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The Chapter House and a fall tour

Behold, the Chapter House takes shape.Chapter House in progressGlorious!Also: Andrew's album release tour starts next week! If he'll be anywhere near your city, he'd love to meet you and sign your beat-up old (or shiny new) Wingfeather books. Check out his tour schedule at his music site.


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading chapters 32-37 of The Warden and the Wolf King. Check back on Friday for an excerpt, and to share one of your own!We've got great discussions brewing in the forum on lament, Wingfeather songs, and more—and you're always welcome to dig up an old thread or start a new one. See you there!

Andrew and the Song Maiden

You've seen Andrew and his Song Maiden Skye sing this song before, and you've downloaded the recorded version. You may have even seen them play it live! But here is a new video, recorded just a couple of weeks ago. It features Skye playing a hauntingly beautiful accordion solo. Give it a listen, and have a pocket-handkerchief handy; you'll need it.By the way, the last of Andrew's prerelease StageIt shows is tomorrow night (9/29). They've been a lot of fun so far. You should come. :-)[embed]https://youtu.be/dAhHcavkcdU[/embed]


This week, Madame Sidler will be starting Part Two of The Warden and the Wolf King, reading from the opening interlude through chapter 31. Come back on Friday for an excerpt, and to share one of your own!Meanwhile, you can come hang out with us in the forum. We've got a whole thread about sad songs, and another about Wingfeather songs, and we'd love to hear your thoughts. There are a ton of other great topics as well. See you there!

Happy 13th Birthday, Leeli!

So today is the first day of autumn, which is also my daughter Skye's birthday, which is why her first name is Autumn, and since Skye's nickname since she was a baby was Leeli, I also named the sweet little Wingfeather girl Leeli, which is why I'm writing this post here. Got it?Skye is one of the most interesting, delightful, beautiful people I know, and she has a lovely singing voice. I thought today would be a good day to give you all a little birthday present in her honor. A free download of "My Love Has Gone Across the Sea," sung by the original Leeli Wingfeather--featuring me on guitar, as well as accordion legend Jeff Taylor, fiddle legend Stuart Duncan, and guitar legend Nate Dugger on lap steel. (You may also recall a dog in Ban Rona named Dugger. That dog, supposedly, could also play a mean lap steel.)If you're new around here, or haven't read the books, this song is from the end of The Monster in the Hollows--Leeli sings it over a certain dying monster during a battle. This recording was a reward for the folks who contributed to the Kickstarter campaign for book four last year, and I think it's time to release it to the world. It's about a wife whose husband has sailed away on some mission, and when he loses his way, she decides to go and find him--even if it kills her.When you listen to it, say a prayer for my girl. I'll be eating mounds of cake.Many thanks to the finest readers in the world,APCLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE SONG.

Leeli and Baxter

Here's a sweet picture of Leeli and Baxter. Faith (now 13) drew this when she was 11 and still waiting for The Warden and the Wolf King to come out. I love that little doggy's face, and Leeli's freckles. Thank you, Faith!Leeli and Baxter


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading chapters 19-24 in The Warden and the Wolf King. Check back on Friday for an excerpt, and to share one of your own! See you in the forum! :-)

Andrew Peterson LIVE in your living room

Andrew's new album comes out on October 9! He's hosting a series of prerelease concerts via StageIt—a live-streaming concert platform—all through September. The first one is already past (sorry!), but you can catch the other three, the next of which is tomorrow night, September 15. Click for tickets!


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading chapters 14-18 of The Warden and the Wolf King, plus the Annieriad interlude preceding chapter 14. Check back on Friday for an excerpt, and to share one of your own! In the meantime, come hang out with us in the forum.

Where'd the Book Club go?

Can I help you?You may have noticed that the Book Club tab in the menu is gone! Never fear; we just changed it to Forum. We have a lot of great conversations going on in that forum—favorite Oskar quotes, conversations both silly and serious, book recommendations, Durgan sneakery, pronunciation guides. Andrew and I would love to welcome you to come hang out and make friends, even if you haven't been following along with the Ban Rona Book Club. But if you are reading with us... see you on Friday!::vanishes::Screenshot 2015-09-08 12.53.32

FAQ #2: How Long Does it Take to Write a Book?

