SERIES: Island Trilogy #1
GENRE: YA Fiction
Sixteen-year-old Meg Traherne has never known loss. Until the beautiful, talented horse she trained herself, drops dead underneath her in the show ring.
Jared Strickland has been living with loss ever since his father died in a tragic farming accident.
Meg escapes from her grief by changing everything about her life; moving away from home to spend her summer living on an island in the St. Lawrence River, scrubbing toilets and waiting on guests at a B&B.
Once there, she meets Jared; doing his best to keep anything else in his life from changing.
When Jared offers Meg a scruffy appaloosa mare out of a friend’s back field, it’s the beginning of a journey that will change both of them by the end of the summer.
Jared Strickland has been living with loss ever since his father died in a tragic farming accident.
Meg escapes from her grief by changing everything about her life; moving away from home to spend her summer living on an island in the St. Lawrence River, scrubbing toilets and waiting on guests at a B&B.
Once there, she meets Jared; doing his best to keep anything else in his life from changing.
When Jared offers Meg a scruffy appaloosa mare out of a friend’s back field, it’s the beginning of a journey that will change both of them by the end of the summer.
GUEST POST - Tudor Robins
My “Guinea Pig” book
Right now,
you’re probably looking at the cover of Appaloosa
Summer and thinking “Hmmm … that looks like a book about horses, not guinea
pigs,” and you would be completely and one-hundred per cent right.
Although
it’s my best-known, and best-selling novel Appaloosa
Summer isn’t my first novel – that’s Objects
in Mirror. You might think the first novel an author publishes would be the
one to change her life, and in many cases, you’d probably be right, but for me
it was my second book – the book I experimented with; that became my “guinea
pig” – and I’ll tell you why.
Indie Publishing (or self-publishing, but “indie” sounds so much more fun!)
Objects in Mirror was traditionally published – that is, I
submitted it to a publisher, they accepted it, and they published it (I’ve just
condensed about three years of angst into one sentence – you can thank me
later!).
That same
publisher also read Appaloosa Summer,
also liked it, and also expressed strong interest in publishing it. But they
took their time about sending me a contract.
And while
they took their time, I read about publishing. I considered my options. I
thought about the kind of writer I am, and the kind of person I am. I thought
about what satisfies me, and what frustrates me.
I decided to
publish Appaloosa Summer myself.
This seemed
like a huge decision for many reasons. I had fought for so long, and so hard to
land a publishing deal; was I really just going to walk away after one book?
Well, yes.
So, I had to
tell my publisher. Yikes.
And then I
had to do all the things they warned me it would be hard to do on my own. I had
to get the book edited on my own. I had to get a cover and the interior of the
book designed. I had to promote and sell it.
And, guess
what? I did all those things. I did them one step at a time, but I did them
all. I published a book that’s become loved by readers and has sold far, far
more copies than my first book.
Learning new things
So, as
indicated above, this book taught me (or forced me to teach myself) many new
things. I learned how to source cover images. I learned how to find freelancers
(cover designers, copy-editors, interior designers, etc.) and I learned how to
work productively with them.
I decided I
could figure out how to code an eBook myself, and I learned how to do that. Now
I code all my own eBooks.
I figured
out what kinds of promotions work, and which ones don’t (I’m still learning).
These are
all things I wouldn’t have learned without Appaloosa
Summer. And the list doesn’t stop there – there are new things to try every
single day.
Meeting new people
In addition
to the amazing team of editors and designers and promotional people I’ve
assembled around me, I’ve also met other writers.
Appaloosa Summer was my ticket into a community of writers
who also write about horses, and who have similar aims, goals, and ideas.
Because we
all indie publish, we’re all free to make the decisions we want to about our
books and our writing careers, and one of the decisions we’ve made is to join
in a collaborative group called Horseback
Reads, so we can
better connect our readers with each other’s work.
It’s fun,
supportive, and rewarding and I wouldn’t be here without my guinea-pig book.
Trying new things
As well as
starting Horseback Reads – which I never, ever would have done before
publishing Appaloosa Summer, I’ve
also done other fun things.
One of the
coolest was recording a podcast audio book of the novel. I spent every Monday
last winter in a soundproof booth in a recording studio, reading my own book
into a microphone.
It was such
a great learning experience for me, and at the end I had something great to
offer my readers, and it’s really exciting that the audio book has now had
nearly 20,000 downloads!
If you’d
also like to listen to Appaloosa Summer as an audio book, read by me, it’s
absolutely free and available in different formats on Podiobooks.com.
And, as a
special added bonus, if you’d like to read Appaloosa
Summer, it’s available as a free Kindle download today only. Click here to get it!
If you have
any questions about books, writing, or anything, please feel free to email me – I love
hearing from readers!
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