Coming in 2020: The Dragon's Song
Posted: Sat Nov 16, 2019 10:18 pm
It took over four years from conception, but my writing partner, Binh Pham, and I finally found a home for our middle grade, refugee escape story, The Dragon's Song. The publisher is INtense Publications (https://intensepublications.com/), a fairly new outfit located in Texas. Tentative release date is summer/fall of 2020.
The Dragon's Song is a semi-fictional retelling of Binh's real-life escape from Vietnam, his journey through three refugee camps and his ultimate arrival in the US. We decided to give him a fictional 11-year-old cousin to tell the story and make it a middle grade book.
Here's the pitch:
Eleven-year-old Bao Dang remembers watching in horror four years earlier as Communist soldiers dragged his parents from their home. Now an orphan, he begins a journey to escape the oppressive government of South Vietnam. The owner of a small boat, paid in gold, smuggles Bao and his cousin, Binh Pham, down the Saigon River at night to the South China Sea, where he and over one hundred other "boat people" pack into a trawler designed to hold fewer than thirty. For six days, they face danger from the police, weather, and pirates, not to mention the constant threat of capsizing as they take on water while living only on dry, rationed rice.
Bao and the others hope a refugee camp in Indonesia accepts them, but there’s no guarantee. Word has it they may be turned away and even towed back out to sea to starve. Eventually finding a safe haven, Bao harnesses the power of music to heal and help him endure months of harsh and dangerous living while he and Binh await word from relatives in the United States, hoping they’ll obtain the ultimate gift: freedom.
As you may recall, we eventually got an agent for this manuscript in 2016 and she tried very hard to sell it to major publishers, to no avail. We kept making changes, hoping to hit the magical formula to snag a top tier pub house, but it never happened. Then, the agent unexpectedly had to leave the business and we were out on our own. It's almost impossible to get a manuscript into big editors (there were some left) without an agent. We sent it to as many places as we could, but there were no takers.
I came across this publisher fairly recently. I sent the manuscript on a Thursday and they offered the next Monday. The editor loved it. I contacted other INtense authors and they mostly had good things to say about the them. They have distribution, so that increases the chance of getting into bookstores and libraries. They print hardcover and paperback copies and they are not print-on-demand, like many others. All publishing comes with risk, so this is no different.
I'm positive you folks will absolutely love this book. I hope it makes you appreciate what many refugees had to go through for their chance at freedom in America (or anywhere else).
As soon as I have a cover and a release date I will share them with the BBs. None of this is public knowledge, so please stay mum about it. I'll make the announcement everywhere else when the deal is reported in Publishers Marketplace.
Remember that title:
The Dragon's Song
The Dragon's Song is a semi-fictional retelling of Binh's real-life escape from Vietnam, his journey through three refugee camps and his ultimate arrival in the US. We decided to give him a fictional 11-year-old cousin to tell the story and make it a middle grade book.
Here's the pitch:
Eleven-year-old Bao Dang remembers watching in horror four years earlier as Communist soldiers dragged his parents from their home. Now an orphan, he begins a journey to escape the oppressive government of South Vietnam. The owner of a small boat, paid in gold, smuggles Bao and his cousin, Binh Pham, down the Saigon River at night to the South China Sea, where he and over one hundred other "boat people" pack into a trawler designed to hold fewer than thirty. For six days, they face danger from the police, weather, and pirates, not to mention the constant threat of capsizing as they take on water while living only on dry, rationed rice.
Bao and the others hope a refugee camp in Indonesia accepts them, but there’s no guarantee. Word has it they may be turned away and even towed back out to sea to starve. Eventually finding a safe haven, Bao harnesses the power of music to heal and help him endure months of harsh and dangerous living while he and Binh await word from relatives in the United States, hoping they’ll obtain the ultimate gift: freedom.
As you may recall, we eventually got an agent for this manuscript in 2016 and she tried very hard to sell it to major publishers, to no avail. We kept making changes, hoping to hit the magical formula to snag a top tier pub house, but it never happened. Then, the agent unexpectedly had to leave the business and we were out on our own. It's almost impossible to get a manuscript into big editors (there were some left) without an agent. We sent it to as many places as we could, but there were no takers.
I came across this publisher fairly recently. I sent the manuscript on a Thursday and they offered the next Monday. The editor loved it. I contacted other INtense authors and they mostly had good things to say about the them. They have distribution, so that increases the chance of getting into bookstores and libraries. They print hardcover and paperback copies and they are not print-on-demand, like many others. All publishing comes with risk, so this is no different.
I'm positive you folks will absolutely love this book. I hope it makes you appreciate what many refugees had to go through for their chance at freedom in America (or anywhere else).
As soon as I have a cover and a release date I will share them with the BBs. None of this is public knowledge, so please stay mum about it. I'll make the announcement everywhere else when the deal is reported in Publishers Marketplace.
Remember that title:
The Dragon's Song