The All-True Story of How a Novel Gets Published, Part 9: Titles and DESCRIPTIONS and Author Photos – Oh My! (the “Description” part)

July 8th, 2010 by me

One funny thing about writing a book is how hard it is to reduce 300+ pages of prose to a one- or two-paragraph description. So the good news is that when your book is bought by a publisher,The Four Ms. Bradwells cover someone else takes on that task.

I remember when I got the “catalog copy” for my first novel, The Language of Light – a book I’d thought of as primarily a father-daughter story – it did not include the word “father.” So the first publisher-generated description of my work is something I’ve held my breath for ever since: What is this thing I spent so much time writing actually about?

The first description I saw for The Four Ms. Bradwells was for the ARC (or ARE? See “Part 7: It’s a … Well, Not a Book, Exactly, but an ARC. Or an ARE?”). It came by email from my fearless editor, Caitlin Alexander, on May 9, and it started with “Meg Waite Clayton’s The Wednesday Sisters was a word-of-mouth sensation and a book club favorite. Now the beloved author is back with a page-turning novel…”

I emailed Caitlin back the moment I read it, with “I’m a beloved author! How lovely.” – followed by a little winky thing so she wouldn’t think I was taking myself too seriously.

But honestly, I was having a Sally-Field-at-the-Oscars moment. It’s the same feeling I get every time I open an email from a reader, but on a bigger scale. Of all the words that might be used to describe what kind of author I am, I can’t imagine anything better than “beloved.”

Really, I must have asked Mac a hundred times that day if he knew that he was living with a “beloved author.” Or maybe not quite a hundred, because we’re still married, but…

So from my perspective, this describing-my-book process was off to a pretty good start. I didn’t know who exactly wrote it – it came from Caitlin, but it looks suspiciously like the marketing department had a hand in it. I sure would like to lay a big fat kiss on whoever it was, though – which is, perhaps, why no one has claimed authorship.

The rest of the description was pretty terrific, too. The only real thought I had on it was that one bit about how many women U.S. Senators there were when wasn’t quite exactly accurate. (The lawyer in me.) So Caitlin and I tinkered with that.

The final copy looks like this:

Meg Waite Clayton’s national bestseller The Wednesday Sisters was a word-of-mouth sensation and book club favorite. Now the beloved author is back with a page-turning novel that explores the secrets we keep, even from those closest to us, and celebrates the enduring power of friendship.

Mia, Laney, Betts, and Ginger, best friends since law school, are gathered for an impromptu reunion as Betts awaits Senate confirmation of her Supreme Court appointment. Nicknamed “the Ms. Bradwells” since their days at the University of Michigan in 1979—when only three women had served full Senate terms and no woman had ever been appointed to the Court—the group has long supported one another through career changes and failed marriages, births and deaths. But when the Senate hearing uncovers a thirty-year-old skeleton in the friends’ collective closet, the Ms. Bradwells find themselves reliving a much darker period in their past—one that stirs up the secrets they’ve kept for, and from, one another, and could change their lives forever. Once again, Meg Waite Clayton writes inspiringly about the complex circumstances facing women and the heartfelt friendships that hold them together.

Doesn’t that make you want to read? – Meg

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Posted in All-True Story of How a Novel Gets Published, Meg's Posts

5 Responses

  1. trish

    YES! I want to read it even more now! I didn’t think that was possible. ;)

  2. me

    Ask and you shall receive, Trish: Advanced Reader Copy on it’s way to you from Ballantine.

    :-)

  3. Dr. Bill (William L.) Smith

    Meg,

    Saw your note on Book Blogs. I’d be happy to have you feature my first novel, “Back to the Homeplace.” I can guest blog or do an interview, whatever works for you… THANKS!

    Bill ;-)
    Author of “Back to the Homeplace”
    http://eduscapes.com/v2a/back_to_the_homeplace.html
    http://drbillsbookbazaar.blogspot.com/

  4. Margie

    Meg- First of all, that cover is To. Die. For. This book will fly off our shelves! I entered Law School myself in 1979, so I am looking forward to this book like no other. Enjoying your blog updates until I can finally get my hands on an ARC.
    Margie from Just the Bookstore in Glen Ellyn, IL

  5. me

    Margie! How nice to see your font here. Can I come do an event in Just the Bookstore again? Such a wonderful store!

    And I knew you were a lawyer, but didn’t know you were 1979. So glad you are looking forward to it. I know Ballantine is sending ARCs to bookstores, but do let me know if one doesn’t find it’s way to you and I’ll make sure it does.

    >that cover is To. Die. For.

    and this was my reaction to! To use a term from Trish (Hey Lady blogger extraordinaire – and I think you can click to her blog from her comment above), I just squeed when I saw it. And it’s only gotten more beautiful.

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About 1st BOOKS: Stories of How Writers Get Started

If you think writers are born rather than made and brilliant writing is recognized immediately, those rejection slips for your novel—or story or nonfiction query, or (heaven help you) letter to your own mother—can seem a daunting thing. The truth is getting started as a writer takes hard work, persistence, and a bit of luck.