The Joys of Being an Indie Author-Entrepreneur

A New Tradition: Patria Christmas Stories

Yesterday afternoon I was busy preparing for the submission of the next installment in my children’s Kingdom of Patria series, a Christmas novella entitled The Chronicles of Oliver Stoop, Squire Second Class: The Quest for Clodnus’s Collectibles. (Absorbed with this novella is where I’ve been for the past couple of weeks.) As I type this, the book has not yet been green-lit for sale on Createspace and Amazon, but I expect confirmation any time now. Inspired by Dickens, I have long wanted to inaugurate a tradition of Patria Christmas stories, and am gratified that I’ve finally begun to do so. I don’t know if I will publish a Patria novella every Christmas, but at the same time I don’t want this book to be a one-off project.

The original idea was to write something in the neighborhood of 12,000-15,000 words. In the end it weighed in at over 16,000, which seems to be just the right length for such a thing. While not nearly the length of a Patria novel, it’s long enough to engage a child for a good part of a lazy afternoon before the fire over the Christmas holiday.

It dawned on me while writing the novella that I had never written a work of fiction of this length before. I find that I like this length. With my high school English classes I’ve been reading an essay by Edgar Allan Poe, “The Philosophy of Composition,” in which Poe, in the context of discussing the origin of his famous poem, “The Raven,” explains how his first consideration in writing the poem had nothing to do with its theme, but with its length. He wanted to write a poem that his audience could read in one sitting, because he believed that was necessary for the poem to achieve maximum emotional impact. Granting that literary works of different lengths will pack different emotional punches, I agree with Poe that there is a distinct experience that comes with reading a work in one sitting, including a novella.

The Joys of Being an Indie Author-Entrepreneur

I was saying to someone just yesterday: I am not an ideologue when it comes to indie publishing. There are many ways to skin the proverbial mole and I remain open to all opportunities and adventures. But today I come to praise the joys of being an indie-entrepreneur. Which brings me back to yesterday afternoon.

At one point in the proceedings I was doing some 11th-hour work on both the final PDF of the interior design of the book and the final PDF of the cover design (see above). I was triangulating with two others: Ted Schluenderfritz, the illustrator who has been doing most of the art for the books and kingdomofpatria.com since the launch of Trojan Tub Entertainment in 2011, and Melanie Stephens, who has designed the interiors for all three Patria print books. As Melanie is also an illustrator, she’s also contributed some wonderful drawings and other creative elements to Stoop of Mastodon Meadow and, now, The Quest for Clodnus’s Collectibles. By mid-afternoon there were still some of Melanie’s illustrations for me to approve, some last edits to make of the text, some back-and-forth between me and Ted on aspects of the back cover design. The emails were flowing freely. I had set a deadline for submission to Createspace by close of business. But what struck me at one point during all of this creative flurry was, simply this:

That, with assists from two talented illustrators, I was able to sit in my rocking chair more or less at my ease, sip some free-range chai tea, and produce a highly attractive book which I will soon be taking to market. I was busy no doubt, but I was also stirring some other pots while minding the Patria production line. My hardest work was already done, of course, but still: how wonderful and joyous it is in our digital age to be able to pick oneself, create one’s best work, and ship it–all from the laptop sitting on one’s lap.

And now, from that same laptop, I am able to announce this good news to fans of the series. Never has it been easier to become an author–provided one is committed, as I happily am, to taking up the challenge of combining the creative work with the business of being an entrepreneur.

So what are you waiting for? Do you have a book inside you that you are eager to share with the world?Are you intrigued by the idea of building a business around your writing? The joys of being an indie author-entrepreneur can be yours with extraordinarily little inconvenience. Just pour yourself and cup of free-range chai tea and go to it.

The Purpose and Power of Children’s Literature

I had a wonderful time at Villanova University on Tuesday, where I gave a talk entitled, “The Purpose and Power of Children’s Literature.” The talk was sponsored by Villanova’s Office for Mission & Ministry as part of their Catholic Imagination in the Arts series. It was a special honor to be invited to speak in a series devoted to a theme so dear to my heart, and I want to thank my host, Office for Mission & Ministry planning and research director, Dr. Christopher Janosik, for so kindly extending the invitation.

There was a great crowd at the talk, comprised mostly of Villanova undergraduates, and we had a very meaty Q&A afterwards which I learned a lot from and appreciated. 

