“Thanksgiving Week in the USA, and a good time for all of us
- wherever we might be from, or live now - to take stock. What are you most
thankful for in your writing career?”
Happy Thanksgiving to all my chums in the USA, or those of
you celebrating it around the world. I hope you enjoy whatever your traditions
for this time of the year might be. We celebrate
Thanksgiving here, in Canada,
in October, where it’s viewed as more of a “harvest” celebration. That being said,
when the entire family is gathered around the table, we do the whole “I am
thankful for…” thing, and I like it, so that’s what I decided I would do here. They
say “It takes a village to raise a child” and it also takes a village for an
author to write, get published, and keep doing that time and time again. So,
since it seems unlikely I’ll ever get the chance they have at the Oscars to do
the whole list of “Thank You’s”, I’ll take the chance to do it here, now.My first ever published short story, Dear George |
I am thankful for: the encouragement of Mum and Dad, without
which I’d never have become a reader, so certainly not a writer; Martin Jarvis
and Rosalind Ayres for finding my short story Dear George and producing it for BBC Radio 4, which allowed me to
enjoy the pride of my family when it aired, and encouraged me to write more;
Ruth Linka who was the publisher at TouchWood Editions who invited me to submit
what turned out to be the manuscript for my first novel, The Corpse with the Silver Tongue.
Mum...so proud with my first novel at Swansea library in Wales |
You’d think that would be it, but you’d be wrong. When
you’re focused on getting your first book published, that date – the release of
your first “child” into the world – seems to be your only goal; what you
realise the day afterwards is that it’s just the beginning. Since I was first published
I have received words of wisdom from many fellow authors, several of whom are
fellow bloggers here, and some of whom I have met at various conferences around
the world. Thank you to all of them. I have worked with different publishers
(thank you Taryn Boyd at TouchWood Editions and Edwin Buckhalter at Severn House
Publishers) and editors (thank you Frances Thorsen and Anna Telfer) and have
also met bloggers and reviewers (sometimes in person, often only on the Internet)
who have provided so much support and encouragement it’s almost unbelievable.
Without my mum and my sister reading everything I wrote, almost as I wrote it,
I might never have finished even my first book – their patience is fantastic.
Cathy Ace is the Bony Blithe Award-winning author of The
Cait Morgan Mysteries (#8 The Corpse with the Ruby Lips was released on November
1st) and The WISE Enquiries Agency Mysteries (#2 The Case of the Missing Morris
Dancer was published in paperback in the USA & Canada on November 1st, and
#3, The Case of the Curious Cook, will be released in hardcover in the UK on
November 30th.) You can find out more
about Cathy, her work and her characters at her website, where you can also
sign up for her newsletter with news, updates and special offers:
http://cathyace.com/
Good stuff, Cathy. And you're lucky to have the support of your parents and husband and others. Have a good TG!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Cathy—as always!
ReplyDeleteYes, Paul - I know I'm a lucky gal, and have so much to be thankful for :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks Art! :-)
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you have a live-in support system, crash pad, fan club. A good reminder here to appreciate those around us who keep us sane on a day-by-day basis :)
ReplyDeleteThanking people is one of the most enjoyable aspects of getting published. I love writing my Acknowledgements page in each book! Your list is great.
ReplyDeleteYou're right Rachel - thankful to be happy and healthy and supported :-)
ReplyDeletegreat post Cathy.
ReplyDelete