Book Title:
The Hidden Chalice of the Cloud People
Genre: Young
Adult Fiction
Publisher:
Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing
Thank you for your time in
answering our questions about getting published. Let’s begin by having
you explain to us why you decided to become an author and pen this book?
Leif and Jason: We have both written throughout our lives. Poetry,
short stories, tales, etc., have always been part of the fabric of our family.
To be quite frank, we can't imagine a day that would be possible without
writing. Like breathing, eating, brushing your teeth, writing is good hygiene for
the creative soul. We decided in particular to write this book as we saw a
paucity in the genre for well-written literature that is reminiscent of
Gulliver's Travels, The Jungle Book, etc. We also have a strong passion for
satire (think Swift) and world culture and lore. All this comes together in
this first novel of a four-part series.
Is this your first book?
Leif and Jason: Yes, this is our first book, and we want to
continue the series and continue writing together! This is the first book in a
tetralogy.
With this particular book, how
did you publish – traditional, small press, Indie, etc. – and why did you
choose this method?
Leif and Jason: We went with Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing to
get our book out to the world. We hope for traditional publishing and feel that
this book shows our capabilities as writers. Our goal is to have the entire
series published traditionally.
Can you tell us a little about
your publishing journey? The pros and
cons?
Leif and Jason: Like any publishing endeavor, it
can be broken down into three steps: 1.) the releasing of the material; 2.) the
publicity of the product; and 3.) the
tenacity to continue forward no matter what the obstacle.
I feel that the publishing process is rife with
pros and cons. One pro is releasing your manuscript to the world. This is a
birthing process, a subtle catharsis of letting this creative child out of your
safe and warm domicile and into a world that at times can be cold and
indifferent. The con for this pro is articulated in the last sentence. Your
creative work is your gift, your internal process worked out with your muse;
then carefully, slowly, edited, and refined along the way. When the process is
complete, your wings unfold, and your gestation is revealed in the published
form. To have this child go into an indifferent world can be maddening at
times. We cannot escape the fact that new children are born to this world (new
ways of thinking in the creative arts) and then not supported. Thelonious Monk
felt this and became quite reclusive. We scratch our heads now and ask how is
it that people did not see the beauty he created!
What lessons do you feel you
learned about your particular publishing journey and about the publishing
industry as a whole?
Leif and Jason: It is hard not
to be somewhat skeptical of an industry that has produced so many overly
commercial products over the last twenty years and has a demand for fixed
formulas. Publishing is such a sacred craft, bringing forth fresh, new and
dynamic ways of seeing the world via book form. For instance when you think
about what it was in classic literature that first captivated you, you may
answer, 'It had me thinking in ways I had not thought before. It was subtly
troubling, and with this troubling, a new process of thought enfolded and
enabled me to think in a relevant and clear way about the theme presented.'
Would you recommend this method
of publishing to other authors?
Leif and Jason: I believe it is a good start. I also feel that
self-publishing and indie publishing apply some pressure to more the traditional
publishing industry. It is roughly akin to the survey they did in the 1990's
when they found out a huge portion of the American population used alternative
medicine in their approach to wellness. Look at the implications of that survey
and subsequent studies! Now they offer acupuncture, yoga, qigong, meditation,
and indigenous herbology in several medical schools. The pressure from the
populace created that change. I am in hopes that the publishing I have listed
above will change the traditional publishing to go back to its roots in being
pliant and open to new ways of thinking and styles of writing.
What’s the best advice you can
give to aspiring authors?
Leif
and Jason: We impart this advice to aspiring authors: Take your art seriously;
refine your abilities, hone your skills and develop a habit of writing on a
quotidian basis; not necessarily a piece of art that inspires the pneuma and
rattles the firmament but something that is at least adequate or decent.
Practicing your craft plays a crucial role in maintaining the well-being and
the liveliness of your mental character as well as improving your writing
abilities. Let the sensitive fabric of your psyche become pachydermatous and
persevere through all the vicissitudes that adversity can muster.
ABOUT THE BOOK
The Hidden Chalice of the Cloud People is a young adult fantasy comedy novel written by a father and son writing duo for an intelligent general audience. It is the first book in an upcoming tetralogy. It is a darkly humorous, fast-paced, action-packed celebratory unification of the world’s rich cultural lore through the lens of an inventive fantasy concept that stands both as an occasionally subversive satire that satirizes the YA genre and an anachronistic experiment on the fusion of storyline narratives (differing stylistically and compositionally).
When Tommy Dana is abducted into a fantastical realm called Lethia, where the worthy stories of humanity are granted a physical reality, the social media-averse thirteen year old must plunge through a multi-varied meta-fictional adventure in order to save his, and the entire human world’s, imagination from falling into the thieving clutches of the witty supernatural villain Facinorous.
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