Please
welcome bestselling author Annette
Dashofy to the blog today….
Starting
Over by Annette Dashofy
About
four years ago, while well into the third of my contracts for my Zoe Chambers
Mystery series, I began to sense it might be nearing the end of its run. I
needed a backup plan and started noodling with some ideas for a new series.
Fast
forward to early 2022. My agent had found a new home to continue my Zoe stories
and snagged an offer on the proposal we were shopping.
Instead
of being settled into the comfort of writing a long-running series with
characters and a setting that fit me like my broken-in slippers, I was starting
over.
After
eleven books with the same central cast, I had to start from scratch. Matthias
Honeywell and Emma Anderson needed a life that began well before page one. I’m
not unfamiliar with creating backstory for my characters. I do it for every
book, but not as deeply as is needed for the protagonists, who will (hopefully)
return for many books to come. They need to have enough depth and inner
conflict to carry them through a multi-book arc. I need to give them a full
past with lots of potential for ghosts to come back to haunt them, not only in
book # 1, but also in book #5, 6, and 7.
Another
big change for me was the setting. Zoe Chambers and Pete Adams live in a
fictionalized county based on the one in which I reside. No research required.
The new series is set in Erie, Pennsylvania, a very real city. Matthias is a
detective with the Erie Bureau of Police, a very real department. And for me,
getting there requires a three-to-four-hour drive. Thankfully, I’ve logged
plenty of vacation time there and have friends who can answer questions.
Still,
setting a series in a real location presents challenges I never had when I made
up everything. I decided to use a mix of fictionalized businesses with real
ones. I studied street maps of the area and water current charts for Lake Erie.
I
made several research trips to simply drive around and study neighborhoods.
Honestly, I expected to have someone call the cops on me. That would’ve been
okay too. I needed to tour the police department and did. Thankfully, I wasn’t
under arrest at the time. A friend introduced me to a detective in the Major
Crimes Division who willingly showed me around and continues to answer my questions.
Beyond
the mere creation of the story, I was venturing into unknown publishing
territory as well. While both of my publishers for the Zoe books were small
presses with similar publishing models, the new contract is with a UK imprint
of HarperCollins, One More Chapter, based in London. They’re digital first
(January 20), with print coming later (March 2 in the UK, TBD here in the US).
And
they’re HarperCollins. As in Big Five. As in, I don’t think we’re in Kansas
anymore, Kensi (my cat. I don’t have a little dog named Toto.)
The
editing process has been fabulous. Tough and thorough, but I’ve had tough,
thorough editors in the past, so bring it. And my London editor “gets” me,
which is always a relief.
What
I have not had previously is a marketing and sales team. They conferred
and decided to change my working title (Rule of Thirds) to Where the
Guilty Hide. They thought it had more punch. Cool. Titles have never been
my strong suit. I was happy to have a team working for me. They also decided to
change the series name (Lake Erie Mysteries) to the Detective Honeywell
Mysteries. Also cool. My second POV character, Emma Anderson, didn’t mind.
Best
of all, my “team” wrote the back cover and promotional copy for the book. For me,
writing back cover copy ranks right up there with writing synopses. In other
words, on the same level as having a root canal.
As
I’m writing this, the digital release date is still about three weeks out. Much
of their advertising focus has been in the UK, which is a brand-new audience
for me. There are still a lot of unknowns lurking. What will a digital-now,
print-later release look like? I’m used to lining up book signings and store
appearances for the weeks immediately following a new book launch. With no
print books in hand, there will be none of that right now. I feel like I’ve
forgotten something. The bulk of my sales have always been from eBooks, so I
keep reminding myself it will be fine.
It
will be fine, it will be fine, it will be fine.
Still, I confess I pre-ordered a print copy from a UK bookseller, just so I can get my hands on it. No matter who the publisher is, no matter how many books I have out, one thing doesn’t change. I love the feeling of holding each new release in my hands.
Annette Dashofy ©2023
USA Today bestseller
Annette Dashofy is the author of over a dozen novels including the five-time
Agatha Award nominated Zoe Chambers mystery series about a
paramedic-turned-coroner in rural Pennsylvania. Her standalone novel, Death
By Equine is the 2021 winner of the Dr. Tony Ryan Book Award for excellence in thoroughbred racing literature. Where the
Guilty Hide (One More Chapter/HarperCollins UK, January 20, 2023) is the
first in her new Detective Honeywell series set on the shores of Lake Erie.
7 comments:
Congrats on your upcoming release Having read WHERE THE GUILTY HIDEs, I see many more books with these characters.
I'm so excited for this series, debut, Annette - so excited that I preordered the ebook even though I will also buy the paper book to keep my collection of your writing complete! Also glad you are loving the new publisher. That's so important.
I'm also writing a new series, and mine is set 3000 miles away. Gulp. As with you, I have family and friends in the area, and besides, research visits to northern California wine country? Happy to do it.
Thank you, Dru Ann! I sure hope so!
Edith, YES, I've learned to pick great locations to make the research fun! And thank you!
Annette, I just started Where the Guilty Hide last night, and I was immediately drawn in. You know how much I love the Zoe Chambers series, and I'm betting I'm going to love this one, too.
Oh, Kathy, I hope so! Thank you!
I preordered an ebook copy also, I look forward to reading the book. This is a very interesting post, very nice to read about the writing process for this one.
Thanks, Tracy!
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