publicist. And two, I had a killer press kit to send to him. I had back up. 

Matt: It gives you legitimacy. Someone else thinks that this is a quality book, this is a quality writer. So I think that has a lot to do with it as well. It's some of the legitimacy that you get when you have an agent. Yes, it's an extra level of security for anyone who books you. It's a good investment. 

Robert: That's the other thing too, is that just because you have the money to hire a publicist. I’m not rolling in it. No, I just had some money saved up. Just because you have the money doesn't mean a Publicist is gonna take you on. I got turned down by three or four different Publicists because they didn't do SciFi, they didn't have space. It's like getting an agent, they've gotta like your work.

Mindy: I have not taken that step of hiring an outside publicist yet, it's something that I considered multiple times for different books of mine. I've never been in a position where I've had the money that I could just be like, Yeah, I'm gonna spend it on this. And I've heard wonderful success stories from people that invested that money and did very, very well because of it, and then I've heard from people that really felt like they had just thrown their money down a black hole. So you've gotta do your research, you have to know that the people that you're giving your money to are going to be worth it, and that they've got those credentials themselves. But also like you're saying, you've got to be ready to do that work. It's them laying the groundwork for you to be able to prove yourself, you still have to show up, and prove yourself.

Robert: You work your behind off on PR, Mindy, so you're doing a lot of the work and you've done it for so long. You've got your own ground work. There really is a thing you have to figure out for each different platform.

Matt: And Mindy has established a brand as well. Whether she did that consciously,  I think her books are all consistent. They can be different genres, but they all sound like Mindy McGinnis. And that's very much to her credit. And that's how her publicity efforts appear to be too, and that's what we're trying to do with Robert's books. 

Robert: The other thing too, is you write so fast. Oh my God, you write faster than I can read. But also, I’m dyslexic. So, you know. 

Mindy: Yeah, I do write fast. What's interesting, 'cause you're just seeing the trad side. So it's like I write very fast, but then if you consider it- since 2018, under a pen name, I put out (with other writers... Let's be clear) With co-authors, I've put out about 20 books. I write very fast. It is a skill that I have built over time. It's partly because I was working full-time. I think I was probably five years into a trad career before I was able to say, I am gonna work from home. And it was still not an easy decision, it was a risky move, and I've been able to do it. For the longest time I was writing in stolen moments. I was writing in the doctor's office. I literally had my feet in the stirrups, getting my Pap last year with my laptop across my knees and they're like, Are you good? I'm like, I'm great. You do what you need to do. That's who I am and that's how I operate. So when I do have free time, I'm like, Well, I'm gonna write and I can write 3000-4000 words in about an hour and a half.

Robert: I hate you.  I hate you.  I hate you.

Matt: I'm basically the anti-Mindy. This is the first book we've published since the pandemic. A big part of that is because the majority of what I did for Elephant’s Bookshelf was at lunch time at my day job and on my commute to and from New York City. People ask, where is your office? I said, first car in New Jersey transit from the 609. That's where I did almost all my Elephant’s Bookshelf  work. And then on my 12-hour EMS shift, I would put in several hours twice a month, and that was how I'd get the advertising research done. Stolen moments is the right way to put it, you do what you can when you can, and to the best of your ability.

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Mindy: So tell me a little bit about getting started as an Indie, I know that you were just getting your feet underneath you, and that things were going pretty well, and then the pandemic hit.. So just tell us a little bit about EBP in general, how you built it and how it's going today.

Matt: Well, the two of you are part of the beginning of Elephant’s Bookshelf. It started with two other writers, Rob Grindstaff has been doing a good job of promoting his new books, also was part of my initial team looking at the short stories that became Spring Fevers. It started from AgentQuery Connect. We just shared some messages between myself and Rob and Cat Woods - ebook publishing is getting pretty hot, this is interesting, we should look into this, and let's all collect writers that we trust, basically have them write some short stories and let's see what we can do with it. And for years before that, I have been thinking about creating a magazine, like basically a literary journal, 'cause I work in the magazine world essentially. So the idea of just organizing it appealed to me and I said, Alright, I'll serve as the publisher, I know more about writing than I do about publishing. I don't think I actually said How hard could it be? 

Robert: Oh, the number of times I have said that about something.

Matt: From there to “how hard could it be” is something that emerged over time. I quickly realized that I had to spend a lot more time learning how to be a publisher, becoming a better editor and still trying to write as best I could. In terms of the fiction, personally, I don't wanna say I lost a decade, but I spent a lot less time writing than I would like, and I know that I'll get back to it, I have ideas that just don't leave my head. 5000 words here, 10000 words there. I know I will be able to complete them. The publishing journey is something that continually evolves, you're continually learning from every success and from every failure, and from every mistake. And I spent a lot of money just trying to get the right tools to get these books out in front of people. I think the best part is just learning, I enjoy learning.

Mindy: How did the pandemic affect the small publishing world? What has it been like? How did you have to shift?

Matt: When the pandemic struck, we had just had our first writer event, if you will. Basically, Valentine's week 2020. Four writers, myself included. promoting the last short story collection, Flight, which was science fiction. And Robert actually briefly contemplated flying in from California for it, which shocked the heck out of me, I'll tell you. I wasn't even asking him about it, as he lives in California, but we had a great time. We had a great response with the Q and A. I felt like we were really developing a readership, just right in front of my eyes there, and I could see where it was going, and one of the other writers, he and his wife and I went out after the event. Elephant’s Bookshelf is gonna really take off now, and then within a month, we had the pandemic taking away everything. As I said, it was difficult for me to find time to do things, to promote things, it made advertising more crucial. And we did okay, initially. You had more people with time to read, but reaching them was just as difficult, and then you couldn't go out and promote in the way that I was just starting to enjoy doing. It was hard, I suspect that's true for many other independent publishers, and probably some had greater success 'cause they had more time to concentrate differently.

