The book "Cumberland" is written, it's 85,400 words strong, and I think it will be between 350 and 360 pages. I have to complete the Thank You page, the Dedication, the Disclaimer, and the Author Notes. I've just gone through it and worked out the paragraph spacing. It's funny, in some novels you don't see any spaces between paragraphs, and in some you do. I think I've done that too, in my own writing. I hate that I have. I may need to someday, not today, go through them all to make them more consistent with each other, but I really don't think I'll ever get around to doing that. If a publishing house ever wants to buy the rights from me and do that, I'll let them. Until then, no, it is what it is.
So, "Cumberland" is done. Now I'll go through it ONE MORE time and check for errors before sending it up to be printed. Then, once it's printed, it comes back to me as a book, and I go through it again to find even more mistakes. I am a strong believer that you can't really find your own mistakes very easily - I have to have the book in my hands to see it as a book before I can find them all, and even then, I don't find each and every single mistake. It is, again, as it is. I'm not going to fret over it. Nothing in life is worth that much fretting.
To say the book is good is a matter of opinion. I certainly like it. I'm still making small adjustments, and they should be done by the end of next Saturday. Sunday next, around Feb 15th or so, it should be ready to send up for publication. When it returns 10 days later, I'll go through it and send it back up with final revisions around the 1st of March. I'm on schedule!! That always makes me happy. I was sick a couple of times during this book's writing, so I didn't know if I would remain on my personally set timetable or what - but so far, so good.
When the book goes up for print, I'll start writing the next book. It's going to be a full-fledged silly and nonsensical book - written nearly entirely by the AI I call TEAGUE. I'll let loose with my instructions, of course, say what I think should happen, chapter by chapter, and then let the AI write it. If I like it, I'll keep it; if not, I'll scrap it and start over. It's an experiment, one I'm looking forward to partaking in, and one I hope will be fun and beneficial.
"Cumberland", though a little dark at times, is a good book. Poor Nick Posh is in for some really rough waters - and then some. He's left home alone to mourn when his grandfather dies, and has to leave his family to take an assignment that should take one week but ends up taking over a month. His car is swept out from under him in a freak rainstorm, which floods the entire area. He nearly drowns, hurts himself, gets kidnapped, and is betrayed by the man who hired him! It's a mess to be sure -- and somewhere in the middle of it all, he has to actually do his detective work and find a dead body that's been hidden for over 10 years.
You'd think he would just give it all up, but he can't! His wife just gave birth again - the family is growing, and he's got tuition to save for! How can he quit? He can't quit because his best friend just moved from Chicago to Oklahoma City to join him in his detective agency - one he didn't realize he had; he typically works alone. Well, it's all tipsy-turvy now! Some folks say that the mountains in Tennessee hold too many secrets, while others say they hold their own. Nick finds out the hard way - and he'll never forget it.
I liked writing "Cumberland". It wasn't planned, but hey, some of the best things in life are unforeseen until they pop up and smack you right between the eyes - REALITY!!
Photo Credit: Me (it's my own barn door)


