Saturday 20 April 2019

Beaver Creek Christmas


Beaver Creek Christmas

The Kindle Cover for Beaver Creek Christmas
ISBN: 9781095233702
Released 22-4-19
Andrew R Welsh Author Page with all book links.

The Query Letter  

I am pleased to be able to introduce my novel “Beaver Creek Christmas”.  It is a 65,170 word Christmas romance about a widowed Englishman Robin Whittaker and his daughter Holly, who take a holiday in Beaver Creek and Neve Avery, a sergeant in the 10th Mountain Division, who has taken a post as Manager of The Nordic Center in the resort. 

They bump in to each other on the way and spend the vacation taking part in outdoor and festive activities, getting to know each other further. The relationship blossoms and by the end of the story, Neve accepts Robin’s engagement proposal and he has accepted a job offer at a local high school and plans to move back in the New Year. 

Meanwhile, Neve has engaged Holly to become more outgoing and exuberant and they also grow to care for each other after initial protective behaviour by Holly of her father.

Over the course of the story, Robin becomes more expressive, though the transformation is still incomplete.  He sees an opportunity with Neve helping him, to allow his creativity to blossom, not only as a writer, but as a cook and a wood worker.

Neve, like the others, allows herself after many years to let love into her life, as well as seeing the possibility of change beyond that that she had already decided on when leaving the army to become the outdoor activity manager.


The "blurb" from the back of the paperback



Robin Whittaker and his daughter Holly, decide to take a holiday in Beaver Creek, Colorado. Meanwhile, Neve Avery, a sergeant in the 10th Mountain Division is leaving the US Army to take up a post as Manager of The Nordic Center at the resort.  They bump in to each other on the way and spend the vacation taking part in outdoor and festive activities, getting to know each other further. A relationship develops as shy Robin slowly is drawn out of his shell, through various family Christmas traditions.

The Synopsis

Robin Whittaker and his daughter leave England at about the same time as Neve Avery is leaving Kuwait.  They both fly via Amsterdam where they bump into each other and then again in Denver they meet accidentally again before sharing transport to Beaver Creek.

En route they discover a shared appreciation of the music of Michael Bublé and as the Whittakers are dropped at the hotel, they find out that Neve’s Aunt Judith is the concierge at the hotel. 

Neve continues her journey to Camp Hale to finalise her discharge papers and returns the next day (22nd December) to assist on a nature snowshoe trail activity as a way of saying thank you for the lift the previous night.

Robin and Holly have various planned activities for their Christmas week vacation which was intended to get them out of a rut in England and for them both, but Holly mainly, to experience a really snowy Christmas.

After the nature trail, they spend time in the Candy Cabin and in the evening Robin and Holly return the favour with a meal for Neve at a hearthside grill in the hotel.  They get to know each other further.

On the 23rd, Neve is shown around her new work place by the previous manager Hurit, while Holly and Robin go cross-country skiing with the same member of staff Ross, who took them out the previous day.  They enjoy sausages at a mountain grill at the end of the skiing.  In the afternoon Robin shows off his hot chocolate making skills with Neve (and Judith) at the log house Neve inherited from her parents, just to the north of the village and choose a tree in the afternoon.  There, Robin cuts his hand and they get a ride to the Emergency Room in Hurit’s husband (Sheriff’s Deputy) Berry Jackson’s cruiser.

In the evening, after some time at the hotel’s pool and hot tub to relax, Robin, Neve and Holly meet Hurit at the local theatre to catch a performance of A Christmas Carol and Robin is introduced to a superintendent and an assistant principal from the local high school, who think he could be what they need as a substitute teacher with a speciality in science.

Robin shows off some poor cookie decorating skills on Monday 24th, before he takes a phone call at Neve’s house in the barn, that is his interview for the substitute teacher job.  In the evening, he and Neve go, with Holly, to the skating rink to meet up with some of the some teachers and students prior to every heading off to the high school Snow Ball.  At the rink Holly makes friend with some middle schoolers who have older siblings at the high school Robin will attend.  Robin excels himself with some dancing at the Snow Ball and is greeted by the students with enthusiasm.