Mindy: One of the things that you have to do to balance is of course, where you're putting your time. That's the biggest thing for me as a writer who also is self-published, the money that I'm putting into it is a question on the self-pub side, the time is a question on the trad pub side, but you kinda have to balance both of those things.

Matt: And you have to balance family. One of the things that I loved about the pandemic, and it sounds weird just to say that sentence, is I got a chance to coach my daughter Kathleen's soccer team. And that's the time I wouldn't have had if not for the global pandemic. That was valuable to me. You're absolutely right that it's a give and take in terms of time and where your priorities are at that point in time. I think that from a writer standpoint, there's probably stuff that will emerge from these two years that I can't even imagine right now. I've often wondered even before the pandemic, how is it that people forgot basically about the flu pandemic a little over a century ago? There's very little in writing in the novels of the time, I couldn't imagine that happening after this pandemic, we're seeing writing with The covid story as a key element already.

Robert: They did outlaw spittoons.

Matt: You can no longer spit on the sidewalk.

Mindy: You sure can where I live. And then I wanna say really quick, you talked a few times about your short story collections that EBP has, so I have a short story in each of the collections that is based on seasons. I always see The Fall, which is called The Fall: Tales From the Apocalypse. I'm looking at my Amazon author page right now. Your author page is listing like what's selling the best, Right? So right now, there's $1.99 Kindle deal on Heroine, so it's in front, followed by my book that tends to always sell the best no matter what. Then my two newest. Two that I did not expect to see sitting here – my fantasies are here, which is surprising. I've been doing a lot of school visits, so that's probably why. Even before one, two, three… in front of three of my trad pub books is The Fall: Tales From the Apocalypse, which is the short story collection from EBP. That one is always showing up for me, it seems to always be doing well, what do you credit that to?

Matt: Honestly, I think one of the big things that I would credit that to is, if you remember the final story in that collection was a short story written by a South African writer named Judy Krume. The story is very dark, it's basically about the South American shaman, the tribe is restless, if you will, and it's very graphic, and I remember I was thinking, Alright, don't put my story after that. I was like, You know what, no one will ever read my story, if I did that because people are not going to read past that story. So it became a quick decision as to where to put it. Judy sent a copy to one of the Good Reads groups and said, I think this would be an interesting book for you to review, somehow got them to make it their book of the month, and that was what got it, the initial bump. That's how I see it. That's 2012. We published that 10 years ago in the fall. I tried to publish it on the Mayan calendar end of the world, that was the pub date, and ironically enough, it was also when Hurricane Sandy wiped me out in New Jersey. We did a little bit of publicity right after that, calling attention to the fact that the publisher's home was knocked off the grid for two weeks, just as this book was going live. I had Jean Oram push this across, I went up to my first aid squad, which had a generator and sent her a quick email just saying, here's all the files. Can you finish this? It's already done, I just had to basically press Publish. And so she did that because she was the editor for that particular edition. Got a little bit of a bump from the Good Reads group. 

And then again, I mentioned KDP Rocket. I got good categories on that particular one, it's a post-apocalyptic story, as you alluded to earlier, Robert, it had a shelf, it was easy to publicize. Honestly, it was one of the reasons I chose to do science fiction for Flight. It's one of the reasons I chose to do urban fantasy, which actually the urban fantasy didn't really do well. The Horror collection has done okay at times, that is a cover issue, probably need to change that cover. The Fall has done very well, it's been very consistent, and I owe that basically to readers. that's what it comes down to, there's an audience for that type of story, that type of book.

Mindy: The last thing: where can listeners find you online? Where they can find Robert, your books online? And then Matt where people can find EBP and where they can find Kiya and the Morian Treasure, and if they're interested in submitting, where they can submit.

Robert: Best place to find me is on Facebook, RS Mellette. As far as where to get the book, you can get the book anywhere books are sold. So go down to your local independent book store and have a chat with them and have them order it. Bezos does not need to send another celebrity into space. He can, that's fine. I don't care, but I just assume that that local bookstore owner gets to feed their family.

Matt: And you can find Elephant’s Bookshelf Press at Elephant’s Bookshelf Press dot com. That's the primary place. You can also, if you're a writer and you're going to send something to be considered, you can send it to submissions@elephantsbookshelfpress.com. As Robert said, wherever fine books are sold. 

Robert: And even some so-so books. 

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.

MarcyKate Connolly On The Differences Between Promoting Middle Grade & Young Adult

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're here today with MarcyKate Connolly, who is the author of multiple middle grade and young adult novels. And one of the things that I think is really interesting, and I stress it a lot whenever I am talking to new writers and up and coming writers is networking, networking, networking. With that in mind, why don't you talk a little bit about how we met in the first place?

MarcyKate: We met back in the day on AgentQuery Connect, and that was such a great place to meet other writers before we both were published. There was a whole bunch of us, and almost all of us have been published at this point, maybe a handful having not been. We got to reach each other's books and give feedback, and for me it was extremely helpful 'cause I really never got critique on my books before. It was like my friends and mostly they were like, This is so great, I love this! Which is great, but not as great for actually improving your novel and your craft, but having other writers working through this and learning how to critique and take critique. You can give critique, and we all kind of did that together, which is really fun. It's a good networking opportunity just to meet other writers and commiserate as well, especially when we're querying, that was like an absolute necessity to have someone to be like, Oh my God, it's been so long that they've been reading these pages or I just get another rejection.

