I've devoted a lot of my time and effort during the past few years to developing my advertising copywriting business to the point of where I can support my family and don't have to depend on writing fiction for my income.
During that first year, I felt guilty that my wife was out working bringing in all our income, while I was at home playing on the computer, so I made myself treat writing like a job.
I got up with my wife, I sat down at the computer when she went to work, and I didn't stop until she got home.
Many of my short stories (all unpublished) were horror, and the novel I'd just finished was horror, too.
Trying to break into the horror market seemed natural.
So, I outlined a horror novel and started writing.
I spent two months on the first draft, working 8 hours a day, five days a week.
A couple of weeks after that, Zebra Books phoned with an offer, and I accepted.
So, in effect, my first sale was actually two books.
Actually, the 14 novels were written over a period of just over 6 years.
In the first year, 1988, I wrote and sold 3 novels.
The way I outline has changed quite a bit from when I first started writing.
For the novels I wrote before selling anything, I didn't outline much. I had a vague idea of the story.
When I decided to take writing seriously, I did a lot of reading and analyzing of the books I liked, and came up with what I thought were pretty sound plotting and structure basics.
I've been reading horror since I was five years old.
When I was a teenager, I got into SF, quite heavily, and that too has had a major impact on my writing.
Even the contemporary horror authors who have seriously influenced me are a disparate bunch.
On the other hand, now that I'm not dependent on fiction for my income, I've been writing more short stories despite the fact that there's no real paying market for short horror other than Cemetery Dance.
For each book, the time is also broken up.
The benefit of this kind of outlining is that you discover a story's flaws before you invest a lot of time writing the first draft, and it's almost impossible to get stuck at a difficult chapter, because you've already done the work to push through t...