Dawn
Brotherton’s latest book, Trish’s Team,
is the first in the youth fiction Lady Tigers’ Series. Dawn started out writing murder mysteries with a female Air Force
officer protagonist, Jackie Austin. As a colonel in the United States Air
Force, she knows that part well (she assures us the murders are pure fiction). As
her daughters started playing travel fastpitch softball, her attention was
drawn back to the dirt fields where she had spent much of her youth. Keeping
score and coaching for two different teams, Dawn grew frustrated with the
standard scorebooks that were intended for baseball with softball as an
afterthought and decided to design her own. The Softball Scoresheet is gaining ground as a more detailed book, with
more room to recreate the games, and directions on how to keep score. Dawn is
contemplating military retirement at this time and hopes to spend more time
writing on a fulltime basis. The second in the Lady Tigers’ series, Margie Makes a Difference, is expected
out by Christmas.
Interview:
Tell us about
your book! What is it about and what inspired you to write it?
My daughters are
my inspiration. I have two (13 and 15) and they both read voraciously. They
can’t ride in the car for ten minutes without their nose in a book. Because of
this, they are both excellent writers. Better than I am, I suspect. They both
played fastpitch for the Williamsburg Starz. Spending practically every weekend
at the ball fields gave me plenty of material to take me to my goal of at least
10 books in this series.
Tell us about
your publishing process. What was it like? Did you go indie or the traditional
way?
I looked around
for traditional at first. In the end, I decided that the trade-off of all the
money and time I had to contribute versus the amount of money the traditional
publisher and agent would take of my profits didn’t seem worth it to me. I
established my own publishing company (Blue Dragon Publishing) and now I help
other authors realize their dreams at a more realistic price.
How did you
choose the title for your book? Did it come to you right away, before you
started writing the story, or did it come later?
I think titles
are the hardest part. This is the first in a ten-part series so that adds an
extra challenge. I almost feel like there needs to be a connection, but my
writers’ group talked me out of that. Trish’s
Team came to me pretty easily when I was almost done with the story. I had
it narrowed down to a few, then floated the choices past some friends. I even
have the second book title ready, Margie
Makes a Difference. The third one hasn’t come to me yet, although I’m over
halfway into the book.
Tell us about
the cover design process. Did you have a basic idea of what your book cover
would be like?
I had some idea
what I was looking for. I spent a long time at the library looking at various
covers trying to decide what appealed to me and what didn’t. Then I asked my
daughters to give their opinion. Once I had an idea, I drew it with a word
picture and sent off to my cover artist. He got it right on the first try with
only minor edits needed!
Who is your
cover designer and how did you find him/her?
Vineet
Siddhartha. Believe
it or not, I found him on www.fiverr.com.
The people advertising on the website will do a variety of jobs for $5, hence
the name. Actually it ends up costing more than that, but they hook you with
the idea of only paying $5. It was very much worth it!
How was your
experience working with the designer?
Excellent. I
would recommend him highly. He has done two of my covers so far, and I hope
will do the whole series. He did a sketch of my original idea and gave me a
chance to make adjustments (Trish was originally too curvy for a 12-year old
<smile>). Then he added color and tweaked until we got it right.
What has been
the readers’ response to your cover?
I was surprised
when a mom stopped by my table at a book signing and said Trish would make a
cute action figure. I’ve gotten lots of compliments on his work.
What tips would
you give to authors who are looking for a cover designer?
Start with
fiverr but make sure you read the fine print. You don’t necessarily have to
spend a lot of money to get a good product. Trust in new talent. And make sure
you own the rights.
Anything else
you’d like to say about your book?
I’m really
excited about Trish and her friends. I read a lot of sports books growing up
but they were all written with male characters. The Lady Tigers have female
leads but can be enjoyed by boys or girls because the lessons apply to both.
I’ve added a glossary of terms in the back as well as questions to be used with
a book club or to start a conversation between parents and their children.
Enjoy!
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