Mindy:       I'm not sure if the boards are functioning anymore, it is still a database and a site that people can go to to get information about agents and what they accept. When we were there... Man, it was a lovely place to connect, like you were saying, and you're so right, you have to be able to share with other writers because the feedback that you get from friends, usually it'll be nice, but even if it's not entirely nice, it is usually their opinions. And are subjective, I didn't like this character, or this part wasn't funny, or something that is an opinion that a reader can have, but they aren't gonna be able to tell you exactly why. Usually they aren't able to pinpoint the word choices, whatever it was that they have this reaction. Sometimes they don't know why. And a writer, number one, knows that likeability isn't necessarily the most important aspect of character, but also number two, they can say why. Or they can give you ideas about how to fix it. And it doesn't necessarily mean that you are always taking the advice of another writer, but you have that in your tool box, you have the opinion of another writer, and I think when we talk about critique partners, it absolutely has to be another writer, if you really wanna get something out of it.

And a lot of us, I know I, for example, live rurally, there simply aren't any writing critique groups where I live. Every single one of us, when we met on AQC was working full-time, if not working more than one job, we couldn't necessarily do a writer's Brunch or, let's get together at noon on Wednesday. We were getting online after we got home from work in the evening and talking to each other, and operating that way. 

MarcyKate: It would have been nice to get together for brunch though, that would be awesome. But that was actually one of the best things about it really was members were from all over the country, so you wouldn't have met otherwise if you had a local group.

Mindy:       Absolutely, having that online access to so many people, I really don't think that I would have gotten an agent if I hadn't joined AQC because we were hard on each other, we made each other's queries improve, we were not hand-holding. I learned everything that I know about the industry from that site, there is no doubt in my mind, and people that were a little bit farther ahead of us, - like Sophie Perinot and she's also writing under the name Evie Hawtrey now, too. We were all operating under screen names at the time. Except for you, you actually had your real name out there. That was really cool, because some of us really did just know each other by our screen names. Interestingly enough, moving through the world now, I have run into people in the publishing industry that were on AQC at one point or another, and I'll share my screen name and they'll be like, Oh my gosh, that was you! That was me. 

MarcyKate: That's awesome. 

Mindy:       I'm sure that there are still sites like that now, I feel like I have no need for such a thing at this point, so I've moved away from that or even being aware of what's functioning, but I can say for sure that Query Tracker is always a reliable resource. Are there any others that you know of right now that we can point people towards? 

MarcyKate: Not off-hand. And the ones that I always use were AgentQuery dot com to track agents and Query Tracker  a combination of the two. Those are my go-tos. That's really what I used a lot.

Mindy:       And I think things have changed now where people are using Slack and Facebook groups and even Reddit subgroups. When I think about it, that was like 14, 15 years ago. The dynamic is still the same, that you can go online and you can meet these people and they're going to help you. So for example, there were two people in general that were really, really helpful to me, one of them who's actually gonna be a guest here on my next episode, who works in LA and is in the film industry, and so had different arenas, different ways to approach things, new areas of that angle of the business, but also kind of that more like slick LA style. Whereas Sophie Perinot who was operating there underneath a screen name who had an agent and was writing in a different arena, she was writing Adult Historical Fiction, but she was a rung up above the rest of us and was still hanging out every day and helping and so professional. She's just like, professional to a T.  She’d be like, This is how you interact with an agent, and this is the best practice. She knew best practices and etiquette.

MarcyKate: She was amazing. It was kind of a shock, I think, sometimes to some people who are brand new, and I think it always is, when they start to learn about what an agent is, how you get an agent, what they actually do. She was just full of information, which was really helpful to have that resource there. 

Mindy:       Like I said, when I moved through the industry now, some of the people that I run into are people that were on the boards and moving in the background, but also present, and we're just industry movers and shakers that were there. Being present and just even absorbing knowledge I probably lurked for five or six months before I had the nerve to post even just doing that, just lurking and just absorbing that information, I learned so much.

MarcyKate: I think I did a lot of lurking too. I don't remember exactly how long I lurked. Posting publicly is nerve wracking, you don't know what kind of feedback you're dealing with yet, 'cause you don't know the people.

 Mindy:           Well, that's part of what I did too, was I was just reading and listening and paying attention and seeing who was posting often, who was being helpful, who had the type of mindset that I wanted to interact with, that kind of thing.

MarcyKate: It was wonderful and I miss it. I think so fondly on those days, I miss it. It was really fun, especially during the pandemic too, where it's been very isolating. It was fun times, especially when we had the chat room. That was fun. 

Mindy:     Monday nights. Yeah, well, and it was my go-to when I got on the internet, it was like a Hotmail, and then AQC. That was my home.

MarcyKate: Same.

Mindy:     It built me. And then that's how I learned. You were just talking about the sheer number of people, and most of us are traditionally published now. In different arenas, but then also we have fellows who have gone on to start their own indie publishing company, there's a lot of different areas of success that I've seen. Jean Oram, who was the super moderator for a long time, I see her all the time moving in the Romance Indie world

MarcyKate:  Yeah she always has something going on.

Mindy:     It's different areas of success for everybody. And like I said, I think that's kind of unique. I think our success level, the percentage is higher than was to be expected.

MarcyKate:   I think so too. We became friends, there was that morale boost as well, we're obviously not pulling punches on critiquing our work. But to bounce ideas off, vent to, that I think really helped. That was helpful for me, and keeping me going and not being like another rejection - I'm done. That camaraderie really helped keep us going, at least it did for me.

Mindy:     I’d be like - So I got another rejection today, and then somebody is like, Well, I got my 300th rejection.

MarcyKate:   Perspective. 

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Mindy:     So I wanna talk about writing. Because you write both middle grade and YA with quite a bit of success.

