Route: Going forward from Byteback

Photo by Ravi Kant at Pexels

The six stories I wrote for The three and a half day parent were for a new media/book project called Byteback, which basically meant readers could download work for free and ensure the romantically enduring image of writers as impoverished was sustained. In less than one year the Route online magazine (launched in Feb 2005) has published eleven byteback books and distributed over 5000 copies of them. This was way over their estimation, but as Route editor Ian Daley explains; ‘for us the important part of Byteback was to generate work and allow us to provide space and opportunity for writers, it’s a real bonus that the writing is being read in such numbers. The work done by Tom Palmer et al with Four Fathers alone was outstanding given the newness of the idea, I think they gave over twenty readings, and hopefully 2006 will bring further development of that project.’

Route are now kicking off February with A Route Compendium, which is a small anthology of Byteback books, some of which are already on the site and some feature new work. They hope that this can develop into a regular feature and a progression route for some of the work they publish. The Bytebacks have been very successful but as Ian goes on to say ‘we’re fully aware that the format, technology and necessary origami is not to everyone’s liking, so to move some of the work into printed books is a natural course. Watch this space.

http://www.route-online.com

A lesson for all first time novelists.

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio at Pexels. Design James Walker 

I had a manuscript entitled This is all I Know accepted for publication with Pomona in 2002. Over the next three years it kept getting pushed back further down the line. The reasons given were frustrating but pragmatic: they needed to build up their reputation before risking a first time novelist. Another problem was distribution. If they were having difficulty getting established authors into bookshops why would anyone bother with mine? Eventually, and somewhat inevitably, my book got pushed so far down the priority list it was no longer a priority. Game over.

From this I would offer the following advice to other fledgling writers:

1) Shit happens, get over it.
2) If your book keeps getting put back, keep an eye out for other publishers/agents and move on.
3) Don’t tell anyone you are having something published until it is actually published.
4) Small publishers can die with one mistake.

I believe Pomona had every intention of publishing the book but the market told them otherwise. I have since reread my manuscript and trimmed it down by 40,000 words to 130,000 and sent it off to Route for a first novel competition they’ve advertised. They may ignore it, they may accept it and then put it on the shelf for a couple of years, or they may give it a shot. Either way, this time I will keep my trap shut.