Somebody’s got a birthday today.

No Time For Kings is 12 years old! Geez Louise, in a few more years, it’ll be old enough to drive. Books grow up so fast these days.

When my novel was published on August 9, 2011, it was probably the proudest accomplishment of my life. Not counting kids, wife, house, that really bitchin’ homemade BBQ sauce I make, etc. I wasn’t even a professional writer yet–I was, in fact, unemployed at the time–which made the whole thing that much sweeter.

Publishing a novel is like carving out a slice of immortality. It’s humbling to think that, long after I die, my words will live on. Here on the blog, sure, but a physical book is different. Actual pages, an ISBN (978-1-61434-460-5).

It’s humbling. I feel eternal.

Tara was my very first customer, by the way. I love that. We weren’t even a couple yet (but we were close). The day I published my novel, my whole life changed. And it was about to change a whole lot more.

Today, I did something I haven’t done since…well, probably August, 2011. I cracked open my novel and began reading it.

Here’s the thing about writers: we’re our own worst critics. I hadn’t yet polished my craft when writing No Time For Kings (a process that began in 2006, was derailed for a few years while I went through a divorce, and then resumed in earnest again in 2009). I feel like a much more proficient writer now and was honestly afraid I’d start redlining my own book page after page. Groaning over my virgin sentence structure. Chiding myself for excessive comma use and lazy metaphors.

But actually, none of those things happened. After finishing Chapter 1, I told Tara, “Hey, this is really good!” Which sounds extremely egotistical, I get that. But is it wrong to feel proud of something you created all on your own? I don’t think so.

No Time For Kings hasn’t made me a fortune. I haven’t even recouped the publishing costs. But I never expected to. I didn’t write it for money; I wrote it for love. I had a story I felt compelled to share, and by god, I did exactly that. It’s my modest legacy, and you can’t put a price tag on that.

To mark this auspicious occasion, I am officially announcing that there will be a sequel called Earth Fights Back.

(At least, I think so. Just gotta turn the threads of an idea that have been percolating around my brain for a few weeks into something concrete–an actual plot–and then write the damn thing. No biggie.)

The basics, if I can work them out:

Twelve years after bringing down the ecoterrorist group Earth Fights Back, investigative journalist Rachel Sullivan-Warren is covering an unfolding global climate crisis. As an endless series of disasters strikes and the death toll from a warming planet continues to climb, she is forced to wrestle with a previously unthinkable question…

Was Earth Fights Back right all along?

Anyway, that’s my elevator pitch. For many years I shied away from a sequel, wanting to focus on other stories. I published Dream Sailors on the Kindle Vella platform, but that has gone absolutely nowhere. Tara asked if I’ve given up on it. I have not; I am very proud of the story, and with a few additional tweaks, I think it might yet end up an actual physical book, too. But No Time For Kings is like a first love, and revisiting those characters excites me. The timing feels right, and with real life looking more and more like fiction every day, I might be able to capitalize on current events while also helping to raise awareness over the fact that our planet is doomed unless we get serious about taking action.

Earth Fights Back won’t be happening anytime soon, and honestly, may never see the light of day. But I’m feeling more inspired than I have in years, and I figure this blog post will at least make me accountable.


42 responses to “Happy birthday, Rachel and Alex.”

  1. I downloaded the free sample on my kindle. I do not read much but I am hoping I will have more free time in winter. Happy Birthday to your book!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you. If you do crack it open, I hope you enjoy it!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I really liked your book. There were a couple of times when something happened with Rachel toward the end of the book that painted a very prominent picture in my brain… I won’t give away spoilers but I just wanted you to know that it was effective and that your character was very likable to me. 😊

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you so much for supporting me and saying such kind things! I do think one of my strengths is creating believable characters. Even from a female perspective, apparently!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Fifth! Okay, now I need to go back and read the post.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, well. Can’t win ’em all!

      Like

  4. So glad that it reads well on the re-read.
    Good luck with the sequel!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Me, too. Though to be fair, I’m only a couple of chapters in. But so far, so good!

      Like

  5. Yeah, I still like my novel and my short story collection. The characters are drawn well and the story is good. I wrote a book that I’d love to read. I reread it a couple years ago and liked it all over again. I’m still “working” on the next one (with the same characters). I’m not sure thinking it’s good is ego…it might be more like relief.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. “Relief” is the perfect way to sum it up. Makes sense that a fellow novelist would know exactly the write word to use. Good luck on your sequel! I love the parentheses around “working.” Been there myself, too.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. I checked out your book on Amazon just to see (first) if it was THERE and then, to read the sneak peak. Not at all what I was expecting from the title. And it does read really well! Update your resume further down the page though, because you’re no longer in Rapid City!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ahh, thanks, Nancy. My author bio is hopelessly outdated…I never think to fix that, but I will now. For some reason, I’d figured you’d read the book a decade ago!