MarcyKate:   I like to think so. I hope so. I started writing young adult books and then kinda fell into middle grade, then eventually my seventh book that was published was a young adult, so I took a lot to actually get published in young adult. I started writing my first published work Monstrous, I wrote it as a young adult. My agent took me on with it as young adult, and then we pushed to editors and my editor who ending up buying it was like, I wanna buy this as middle grade. Which kinda had us scratching our heads for a little bit, then we had a conversation with her, and it was really illuminating that the book really was middle grade, and I hadn't realized it was middle grade, except for this one part. And the last part of the book that we had to age down then it was middle grade. I kind of fell into it, but I love middle grade. It's a great age to be writing for, and I know for me when I was actually a middle grader, reading was just such a formative thing, it was so necessary. It was my escape. It was so important to me, so it's pretty cool writing for that age. It was also very important to me as a young adult, so I was excited to have some Young adult out there as well. So I actually write more young adult books and middle grade only they’re just still trying to get them out there published.

Mindy:     Yeah, young adult is super competitive. There's no doubt. I think the middle grade is actually edging that way too. Personally, I could never write it, it isn't my arena, it isn't my content, it isn't my subject matter, it isn't my age category, there's no world where I'm a middle grade writer.

MarcyKate:  Never say never, Mindy.

Mindy:     Can you imagine? It would be so bad.

MarcyKate:    I would love to read it.

Mindy:     I can do fart jokes. 

MarcyKate:   Yes! You’re funny! Like you are so funny, even though your books are dark, you could totally leverage your comedy skills in middle grade. This is an opportunity. You should absolutely do this.

Mindy:     Can you write a whole book about farts? 

MarcyKate:   You could try.

Mindy:     I don't know. farts are funny. That's true. Okay, ‘llI hang that on a peg in the back of my mind - write a Middle Grade fart book. This is one place where I hit the skids pretty hard when it comes to middle grade, and I was actually having a conversation in my last episode with Fred Koehler, he is an illustrator and a writer that lives in Florida, and he was saying... Especially during the pandemic, he's never interacting with his audience when he does a Zoom. You don't have 10-year-olds aren't excited about sitting down and meeting the writer on the computer, it's just not that interesting to them, the impact isn't there, and I think it's a really interesting dichotomy, because I know that for middle grade writers and children's writers, they can get into a school and they can absolutely mop it up and they can do amazing amount of sales and an amazing amount of work in one day going into a school visit. Teens are a harder sell. But I think that the online side of marketing and promotion for middle grade has to be super tricky, I assume that you're aiming it at the adults in their lives?

MarcyKate:    Exactly, it's definitely different from YA. You’re marketing to the gatekeepers. They're not buying their own books, people are buying them for them, and so you have to be able to find those people and make them sit up and take interest. So that means there's a lot of reaching out to libraries and teachers, getting reviewed in the School Library Journal and Kirkus and places like that, where they're looking for things and where they're tuned in. That's actually pretty important just to get that awareness out there that your book exists, 'cause they're not necessarily browsing the shelves at Barnes and Noble or looking on Amazon for books, they're looking at other places. And I've been very fortunate that my publisher, most of my middle grade books are with Sourcebooks, and they're fantastic. They have this wonderful school and library marketing team, and they've been really great at getting my books out there. Things like getting your book in Junior Library Guild Selection also really helps, 'cause they are buying those as packages. I've been very fortunate that I think most of my books have been JLG selections, which is awesome. It's definitely a very different animal than with a young adult, 'cause young adult, you can actually reach the teens 'cause they are more online, and there's still obviously a lot of adults reading young adult books as well, but you can access them more directly.

I actually had four books launched during the pandemic, so four, two duologies. As you can imagine, they have not done as well as we would have liked, which is unfortunate. The first book, it was like right as the pandemic was starting, so I launched that one in person, that worked out fine, but then the second, third and fourth books were all during the pandemic, and for the fourth book, I didn't even do a virtual launch party. Because the first one was my first YA novel, Twin Daggers, and we had four people show up, and I think I know all but one of them. Then for the second one, no one showed up, it was just me and the two people from the bookstore. So we were hanging out on Zoom, which was fun. It was great, we chatted for like an hour, and actually the one person who I know did show up briefly for a little bit of time, but her microphone was having issues, so she really didn’t get to talk, which is too bad.

I kinda switched gears for the fourth book that came out, which was Lost Island, which was a sequel to Hollow Dolls, which is the first book that came out during the pandemic times. We did this pre-order incentive through my local bookstore Porter Square Books, that if you order it through them, you get some swag. It’s definitely Been much more difficult to get people engaged, generally speaking, during the pandemic. At least that's what I found, and it's also been more like emotionally taxing to be engaging yourself or putting yourself out there, the whole situation is very demoralizing and there's burn out on a personal level that just makes doing anything hard, and I was pregnant for most of it as well, so that didn’t help.

Mindy:     I have felt the same way. Be Not Far From Me came out, I was on tour, and I came home and we were on shutdown, and we haven't really done a whole lot since. I do think that people are burned out, and I think that they're done with virtual. And I think that at the beginning of the pandemic, everybody was like, We're gonna make the best of this. And it was kind of a new and novel experience, and then it was like, This is bullshit. I've done things with festivals where it'll be like four or five authors and we'll have maybe 17, 18 people show up and that's not bad, really. I just did a Zoom this past weekend that was supposed to be for the release of The Last Laugh back in March, and then it just didn't happen for various reasons, and we had to reschedule for here in May. It was me and Maureen Johnson, who is a big freaking deal, and we had nine people show up. She was totally cool, she was absolutely wonderful. I was like, I am so sorry that there were only nine people, and she was like, Oh, it's fine, I don't care at all, I don't mind. This is the job, and I was like, Thank you, I really appreciate that. I've been handing out her books to kids for 20 years, I was just like, Oh my God, this is embarrassing. Yeah, nine showed up.

