Blog #1
While writing All Up, as I’ve done for all my books, I kept a running, dated chronology of my progress. I noted self-imposed deadlines, number of pages written, goals, and so on. It’s a way to set milestones, to keep to a schedule, to get the job done. My deadlines were reasonable but strict; I find myself a reasonable taskmaster. I do it because, otherwise, particularly for All Up, I would be toiling in a void-like purgatory. A structured schedule is a great way of remaining sane. It might not work for everyone, but does for me. However, I never anticipated taking so long to write All Up. I underestimated the work and the research; I also ended up overwriting and had to spend months cutting things down. Yet it was all necessary. That was the “journey” (yes, an overused word) I had to take, and it was fascinating. I offer these dates and the implied evolution to other writers and to anyone interested in one writer’s trajectory. It can be viewed as a cautionary tale or simply a nutty record of one man’s struggle with words and a cat (Stinky) that kept walking across the keyboard… Thanks, J. W. Rinzler All Up, The Chronology 1962: Born. No intention of writing novels. 1969: Woken up by parents to watch moonwalk. Impressed. 2005: Visit Huntsville museum. See actual Saturn 5. Mind blown. Learn more about Operation Paperclip. Start playing with idea of writing a novel about first Space Age. 2005 to 2012: Idea gestates. Fear of not being able to do it. Write books on cinema, and a licensed YA novel about Indiana Jones (Indiana Jones and the Mystery of Mount Sinai). That YA novel receives a very positive reader review on Amazon that makes me think I might be able to do a historical novel. Little did I know what was in store. June 3, 2012: I start and, a month or so later, falter; work stops on novel. February 19, 2013: I start again on All Up: Odyssey of the Rocketmen. Spend roughly two hours a day for one year doing initial research for book while on bus commuting from Petaluma to San Francisco/Lucasfilm. Read dozens of books on Space Age, memoirs, bios, histories (see “Further Reading” on allupjwr.com or jwrinzler.com). February 9, 2014: Complete 80,000-word rough research outline. Begin work on turning that outline into rough draft (before/after day job): goal is to convert at least 5 pages of outline per day; 15 pages/week; 12 weeks to finish very rough draft. May 2014: Late, but finish Very Rough Draft. I give a chapter to my wife, Geneviève, to evaluate. Is it worth continuing? I always ask Geneviève to look at work that I’m not sure about; she is a natural editor. Gen says yes, continue. I make a character list and divide book into five acts. April 12, 2014: Begin writing “real” rough draft: two chapters/week; goal is to finish in 75 weeks, circa October 2015. June 9, 2015: Ahead of schedule, finish Real Rough Draft; it’s approximately 276,000 words. I’m not worried about length. Big mistake. June 19: Begin work on first draft. November 28, 2015: FINISHED FIRST DRAFT. December 21, 2015: Start second draft; novel still needs much work. (Note: During all of these early drafts, research continues.) Want to finish end of June 2016. April 1, 2016: Finish second draft. I give whole book to Geneviève to read and comment on. April 25, 2016: Up till now I’ve worked, except for notes and miscellaneous, almost completely on laptop. I read and edit third draft on paper. Eyes and inner-ear read it differently on paper; important necessary step (for me). Word count is dangerously high at 299,447; I still don’t care. Still big mistake. July 23: Have incorporated my edits and Geneviève’s edits, and cut down word count to 259,603—third draft finished. After more cuts, by August 26, 2016, fourth draft is down to 256,686 words. I solicit criticism from readers—friends and family and professionals—about five of whom actually have time to read and comment. Month or so later, better than expected feedback. I incorporate, make more changes. September 29, 2016: Start looking for agent. This turns out to be one of the more frustrating experiences of my life. October: Start what I’m calling fifth draft. (Date finished is unrecorded.) May 8, 2017: With time between writing books on cinema, I decide to do a sixth draft. Geneviève re-reads whole thing. Word count now 231,808. Still no agent. October 8, 2017: On the advice of friend, I begin reading whole novel aloud, editing as I go. Makes a big difference to read out loud. Call it a seventh draft. November 1, 2018: I decide to cut out Jack Parsons’ storyline; I can’t make it work in terms of Apollo 11; and there has been a lot of attention about Parsons, even a TV show; I’d be late to the party. December 13, 2018: Major revision, more or less done. Novel now less than 160,000 words. Title shortened to All Up. Call it an eighth draft. Wizard of Oz moment: I realize that the ideal agent has always been around: long-time family friend and veteran agent/publisher, Peter Beren. April 2019: Beren masterminds solicitation plan; Permuted Press decides to publish All Up. June 27: Start last polish/ninth draft; finish on September 30. February 2020: Receive proofread version and re-read novel, making corrections and several simple but important improvements (tenth draft). May 2020: Mind racked with existential problem: How can I explain to potential readers what kind of book this is in a few sentences—and get the word out? Marketing only goes so far. Pray hourly…
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I write behind-the-scenes sagas. I used to do it in nonfiction when I worked for George Lucas at Lucasfilm. I wrote The Making of Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi. I also wrote The Complete Making of Indiana Jones. Since then I've written about Ridley Scott, James Cameron, and Stanley Kubrick. Though I write primarily nonfiction, I'm always telling a story. Same problems: pacing, dialogue, drama. I have to keep the reader’s attention.
Now I’m telling the behind-the-scenes story of the first Space Age, a true story. About 85% of the book is historically verifiable. But I’m doing it as a novel, so I can get into the heads of these historic personages, from Wernher von Braun and Sergei Pavlovich Korolev to Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins. This way, I can also delve into the more esoteric material, such as Freemasonry, cover-ups, and extra-terrestrials and alien ships, which are nearly impossible to verify 100 percent in the nonfiction world, but which find their places easily in a novel. ALL UP is for those readers who want deeper stuff and some solid entertainment. It’s taken me more than five or six years of research and writing to do it. A life-long goal ever since 2005 when I visited the space museum in Huntsville and saw that many of the original rocketeers were former Nazis. The idea for a book that told the whole epic story gestated for a couple of years, and then I started... |
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