James L. C. Kafka - Fiction is My Reality

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Epic Publishing Failure


You don’t have to fail to succeed.

 

However, when you do fail, it’s not the end of the world. Learn from your mistakes and move forward.

 

Part 1

My Story, as a writer, began with an idea for an Epic story, and it nearly ended because of an Epic failure.

Several years ago, I finally got to a place in my life to where I had plenty of free time to sit down and write a novel. It was a struggle at first, mainly because I heedlessly jumped into the deep end, and quickly learned that writing a novel was a lot tougher than I ever imagined.

I spent a month writing the first paragraph – that’s how ignorant I was.

More than a few times, I just wanted to give up and toss in the towel, but I powered on and finished the first draft. The next step, I read the entire novel aloud to my wife, one chapter every day, correcting errors along the way.

Once that part was over, I foolishly believed I had a novel that was ready to be published.

I was wrong – undeniably wrong.

The euphoric feeling of finishing a novel is amazing. I had never experienced anything like it before, and for those who know, it’s a dam good feeling.

I queried agents – and after I got rejected numerous times, I decided to self-publish and prove to the publishing world they were wrong.

 

This is what Failure looks like.


Part 2

More Editing? Why? I corrected all the errors.

No, I corrected what my eyes and mind wanted me to see.

Ignorance is Bliss – the Ecstasy that clouds all rational thought.

I got a nice cover and self-published my first novel, and put it on Amazon for the entire world to buy and read. I also had 50 copies printed – 25 hardback and 25 paper back. I even set up a book signing at a local library. What I didn’t do, and to this day I don’t know why; look inside and read my great literary work of art. No, no, I mindlessly went to the book signing and sold some books.

And then, . . . it happened.


Sadly, I have a picture of when it happened.


A person who bought my book, opened it, silently read a few pages, and then asked, “Who edited this?”  

Slowly and painfully, the euphoria I had felt, immediately turned into absolute embarrassment, as I opened my book and read the same pages. (I quickly packed up and left)

The next day, my only thought was about how can I fix it. Sure, just contact Amazon and have them take it down. Unfortunately, a few books were purchased already. There was nothing I could do about that; the damage was done. It eventually got pulled down.

The embarrassment isn’t over yet, . . .

The worse part, if that’s even possible, I gave a few books to family members and bragged about my great accomplishment on the family Facebook page. It wasn't a delight experience. I can still hear the unspoken words at every family gathering.

 

Moving on, . . .

I could have given up, after all, my name was ruined, along with my reputation, what little of it there was. I reckon most would have quit and absorbed the shame for how ever long folks remembered.

But that’s not me. I had to fix it! So, I got right back up on the horse and got to work, but this time, I contacted a friend who knew a thing or two about editing. I rewrote the first book, and wrote another and another – and a Trilogy was born.

15 years and six books later, I’m still writing, and working on a seventh book.

 

The day my writing career turned for the better


Nothing is over until you say it’s over. The embarrassment and public humiliation hurt for a time, but for me, it was just another chapter in the story of my life.

I’m not uncomfortable sharing my failure, because it’s the truth. I made a mistake. It happens and I moved on. I not a better writer because of what happened, I'm simply smarter about the process.

 

The best advice I could ever give to a young writer – find an editor you can trust.

Oh, and always write like you mean it.

 

jk

 

Saturday, January 3, 2026

Meaningful Intent



Books are awake dreams that take us to far-away places.

Words and their narratives are the extensions of a writer’s vision, destined to be experienced by an eager audience. Embrace the wonder of the words you read, welcome the mysteries they provide, and delight in endless tales of the unexpected.

      Be a gentle reader.

The pages of a book are the pavement your imagination walks upon; turn them with care so others may follow in your path.

Bewilderment surrounds each chapter read, and swelling enthusiasm ignites spirited anticipation of hopeful outcomes. Plots twist. Hero’s rise. Villain's fall. And love is lost and found.

If at story's end brings a tender tear or despair of the final outcome, rejoice and be content. Conclusion of the last word read should neither be happy nor sad, a book blissfully consents you read another and another.

Only when stars cease to shine and inflamed inspiration dims will books be silenced. Until such time, the written word will forever have meaningful intent.


-jk-


On the journey taken, sometimes a memory is not enough, therefore a souvenir is a must – perhaps a book, written for all of us. 

Forever keep your books safe from harm. 



Previously Published

1/8/15 11:58 AM