Adventures of a Chilehead — Formal Debut

Chilihead Cover KindleToday is the official debut of Adventures of a Chilehead. It’s a quiet affair. No big party it’s too cold and icy right now. No champagne but I will celebrate and toast the book with a bowl of chile, complete with guacamole topping  and a beer.

Books are much like debutantes —  when they make their formal debut, the whole community has watched them grow up and mature. Likewise, regular followers of this blog have read a number of posts about this book's progress.

You know, for example, that it began as a simple anthology and grew organically into a true memoir. You know that I learned many lessons along the way, and one that’s seldom discussed is the matter of length. People often ask how long a memoir should be. As with any story, a memoir should be as long as it needs to be to tell the story.

This book is short. You can read the stories in a couple of hours. And yet it does have all the components of a formal memoir:

  • It has a story thread or theme, my love of hot chile, that runs through and ties individual scenes together.
  • It remains tightly focused on that theme.
  • It has a story arc, progressing from my first public involvement with surprisingly hot chile to the present, demonstrating change of perspective along the way.
  • It is comprised of scenes, with a new adventure in each one.
  • It hits the highlights without becoming mired in the mundane.

The book is short because it does remain focused tightly on its topic. If I’d wanted to make it longer, I could have pulled in other stories, or broadened the topic to food or cooking in general. But that was not my purpose. This is a tribute to  my beloved chile, and to the goddess Capsacia, who revealed herself in the process of writing. I said all I had to say on that topic. Thus I coined the term, “mini-memoir.

I think of this term as the memoir equivalent of a novella, a written, fictional, prose narrative normally longer than a short story but shorter than a novel. Novellas have no specific word count. They are generally more highly characterized than a simple short story, but less layered and complex than a full-length novel.

Although I had not heard the term “mini-memoir” before, I found it a delight to work with. Like a novella, it’s long enough to sink your teeth into, but short enough to avoid becoming bogged down. Especially with the advent of eBooks, mimi-memoir offers great potential. I chose to do a print version of this one, primarily because several people asked for one. They want to have the recipes handy in the kitchen. But a series of short eBooks would work just fine.

If you have several minis, you may eventually want to bundle two or three into a single print volume. The possibilities are limited only by your imagination. If you haven’t already read it, pop over to Amazon and order a copy. If you order print, the Kindle version is included for free.

Write now: look through your pile of finished stories and find a cluster of related ones. Consider ways of organizing them into a mini-memoir, using the “Story Album to Memoir” post as guidelines to help you organize your thoughts. If you don’t have more than a couple of finished stories, think of a theme, make a list of story ideas, and start writing, one story at a time. Don’t fret about weaving them together until you have them all finished.

4 comments :

KathyPooler said...

Congratulations on Chilehead's formal debut! It is a delightfully engaging and informative read. You have put a spotlight on mini-memoir and ushered in a new wave of interest in this sub-genre. I am also intrigued by the description of your creative process and how your love of chiles sparked this wonderful achievement. Brava!

SuziCate said...

Congrats, Sharon! I do so love the title!

Sharon said...

Thanks Suzi. That title came to mind ages ago after I wrote the first story and realized I had a trilogy. When I decided to assemble the trilogy into a volume, I thought of a couple of other stories, then the story arc emerged like a rising sun and I realized I had a few holes to plug.

Sharon said...

I see this book as double fun. First, I had a blast writing it -- how many memoir authors can say that? Then the fun of perhaps coining a new term. I may not be the first to use "mini-memoir," but if anyone else has, it has escaped my notice.