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The History of How to Schedule a Death

How to Schedule a Death drops in 3 days. It’s the darkest book I’ve ever written. It’s also the first book I’ve ever written for an adult audience. Today I’m opening up all my old writing notebooks, blog posts, documents, and file folders. I’m scouring my notes for anything even remotely related to the project. 

Let’s see the history behind this amazing new thriller. 

Idea Journals
The original blog post featuring what will, basically, be the opening chapter for How to Schedule a Death

Looking back on all of these documents to find these dates and look at how far this little idea has come taught me a few important things that I want to share with all of you out there who are writing (or want to be).

  1. No idea is a bad idea. Some ideas might come to you incomplete, at the wrong time, or when you’re not ready to write them. But they’re not bad ideas. Write them all down and revisit what you have written down often. If I hadn’t written that off-the-wall writing prompt idea down in November of 2015 How to Schedule a Death never would’ve happened. 
  2. Trust your gut. I can tell just by looking back on my notes that there were times I knew this idea would be something but I just didn’t feel it yet. I once stopped drafting one scene mid sentence because I just wasn’t feeling connected to it anymore. As much as my gut knew this was a good story, I also knew something was wrong. I had to trust my instinct. 
  3. Be persistent. You never know when rereading something old will spark inspiration. You never know how much you’ve changed or how much the idea has changed. There were literal YEARS this little idea spent time just hanging out in my idea journal. I would open it, read it again, and think about it. I couldn’t let the idea go. I’m glad I never did. 
  4. Don’t rush the process. I’m a firm believer in taking the time you need to let the story happen. If I had rushed into writing this with the original outline, it wouldn’t be as strong. If I had never bothered to revisit it and see how I could flush it out, it wouldn’t be as interesting. Take time with the idea and let it develop into its absolute best work. 

Now we’re here. Three days away from the new book and still deep into other projects. I’m so glad I kept with this one. Regina deserves to have her story told. If you’re into dark thrillers, I hope you’ll check this one out. It’s been a long time coming. 

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