Tag Archives: Children’s Stories

Introducing Fiona Veitch Smith and Crafty Publishing: David and the Hairy Beast claws its way to market

Fiona Veitch Smith

Fiona Veitch Smith

I MET FIONA VEITCH SMITH online via the Association of Christian Writers facebook group, where she was telling us a bit about her experiences of trying to persuade Christian bookshops to stock her new children’s book, David and the Hairy Beast.

Curious to know more, I checked out her website where I found, to my delight, an excerpt — and loved it. Hopefully, you will too — and you might even find your customers like it as well, but there’s only one way to find out about that…

I invited Fiona to tell us all about it. She writes:

David and the Hairy Beast claws its way to market

When we read of bookshop chains shutting down, publishing contracts becoming scarcer than a footballer without a super injunction and the bogey man of the e-book market changing the way we consume books, then you would be forgiven for raising an eyebrow at a new company launching its pilot title – in hard copy. Add to that the fact that the pilot is ‘self-published’ and the more business savvy among you may well be tutting in disdain. And yet, that’s what Crafty Publishing is doing. My husband Rod and I felt called to start Crafty Publishing using some of the redundancy money he received after being ‘released’ from the NHS. Our vision is to test out the market and distribution chains with a series of children’s picture books that I’ve written and then, if all goes well, start taking on other titles.

But we’re not going into this blindly. I am not a wannabe author who is so desperate to see her name in print that I’d sell the family silver to see it happen. I am already published and produced in a variety of genre including theatre, film and books. I’m currently working on a non-fiction book contract with Lion Hudson and a devotional booklet contract with CWR as well as continuing to work on a series of ghost-written children’s books for the secular market. In addition, I have worked as a freelance editor for Tafelberg Publishing in South Africa as well as for a number of magazines (in the UK and SA).

So why am I publishing my own work? I got a taste for the business side of self-publishing about eight years ago. My first book, Donovon’s Rainbow, was published in South Africa by Vineyard International Publishing (who have subsequently discontinued their children’s line). The book was not distributed beyond Vineyard bookshops in the UK, so when I moved back here in 2002 I asked permission from the publisher to distribute it. Effectively then I took on the job of a self-publisher. I entered the book for the Writers’ News best self-published / independently published children’s book of the year award in 2002 and won. The award gave me confidence to tackle the market and I was able to distribute the book to around 20 bookshops in the UK (secular and Christian).

It was a steep curve and I quickly had to learn about things like wholesale discounts the pros and cons of sale or return, the horrors of cold calling and the shaky financial footing of independent booksellers. I also realised that the title I was trying to sell did not fit easily into existing age categories and that the cover made it look as if it was for a younger readership than it actually was. Despite that, the book went into profit, but we would not do it the same way again.

So when my husband and I decided to launch our own title this year, we had some background to draw on. In addition, since 2002, the internet has become a much more effective marketing tool and as he is a professional software developer, he has been able to tackle that side of things.

But it’s still a scary world out there for a new publisher, not least when dealing with some bookshop managers who consider any ‘retelling’ of a bible story with the same abhorrence they normally reserve for Satan (or Rob Bell). However, there are some great folk too and in the month since the title’s been launched, five bookshops have agreed to stock us and our online sales are ticking over very nicely.

David and the Hairy Beast

David and the Hairy Beast

Our pilot title is called David and the Hairy Beast (retailing at £5.99) and is the first in a series of six books about the childhood of King David. The illustrations are by my design partner, Amy Barnes. We’re working on the next book, David and the Kingmaker, now. It will be ready for distribution in October, in time for the Christmas market. We’ll see how sales go in the New Year before launching the third in the series David and the Giant.

To find out more, please visit www.craftypublishing.com

Fiona Veitch Smith
e: Fiona AT thecraftywriter.com
www.thecraftywriter.com
www.craftypublishing.com
facebook.com/pages/Crafty-Publishing/229271997105270

Friends and Heroes

I invited Dave Carlos, Marketing Director at Friends and Heroes, to tell us something about the company’s vision…

“Where there is no vision, the people perish” – Proverbs 29:18

I find this a fascinating verse and one which I see as at the heart of the inspiration for Friends and Heroes!

The Friends and Heroes team were in the USA recently, at ICRS, manning a stand (they call them “booths”) and telling folk about the Friends and Heroes project. Our opening line when talking to Christian booksellers was “What is your passion?” It could just as easily have been “What is your vision?”

Several folk had to think for a while but most replied with something along the lines “To reach out to people with the gospel through the medium of Christian books”. We discussed their answers a little before saying, “Can we share our passion/vision with you?” That’s what I’d like to do in this column and it’s quite a vision!

I recall vividly as a child that the Bible permeated my young life: Bible stories; Bible pictures; Bible quizzes; Bible exams; Bible readings and even TV Bible stories. They came at me from all angles: home (my mother was a Methodist minister); school; church; Sunday School Union and even the BBC. How times have changed!

Many schools now teach Comparative Religion. The radio and TV are almost devoid of clear Biblical content and even some churches place less emphasis on the Bible than I experienced as a child. I took my last NSSU Bible Examination in my mid twenties (the 1970′s if you must know)!

It is this dearth of Bible material in our culture which inspired David and Alison Dorricott to become involved in Friends and Heroes - a TV series which has Bible stories in every episode – with the aim of introducing a new generation of children to the truth of the Bible in an understandable form which they love – TV!

Macky

Meet Macky: Macky is a fourteen year-old boy living in Alexandria when the Friends and Heroes story starts. Bright, funny, sometimes hot-headed and courageous, also confused and torn at times, Macky is not much different to teenagers today!

Friends and Heroes tells a historically-accurate adventure story set in the First Century AD when the stories of Jesus were circulating in the oral record. Our teenage heroes, Macky, a Jewish boy and a Roman girl, Portia, hear the stories in a real-world context – when they need help or inspiration – and so the stories, from both Old and New Testaments, are presented in such a way that their meaning is clear and their application obvious!

Portia

Meet Portia: Born into a noble family, Portia has an easy life in Alexandria living with her uncle Tiberius, the Roman Governor of the city. She finds herself drawn to Macky and his family after she is rescued from a runaway horse.

I think this is what inspires our young viewers so much – they not only see the Bible stories in superb 3D computer-generated animation – they also understand why they should respond and what they can mean to them as they face everyday life in the 21st Century AD. You can see the story of Daniel in the Lions’ Den here:

Watch Daniel in the Lions Den

Watch Daniel in the Lions Den

I said earlier that this project doesn’t lack vision. By the time the production is completed there will be 39 half-hour episodes in three series – over 16 hours of video, that’s nearly 10 feature-films worth – at a cost of over £10 million!

The action moves around the world from Alexandria in Egypt, to Jerusalem and eventually Rome. But we have an even greater world vision for our programme and will soon have dubs in 10 languages other than English including Mandarin, Russian, Portuguese, Spanish (South American), German, French, Korean, Arabic, Hindu/Urdu and Manx!

Friends and Heroes will soon be broadcast in Taiwan, the Middle East including Iran and broadcasters in many other countries are interested in seeing it broadcast in their language too.

Where there is no vision, the people perish and without hearing who Jesus is they can’t accept Him as their Saviour! Friends and Heroes is trying to play its part in the Great Commission – by letting children see and hear Bible stories!

You can learn much more about Friends and Heroes from our websites:  www.friendsandheroes.com and www.friendsandheroes.tv

All images courtesy of Friends and Heroes, used by permission. Contact Friends and Heroes online if you’d like to become a stockist…