How One Concept Book Became Three
by Diana Murray
ONE SNOWY DAY (Sourcebooks, 2018) had a long,
long journey beginning with the first draft of CITY SHAPES (Little, Brown,
2016) which I wrote around 2009. You see, CITY SHAPES sold in a two-book deal
after I got my agent in 2012. There were some publication delays and it didn’t
get released until 2016. Because it was a two-book deal, I began sending some
options for a second book to the publisher around 2013. When you have a
multi-book deal with a publisher, things move a little more slowly since you
can’t send new work to other publishers until they’ve chosen your second
contracted book. I found the wait frustrating since I’m very prolific.
Anyway, the editor chose a manuscript that the
team was interested in around 2014. It was a manuscript about the four seasons.
But when I spoke to her in detail about her thoughts on it, it turned out, she
wanted a major rewrite. It would basically be a different manuscript entirely
and I’d have to start from scratch. I was so nervous I wouldn’t be able to pull
it off, but I finally garnered my strength and plowed forward. After discussing
with my editor, I felt I knew what they were looking for. They wanted something
similar to CITY SHAPES, a kind of companion book, even though the illustrator
would be different. They wanted something lyrical, poetic, descriptive, and a
bit more on the literary side.
So I sat on my patio (listening to the
pitter-patter of a passing shower) and began to write SUMMER COLOR! (which was
originally called “Summer Rain”). I deliberately set it in the country to
contrast with the urban setting of CITY SHAPES. Going with colors as the
concept seemed like a natural choice. I ended up loving the final result and
felt fortunate that the collaborative process led me to a manuscript that I
wouldn’t have written otherwise. Thankfully, the publisher loved it, too, and
accepted it as their second book.
Now that my contract was fulfilled, I could do
whatever I wanted. I thought, what the heck, maybe I should try a third concept
book. I already had a city setting and a country setting, so this time I tried
a small town setting with the concept of counting. Although all three books
were concept books (not character-driven books with your typical
problem/solution-based plot) they still needed to have a kind of story arc. For
ONE SNOWY DAY, I used a day to night transition. In addition, the climax of the
book involved a playful puppy stealing the carrot nose from the snowman. At
that point, the numbers went from counting up to counting back down to one.
I sent it to the same publisher. My editor loved
it, but it turned out, the publisher pretty much wanted an entire rewrite
again. I adored my editor (and the whole team at Little, Brown), but after much
thought, I decided not to accept the revision request. I felt that the story
was solid, and although it didn’t fit with their particular list, I thought it
might fit with the list of another publisher. After several years of writing, I
had become more confident about knowing when something was generally working or
not. This was a tough choice, but I’m glad I made the choice I did (and that my
agent was supportive) because I ended up getting another offer from Sourcebooks
and they had the same vision for the book that I did. Huzzah! It all worked
out.
The book trailer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrIsUpHXBhM
My journey with ONE SNOWY DAY was a good lesson
in patience, hard work, self-reliance and tenacity.
Thank you, Dawn, for the opportunity to share my
experience.
THANK YOU, Diana, for taking the time to share your experience. Your stories are so much fun to read. Thanks for providing a little insight about how they came to be! You've shown us the value of having a vision for your story and the importance of having confidence in your vision.
********************************
Diana Murray is the author of over a dozen books
for children, including CITY SHAPES (Little, Brown, 2016), GRIMELDA THE VERY
MESSY WITCH (Tegen Books/HarperCollins, 2016), NED THE KNITTING PIRATE (Roaring
Brook/Macmillan, 2016), PIZZA PIG (Step-into-Reading/Random House, 2018), and
UNICORN DAY (Sourcebooks, 2019). Her award-winning poems have appeared in
magazines such as Highlights, High Five
and Spider. Diana grew up in NYC and
still lives nearby with her husband, two very messy children, and a goldfish
named Pickle. Find out more at http://www.dianamurray.com .
Congratulations, Diana! And best wishes with Unicorn Day too!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Matt! :)
DeleteI LOVE hearing your process and seeing the beauty of rhyming concept books! Thanks, Diana
ReplyDelete