On Christmas day, Neve arises first in her house and opens a few presents.  Holly and Robin sleep in accidentally and have to be rushed around to Neve’s by taxi.  They receive and give gifts and using their new snowshoes, Holly and Robin go with Neve on a hike up towards the Candy Cabin before heading back down on the ski lift to the hotel.  On the walk, Robin loses the engagement rings, earrings and other pieces of jewellery he was planning to give to Neve.  Holly finds these on the way as Robin loses them and so saves the day.

In the late afternoon on Christmas Day, Judith takes the trio to her house for a large meal and to meet her family of husband John, son and chef Nathan and his wife, Vanessa and daughter, Scout who is also Holly’s age (10).  The two young girls get on well and play with the family’ rescue dog, Star.

Returning to the Hotel, a squally blizzard whips up which calls into question the suitability of Robin’s choice of final activity he has set up - the sleigh ride at about 9pm in the evening.  Luckily the weather breaks and a perfect layer of snow is left for the ride around the village.

Back up in the hotel room, Robin finally gets the opportunity to propose, Neve accepts, they have their big kiss, before they all settle down to watch a film from a Christmas movie marathon.

Tuesday 16 April 2019

Why did I write the first novel?

Why did I write the first novel?
Honestly, I was bored in the long afternoons after finishing teaching at Gulf English School in Qatar in 2004.
I assigned 1 hour each day to write a diary piece on the fictional character, Richard Buchanan. I had some really badly behaved boys in a science class and I allowed Richard to vent my anger and rage at the people he met on his voyages.
It was a catharsis, and I also took images and drawings and adjusted them to illustrate each chapter heading. The dates were the actual dates I was writing, all I did was change the year.  It was later on that I had to readjust the days of the week to match the real calendar of the time.
The one hour writing slowly drifted into 2 or more as I became more embroiled in the story. I spent more time researching the locations and then using Google Earth to worth out distances between locations, the currents and prevailing winds so as to see how long it was between landfalls.
Diagrams and pictures took longer and longer to complete and the story started to take over. Each day I had to find out what had happened historically to see if it could be used or would affect the story. Was there an alliance between England and France or England and Spain at the time. England being the catch-all term for Britain as the crowns were unified but not the parliaments yet.
Being the time of great scientific discovery with Newton and others around at the time. I discovered that pocket watches were available at the time of good quality and could have been used to work out longitude by an enterprising sailor with some genius. Just because the actual use of chronometers came 100 years later, didn't preclude the experimentation into their use in this story.
Likewise, a game of football, although not following association rules, could still occur as villages played against each other in medieval times.
In that respect, the story was historical and fictional with a bit of science fiction.
The writing continued from October 2005 through to April and May 2006.
I wrapped the story up, edited it and let a few colleagues read it to see what they thought.  I've always been pleased that history teachers I have met have liked it.
Two people who gave early encouraging words were Rachel Green- Roche and Linda Bonnar (nee Cunniffe).
The following year (2006) I met and then married my wife (2007) and so the writing with on hold and was forgotten about completely.
By the time I got to Abu Dhabi in 2009, the book was a file buried in a hard drive.  One on my colleagues in the CfBT school improvement team working for the Abu Dhabi Education Council was an American Wayne Brown who had his on publishing company. I mentioned the story, " Any Means to an End" and he encouraged me to dig it out polish it off.  He wanted me to pay him money to vanity press the book, but that didn't seem sensible given I was leaving the UAE in the summer of 2011.  What would I do with 1000 copies of a book? Excess baggage? I don't think so.
I sat on the idea again fir a few months until I heard again from a chap Peter Malone would had been at GES and was then in AD at the AD British International School. He told me about FeedaRead.com a self publishing group. Again I sat on the information while I had a brief foray into Alexandria to teach for a month before returning to the UK.
I was face with the prospect of not working for a while.  The benefits system was going to be 13 weeks delayed. The book had to be published.
I went through it again, came up with a parchment looking cover and published it. The family say the cover and objected. Suggestions arrived and eventually my mother used an image of the Wasa warship (as a basis of her painting for the cover) going past Tynemouth priory.
It was not going to save the family from starvation. I had to contact the mortgage company to freeze the payments for a few months.  I got a job through CfBT to work for the Mongolian government and Cambridge University international examinations, to go to Ulaan Baatoor for three months to improve the scores of the first cohort of students there doing IGCSE chemistry.
That gave me time to write. I cheekily submitted a chapter of the book to the Rosetta Press 2012 literary competition as a short story and got 2nd prize.
The prize was to have a cover done. But I didn't have a book needing one. I therefore wrote the follow-up, Protective Craft and it also got edited at the Rosetta Press.
Being in Mongolia became a prolific writing period. I finished Protective Craft. I got angry at some of the other UK staff moaning about working overseas, so I wrote the ebook version of Teaching Overseas - A Short Guide.  I then wrote Fishing Trip - An Introduction to Trout and Fly Fishing.
Protective Craft went off to FeedaRead and the following summer I used Photobox.co.uk to make a glossy version of the fishing book to give to my  daughter. It may well still be available there.
Sales were spotty to say the least. The next year 2012-13 I was in Kazakhstan and tried to use Twitter and Pinterest to boost sales, to no effect.
Only free giveaways on Amazon in 2013-14 (after I'd moved to Kuwait) seemed to shift copies and no reviews were forthcoming.
I did get a request to make the  teaching guide a paperback which I did in 2014 using FeedaRead. The content of those paperbacks was all black and white, an I was loathe to waste the fishing book on anything other than colour.
After shifting schools in Kuwait in 2014, another history teacher came to my rescue. He like the rights of man parts and the anti-slavery stance of the protagonist and decided to use the book in his teaching.  The students took to the book, made reviews as they bought ebooks and read on Kindle unlimited.
Income started to arrive. £18 a month, then 23 then 27,  43 and now it's £75/ month on  ebooks costing £0.75 each. The royalty is £0.33 per book. It's taken a while but things are moving along now.  It all started in 2005.  It's now 2019, but return on the time invested is occurring.
I started watching Christmas movies on the Hallmark channel in 2018. The was a note about unagented submissions for novels in February 2019. My wide encouraged me to write one.  So I did.  I submitted it and am awaiting the outcome.
I've seen my pension plans decompose over the years. E books seem to be a possible solution. A steady income while you sleep once written.

