A Wicked Welcome to Faye Snowden! **plus a giveaway**

by Julie, preparing for hot weather today in Somerville

Today I’m delighted to welcome Faye Snowden to the blog. Faye is a talented author, and part of our genre hopping series. She is also the current secretary for the national board of Sisters in Crime, a huge job at which she excels. She’s also a terrific person. Welcome to the blog, Faye!


Writing Advice | Five ways your book is not your baby

By Faye Snowden

My new book, A Killing Rain (Flame Tree Press), the second book in my Killing series will be released next week on June 21, 2022. The tale stars Byrd’s Landing, Louisiana homicide detective Raven Burns who must capture a serial killer to save her nephew. Raven is a strong, brilliant, but utterly flawed protagonist made that way by her father— notorious serial killer Floyd Burns who rides shotgun uninvited in Raven’s head. It’s not only his voice from the grave that she can’t escape. She’s being pursued by two men—one who wants to lock her away forever for a crime she felt she had no choice but to commit, and another who claims he wants to redeem her soul.

While promoting the book, I was asked about writing advice for new writers. Now, I wrote Rain during the pandemic at a time when I could barely think straight. I poured everything I had into it, and along the way missed a couple of deadlines, something that’s never happened to me before. It was one of the hardest things I’ve done in my life.

Even so, my answer was ready. I said that I would tell new writers, “No matter how much soul you pour into your book, or how difficult it is for you to write it, it’s not your baby.” Thinking of your book as a tiny, helpless creature as I know some authors tend to do will only bring on unnecessary angst when starting the next book. It serves no useful purpose. To help illustrate this point, I’ve listed 5 fun ways your book is not your baby. The list features a real live human baby also known as the #1 grandkid.

  • You’ll never refer to your baby as the Shitty First Draft (SFD)

We all have to start somewhere. For me, it’s creating what Anne Lamott calls the SFD. To prepare for Rain’s SFD, I made an intimate acquaintance with my villain by performing a character study. Lamott has some great advice in Bird by Bird (1994) on how to do this.

Next, using Jess Lourey’s Book in a Bag technique, I sketched out 80 or so scenes on index cards, and threw them in a bowl I lifted from the kitchen. Each writing session, I pulled a card from the bowl and started writing. It was like getting a birthday present every day. When the bowl was empty, my SFD was complete. I was delighted. Still, not even close to being a baby.

  • Parents rarely obsess over ways they wish their baby was different

We can’t send an SFD to our editors. And Rain had plot holes big enough for an ocean liner. I knew that changes were a must. I started by placing the scenes in some semblance of order, and then rewriting each one. Here are some of the questions I used to guide me during the scene rewrites: 1) Did the scene fulfill its purpose?, 2) Was it vivid enough with sensory detail that mattered to character or plot?, and 3) How would the book change if I removed it? Once this was done, the book was better, but still, I knew I didn’t have a baby on my hands.

  • You won’t neglect your baby for at least two weeks so it can ‘rest’

After rewriting and ordering the scenes, I took two more passes. The first pass was a  developmental edit by me and my writing partner. The second was a read for consistent tone and style, and to identify grammar mistakes. I made the changes before stuffing the entire thing in a drawer to ‘let it rest’. For me, stepping away creates needed distance for an effective final edit before it goes off to my editor. I’d never stuff the #1 grandkid in a drawer to let him rest. 

  • You won’t keep asking strangers if they like your baby

Reentering the publishing world after raising my sons was not easy for me. I sent out query after query only to be rejected— about 150 of them before I found my agent. Finding a publisher required similar tenacity from my agent.  Would you subject your baby to all of those rejections?!?

  • Good parents won’t forget about their baby and move on

I strive to write the best book I can, but once it’s done, I move on. I don’t obsess over small mistakes that my editor and I may have missed, or reread for nostalgia’s sake. And I’m no longer particularly interested in how it grew from that SFD into the finished product unless I’m asked about it during interviews. Does a negative review sting? Sure it does.  Will positive ones bring validation? You bet. But I try my best not to dwell on a book that’s already been written unless I’m about to write its sequel.  We don’t do that to our babies.

While I do recognize the courage and effort it takes to put work out there, I believe that thinking about your books in an objective light will relieve unnecessary pressure and doubt. And writers need all the help they can get creating and publishing in an intentional and joyful way. But tell me, do you think it’s healthier to view your book as a product?

Faye will give away a copy of A Killing Fire and A Killing Rain to one commenter!

About the book:

Dark, Southern gothic tale of homicide detective Raven Burns, with a complicated past and a desperate case to solve. Black Girls Lit recommends the first book, A Killing Fire “to crime fiction and mystery lovers and fans of Ruth Ware and Gillian Flynn.”