Pictured above is Your Faithful Servant with ardent Kingdom of Patria fan, Dora. Poor Dora had to suffer through my entire talk just so that she could get her Patria books signed. Thanks for being such a trooper, Dora!

What follows are my notes for “The Purpose and Power of Children’s Literature”–suitable for framing or wrapping fish.

Comments most welcome and appreciated!

 

The Purpose and Power of Children’s Literature

Daniel McInerny

A Talk Delivered in the Catholic Imagination and the Arts Series

Sponsored by the Office for Mission & Ministry

Villanova University

October 7, 2014

Introduction

  • Seeing the movie adaptation of The Fault in Our Stars by John Green. The mother coming out of the theater asking, “Is that what you wanted?” (not, “Did you like it?” more like feeding a need).
  • Sold more than 10 million copies worldwide. Currently no. 3 and 4 Amazon bestsellers 2014 (paperback and hardcopy), currently no. 15 in UK–despite being published at the beginning of 2012.
  • The move made 48.2 million and a #1 rating in its opening weekend–June 6 (beating out Tom Cruise’s Edge of Tomorrow), and has since grossed over 300 million worldwide.
  • It’s a seductive book, not because it glorifies illicit teenage sex, but because it aims for authenticity as opposed to phoniness (these are the descendants of Holden Caulfield and the cultural cousins of Lena Dunham)
  • Looking for authentic answers to questions about the meaning of suffering and the meaning of romantic love
  • But these questions do not receive anything like adequate answers; to be authentic is to realize that the universe does not really care about us, that suffering does not have a point; read the section on Antonietta Meo
  • The Fault in Our Stars is our adversary in the fight over the moral and spiritual formation of our children. And it’s a formidable one. How are we going to combat it? What would children’s literature look like as created by the Catholic imagination?  

I. Why is the Imagination So Important?

  • G.K. Chesterton, the sword and the trowel: the sword defends but the trowel (the imagination) helps cultivate + build (Nehemiah rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem); 
  • GKC says that the development of the imagination is the most essential element in education. Why?
  • I can learn what humility is conceptually by studying the relevant portions of Aquinas’s Summa. I can learn humility even better by watching my humble Aunt Edna. When it comes to learning how to act humbly in the world, Aunt Edna is more helpful than the Summa. Why? Because in Aunt Edna’s case I can see her action (we learn through the senses) and the love I have for her and the attractiveness of her humility compels the heart. And because my love for Aunt Edna and for the goodness of her actions motivates me to imitate her example and learn by doing. 
  • Works of the imagination occupy a middle space between conceptual works (theology, philosophy) and our friendships in the world (Aunt Edna)–and partake of some of each. Enjoyed in a contemplative, as opposed to practical, space, works of the imagination inspire our loves and thus enable us to imagine how life should really be lived.
  • The picture of humility that we find in Edmund’s narrative arc in C.S. Lewis’s The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe is both closer to the contours of human life as it is lived and is a more heightened image of humility that it compels the heart far more effectively (for most human beings) than the discussion of humility in the Summa
  • Works of the imagination enable us to picture how actually to live out the decisions we have to make, the roles we have to play, the culture we have to rebuild. In order to achieve a thriving homeschool, parish, Church, or culture, we first have to imagine it and experience what it would feel like to love it. Works of the imagination are thus critical exercises in ordering our loves (Augustine defines virtue as the ordo amoris).
  • But here’s the rub: works of the imagination can be seductive in a negative sense: they can persuade us with misleading pictures of what life is really all about. This is especially so with children, because children are moved by images, not arguments.  

So we need to ask ourselves: what sorts of images do our children need? 

II. Children’s Literature in the Catholic Tradition

Once upon a time, a poet climbed a mountain (Dante’s Purgatorio). Mathilda. His moral and intellectual transformation has prepared him to enter the terrestrial paradise.   

Purgatorio 28

“The poets in their melodies of old

may have dreamed on Parnassus of this spot

singing about the happy age of gold.

For here the human race was innocent;

forever spring, and fruit upon the vine.

This is the nectar which the poets meant.”

