I’m just emerging, weary and very relieved, from writing my second
book, How Not to Disappear. I knew before I started that second books were
notoriously tricky. In the world of music, ‘difficult second album’ syndrome is
well-recognised - the Association of Independent Music rather brilliantly
awards a Difficult Second Album prize - and many of the same difficulties apply
to writing. (I should say at this point that I really don’t want this to sound
like a whinge. I know how incredibly lucky I am to be paid to write. It’s just
that it’s not always easy, and when I was finding it tough it was
unbelievably
helpful to know that other authors found it hard too.)
Perhaps the most obvious difference between a debut and a second
book is the time issue. I wrote my first book, The Year of The Rat, over four
years on and off. All my deadlines were self-imposed. Of course there were pressures - financial pressure, the
pressure of not knowing whether all the time I was spending on it was ever
going to result in anything, the pressure of self-motivation when I had many
other calls on my time. But external deadlines, set by a publisher, are
different. You’re being paid. This is no
longer a dream or an ambition: it’s a job. There’s an awareness that other
people need you to get your job done in order to be able to do theirs. I knew
that ideally publishers want authors to publish a book a year and to be honest
this scared me. Not because I didn’t think I could write a book in that time,
but I didn’t know whether I could write the book I wanted to write as well as I
wanted to in that time. (As it turned out, I couldn’t, of which more later.)
Then there was the pressure of having an expectation to meet, not
only in the sense of ‘Will this book be as good as the last one?’ but also in
terms of the kind of book I would write. With a first book you can write
whatever you feel like. With a second, especially if it’s a two-book deal as
mine was, you know there’s a desire for it to appeal to the same readers as the
first book did. And of course I wanted people who liked the first book to like
the second book too... At the same time I felt strongly that I didn’t want to
end up effectively writing the same book again. I wanted a new challenge,
something a bit different. I’d lived with the last book for four years, and it
had been pretty intense. I was very ready for something new. At the outset,
this book felt like a balancing act in a way that the first book hadn’t.
Meanwhile, time, energy and head space were being taken up by the first
book. The launch of the paperback, blog posts to write, talks to give... I was
extremely grateful for all of this, but it was undoubtedly a distraction, as
were the perennial ‘How are sales going? Is your publisher happy?’ questions.
Of course, I knew from the start that the only way through this was
to put it all to one side and immerse myself in the writing, in the characters
and their story. This was how I’d written the first book, I just had to do it
again. But it was easier said than done.
It’s fair to say How Not to Disappear took a while to get going.
There were certain things I knew before I started. I knew it would have two
storylines, one contemporary, one set in the 1950s. I knew the contemporary
storyline involved a teenager and her great-aunt who was suffering from
dementia, and that the 1950s storyline was the great-aunt’s teenage story.
There would be some kind of road trip as they visited places from her past and
unravelled the secrets from her past. I had an image in my mind of the final
scene. Beyond that I didn’t know much.
I felt strongly that this story shouldn’t be planned, that I had to
let it take its course. The fact that the road trip storyline is driven by a
character whose memory isn’t entirely reliable meant that I wanted it to feel
unpredictable - it couldn’t be too neat, too planned. I wrote the 1950s
storyline separately, as a series of vivid flashbacks, and then had to make the
two plot lines into one coherent story. I have to be honest, weaving the two
storylines together was a complete nightmare, but I still think this was the
right way to do it. I do think some of the most interesting aspects of the
story came out of the fact that it wasn’t planned. But it was all rather
nerve-racking and it did mean that my editor, Jane Griffiths at Simon and
Schuster, had to take a big leap of faith... I’m extremely grateful that she
did.
This book also turned out to be much longer than I’d expected -
almost twice as long as my first book - which meant it took a lot longer to
write and edit than I’d intended. Deadlines were missed, which was stressful
and inevitably I felt that I’d failed. Still, I believed that it in the end it
had to be better to write a good book than to write it quickly, and I’m
incredibly grateful to my editor for taking the same view. Her patience meant I
had the chance to make this story into the book I knew it could be. And once I
stopped worrying about all the other stuff and just immersed myself in the
writing, guess what? I loved it! It was fun again. I’d forgotten how exciting
it is, that feeling when the words are flowing and it’s all coming out just
right.
Of course, I don’t know whether anyone else will think the book is
any good - only about three people have read it so far and we are STILL doing
the very final round of edits! - but I do know it’s a book I put everything
into and can feel proud of. And I realised while I was writing it that this was
what I had to focus on. Of course I want other people to love the book, but
actually that’s one of the many things about being a writer that I can’t
control. All I can do is try to write the best book I know how to.
So, will Book 3 be easier or is the terrible truth that, as with
parenting, writing doesn’t ever get easier, it just carries on being difficult
in different ways? I suspect I know the answer to that one...
How Not to Disappear will be published on 28 January 2016.
5 comments:
It's done! Congratulations Clare! And I hope very soon to chase the number of those who've read the story up.
I think once a number is put on a piece of writing as in the form of an Advance all things immediately change – the higher the Advance (however nice that is) the more the pressure. But you've summed it up... 'once I stopped worrying about all the other stuff and just immersed myself in the writing, guess what? I loved it! It was fun again. I’d forgotten how exciting it is, that feeling when the words are flowing and it’s all coming out just right.'
Writers are fragile but that's what makes us writers. Now you can wallow a little in the pleasure of having it out there. Look forward to reading it... sounds wonderful!
Oops! Split infinitive in that first paragraph!
Congratulations! Now you can continue on to Third Book Syndrome, Fourth Book Syndrome...
Well done! Hope it goes well and that 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and more go more smoothly.
Thanks for this interesting post - I'm looking forward to reading the book! I loved Year of the Rat.
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