Saturday, November 23, 2013

Ending Soon!

My post office box is expiring in three weeks. SO, if you’d like me to sign your copy of my novel, The Arrow Catcher, and also receive a signed arrow catching photo, you need to send it to me soon.

I also offered to send a signed photo to anyone who purchases a Kindle version and posts a review on Amazon, as some of you already did. If you’d like one of these, let me know soon as well.

The address to send your books for signing is as follows:

Jim Mather
225 Crossroads Blvd, Box 426,
Carmel, CA 93923

Thursday, November 14, 2013

The Arrow Catcher Back in Print!

I made changes to my novel, The Arrow Catcher, in order to make it more appropriate for young adult readers. (For those who have read it, I softened the scene between Asim and Reiko.) While awaiting my changes and approval of the new proof copy, my publisher took the book out of print. I approved the proof this morning and The Arrow Catcher is again available on Amazon!

Saturday, November 2, 2013

My great editor!

I have a great editor! I recently made changes to the novel, removing a violent scene that had been inserted when I was hoping to get the script accepted as an HBO pilot. (If you've read The Arrow Catcher, it's the scene between Reiko and Asim.) Even after adding more edgey scenes, I was told it was still too tame. After recently removing the scene from the novel, CreateSpace, my publisher, sent me the proof for the new version. It had some issues, some my fault (a word left out, a sentence not worded as well as I wanted) and some theirs (missing sentence breaks, etc). I changed the manuscript and at around 6 tonight, Saturday night, (after 9pm for her), I emailed my editor to ask if she could double-check my changes before I resubmitted them. Within an hour, she returned my changes with her thoughts and corrections. I was able to upload the new version to CreateSpace tonight so they can get the book back in print. (Apparently, you can't order the book until they make the changes and I approve them, again.) I'm very fortunate to have someone so sharp and dedicated.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

A few words made my day!

Although it's very brief, I received what I thought a great review of The Arrow Catcher today. Someone who had just finished it said, "So how Long do I have to wait for the next book?"

Those few words made my day. Thank you!

The Arrow Catcher receives great Kirkus Review

Kirkus Reviews released a very good review today of The Arrow Catcher. You can follow the link to their website and their comments. https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/jim-mather/the-arrow-catcher/

Saturday, October 19, 2013

It's never too late


Many years ago, I took a summer writing class taught by John L'Heureux, who headed the creative writing program at Stanford. (John’s acclaimed new novel, The Medici Boy, was recently released.) The class was full, except for an empty seat next to me. Just as the class was about to start, a white-haired old lady opened the door, apologized for being late, and sat down beside me.
John started that first class by having everyone around conference table introduce themselves and tell a bit about their writing to date. When my neighbor’s turn came, she said her name was Harriet Doerr and had just moved back to the United States from Mexico, where her husband had worked for years as a mining consultant. Other than the book she was working on, she hadn’t ever written anything before, other than letters to family.

For our next class, John asked us to come prepared to read something we had written. Most were papers most had written in high school and been given high marks by their teachers there. Everyone yawned or rolled their eyes as Harriet tried to quiet her quivering nerves so she would read her story. This is what she read:

In early November there was an emergency. Sara left Ibarra at midnight, arrived in Concepcion at one, and for the rest of her life could recapture this hour whole and bright, polished as it had been with fear. Time failed to blur the images and five years later, or even ten, glimpses of them would intervene between her and a gathering of people, a display in a shop window, her own reflection in the glass. She would never afterward stand under a full moon without seeing corn shocks and chaparral, ditches flooded yellow with wildflowers, the chandeliered lobby of the Hotel Paris, and the telephone on the reception desk, without hearing the doctor’s voice as he answered. “Bueno,” he had begun. “Bueno, senora.”

We were speechless. She looked shyly up, afraid everyone hated it. But it was wonderful. Harriet Doerr went on to finish and publish her book, Stones for Ibarra, which was selected as a National Book Award winner. Her second novel, Consider this, Senora, was also very well received.

It’s never too late to start writing.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Wallace Stegner almost made me quit writing

Wallace Stegner was one of America's greatest writers and also founded the Creative Writing program at Stanford. I never had the honor of meeting him, but his daughter-in-law, writer Lynn Stegner, helped me with my novel, The Arrow Catcher. While Lynn kept me writing, her father-in-law almost caused me to quit. I came across a passage in his novel, Big Rock Candy Mountain, that was so good that I felt I had no business calling myself a writer. The passage went as follows:

"There had been a wind during the night and all the loneliness of the world had swept up out of the Southwest. The boy had heard it wailing through the screens of the sleeping porch where he lay and heard the wash tub break loose from the outside wall and roll down into the coulee… and the slam of the screen door and his mother's padding feet as she rose to fasten things down. Through one, half-opened eye he had peered up from his pillow to see the moon skimming windily through an illuminous sky. In his mind’s eye, he could see prairie outside with its cactus and its wooly grass white under the moon. And the wind, whining across that vast, oceanic land, sang through the screens and sang him back to sleep.”