Terah Shelton Harris on Balancing Multiple Projects

We all like to hear about the journey to publication, and hopefully other people's success stories help bolster the confidence of those still slogging through the query trenches. But what happens after that first book deal? When the honeymoon is over, you end up back where you were - sitting in front of a blank Word document with shaky hands. Except this time, there are expectations hanging over you. With this in mind, I’ve created the SNOB (Second Novel Omnipresent Blues) interview.

Today’s guest for the SNOB is Terah Shelton Harris, author of One Summer in Savannah

Whether you’re under contract or trying to snag another deal, you’re a professional now, with the pressures of a published novelist compounded with the still-present nagging self-doubt of the noobie. How to deal?

I don’t. LOL! I don’t know if I’ll ever deal with it as much as accept it and adjust. I suffer from imposter syndrome. It’s comes and goes but its there nonetheless. I deal with it by accepting it and writing through it. Feedback helps. Nothing scares my imposter syndrome away faster than hearing that my editor, Erin, loves a chapter that I wrote or that my agent, Abby, is loving the pages I sent her. Their opinions power me to keep going. I’m also truly inspired by readers who reach out to me about the book. I try not to read reviews but when I see one that a reader wrote that truly understands the book and what I was trying to do, that motivates me. I know that I’m doing something right.

Is it hard to leave behind the first novel and focus on the second?

My goodness, yes! My process differs from other writers I’ve spoken with. My characters speak to me. They walk with me. They eat with me. They wake me up at night. They demand that I tell their story. So, I do. The problem is that when the story is told, they don’t just vanish. Well…not in my head anyway. Because I spend so much time with them, in my head, writing them, they almost feel real to me. I hope that doesn’t make me sound weird! Sara and Jacob, the two main characters in One Summer in Savannah, are real people to me and it’s hard to let them go once the book is completed. I miss them. I spent a year with them, developing them and learning about them. Then, suddenly, I’m supposed to move away from them and allow space for new characters. That’s hard! What’s more is that once I’ve moved away from them, there are times when I have to call on them again, for edits and for publicity. That approves difficult when you’ve said your goodbyes and are knee deep into the lives of new characters.

At what point do you start diverting your energies from promoting your debut and writing / polishing / editing your second?

Never! LOL! At the time of this interview, I’m two months away from the publication date of One Summer in Savannah and I’m still pouring buckets of energy to it. In fact, I’ve increased it to prepare for my upcoming book tour. All of this while editing Long After We Are Gone and starting my third book. It’s one of those weird publishing facts that no one ever talks about, especially if you have a two book deal. That you will be promoting your first, while editing your second, and reading your third.

Your first book landed an agent and an editor, and hopefully some fans. Who are you writing the second one for? Them, or yourself?

I always write for myself. Always. I wouldn’t be true to myself if I didn’t. In order to devote the time to write a book (roughly six months to a year), it must be something I do for myself. I have to love the story, see its vision, and turn myself over to it. My next book, Long After We Are Gone, tells the story of four siblings—each fighting their own personal battle—return home in the wake of their father’s death in order to save their family home—and themselves. It’s a deeply personal story for me and I poured so much of myself into it. Something not possible if I wrote it for someone else.

Is there a new balance of time management to address once you’re a professional author? 

Absolutely. With my two book deal, I quickly had to learn how to juggle promotion of One Summer in Savannah with writing and editing Long After We Are Gone. Additionally, in the middle of this, I started writing my third book. All equally important tasks and so time management is extremely critical. For me, it’s about knowing when it’s time to flip that switch and move on to something else. This proves difficult for me as I tend to be hyper focused on whatever I’m doing at the time. 

What did you do differently the second time around, with the perspective of a published author?

Honestly, nothing. I approach the start, middle, and ending of all of my books the exact same way. I start with the plot, always. I have to know what my story is about, the overall theme, and more importantly, how it ends before I write one word. Nothing about that process changed for me with the publication of One Summer in Savannah. If anything changed, however, is the weight of expectation. I wrote One Summer in Savannah with zero expectations. I, of course, hoped and wished that it would get published. I also hoped that if it did that it will be well-received. Internal support from my publisher, Sourcebooks, has been amazing. And I knew pretty early on that they were excited about it and were fully invested in it. A good problem to have, yes, but word of this came just as I was finishing Long After We Are Gone and I began to wonder if this book would be as well-received as One Summer in Savannah.

