What I learned after being reprimanded that I couldn’t ‘write the Queen’s English’

By Kevin S. Giles

I was a young reporter beginning my first full-time newspaper job when a snarling copy editor informed me one night, “You can’t even write the Queen’s English.”

He wasn’t wrong. Let me explain.

This frank assessment of my writing skills took place overseas at a metro paper in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. I was 21 years old. The newsroom at the Courier-Mail felt foreign to me in many respects as I struggled to learn colloquialisms and the stiff manner of England-influenced news writing.

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Kevin S. Giles talks about nonfiction writing in ‘Eight Essential Secrets …’

Cover of 'Eight Essential Secrets'

My guide to nonfiction writing is now available on Kindle.

By Kevin S. Giles

Reading about writing nonfiction isn’t the same as doing it yourself.

I learned that through trial and error.

Somewhere in the midst of writing “Jerry’s Riot: The True Story of Montana’s 1959 Prison Disturbance,” I decided that after I published, I would write a concise book to help writers avoid common pitfalls.

Some years went by. As I wrote and published “One Woman Against War: The Jeannette Rankin Story, I renewed my desire to help fellow writers launch their own nonfiction stories.

Finally, I got around to it.

My short book, Eight Essential Secrets for Beginning Nonfiction Writers, draws on my personal experience. It can be read in an hour or less. I didn’t want to encumber nonfiction writers with volumes of advice. Instead, I give them straightforward tips to put to work right away.

Successful nonfiction requires diligent research, a deep pool of accurate facts and a flair for storytelling. It also requires focus because success depends on the quality of the idea.

I spent a blur of evenings and weekends working on my nonfiction books. Sometimes I became discouraged at all that work ahead of me. In those moments I reminded myself that I had embarked on a long journey. Every few steps took me closer to the end.

Do you have what it takes to write nonfiction?

Are you curious, relentless, enduring and inspired? I’m betting so. None of us know until we try.

Find Kevin's books on Amazon (and leave a review, please!)

Western Montana native Kevin S. Giles wrote the popular prison nonfiction work Jerry’s Riot, the coming-of-age novel Summer of the Black Chevy, and a biography of Montana congresswoman Jeannette Rankin, One Woman Against War, which is an expanded version of his earlier work, “Flight of the Dove.” His new novel, Headline: FIRE! is the third in the Red Maguire series. Masks, Mayhem and Murder is the second. The first is “Mystery of the Purple Roses.” More information is available at https://kevinsgiles.com.

Author Kevin S. Giles: If you want readers, publishing is only part of a long story

Photo shows Kevin S. Giles

The author, Kevin S. Giles, pondering his next cavalcade of words. Sunglasses optional.

By Kevin S. Giles

I learned a few things. One of these discoveries was a reminder that promoting a book takes a lot of work, even more than it did in the early Internet era. Infinite online opportunities await hopeful authors. So does the challenge of cutting through the “noise” of tens of millions of people trying to get noticed all at once, many of them promoting a political bias or sharing false information. Yes, the Internet has opened a new frontier to authors. No, finding an audience doesn’t come easy, because distractions abound.

When I published Summer of the Black Chevy, the spam started rolling in like a winter storm. Internet marketers promise they can deliver a rich market of readers — for an undisclosed price, of course — and they aren’t entirely wrong about that. Navigating the Internet, and rising above the noise, does require a strategy that largely involves social media to target customers.

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Miles traveled: A writer’s journey began in the mountains of western Montana

Photo shows Kevin S. Giles

This was during the time I wrote “Flight of the Dove.” I was at my paying job (or appearing so) in the Independent Record newsroom in Helena, Montana.

By Kevin S. Giles

Ideas for writing fiction tumbled around in my head for most of the bouncing long road through adulthood. I also deal in fact. I still can’t say with certainty which is harder to write.

I wrote Flight of the Dove: The Story of Jeannette Rankin on a typewriter when my second daughter, Harmony, was a baby. Looking back, writing nonfiction in the pre-Internet days seems somewhat of a miracle. I spent hours in the library at card files, and writing letters to distant places, and trying to revise my story by retyping pages time and again. The new edition of the Rankin book (One Woman Against War), which I launched in 2016, benefits from technology that puts information at our fingertips.

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From Author Kevin S. Giles: Write your fact-based nonfiction book with confidence

By Kevin S. Giles

Want to write a book about an event? A good story you want to share with other people?

The first step is thinking about your audience. Who will read the book? Who will pay for it? How will you tell your prospective readers about your book? What similar books can you find already on the market? Continue reading