MarcyKate:     I think every author can pretty much understand, unless like they're super famous and it's gone to their head, they forget.

Mindy:     I don't think I will ever forget because I am 12 books in. I had one actual bookstore signing for release week, the rest were all library events in school events, and for the library events they were bussing in kids and school events, and so it was captive audience type of stuff, and they were supremely successful. But again, attendance is mandatory. Right. And man, I was feeling good because things were going well, and I was just like, Oh my gosh, if I spoke to 300 kids about 150 bought a book. I could get with my audience, man, I was high on life, and I was telling my boyfriend - I don't know if it's because people are so excited to be able to go out and do things now, I don't know if people are just excited and appreciating life more, or if I'm doing better, if I'm more well-known, or if I'm just selling better, I was like, But I don't know, I’m killing it. Things are really working. Things are going good, right? And then I had a bookstore signing just me, and it was a drop-in thing on a Saturday afternoon, and I had one person show up. I sat there for two hours and one person showed up, and then this past weekend did a signing with Natalie Richards, who is a fellow Ohio author, she's a Sourcebooks, author.

MarcyKate:   We share an agent, actually.

Mindy:     And she's like,  super famous. NYT. And she and I did a signing together this past weekend, literally zero people.

MarcyKate:    That's hard. You're so hit or miss. Sometimes you'll have a ton of people. Other times like absolute crickets, it's so hit or miss.

Mindy:     I think it's good to be humbled, but I don’t want to be humbled all the time. That’s  why I think that for middle grade and ya authors - school visits. School visit. School visits.

MarcyKate:    Yeah, if you can get them. Those are definitely the best. I found it has been more difficult during the pandemic to get those. There's so much going on in schools and they're like, at first they were so concerned about how are we going to do testing? And that was a real big challenge initially, but since then I've done a few online ones which have been decently well-received, but it's not as, definitely not the same as going in person and having a book there to sign for the kids and handing them a physical copy like that. That's definitely a different dynamic. That's for sure.

Mindy:     Yeah, I've just now, in the past two months, started getting these school visits again, it's been really nice and the energy is there and everything about it. They feed me, I feed them and it all feels really good. I don't get that over-Zoom. I don't feel it. I don't think the energy exchange is there.

MarcyKate:    There's nothing like being in person, and been talking to actual kids, that's just the best talking to kids about books.

Mindy:     I love talking to kids. It’s my favorite.

MarcyKate:    And it's even more fun when they've read your book and they love it, and they're like, I want to hear about this character. And are you gonna write a book about this? Or are gonna do this?

Mindy:     Yeah, it's why I write. It's not the only reason. Really, a paycheck is nice. But just because of the nature of what I write, it reaches some kids that otherwise aren't going to be reached by books and usually by the content, I get a lot of rougher kids and they're the kids that need to have some sort of escape or something to do in their lives that is healthy and man, it's like if you're able to reach them, God, that's everything.

MarcyKate:   That's amazing, absolutely.

Mindy:    I will say, I wanna go back real quick to the Zoom question. Being extraordinarily famous does make a huge difference, I was in a Zoom with R L. Stine, and we had like 325 people. 

MarcyKate:   That's amazing.  

Mindy: It was like me, R L. Stine and I think two other authors, 'cause R L. Stine’s actually from Ohio, originally. And so it was an Ohio-based thing. Have you ever met him? 

MarcyKate:   I have not.

Mindy: Oh, okay, so because he is originally from Ohio, I've actually crossed paths with him multiple times and, oh my gosh, he's so kind. 

MarcyKate:   These are the circles you’re moving in. With RL Stine. That's so cool. 

Mindy: I have occasionally been in the same room as RL Stine, let's put it that way. But he's very kind, and when you hit RL Stine levels, it doesn't matter. You get 300 people in the Zoom.

MarcyKate:   I think it's harder for people who are like midlist or new authors, and just being on sub in the pandemic has been very strange too.

Mindy: I’ve heard that from other people. Is it just like long wait lines?

MarcyKate:   Everybody is so burned out, I mean, especially editors, they're trying to push these published books. It’s hard, it's 10 times harder than it was, and then trying to read and get new submissions, it's just... It seems like it's so much more difficult. And I've been on sub with one book for a year and a half, and we just sold it like two weeks ago. And then I have another book that's been on sub for  a year now, a picture book. We'll see if that ever happens. It’s my weirdly dark picture book for baby Goths. It's actually Poe inspired. I'm not complaining by any means. I totally understand I've been burned out too, so I think it's just kind of this mass burn out. 

Mindy: I've been hitting it pretty hard myself. It's a beautiful day today, and I'm doing this interview with you and I've got people coming on next, and then I am going outside for the rest of the day because it's like, I can't sit in front of my laptop anymore. 

MarcyKate:  Nice, nice. I  have to sit in front my laptop 'cause I have to work, but that's okay

Mindy: Oh I have to work. I'm just not doing it.

MarcyKate:   Good for you, that's awesome.

Mindy: Last thing, why don't you let listeners know where they can find you online and where they can find your books?

MarcyKate:   You can find me online at Marcy Kate dot com, if you can spell my name, you can find me... It's M-A-R-C-Y K-A-T-E dot com. All my books are listed there along with buy links. You can get my books from Bookshop dot org, from your local bookstore, or you can also get them on Amazon, Barnes and Noble. Pretty much anywhere. If you contact me through my website, you can request a bookmark and I'd be happy to send them to you. I hope people like to read my books, I write weird, dark children's books and middle grade. That's kind of my brand. 

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.