Thursday 4 April 2019

Mild Manic - depression / bi-polar

Ever since I was in secondary school, aged about 13, I noticed that, when essays and projects were concerned, I was able to do large creative bodies of work only once every 3 weeks.
The fourth week was tremendous. I would be keen and have no bother coming up with ideas for paintings, stories and getting really high scores. The peak would then tail off to a slump of lethagy and despondency 2 weeks later and then build up again.
This wasn't such a problem with a project that could be delayed to a time when I could deal with it on a high point, but it meant that if exams coincided with a low point, I was in trouble.
Now, if I'm to do planning for teaching, I leave it until I'm on an uptick of the wave.  Same for coming up with ideas for novels.   Once they have been started I can keep going. If I have a break from them it's really hard to get back on board in a trough of the wave. The words per day follows the wave too.  I can get 10k done on a non-working day at the crest of the creativity wave, tailing off to 250-400 on a trough day.
At the moment I'm in a trough, but coming out of it.

Thursday 14 March 2019

New Novel MS completed - Beaver Creek Christmas

I have completed the new novel.  Dispatched it to Hallmark Publishing for their unagented submission month of February.  I followed the guidelines and, in spite of sickness in January, got it submitted three days before the end of Feb. deadline.

Now all I'm doing is doing another edit while I wait.  Apparently I'll find out by the start of May whether they will pursue it as a book.


C
I had been watching a lot of Hallmark Christmas movies with my wife and it was her challenge to me in October, when she saw about the February submissions, to write a Christmas romantic novel.
I actually think it turned out rather well.

Other cover ideas include:
B

A

Any preferences?