Interview with Don Miles, author of Cinco de Mayo
Published March 19, 2008
Have you ever suffered from writer’s block? What seems to work for unleashing your creativity?
Writer’s block? Not really. As I said, my motivation has always been, “Somebody’s gotta write this,” so when I commit to the topic, the whole project sort of gains a life of its own, like a runaway train. I’ll admit to you, though, that I wrote a complete novel about Cinco de Mayo before I wrote the non-fiction book that’s been published. As I resumed sending the manuscript for the novel around, a reviewer said that one of my characters was “flat,” meaning that she was just “there” in every scene but didn’t do much. After a few days, I had her kidnapped by a serial killer, but that’s as close as I’ve ever come to writer’s block. Even then, the delay was because I was busy with other stuff and had deliberately set the manuscript aside.
How was your experience in looking for a publisher? What words of advice would you offer those novice authors who are in search of one?
My advice would be, “Keep your day job.” I was rejected by 44 agents over more than a year of sending out queries for the novel, but when one of them wrote on the rejection slip, “I’d like to see a non-fiction version of this,” I immediately got in touch with him and he took me on. Even he couldn’t find me a traditional publisher, though, so I finally laid out my own money and went with a subsidy publisher. At least we were talking about a real book, not just an idea or a manuscript. I’m about ready to upgrade from there, and I’ll have two editions in Spanish coming out in ’09, with maps and charts and a lot of nice color graphics.
What type of book promotion seems to work the best for you?
I have one of the best publicists in the business, and together we’ve spent the past year researching that very question. I told a panel at “Book Expo America” in New York last summer that my best responses were coming from libraries, museums and the field of education, but I said that Barnes & Noble, Borders and the other major book stores were not putting it on their shelves. One of the panel members told me how to solve the problem. He said, “Just change the title to The Secret Diary of Anna Nicole Smith!” Oh, sure. On the other hand, I addressed a faculty gathering at the University of Texas on May 4th, the night before Cinco de Mayo, and the very next day I sold 19 books at Book People, the state’s largest independent bookstore, a few blocks away. Unless you’re already famous, you’re going to be in a “learning process” when the book comes out. You have to be flexible and patient.
What is your favorite book of all time? Why?
Oh, I’d have to say Three Cups of Tea, by Greg Mortenson. He’s a mountain-climber, and when he failed to make it to the top of one of the world’s toughest peaks known as “K-2,” he wound up in a little village in Pakistan. They were extremely poor, but since they had treated him with such warmth and kindness, he promised that he would come back and build a school for them. Well, this is way up in the Karakoram mountains, where the Taliban got its start. This is the story of how he not only went back and built a school, but in the next ten years he built 55 of them. It’s a really fine example of Americans at their best, and a relief from all the “negatives” we hear in the news lately.
- Interview with Don Miles, author of Cinco de Mayo
- Published: March 19, 2008
- Type: Interview
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Nonfiction, Books: Latino, Books: History, Books: The Writing Life
- Writer: Mayra Calvani
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