Terah Shelton Harris is a librarian and freelance writer who now writes upmarket fiction with bittersweet endings. As a freelancer, her work has appeared in consumer and trade magazines including Catapult, Women’s Health, Every Day with Rachael Ray, Backpacker, Minority Nurse, and more. One Summer in Savannah is her first novel. Originally from Illinois, she now lives in Alabama with her husband, Jamel. Terah is a lover of life and spends most of her time reading or traveling. A world traveler, Terah has visited over 40 countries across six continents. She has watched the sunrise at the beginning of America, trekked through the jungles in the Bokeo Nature Reserve, searched for William Clark’s grave in St. Louis, and much more. Find her online at: www.terahsharris.com.

Jacqueline Vogtman on A Mother’s Magic

by: Jacqueline Vogtman

In an episode of True Blood, a guilty-pleasure HBO show I watched religiously in my 20s, the vampire Bill Compton says something I always found profound (particularly for TV): “You think that it’s not magic that keeps you alive? Just because you understand the mechanics of how something works, doesn’t make it any less of a miracle…which is just another word for magic. We’re all kept alive by magic, Sookie.”

I’ve been writing magical realist short stories now for about 18 years, since my final year of undergrad, and all throughout my MFA program and beyond I’ve returned to magical realism and its sisters, fabulism and speculative fiction, though I’ve tried out other types of writing. For me, though, magic doesn’t conjure (get it?) wizards and Harry Potter, or witches or Tarot cards or vampires. I find magic in our real world, particularly our natural world, and yes, also in being a mother. 

When I was pregnant back in 2013-2014, I marveled at the miraculous changes in my body, that first kick, that first heartbeat, and the sheer fact that we created something—a whole being, soul included—out of nothing. (Well, I know it’s not really out of nothing; I wasn’t absent during sex-ed class.) And even after my daughter was born, the magic didn’t stop, and still hasn’t stopped eight years later. 

I was particularly fascinated by breast milk, how a newly-born infant will sometimes squirm its own way up a mother’s body to get at it, how the first drops of colostrum carry protective benefits, how the composition of breast milk will change over time to adapt to the baby’s age and health, how my body would let milk down at the mere thought of my child or her cry in another room. All of this is not to say breastfeeding wasn’t very hard—it was, let me tell you, and I almost didn’t make it through—and I know that some parents are not able to or choose not to breastfeed, and that does not make their nourishment of their children any less magical. But for me, the idea of breast milk was a profound mixture of science and magic, biology and spirituality.

For a long time after my daughter was born, I didn’t write. When I finally did, the first story I wrote featured the magic of breast milk (though this was capitalized on by the patriarchal-capitalist system in a near-future semi-dystopia). The story was titled “Girl Country,” and it became the title story of my first published book, coming out from Dzanc Books in May 2023. Many of the stories in my collection focus on mothers and children because I find magic every day in raising my daughter. From watching her grow taller overnight, to that first tooth that fell out and then miraculously grew back, to creating imaginary worlds with her toys, to exploring the budding plants in our backyard, to watching deer dance in a field, to that first word read and that first story and poem written: all of it is magic, and I hope she grows up knowing this too. 

Jacqueline Vogtman won the 2021 Dzanc Short Story Collection Prize, and her book Girl Country will be published by Dzanc Books in May 2023. She received her MFA from Bowling Green State University, and her fiction has appeared in Hunger Mountain, Permafrost, The Literary Review, Third Coast, Smokelong Quarterly, and other journals. She is currently Associate Professor of English at Mercer County Community College in New Jersey and resides in a small town surrounded by nature, which she explores with her husband, daughter, and dog. Find her on Instagram @jacquelinevogtman and online at jacquelinevogtman.com.