  • I believe all fairy stories are dreams of the golden world. I propose that all literature in the comic mode can be described as a dream of the terrestrial paradise. (Tragedy is about another aspect of our relation to God.) For this reason I want to argue that children’s literature is also a dream of terrestrial paradise.
  • And because of this, children’s lit has an essential understanding to a Catholic understanding of moral formation. Another way of putting My Central Point is this: 
  • Children’s literature is about the adventure into the “golden world” in which innocence is fought for and achieved

Define children’s literature

Define “golden world” 

Define innocence

A. Children’s Literature

  • Children’s literature, at least as we know it today, did not begin to emerge until the 19th century. Aesop (620-564 BC) fables were not children’s stories. We learn from Plato’s Republic that Homer was a key text in childhood education. Shakespeare did not read children’s books as we think of them: he was busy reading the plays of Plautus and Terence in Latin.
  • Of course, I’m not denying that these tales and folk tales were never adapted for children, much less denying that fathers have been telling bedtime stories to their children since man first dragged himself out of the primordial ooze.
  • But this isn’t what we think of when we think of children’s lit. We think of the children’s section at B&N, with its Winnie-the-Pooh Hundred Acre Wood backdrop; we think of the children’s section of the public library. We think of the books we enjoyed as children, probably none of which were older than 170 years. Children’s literature as we think of it, is of fairly recent vintage. 

John Newbery, Newbery’s Pretty Pocket Book (1744): pays tribute to Locke; edification + enjoyment; a children’s publishing business; The Newbery Medal (American)

The Brother’s Grimm, Children’s and Household Tales (1812)

Hans Christian Anderson, Fairy Tales (1835)

Victorian Era (1837-1901)

Edward Lear, A Book of Nonsense (1846)

Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland (1865)

Charles Kingsley, The Water-Babies (1863)

Louisa May Alcott, Little Women (1869)

George MacDonald, The Princess and the Goblin (1872)

Robert Louis Stevenson, Treasure Island (1883); A Child’s Garden of Verses (1885)

Andrew Lang, The Blue Fairy Book (1889)

E. Nesbit, The Railway Children, The Story of the Treasure Seekers, Five Children and It

The Edwardian Era (1901-1910, approx.)

J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan (1902)

Kenneth Graheme, The Wind in the Willows (1908)

The Secret Garden (1911)

Hilaire Belloc, Cautionary Tales (1907) 

Enid Blyton, The Famous Five, The Secret Seven series and the Noddy books (40s, 50s)

Roald Dahl (60s) 

Children’s literature rose to the fore in the Victorian era. Why?

  • tremendous rise in literacy rates and in education reform
  • tremendous growth in commerical publishing, which had a positive effect on book publishing for all ages.
  • But perhaps most importantly: in this period childhood came to be seen more and more as a protected period of education and enjoyment. Childhood became romanticized.
  • In one of his letters Lewis Carroll enthuses about children, “Their innocent unconsciousness is very beautiful, and gives one a feeling of reverence, as at the presence of something sacred” (Letters 381)

Why this sense of childhood as sacred?

  • Because of Romanticism
  • The first fifty years of the 19th century was the peak of Romanticism, a literary, artistic, cultural movement that reacted against the Enlightenment ideal of scientific rationality embodied, for example, in the Industrial Revolution. Romanticism was a response to the dehumanizing aspects of modernity.
  • Or as the philosopher Roger Scruton has put it: Romanticism was an attempt to recapture, in a secular mode, the medieval Christian sense of local community and reverence for God. 
  • This Romantic desire for reverence was exercised in one direction toward non-human nature, and in another direction toward the child.
  • This treasuring of childhood gave an increasingly secular culture a way of connecting to purity and innocence, to wonder and other worlds. It encouraged it to favor the imagination as opposed to reason in its scientific mode. Brad Birzer argues in his book, J.R.R. Tolkien’s Sanctifying Myth: Understanding Middle-Earth, that for Tolkien fairy stories provide us with a means to escape the drabness, conformity, and mechanization of modernity. I think the same could be said for the children’s literature that first sprung up in the Romantic period.
  • Indeed, I would argue that the Romantic sense of childhood, and the children’s literature that flowed from it, was one way of trying to re-create the golden world of the “terrestrial paradise.”
  • For this reason, though children’s literature is largely secular in inspiration, the fact that its deepest inclinations yearn for a terrestrial paradise puts it in an interesting relationship to the Catholic literary mind. The Catholic can deeply appreciate much of what good children’s literature is trying to do, even while it resists making idols out of childhood innocence and the child’s imagination. 