A couple weeks ago I answered a question about inspiration. This question is a bit more practical, and I’m asked it at every single school visit.

How long does it take to write a book?

It’s a fair question. When you’ve never written a book, the task seems insurmountable. Hundreds and hundreds of pages of words, all telling a single story, sentences strung together in a way that will hopefully engage a reader for days or weeks, even months? How does it work?

In practical terms, I can tell you that my first book, On the Edge of the Dark Sea of Darkness, took roughly five years. The learning curve was steep. I’ve never taken a single writing class (though I’ve taught one, which is hilarious to me), so I truly had no idea how to begin, or worse, how to finish. I bought lots of How to Be an Author in Five Easy Steps sorts of books, I read and read, made little notes, drew maps, and asked authors for advice. Finally one of those authors told me I was wasting my time reading all those books on writing, that the only way to learn to write is to write. It’s not fun advice, but it couldn’t be more true. Write, write, write. And it doesn’t mean you have to bang out a book in a month and let the rest of your life go to seed. It just means you need to write a little every day. I recently read a great interview with historian David McCullough, who’s written many books, and he said that he writes two pages a day. TWO PAGES  A DAY. That’s it. But if you think about it, that’s 700 pages a year, give or take. Seriously, folks, if you have time to manage a Facebook account, a Twitter account, and an Instagram account (and I sheepishly admit that I do), then there’s no reason you can’t carve out enough time to write two measly pages.

The only thing keeping you from it is you.

So how long does it take to write a first draft of a 284 page book? Well, it comes down to math. If I wrote two pages a day, it would take a little less than five months. That should be encouraging. It means you could have your first draft finished by this February, and the fun thing is that once you get into a groove you end up writing much more than just two pages a day. I bet you’ll finish even sooner.

One important thing to remember, though, is that your first draft will stink. It will stink to high heaven, as my dad used to say. It will stink like maggotloaf, like Fang sweat. However, the good news is that the first draft, for me, at least, is by far the most difficult part. Once you can write the words, “The End,” you can look at your story from a bird’s-eye-view and see what needs to be revised–and revision is the fun part. But before you revise a single word, you should throw yourself a party because writing two measly pages a day for several months is incredibly difficult. (I know I made it sound easy in the last paragraph, but I was just trying to pump you up.)

So why did it take me five years? Well, I’m counting from the night I drew my first map of Aerwiar till the day I went to Barnes and Noble and saw the Wingfeather Saga on the shelf (right next to Terry Pratchett and Phillip Pullman, which was crazy). Not long after I started writing the actual book I realized I needed to write histories, backstories, and character descriptions. Then, after my first draft was finished I had to revise every single page, and when I finished that I had to do it all over again. And that was before I sent the book to my editor, who tore it to shreds. The book went through about five revisions before it got to its published form–and even now when I flip through that first book I wish I could revise it a few more times.

There you have it. In the words of Shank Po, “Get thee busy.”

Things to come

Here, dear readers, is the beginning of the newest little building at the Warren: Andrew's very first writing cottage.Writing cottageAndrew is excited, dreaming of new songs and stories. I am excited, too, because new stories mean new characters, and new characters are basically new little brothers and sisters and fourth-aunt-cousins for his older characters. :-)Let's pretend we are sitting in the grass and dreaming along with Andrew. Feel the coolness of the grass and the warmth of sunlight on your face, and let your heart wander. What new worlds will be born here?::deep breath:: How happy!Also: We're working on building an FAQ page. It's not quite finished yet, but you can click the link in the menu above to see what we've got so far. If we're missing anything (and I promise we are), leave us a comment and we'll get right on it.And some music news: Andrew's new album will be available for preorder tomorrow! It won't ship until October, but if you preorder you'll get three songs right away. :-)


This week, Madame Sidler and the Ban Rona Book Club will begin reading The Warden and the Wolf King! If you'd like to join us, we'll be reading chapters 1-6. Come back on Friday for an excerpt, and to share what you've been reading! Meanwhile, come play with us in the forum. We'd love to hang out with you.