After former homicide Raven Burns returns to Byrd’s Landing, Louisiana to begin a new life, she soon finds herself trapped by the old one when her nephew is kidnapped by a ruthless serial killer, and her foster brother becomes the main suspect. To make matters worse, she is being pursued by two men— one who wants to redeem her soul for the murder Raven felt she had no choice but to commit, and another who wants to lock her away forever.

Learn more here.

Bio:

Faye Snowden is the author of noir mysteries, poems and short stories. Her novels include Spiral of Guilt, The Savior, Fatal Justice, and A Killing Fire, a dark, southern gothic tale featuring homicide detective Raven Burns. A Killing Fire is first in a four-part series. The sequel, A Killing Rain, will be released in June, 2022.

Faye has a master’s in English Literature. She has been awarded writing fellowships from Djerassi and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Her short story “One Bullet. One Vote was included in The Best American Mystery and Suspense 2021 edited by Steph Cha and Alafair Burke. She is a member of Crime Writers of Color (CWOC), Mystery Writers of America (MWA), and Sisters in Crime (SinC) where she serves as Board Secretary for SinC National. She has participated in many writing panels, appeared as a guest lecturer in several university writing classes, and taught information technology courses at the university level. Today, Faye works and writes from her home in Northern California. Learn more about Faye at www.fayesnowden.com .

26 Thoughts

  1. Thanks, Faye! You made my morning with the fun comparison of SFD and grandbaby (too cute!). Your latest book, A Killing Rain, intrigues me. I’m looking forward to the release on June 21, 2022.

    1. Thank you, it’s been a wild ride! Tuesday launch day can’t come fast enough.

  2. I’m not a writer, but I can understand the struggle! Your new books sound deep and dark, wishing you much success!

  3. Welcome, Faye! Great comparisons (and adorable pictures).

    My books are definitely products. Writing is a business and I’m a professional (most days, that is!).

    1. I agree. Professional. But I do reserve short periods of time for meltdowns! LOL! Thank you.

  4. What a fun and interesting way to become acquainted with a new to me author. I’ve already followed on Facebook and can’t wait to read and review the Killing series. Congratulations on the upcoming release of “A Killing Rain”!

    I’d wondered how authors work through the process of writing a book. You five fun ways to look at a book as not your baby makes perfect sense. I’m sure it would be helpful especially for those new to the industry by putting it in that prospective.

    Thank you for the chance to win this fabulous giveaway of not one but both books in the series! I’ve shared and hoping to be the very fortunate one selected.
    2clowns at arkansas dot net

    1. You are welcome! Thanks for taking the time to comment. It’s a rough process sometimes, but there is much joy in it.

  5. Faye Snowden is one of my favorite authors, and Raven is one of those characters you scream at–not always in your head. “Stop doing that!” I’m thrilled to note that her short stories and mine have appeared in the “Low Down Dirty Vote VII and VII.”

  6. Welcome, Faye! Great writing advice and cute baby pictures first thing in the morning — a great way to start the day! I have to say one of the best days of my SinC presidency was the day you applied to be secretary. You have worked so hard and done such a great job. We were lucky to have you so thanks for saying yes!

  7. Welcome, Faye! Most important, #1 grandkid is adorable.

    I’m very proud of my books. But they are definitely products. If people email me about typos in book #1, which came out in 2018, I don’t worry about it. I’ve got book #5 to launch!

    1. Thank you! I think he’s adorable, too. I agree about books being products. It took me some time to realize it.

  8. Welcome to the Wickeds, Faye! Your grandson is adorable. I’ve been noodling a bit about why the business of writing feels so much more personal than the business of business. I may even turn my thoughts into a blog post here!

    1. Thanks, Barbara! You should do that. It’s such a tough business. Authors need all the help they can get in navigating it.

  9. I love Faye’s idea to write a scene on index cards and put them in a bowl and take one out every day and write that scene. How fun!

    1. You are welcome, Mark. I laughed while I was writing it…but I always laugh at my own jokes! LOL!

  10. You are a new author to me. The Killing.Series sounds like a great read. Looking forward to reading the series.

  11. Hello and Welcome Faye! Your book series sounds like a great read! I love criminal homocide Detective books! You know what you say about books is so, so very true and it makes so much sense, what a great way to explain to us that a book is not an authors baby, I loved how you explained it and how much sense that makes! Thank you so much for the chance at your very intriguing sounding and looking books. Have a great weekend and stay safe.

    1. I hope you are having a great weekend as well! Thank you for reading the post and your comment!

  12. A book is a living thing which leaves your mind and is in script by hand or computer/tape recorder. I know an author who had a manuscript in a drawer and after a crisis, brought it out and submitted it for publication. Letting the words rest gives them time to marinate to see what gets along and the parts which need to leave.

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