Fred Koehler On Experience, Inspiration and the Outdoors

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 Fred Koehler, who, apart from being an author himself and having quite a life full of misadventures and inspiration, also has a development program called Ready Chapter 1, for writers, and he also helps brands across the US tell their own story and runs a design studio, just a lot of different elements at work here with this guest to dive into and talk about different elements of writing and publishing and especially marketing. So let's start by you telling us a little bit about your life and just the various elements of your life that the rest of us probably haven't experienced.

Fred: I’m kind of woodsy, and I think I used to say the word redneck, but I don't know if that's derogatory or not anymore. My dad was an outdoorsman and we spent a lot of time camping and fishing, and I never got into the hunting or anything like that, but riding my bike barefoot and wading in the lakes and rivers, and there were alligators and all kinds of stuff creeping all around us, we didn't know. We were just kids. We were just kids growing up. When that kind of turned into me being an artist, I felt like that was a voice that I could pull from because not a lot of people had those kinds of experiences or not that I've encountered in the publishing industry have had those experiences, so... It's a neat perspective to be able to bring, and I know it's one that you've had as well.

Mindy: I grew up... Woodsy is a great way to put it. I'm still Woodsy, I live in the middle of nowhere. I'm in Ohio, so we don't have anything out here in nature that can kill us, no alligators or anything like that, but when I think about the things that I did as a child growing up there were just so stupid. Near death, most of the time. I thought I was having fun and I was, I was having a great time. I really love that, and I love that naivete of childhood where we're not worried all the time, we're just having fun, it's a beautiful thing.

Fred: That's an experience that is incredible to be able to put that energy and that curiosity and that imagination into books and into stories. But also I feel like it's part of our bigger mission is to create a world where kids still get to have that, or they still get to be kids. I wanna simultaneously live out my childhood throughout my entire life, but I also wanna create safe spaces for kids to have those same opportunities.

Mindy: Yeah, absolutely. Have you read The Last Child in the Woods?

Fred: No. That sounds good though.

Mindy: It's fascinating, it's called The Last Child in the Woods, and it's just about children growing up with absolutely no contact with nature, there's a certain unhappiness that can be tied to it. I know that whenever I'm not doing well, like mentally or whatever, it's like you gotta go outside, man.

Fred: Exactly, I'm in Central Florida, so I'm about 50 minutes, less than an hour from Tampa, a couple of hours to the East Coast. And we love both coasts, but if I can get my toes in the salt water, and I still do this today, I free dive and I Spearfish, and kayaking, and I go to the springs.

Mindy: So I'm from the Midwest, we hike all over the Midwest, and we found a spot in Kentucky that it's like an unofficial jump off the cliff into the water spot.

Fred: Oh my gosh, yes.

Mindy: We were participating in that and there weren't many people around and getting up that nerve to do something like that, of course, and then being like, That was awesome, I'm gonna do it again. And it's like re-capturing that feeling, 'cause you know I'm in my 40s and I'm like, I'm gonna jump off this cliff and I'm gonna see what happens. I was kind of like, Oh, I remember this, I remember this feeling.

Fred: Isn't that what we have to do? Screw up our courage? If you wanna put your work out there into the world, and I bet you have a lot of listeners who are breaking into the publishing industry and it's such a scary thing to be like, Okay, this story that I wrote, this thing that's so personal and so dear to my heart, if I put it out there into the world, what if something goes wrong? What if I don't hit the water? What if I belly-flop? I mean, there's so many analogies you could make.

Mindy: Oh yes. What if something goes wrong is basically how I think a lot of people live, which is fine, and they'll live a long time, and probably be healthier. I am a risk taker. There's no doubt. And it does hurt though. You can get hurt. This is a really good point. I was querying for 10 years, this was before, because before you couldn’t query with emails, we were doing self-addressed stamped envelopes. But it hurt. Every time you grow a callous, but man, rejections are still rejections, and I think that it's scary to take that stuff where you're trying to find an agent. But I actually do think that it is almost scarier that first time you're sharing something you wrote with someone, man, there's a vulnerability there, like you're saying it is like throwing yourself off that cliff or swimming with the crocodiles in Florida.

Fred: It’s alligators in Florida.

Mindy: I’m just very Midwest over here. We don’t have things that can kill us. I don’t know what yours are called.

Fred: I'm more afraid of the alligators that I am the sharks, they're all just trying to live their lives and be who they are, but you have to remember they are also wild animals with big pointy teeth. But they all hurt, When they clamp down.

Mindy: Yes, they do. Tell my listeners a little bit about your development program and your training program, which is called Ready Chapter 1.

Fred: This is literally a thing that happened because of covid, so much happened because of covid. I had a local writers group, when you're a writer, you wanna hang out with other writers, those are your people, that's your tribe. That's where you feel the least insane is when you're around people who think and act and have the same sort of vision and hopes as you do. So we were getting together with this writer's group, and people were coming from all over Central Florida just to meet and hang out and read some pages and talk about where they wanted to go with their writing and their creativity. And then covid happens, and it's like, Well, we can't meet any more. I wasn't ready to accept that as an ending to where I was seeing all of these folks elevate their craft. So I thought to myself, Well, you know what, if we use the same technology that I have to use for all the boring meetings that I go to for work, what if we could figure out a way to sort of bring that learning and that craft development into the virtual world? I basically invited nine of my friends who are extremely successful, either agents or editors or best-selling authors, and I was like, Will you guys each come and teach a class for me, and let's not just teach a class, let's make them consecutive.

So let's take the 10 most important elements of storytelling and teach them in the order you would need to know them to write a really, really good story. And lo and behold, they were like, sure I'll teach that class for you, and so now we've got... We're building and it's still in progress, but we've got a cohort of about 60 students who are going through this process where literally we've taken them from the idea, from the very concept of their story, and we're gonna end with a completed story and a query package that they're gonna be able to take out and submit their work out into the world. 