 

B. The Golden World

What do I mean by the “golden world”? 

  • Wonderland, Neverland, The Secret Garden, Oz, and the dreamworld where the wild things are; the magical London of Mary Poppins, The Hundred Acre Wood, Hogwarts, the pastoral world of The Wind in the Willows and the Redwall series, Terabithia, the barn of Charlotte’s Web, the house with Green Gables on Prince Edward Island; the revolutionary-era Boston of Johnny Tremain, the Connecticut Colony of Elizabeth George Speare’s The Witch of Blackbird Pond, the medieval England in Avi’s Crispin: The Cross of Lead. The golden world is not always a “secondary” world; it’s Treasure Island, the Camp Green Lake of Louis Sachar’s Holes, the “Mysterious Benedict Society” of the books by that name by Trenton Lee Stewart
  • The “golden world” represents the triumph of death over waste land.
  • Notice that these “golden worlds” are far from perfect images of Eden. They are filled with conflict, danger, evil, but I still call them “golden worlds” because it is in these worlds that characters undertake the work of restoring innocence. Innocence is not something given–it has to be fought for.
  • We see this very clearly in Frances Hodgson Burnett’s 1911 classic,The Secret Garden: the garden of innocency needs to be discovered and tended to. And in doing so, friendship and reconciliation and renewed innocence are achieved. It’s a story, to paraphrase Mathilda, of how to get back to the Garden.
  • In The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings the golden world is in one sense the Shire, but more, it’s the adventure that sustains the peaceful life of the Shire. 

GKC: “Fairy tales do not give the child the idea of the evil or the ugly; that is in the child already, because it is in the world already. Fairy tales do not give a child his first idea of bogey. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of bogey. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St. George to kill the dragon.”

  • So we’re not talking innocence in the sense of remaining “sheltered”–quite the opposite, in fact. Remember, good children’s literature pictures innocence as an achievement. What Bilbo says to Frodo in The Lord of the Rings captures the point well: “It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.” 

Innocence

Finally, I want to say a word about the innocence that is achieved I’ve been talking a lot about innocence. What do I mean by that? 

  • Start here with another objection. Children’s literature keeps us “innocent” in a negative sense.
  • Innocence is an achievement; it’s an exercise of virtue; it’s not being sheltered: quite the opposite. What Bilbo says to Frodo in The Lord of the Rings captures this point well: “It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.”
  • So the kind of innocence I’m talking about is a state of moral character–reached, like Dante’s, at the end of a long journey with many hardships along the way.
  • This understanding of innocence is becoming increasingly threatened by the contemporary children’s publishing establishment. Meghan Cox Gurdon, children’s book reviewer of the WSJ: “The Case for Good Taste in Children’s Books.” in Imprimis, a publication of Hillsdale College. Her point is about the pernicious state of YA “problem novels.” Sex. Abuse. Self-abuse. Gurdon: “The argument in favor of such books is that they validate the real and terrible experiences of teenagers who have been abused, addicted, or raped—among other things. The problem is that the very act of detailing these pathologies, not just in one book but in many, normalizes them.”

Conclusion

  • Weeding. Much contemporary children’s literature seeks to distort this picture of innocence. So we need to remain vigilant. The dangers of YA and not only for teenagers.
  • At the same time, we need to be “catholic” in our tastes. These golden worlds need not be explicitly Catholic or Christian to make for valuable reading. The story of Mathilda implies that the stories of non-believers have truth to them. In a sense, these attempts to find the golden world are “our” stories. There’s no need for us to be pigeon-holed by anybody as “parochial.” What we need are stories that trace a hero’s journey to fight for innocence.  Support excellence wherever you find it.
  • My last point is my most important one. We need Catholic artists and we need books, we need works that will rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. What we need more than anything else are works by Catholics who really understand how to use the trowel, who master the craft of storytelling–and not just stories about saints and not just Catholic writers living 50-60 years ago. We need to encourage such authors and to support them. And the writers themselves need to write and bring their works into the world. By any means necessary Self-publishing: ownership. Analogy with homeschooling.     

