What “The Jim Garraty Chronicles” book looks like in Kindle Create.

Wrestling with Subheads, Holding on to Stories

Tuesday, December 16, 2025 – Orlando, Florida

The Garratyverse

If you’ve ever worked with Kindle Create, you’ll know it can be both a blessing and a curse. Today, I’m spending several hours fixing subheadings in The Jim Garraty Chronicles—particularly in Reunion: Coda. It’s a formatting issue that has haunted every book I’ve published since 2023, from Reunion: A Story to Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen.

For me, subheadings aren’t just decoration. They’re anchors. Because Reunion: Coda spans multiple timelines and settings, I use them to orient readers—lines like “7:05 AM – SMSH Music Department” or “6:10 PM – The Last Rehearsal.” It’s a technique I borrowed from technothriller writers like Tom Clancy and Harold Coyle, and it’s become part of my storytelling rhythm.

Unfortunately, Kindle Create has a habit of “correcting” capitalization in ways that make subheads look clumsy. Even when I format them properly in Word, the app insists on producing titles like “An Unexpected Turn Of Events.” Fixing these errors is slow, manual work, and it drains creative energy I’d rather spend writing.

My sales report for December 2025 (as of December 16)

I’ll admit it’s hard to stay motivated when sales don’t match the heart I pour into these stories. Reunion: Coda and Comings and Goings received kind reviews on Amazon and Goodreads, yet the numbers remain discouraging. Writing fiction is tough enough when readers are eager; it’s tougher still when you feel your work is met with indifference.

But here’s the truth: I’m going to finish this omnibus. I’ll keep writing new stories. Storytelling has been my calling since 1978, and I believe in the worlds I’ve built. What I need—and what every writer needs—is a supportive audience. If you’ve enjoyed my work, I invite you to share it: buy a copy, leave a review, recommend it to a friend, or even place it in a Little Free Library. Every gesture helps keep these stories alive.

Because at the end of the day, I’m a writer. And writers tell stories, even when the formatting fights back.


Comments

4 responses to “On Writing and Storytelling: Wrestling with Subheads, Holding on to Stories”

  1. Just letting you know, Alex. I’ve finally ordered both “Coda” and “Comings and Goings.” Hoping to get them before X-Mas, get them read and reviewed by early-middle January. Thanks for your patience. Looking forward to devouring both of them!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Paul!

      Although there is no “right” way to read the interconnected Jim Garraty stories, I suggest the following approach:

      1. Reunion: A Story
      2. Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen
      3. Reunion: Coda

      Of course, publication order (Reunion, Coda, Comings and Goings) works well, especially if you want to experience the Jim/Marty arc first. C&G wasn’t planned…it simply insisted on being written as its own slice of the Garratyverse.

      And, of course, thanks for buying my books. Let me (and other readers) know what you think about them when you finish them!

      Like

  2. I may quickly re-read Reunion: A Story. It was a quality snappy read, but it’s been a couple years. Then read the others in the order you suggested. Of course, I’ll let you and others know what I think. I’m really looking forward, Alex! Thanks for your patience!

    Like

    1. Thanks for taking a chance on my stories, Paul.

      Re the suggested reading order: You could, of course, jump from Reunion: A Story to Reunion: Coda, and leave Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen as a literary dessert. The novelette is an expansion of a flashback Jim has in the novel; it wasn’t part of the grand plan…but it insisted that I write it while I still had “writer’s mojo” after finishing the larger work.

      Either way, I hope you like the new stuff as much as you enjoyed Reunion.

      Like

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