During the months that followed, I also wrote numerous stories for young adults, a nonfiction book about driving
Tor, which would later buy and publish my previously written books,
“In all good conscience,” she couldn’t publish such a book.
(I’m sure she would’ve rejected
Overseas,
Back in England, it was re-issued a couple of times by New English Library, then taken over by Headline, who published it in 1993. In 1995. Book Club Associates brought out a hardbound “double book” containing
Oddly enough, publishers and reviewers have rarely linked
Before leaving
At the time, I didn’t know that Gorman could even be a name. I thought I had invented it.
Subsequently, however, I became very good friends with the writer, Ed Gorman. Far from being the scum of the earth, Ed Gorman is the salt. If I’d known Ed at the time I wrote
Ed has never brought my attention to the matter. But it is something that has bothered me over the years, so I thought this would be a good time to mention it.
Immediately after finishing the first draft of
I’d gotten $10,000 for writing
I would be getting $500 each for these.
At that point, $500 sounded pretty good. Lousy pay for writing an entire book, but more than my monthly income. I could use it. In a bad way. So I accepted the contract.
I was sent general guidelines for each book. I recall doing some research on the logging industry and paper mills.
And I actually had fun writing them.
I stayed home from my temporary office work and churned out about twenty pages per day. This was at least four times my usual output. And it suffered no revisions. My first draft was my only draft.
As each page came out of my typewriter, so it was sent to the publisher.
Oddly enough, I’ve always looked back on the “fast writing” of those two books as a significant learning experience. I was forced to plunge ahead, commit to paper pretty much the first thing that occurred to me, leap into the flow of the story and let it carry me along in its currents, write by instinct and the seat of my pants.
It taught me something about how to move along with the currents…
And it taught me that I’m capable of writing twenty pages a day if I have to.
I finished the two books ahead of the deadline and got paid my handsome sum.
I was told that Blue Heron had gone out of business before they could get to my second book. If
I wrote the original version of
It was part of my plan to open a second front as a suspense author. The 1985 version of the novel (unpublished) bears the Richard Kelly pseudonym.
The plan didn’t work.