**'The Beat' was published on December 16th. Read it here: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/115101
There is nothing so shameless and necessary as self-promotion when you are self-publishing fictional work.
In the coming days I will publish my first baseball short story on the self-publishing site Smashwords.
The story is set in the minors (where else?) and is an idea that went through a five-year gestation process. My desire to tell a fictional story about the minor leagues grew as the idea grew.
The story is a mix of ideas, inspired by my own experiences, and the unique world of minor league baseball. As I gained experience as a reporter, I experienced frustrations, and witnessed others. I saw and heard things that made me laugh, taught me to be tougher, and gave me insight into the heart of a kid's game. I understood young players and why they fought so hard for something they cared about. I saw their hearts break and watched them grow strong enough to pick up the pieces and declare there was another day, another chance, a way to make it. What was most profound was the pressure on guys so young and how they managed to not crack under it. That served as inspiration for the young top prospect the story focuses on.
That leads to what will inevitably be the main question. The player is based on no one. I imagined a player dealing with indescribable pressure and what he would do if the spotlight shined on him in a way that frightened him.
The writers in the story are a composite of people I know, some are experiences I've had or heard about. I will not name names. I won't answer questions about what's pure fiction or lifted from real life. And when I say they're people I know, that doesn't mean baseball people.
What I wanted was to tell a story about four writers on the same beat. I knew I wanted to main character to be a girl, fairly young, but a litle seasoned. The original idea came several years ago. I started thinking about writing about baseball writers in a different time period, but that fell away. It was also around that time when an expose book was written on a famous player. I started having a lot of conversations with writers about being THAT person, who blows the whistle, and exposes a player's life. Some people feel they're fair game, others have no interest in reading stories about players taken down that way. Around the same time, a minor incident happened when I was about report on something and decided against it. All those ideas came together and I started to have something.
My experiences through the years, a desire to tell a story about a female reporter and a group of colleagues chasing a big story became 'The Beat.'
What I didn't expect to come out of it was a recurring character. I'm planning on building a series of stories around her throughout her career and have already begun plans for the second installment. I hope for her to be a strong female character and a positive representation of women in the sports media. There's been so much negative attention and discussion about female sports reporters, I wanted to show a woman I related to, that was tough, thoughtful, and intelligent, but faces challenges she is forced to grow from in the business.
I've priced the story at a low rate, with every budget in mind and consideration to my own lack of experience. I'm known as a baseball reporter, not a fiction writer. I know that I have to build a following and so I wanted the price to be fair. I also understand it's not a full length book or a book at all, so I was realistic.
I'll be publishing it soon and I hope you'll read.
**Updated December 13th**
Publication of 'The Beat' will be Friday, the 16th. [official cover art above]
**Updated December 15th**
Some notes: I've played a bit with time and changed names and titles for story purposes.Here are a few of the changes, before you read, so that I might keep any confusion from happening.
*MLB Network didn't debut until several months after the story takes place.
*The team, the Trenton Hunters, is a Nationals Double-A affiliate in the story. The Trenton Thunder are actually the Double-A affiliate of the New York Yankees.
*The two competing newspapers in the story are fictional.
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