Mindy: Nice. A lot of people need that encouragement right from the beginning, because I know that when I was doing this, everything was kind of hush-hush and magical and behind closed doors, and you had to go to the book store and buy the Writer's Market guide to literary agents for that year. It blows my mind when I look around and I look at sites like yours, I'm just like, Oh my gosh, I feel like so much has been demystified, those barriers are coming down, the barriers to entry, but also just the barriers to knowledge, because I feel like the knowledge was very guarded for a long time.

Fred: Yeah, and I absolutely agree with that. And I spent 10 years wandering the deserts of publishing trying to figure stuff out, and I don't want other people to have that experience, and I just wanted the answers, I just wanted the information and I was willing to put in the work. Those are the types of folks who I feel are gonna be successful, so if you're listening to this and you are the type of person who's willing to put in the work, and you're hungry to elevate your craft and you're hungry to elevate your network... My guess is you are the type of person who's gonna be successful sooner in publishing than the folks who are looking for somebody to just hand them the answers.

Mindy: Absolutely. I had a conversation with my mother this past weekend because I was keynoting a festival, and they had asked me to speak about Why I Write the things that I write, 'cause I write dark stuff, I write for teens, but I write very dark, gray moral areas and things like that, it's what I like to explore. The people who are organizing it said, Hey, why don't you make your keynote about why do you write these things? Why do you like those things? I don't know, it's just who I am. And went over to my mom's and I just open up the old family scrapbooks to find pictures of families together on family outings and everybody's having fun, and then there's me, and I am clearly miserable and very unhappy. I'm in my head right now, I'm not having fun at the water park, everyone around us could drown... That's what I'm thinking about. I'm thinking about falling off this high slide and dying, I'm in a worst case scenario I'm four, And I'm like, We all die here. So yeah, I was a fun kid. Once I was in that mode, I was just like, I wasn't leaving it, it's like you're not going to convince me that I'm having fun.

I'm not having fun. I'm legitimately scared. I think I'm gonna die. The rest of you are naive to think that this is fun, I was a pretty unbearable child. And my mom would get so upset and she would be like, Mindy, you're so stubborn once you're thinking anything or you're convinced of something, you don't let it go. It doesn't matter. All evidence to the contrary. You're not gonna let it go. You're stubborn, and my grandmother told her, she's not stubborn, she's determined, and that is going to be a wonderful quality for her to have. And my mother was telling me this story in the car this weekend, and I was like, You know, if I wasn't determined, there's no way I would make it in publishing. There's no way. The only reason I'm good at what I'm good at is because I don't quit.

Fred: Exactly, exactly. And it's so interesting that you brought that up. My day job is in animations, I work for an animation studio as a writer. They made me do a personality profile before they would hire me. I was the only person in the entire hundred person organization who was 100% Green, and basically what it meant was that my super power was determination, but there was also a flip side of that, and when you flip the thing over the Achilles heel is stubbornness. And so I think there are two sides of the same coin, and it's literally like, how you are when you're at your best and how you respond when you're at your worst. So that's something for both of us to keep in mind is that when we're highly stressed out we will be stubborn.

Mindy: Oh yes, absolutely. And you will not move me, even if I know I'm wrong, I will argue to explain how I know that I'm wrong, but I'm still not budging.

Fred: Okay, so give me an example of how that has served you in publishing.

Mindy: Just that length of time, those 10 years of querying, you are being rejected for 10 years. You're having someone say, No, you're not good enough. No, this doesn't work. No, no, no, no, we don't want you. Right? For 10 years. And instead of absorbing that as, you really aren't good enough, you really can't make this... You can't do this. So this is where I was determined, but not stubborn. I think if you're stubborn, you're thinking - screw you... You're missing out. No, I was determined to absorb that feeling and get better because I needed to. I was rejected for 10 years for good reason - I was not good enough. I had to write four more books before I was good enough, but I was determined to get better and to do it, and to break in, there was an edge to it of, Yes, I will make this, I will get in here. This is the only thing I've wanted to do with my entire life, this was my life’s goal from a very young age. This is what I wanted. Like you, I had No connections. I’m a Farmer's Daughter from Ohio. I'm doing this on my own. Not only do I have to climb this ladder on my own, I have to make the ladder.

All of it is on me. I did it because I wasn't going to quit. And I do dislike in many ways, when people say, Never quit, don't quit. I do think it is okay to quit for a small period of time because you can't hit your head against a brick wall ‘til the point where you have a concussion and keep going. You have to stop, let the concussion heal and then come back to the brick wall and start hitting your head against it again.

Fred: I like that analogy, and then I probably have some scars on my forehead from that process, I think we all do. You're exactly right. Those are the folks who are gonna find success, I love to meet people like that through the program, those are the people that I've been able to give scholarships to. I didn't wanna make cost a barrier to anybody to participate, so it's like... Just write me a note and tell me how excited you are about your career and how passionate you are and what you think, and how you think you can change the world by becoming a better storyteller. And literally, I gave so many people a free ride to this program because I could see myself reflected in them. I wanna root for every single person who feels that way, it feels like you just described.

I wanna talk about writing. It's so refreshing just to get to talk to another writer and hear their stories and hear their struggles. Have you seen the effects, fallout from the pandemic in the industry? 'cause I feel like I have everywhere.

Mindy: So the most obvious right now, which is a real thorn in my side, is the paper shortage. It's bad.

Fred: Printing fewer books?