      Like

  7. Over the years I’ve had a lot of blog friends who thought they were writers. They’d publish a book, I’d buy it in support… and was always disappointed. Until yours. A blogger who can actually write! Who knew? 😉
    I’m totally on board for the sequel.
    Good luck!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I know I keep using the word “humbling,” but truly — this comment is just that. Thank you for taking a chance on another blogger’s book, and thank you even more for actually liking it. 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I take my reading seriously and don’t praise when it’s not deserved.
        😉

        Liked by 1 person

  8. What an accomplishment and even better that you still like what you wrote! I know many bloggers, myself included, cringe at stuff we wrote long ago,

    Liked by 1 person

    1. To be fair, I cringe at old blog posts all the time. Guess I put a little more effort into my fiction back then!

      Like

  9. I still like to go back and read my snarky posts from years ago. I think I am meant to do snarky and cynical. I’m not really all that nice 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Haha! While I absolutely think you’re nice, I can totally see the snarky, cynical side too. That’s a compliment. It just means you’re well-balanced!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Well thank you! I do think snark is my hidden side, one I quite enjoy revealing more as older age wisdom sets in 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I think a lot of people almost except older individuals to be snarky anyway. It’s something we all age into as we stop caring so much about how others perceive us.

        Liked by 1 person

  10. Yay! Happy Birthday “NTFK”! 😊😊😊

    Liked by 1 person

  11. I admire your ability to write novels, it takes more energy & imagination than I could ever do. I’ve wondered about Kindle Vella and you’ve answered my questions about it. Anyway, getting to a real comment here, congrats.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. To be fair, I’ve only managed to crank out two novels in 17 years. I’m hardly prolific! It may be 20 years before the sequel comes out (though I hope not).

      Kindle Vella intrigued me, but I don’t think a lot of people have latched on to it.

      Liked by 1 person

  12. Congrats on your novelversary! I think it says a lot about your writing that you didn’t cringe when you re-read your book. We can be our own worst critics, for sure and I like a writer that has a (deserved) confident opinion about their skills.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I like Jim Stewart’s comment above. He wrote a book he’d like to read. So did I. Nothing wrong with liking that!

      Like

  13. May the manifesting continue! And happy birthday.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Even when I’m not actively manifesting anything, it’s always on in the background. Like an episode of “The Office” you’ve seen a thousand times that you’re half-watching while cooking a sausage and mushroom frittata.

      Liked by 1 person

  14. Happy Book Birthday! It’s on my “to read” list, but since I haven’t read it yet, I skipped over the synopsis of the sequel in case it gave too much of the first book away. If I can mourn the loss of a travel trailer, you can celebrate the birthday of a book. 😉

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, no! Your travel trailer is toast?? (I see a new post in my feed. I’ve been wondering about you. RIP, Bobbie. I’ll catch up this afternoon.)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’ve been AWiL (absent WITH leave) in Europe.

        Liked by 1 person

  15. I love reading that you re-read and were proud of it. It is a really great book. By the way, I haven’t figured out how to get the Kindle Vella platform so I suppose I have to work harder at that because I’d love to read Dream Sailors. And you know I’ll be one of the first inline (I’ll cede the privilege of first to Tara) for your sequel. I’m all in, Mark! Love your writing, imagination, and this little bit of tease!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you so much! You’re too kind. Kindle Vella is kind of tricky. It’s a serialized format in which you buy tokens, then use those to unlock chapters. Interesting concept that hasn’t really caught on.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Huh – that is an interesting idea….

        Like

  16. Okay, so bit of a delay between my first comment and this one. I DID actually go back and read the post but then wasn’t able to comment. Something about small people in my home, maybe? Whatever. At any rate, that’s great that you actually enjoyed your early writing and have plans to make another. Good on you, Mark!

    Like

  17. You are such a talented writer and YOU SHOULD be proud of your book!! Happy Book-Aversary. 😉

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Aww, thank you so much!

      Like

  18. […] wasn’t even a professional writer yet, I told a pretty good story. I was impressed enough to sort-of promise a sequel. Maybe, […]

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  19. […] been kicking around the idea of taking part this year, so I can finally get to work writing my sequel to No Time for Kings. It’s a huge commitment, but one that can pay off tremendously: I successfully completed […]

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