Kristin Nilsen on Celebrity Crush Covers for Middle Grade Readers

I love talking to authors. Our experiences are so similar, yet so very different, that every one of us has a new story to share. Everyone says that the moment you get your cover it really hits you – you’re an author. The cover is your story – and you – packaged for the world. So the process of the cover reveal can be slightly panic inducing. Does it fit your story? Is it what you hoped? Will it sell? With this in mind I put together the CRAP (Cover Reveal Anxiety Phase) Interview.

Today’s guest for the CRAP is Kristin Nilsen, author of Worldwide Crush which releases today

Did you have any pre-conceived notions about what you wanted your cover to look like?

Definitely! I obsessed about it! No matter what your teacher told you, people definitely judge a book by its cover and it felt very make-or-break to me. Especially because my story may appear to be one thing on the outside (fluffy first crush, celebrity-style) but deliver something very different on the inside (humor! a quirky grandma! poignant coming–of-age arc!). I was so afraid the cover wouldn’t sell the story properly. 

I also have very strong opinions about cover art for middle grade books right now – there’s a trend that is so strong, it makes every book look exactly the same. I won’t say what that trend is because I don’t want to throw anyone under the bus, but I will say I was terrified of getting one of those covers. And I was prepared to say “We are underestimating middle grade readers. They are attracted to more than one thing.”

Did you have any input on your cover?

I had input, yes, but it came with boundaries and I was very nervous about overstepping those boundaries. Which I did. And then I got a call from the publisher which felt very much like getting called to the principal’s office. Being able to say “no, I don’t like that” was both a blessing and a curse. 

How far in advance of the reveal date were you aware of what your cover would look like?

Since I’m a debut author, the only person waiting for my cover reveal with bated breath was me. And the people and animals who are within arm’s reach of me. This makes a reveal announcement a little awkward; it felt less like a public event and more like a personal one. So a reveal date, per se, was not set for me (because no one was watching except maybe my mom), and I was free to reveal the cover when it was officially finalized.

Was it hard to keep it to yourself before the official release?

I felt the opposite actually; I was free to reveal the cover when it was complete – but I couldn’t. I wasn’t nervous anymore because we did, indeed, arrive at that place where I was like YES! THIS! But releasing it to the world felt wobbly. I wasn’t ready. I needed to cradle it in my arms a little longer. So while it was revealed on the publisher’s website, I waited to announce it on my social channels until the two of us had truly bonded. 

What surprised you most about the process?

Two things: first, how I longed to be a part of the process and then actually hated being a part of the process. Okay, I didn’t hate it but it was sooooo STRESSFULLLLL. For a brief moment, I wished I had never been asked for my input because getting to perfection seemed out of reach but I couldn’t stop trying. And I knew I was the thorn in someone’s side. I pictured people rolling their eyes every time they saw an email from me. 

And second, it revealed how much of my book lives inside my head; what does a celebrity crush mean to you? It’s different for everybody. When I say celebrity crush, I picture something specific but the designer pictured something else entirely. We had to come to an understanding about what a celebrity crush means for this book, without our personal interpretations interfering.

Any advice to other debut authors about how to handle cover art anxiety?

No, I really don’t! Although I’m ecstatic about how my cover turned out, I’m still licking my wounds a little bit. I have butterflies just writing this sentence! And I’m sure I will have the same anxiety with my next book. Because it’s that important! 

For me, I think I will work on my communication about the tone and style of my story and also provide quotes from the book that describe my characters fully so the designer will know what the reader is expecting. But for those who don’t have that kind of input, my advice would be… be a good person and manifest hard!

Kristin Nilsen is an erstwhile librarian, a collector of crush stories, and the author of Worldwide Crush (July 2023), a middle grade novel inspired by her own childhood crush on Shaun Cassidy. She co-hosts The Pop Culture Preservation Society, a weekly podcast celebrating the cultural nuggets of the classic Gen X childhood. Kristin lives in Minneapolis with her Gen X husband, her Gen Z son, and their rock and roll goldendoodle, Axl Rose Nilsen.