Friday 24 December 2021

A Boy, a Girl, two hats and some ships


In July, I wrote about how The Boy With Two Heads (originally published in 2012) has become Book 1 of The Connection Trilogy. I stated titles and timings, all of which I have since had to change (though not the ISBNs) - a lesson from my professional days that I'd forgotten: 'schedules are guides, not laws'. So the evolution
 of the trilogy continues, and this is an update on its progress.

Although I now wear two hats, the author’s and the publisher’s, unfortunately I have only one head (unlike the original title of my book!). And my one head is that of a perfectionist.  

So the many enjoyable (to me, at least) processes involved in metamorphosing The Boy with Two Heads into The Boy in Two Minds, and preparing his sequels to be consistent as a trilogy, have been progressing rather slowly. Mind you, this year, The Boy has gone through two title changes, one text revision, one cover change, and still awaits a tweak to his styling. This is truly ‘learning through doing’. And the 'doing' is very different from when I was a professional editor and later publisher in an ‘in house’ department in the last century!

I have also been preparing the other two books in the trilogy. These are the three draft covers … My enduring thanks to Kate, my collaborator on these. We will eventually get there!

   

My thanks, too, to those who have bought The Boy in his present state as print and ebook, both of which will be marginally (literally!) updated in the new year. 

 During the autumn, my single head and mind were distracted from writing and publishing because at last I was able to travel to Greece. There I experienced the joy and excitement of the birth of a new family member, and I managed to visit a couple of locations that come into the story in Book 3, the Heraion of Perahora (lots of guessing as to what it was really like), and the Diolkos (an amazing remnant of an ancient 'railway'!).

The Diolkos is the drag-way used by ships along approximately the same line as the Corinth Canal from around 600 BCE. What a sight, to see a ship gliding on land up the gentle gradient (hauled by oxen perhaps?), and then 'floating' down the other side, back to the sea!

 

(Nowadays, nearby, a reproduction Poseidon stands guard by a modern basketball court, 'protecting' the area around the western mouth of the Canal. Surely, in its heyday, he had a temple at each end of the Diolkos?)

So my fictional Boy and Girl often wait in line for my attention. And although The Girl in Two Worlds's original July publishing date has been pushed into 2022, she is well on her way - on a trireme, no less!

 


from greekerthanthegreeks.com

 A different kind of ship has ushered in the celebrations for the winter solstice and Christmas in Greece for centuries. Traditionally, decorative ships appear in early December (this was in Aristotelous Square in Thessaloniki some years ago) and similar boats have been decorated in homes and villages since ancient times, often now alongside the more modern Christmas tree.

This one is here to bring my readers my best wishes for your joy rather than frustration over the holidays in these bewildering times. 

 

I wish you a joyfully Merry Christmas, and thank you for reading!




 

Sunday 25 July 2021

The Boy is Back - and he's not alone!

He’s now “in Two Heads”, and part of a trilogy. But Themistokles' story of involvement in the Olympics of 432 BCE and how he got there is the same. Back in 2012, I believed his and Suzanne's novel was a one-off, but they had other ideas! As time went on, Themistokles kept ‘telling’ me bits of his later life. At first, I just wrote them down as separate incidents. Then Suzanne began to do the same, and gradually I had another novel. Then a third. So I may not have been posting here for a while, but I have been ‘listening’ and writing, rewriting, researching and, until last March, travelling.

Then, around this time last year, by chance I saw a tweet from Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc, millions-selling author of children’s books set in Ancient Rome, and Athens) about The Boy with Two Heads. It said, “Ooh! Another #timeslip to #Athens novel for kids! Written by @JuliaMNewsome in 2012, this one has lots about the Olympic Games. I’m loving it so far!” And there was a picture of my book. I was thrilled! (Although The Boy was not written for kids under 12, nor is only about Athens.)

from the Amazon web site
Caroline’s tweet gave me a boost. Even though her books are for a different age category, she is a world-wide best-selling writer (carolinelawrence.com). So her interest and kind encouragement had me thinking seriously about naming the new stories, polishing them up and perhaps publishing them. 
Because, once upon a time, before the internet, I was a professional editor and publisher of textbooks. 
Surely, with the help of The Boy’s original publisher, Trifolium Books UK, I could learn how to do it myself with the new technology? It could be my COVID survival project! 

Birkby Books
design: Connie Jensen
Thus, The Boy in Two Heads, and his two accompanying volumes, The Girl in Two Minds anPrecarious Connections, are coming out, one by one, under my new imprint, Birkby Books. At present, with Kate of Trifolium, we are working on visually linked covers, but The Boy’s revised text was ready early, so I brought him out in his old jacket to coincide with this year’s anomalous Olympics. The three books will make up The Connection Trilogy.


The Two Heads by Fliss Watts
Themistokles and Suzanne have kept me company and been fascinating (though somewhat demanding) friends during this deeply disturbing time, for which I’m very grateful. Now they even have portraits ready to be incorporated into the new covers, thanks to Fliss Watts (instagram: @flisswatts, https://flisswtts1Wordpress.com).



If you are new to this blog and didn’t read the 2012 edition of The Boy, this is what some readers said:


"A very clever concept for time travel ... lots about the Olympic Games. I'm loving it ...!" Caroline Lawrence (see above).

"This book transported me effortlessly back to ancient Greece, vividly evoking its exotic sights, sounds and even smells. And it seems that young people's issues have hardly changed in 2,400 years!" Marion Clarke, fiction editor.

"A wonderful story which brings the ancient Olympics to vibrant life." Philippa Harrison, former Managing Director of Macmillan and Little, Brown UK.

"... extremely well written, highly believable and engaging ... the aspects of every day life in Ancient Greece are so cleverly and easily portrayed here." Fiona Robson on Goodreads.

"This was a very engaging read. Lovers of the grecian era will find it interesting and the blog is a good twist." Prudence on Amazon. (not this blog, the one in the book!)

" ... a story on different levels, from different points of view. It brings ancient Greece to life, ... excellent ... well-researched ... well-written story." Sally Katherine Bracher on Amazon.

" ... enthralling read, I did not want to put the book down." Bill on Amazon Kindle.

The Girl in Two Minds will be out later this summer, and next year, the third book, at present titled Precarious Connections (unless I change my mind again, which I have done every day for months!). 

If you are on Twitter or Instagram or any of the other wide-reaching platforms, please post a link to this blog, or better still, read the book and post a review! You will be mystified, amused, excited and enthralled. (At least, I was while I was writing it!) 

Thanks for reading! 
Please leave a comment or a review if you can.





The Boy in Two Heads ISBNs: 
paperback 9781838413606
ebook 9781838413613

@JuliaMNewsome on Twitter
'J M Newsome, author' on FaceBook

The appearance of this post is different on smart phones and tablets, but all the content seems to be there! 
All photographs © Julia M Newsome unless otherwise credited