Revising Old Work – Blood of the Witch Heir

Recently I had the publishing rights to several of my novels returned to me. This was a strategic decision made due to the original publisher selling itself to another site, which I felt wasn’t a great fit for my work.

Before I did this, I reached out to Amazon to make sure there wouldn’t be any copywrite issues once the reversions were done and exactly what I was allowed to do with the work once it was mine to publish again. Things like if I wanted to change the title (which I did) and if I should put a notice in the front of the novel letting readers know that this is a Re-Release.

The answer to both those questions was yes, I could change the title but it would be like releasing a whole new book so the reviews I have on the original won’t be transferable. And yes, I can put a notice in the beginning pages letting people know so they aren’t shouting at me that I stole someone else’s work. (Difficult to do there, it’s still the same author name.)

Due to contracts and all that, the things that I COULD NOT use from my original publication was the cover art and the editing. The Publishing House paid for the editor to this work originally, and thus owned the rights to that version.

This was fine. I have grown enough in my craft that I felt confident I could take the book to the next level.

That said…

Revisiting old work is hard.

Mega hard.

Tooth pulling hard.

It hurts to see what I put out into the world. Not only have I grown as a writer, I have grown as a person too. Things that I didn’t blink twice at before have been unpacked and rewritten. The themes at the core of the book revolving around trust and independence and how the two have to learn in live in harmony are being highlighted better.

On the line-by-line level, the narrative has been given a major overhaul.

But more than that, the characters are being given the chance to breathe more. Elsie Varene Delgora is as sharp as ever, and Dorian Feverrette remains my favorite roguish nobleman. Their story is one of tragedy and triumph, despair and love, and I sincerely hope that readers walk away from it knowing that no matter how dark the path they have traveled, joy and happiness can still be achieved if we’re willing to open ourselves to it.


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Comments

3 responses to “Revising Old Work – Blood of the Witch Heir”

  1. sallybyname Avatar
    sallybyname

    You can, of course, change the title, but it’s not necessarily a good idea. I’ve been scolded because readers bought the same book twice and blamed me. It wasn’t even my decision to change the title! Then there was the vicious reviewer that hunted down the second (title changed) edition just for the fun of skewering my poor book twice. In all my fifty-odd years of being commerically published I don’t think I’ve ever read such a nasty review of my books or any other. And I got served twice! Putting “rerelease” might not save you if someone buys online. Sigh.

    1. ajmaguire Avatar

      Seriously? That is so rude. I will never understand the instinct to tear things down like that. I appreciate honest reviews and accept when my work is not someone’s cup of tea, but that’s being weirdly spiteful.

      This particular book was originally released back in 2011, so I think it will be alright as long as I keep shouting to my core group of readers that it is a re-release. Plus, to be completely honest, this overhaul is changing so much of the book that it should be a new (and hopefully delightful) experience.

      That said, I am so sorry that happened to you. It must have felt like a personal attack rather than a review of your book.

      1. sallybyname Avatar
        sallybyname

        It was gratuitously nasty. I’ve never before or since had such a review. If it had gone to some novice writer rather than an old veteran it might have caused serious angst.

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