Mindy: Printing fewer books and literally running out of them. So I had a book come out in March and my new releases are fine, so... That's great, but I don't give up on my back list. I have, I think, 12 books out now, and when I travel, I promote all of them. I will speak primarily about my newest books, and then I'm like, and these are my other books, because I wrote them, I don't care if they came out 10 years ago, they still matter to me and I'm still promoting them. So I would be promoting books and people literally can't get them. I was at a school visit, and in some ways it was on the school... 'cause two weeks before my visit, they said, Hey, we wanna buy a copy of your book for every single seventh grader... That's amazing. Of course, I will sign them. And then they got back to me and they were like, Hey, we can't get them. They don't exist, and I got a hold of my publisher, And they don't have 350 Copies of that, and we can't get them printed, we can't make that happen.

Fred: All the frustrating things about the industry, which again goes back to that whole thing about determination, stubbornness. I found during the pandemic that everything I sent out for querying just kind of felt like it disappeared into the ether, what used to be a week turned into months and then a lot of times… crickets. I was just like, Oh well, maybe my work isn't good enough anymore, maybe they don't wanna publish my books anymore. Come to find out that's not necessarily true, it's just like it feels like the industry has done a reset and it's on us to figure out what these shifts are and how we need to adjust and pivot just to be able to be successful.

Mindy: Yeah, I agree with that. I have found that because I write for teenagers, I have to be in front of them. They aren't showing up to Zooms, they don't care. And it is an interesting facet of being a young adult author, people outside of teens think of them as always being on their phones, they're always on their phones, they're always on the computer, they're always looking at a screen. And that's true for certain areas, if they're gonna do homework, they want a computer, they want a phone, if they're gonna obviously social media and texting their friends, all that stuff, it's phone, phone, phone. But what's really interesting is when it's not - they're out. They don't read ebooks. Teenagers do not read  ebooks, they want physical books. And it's true about interacting with authors. When I do anything online, it's adults that show up. I don't get kids. When I have people in my social media feeds, 95% of the time, it's adults. The kids want a person in front of them. And I think that's super refreshing, but that is something I always believed, and then I learned it very, very strongly in the pandemic. Because I would do virtual events anything, anybody wanted - Yes, of course, I'll do it. And three people show up. I'm starting to go back out on tour and things like that, and of course it's a school, so it's a captive audience, but I'll have 300 kids in an auditorium and at least half of them come up to buy books or to talk or to get a selfie. So yeah, for me, it was a really big re-understanding of something that I already knew that the teen audience wants to interact with you in a legitimate way, they don't want that screen in between you and them.

Fred: Yeah, it makes such good sense. So my books are middle grade and picture books, I experience those kids even less through any sort of digital way, if it's not an in-person event. They're not gonna sit on mom and dad's lap to show a Zoom. I haven't done a school visit since the pandemic, all my author friends like they're starting to get back out into the world. I know it's gonna get better, I know we're gonna come out of this, but I feel like as writers who have to promote. Sometimes you have on your introvert hat, you get to be the introverted person sitting in the corner of the coffee shop, writing the story. And sometimes you have where you’re a promoter and where you're out in the world talking about your books, that shift is gonna shake up the industry a little bit as we come out of the pandemic.

Mindy: The introvert extrovert hat is a real thing, and I can very, very powerfully be both, and I enjoy that dichotomy about myself. When I do school visits, I'm always trying to be partially just entertaining, you know what that's like. It's like you have to keep their attention. Selling me and selling the books are two different things, right? But if I can sell myself to you, then you'll buy the books. 

Fred: What advice can we give to your listeners that help point them along their journey, and you've done enough of these that you've probably got stuff that you say over and over again. So what do you say over and over again? What do you wanna underscore for your listeners

Mindy: If you wanna be a writer, you have to be a reader. You must read. Having classes and things like yours available are absolutely amazing. I didn't have access to any of that. I learned how to write entirely by reading, I grew up in a not artsy place, I never had a single instructional moment of writing my entire life, I learned to write by reading, and that's what I tell people like If you can't write... For whatever reason, if it's not there today, if you're hurting, whatever is going on, if you can't write, be reading.

Fred: I love that advice. That's so good. Well, I think what I'll add to that is get out there into the world and having the experiences. For both of us, as outdoorsy people, it's second nature to be away from the civilized world. It's also the way that I get story ideas is by going out and having really dumb adventures. Think of the things that you want to know how to do, that have always sounded exciting and interesting to you, and then just give yourself permission to go try it. Whatever it is, whether it's sky diving or hiking or Botany... I don't know, but whatever it is, just by going through that experience you'll have the memories and then sort of the physical recall to put into the details of your story, and it's gonna make it that much stronger.

Mindy: My last three books exist because I go outside and I had a single moment, an event, a thing that happened, there was a seed that grew into a novel. And if I was the person that sat inside and tried to come up with ideas, was an idea generator, those books wouldn't exist

Fred: Since we were talking about Ready Chapter 1, I will give you a coupon code or your listeners, anything that's gonna help them get themselves going and get them motivated, it would be a pleasure to just introduce them that way into the program.

Mindy: That's awesome, well, thank you so much. Last thing, why don't you let listeners know where they can find you online, but also your books and where they can find your program, Ready Chapter 1?

Fred: Let's start with a book. So I used to be able to say, anywhere books are sold, and it seems like that's harder to get onto the bookstore shelves these days in the physical store. So a lot of them are through online retailers, and I always suggest that you support your local indie book store. My best known books are probably Garbage Island, which is a middle grade novel about animals stuck on the Great Pacific garbage patch. And then One Day, The End which is a picture book about the adventures a little girl has just in her own backyard, and then the way she tells that story of her experiences. My personal website is I like Fred dot com and that's where I have all of the books listed there, and ways to contact me and get in touch, and the program is Ready Chapter 1 dot com, and that's the numeral one. So Ready Chapter 1 dotcom.

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.