Steps to Indie-Publishing your children's book. Step 1-Just Write

in #writing8 years ago

 This is an updated post that originally appeared on martintiller.com

As people began to ask me about writing Kevin and the Seven Lions, several people said "Oh, I've always wanted to do that!" or "I want to do that but just can't come up with an idea."  

The best advice I can think of for ideas, is just write. 


You want to write a book.  So write.

That's how the book was born.  I just started writing.  This sentence came to mind "Kevin slept in class."  That was the sentence that I first wrote down.  

For the longest time the story didn't have a name.  The story just sat in my hard drive as "Kevin slept in class," because Word saves the first sentence of anything you write as the title until you change it.  "Kevin slept in class" as a sentence didn't make it into the book, it was changed along time ago in some editing phase.  But the book was started by one simple sentence.  Don't make it a big deal.

Write First, the Ideas Come Second

I know it sounds slight and condescending to say "just write."  But it is what I learned in this process. 

Sit your butt in the chair and write.  Write first, then the ideas come.  Louis L'Amour has a quote along the lines of "You can't get water, until you turn the spicket on."  (Or something like that, I'm not looking it up right now.)

But the message is, don't wait for ideas to come.  Write first, then the ideas come. 

Don't over think it, don't think about what would the kids want to read or your audience.  Write what you would want to read.  Write for you.

Writing your own made up story should be fun.  If it isn't, for crying out loud, stop.

Okay I've written something, but doesn't someone have to publish it?

I originally shopped my story around to different agents and publishing houses.  More than anything I just wanted to learn how querying agents worked, maybe I could get some feedback.

I got nothing.  I lost count after contacting 20 or 30 something agents and houses.  It was a lot of work keeping track of who I sent the manuscript to and looking for people to send it to.  It was too much work, a spreadsheet was involved.

But now in the 21st century there are no more gate keepers.  

No one is going to come down from on high, lay hands on you and ordain you a writer.

And that's a good thing.

If you are a teacher, like I am, you read a lot.  Reading a lot helps with writing.  Stephen King wrote in his book "On Writing" that writers need to read, a lot.  I read a lot of children's books.  

I mean a lot. 

 On an average, vanilla day, I read four different picture or story books.  That quickly adds up.

It is this math of books that lead me to writing a children's book, as opposed to say a spy novel.  I do read lots of James Bond books, but I read more children's books.  Lots more, it is a consequence of my job.All that should help people that want to write a book, to well, write a book.

What if no one buys it?

So what if no one reads it? 

Upload it to Createspace make a paperback and bring it with you to a job interview, and automatically you stand out more than the other people competing for the same job.  How many other candidates will have a book they have written with them going into the interview?  Probably zero.

Post it on Amazon, and then order a copy from Amazon.  Having the UPS man drop off one of those boxes with the smile on it, with YOUR book inside, is an awesome feeling.  I know, I took a picture of the box before I opened it.

Knowing that your book is inside of Amazon box is a pretty cool feeling. You should try it sometime.

But step 1 is, just start writing. The ideas will come. 


Other posts of mine I think you should read.

Ten reasons why Star Wars is the Greatest Movie Ever Made

Dolbin School for the Extraordinary-Chapter 1-Jake Cooper

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Great piece, Martin!

Thanks man!

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