Talking Children’s Literature with Sheila Liaugminas

On Tuesday, June 17 I had the pleasure of appearing on Sheila Liaugminas’s radio program, A Closer Look, in order to talk about children’s literature and the power of the imagination. It was full hour, and our conversation ranged over several topics:

  • my humorous Kingdom of Patria series for middle grade readers
  • the importance of good literature for children
  • why the imagination is an integral component of moral and spiritual formation at any age
  • the Catholic underpinnings of the whole genre of children’s literature
  • where writers get their ideas
  • the book and film, The Fault in Our Stars

You can enjoy listening to the interview here.

I’d love to know what you think of it and to continue the conversation.

The Truth About the U.S. Government’s Secret Area 1.

Very powerful people would stop at nothing to keep me from showing you what I’m about to show you. Here, finally, is the shocking truth behind the U.S. Government Secret Area 1.

Preparing for the Release of “The Actor”

I haven’t had much time to blog of late as I’m in the homestretch of preparations for the release, next Tuesday, of my play, The Actor, based on part of the early life of Karol Wojtyła, the man who became Pope John Paul II. I’m timing the launch of the play with the canonization of John Paul II, which will take place in Rome on Sunday, April 27.

Homeschoolers will be especially interested in talks I’ll be giving at two homeschooling conferences this summer. I’m going to speak on, “Children’s Literature, Catholicism, and the Golden World,” a version of a talk I gave last fall at Notre Dame, to both the IHM National Homeschool Conference in Fredericksburg, Virginia and the IHM Maryland Homeschool Conference in Mt. Airy, Maryland. Here are the dates and locations:

IHM Maryland Homeschool Conference

St. Michael’s Catholic Church

Mt. Airy, MD 21771

Saturday, May 17, 2014

 

IHM National Homeschool Conference

Fredericksburg Expo and Conference Center

2372 Carl D. Silver Parkway

Fredericksburg, VA 22041

Friday, June 20, 2014

I haven’t yet been told the precise times of my talks–I’ll let you know as soon as I do.

At both conferences I’ll be available to sign books after my talks. I will have limited numbers of Patria books with me, so I encourage you, if you’re interested in signed books, to purchase yours beforehand from Amazon and bring them to the conference.

Trojan Tub Entertainment, the children’s entertainment company under which I publish the Kingdom of Patria series, will have a vendor table both the Friday and the Saturday (May 16-17) of the national conference.

I look forward to seeing you at one of these events!

 

The photograph above is of St. Mary’s Church in Wadowice, Poland, where soon-to-be Pope Saint John Paul II was baptized on June 20, 1920. It is reproduced courtesy of Piotrek Szymakowski at Flickr Creative Commons under the following license.

My Recent Visit to St. Peter School on Capitol Hill

I’m very grateful to Mr. Brian Boyd for the following testimonial regarding my recent visit to St. Peter School on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. in order to do a reading from my Kingdom of Patria children’s series, along with some Q&A and a book signing. What a wonderful afternoon it was with the wonderful students from St. Peter!

Teachers–I know it’s impossible for you to take your class on a field trip to the Kingdom of Patria, so why not let the Kingdom of Patria come to you! For those in the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan area we can certainly talk about a live visit. For those around the world a Google Hangout can work very well. As a former elementary school teacher myself, I appreciate all that you do and guarantee an experience for your students that will enlighten, entertain, and inspire!

“As a general rule, students like assemblies — and still I’ve never seen my middle-school students so captivated as when we had Daniel McInerny visit to welcome them to the Kingdom of Patria. Far more than a book reading, Dr. McInerny also taught the story’s historical background and held a fascinating Q&A about what it’s like to be a “real-life” author, planting good seeds which have already inspired my students to try their own hand at fiction! It was an absolute delight to have Dr. McInerny speak at my school, and I cannot more strongly recommend having him speak to students from 4th through 8th grade: an hour of giggles, groans, and good old-fashioned storytelling is guaranteed.”

Mr. Brian Boyd
Middle School Language Arts Teacher &
Dean of Student Life
St. Peter School
Washington, D.C.

 

 

A Recent Interview

Yesterday on her blog, So I’m Fifty, Pam Torres, a children’s middle grade book blogger, posted this interview with me regarding my humorous Kingdom of Patria series for middle grade readers.

Enjoy!

New Kingdom of Patria Series Book Trailer

I’m proud to present the new book trailer for my Kingdom of Patria series. I’d love to hear what you think about it–either in the com box here, or over on YouTube.