Chasing Rainbows







First, I've lost some followers. Hmmm. Was it the NaNo thing? Oh come on. Oh well, more booze for the rest of us.



Well, the last (at least I hope it's the last) of my rejections came creeping into my inbox last week. It was unexpected, because I assumed that after the months of no reply, I'd been rejected anyway. And it was the best and worst rejection I've received yet. Best because it was very personalized and they took the time to tell me exactly what they didn't like, proving that they did read at least part of the manuscript. And worst because they described the manuscript as "little more than a detailed synopsis". Ouch. It hurts just writing that.

Do I agree with what they said? In part. Most of what they didn't like about it is subjective and I can shrug and say, "Whatever." The bit about detailed synopsis, well…I had to take another look to decide. The conversation in my head went something like this:



-The first chapter stinks.

-Yes it does.

-Worse than Kurt after hockey and wing night at the Fare and Foul.

-But the second chapter is good. Why not start there?

-Because the first chapter is necessary for the second and third…isn't it? Well it sets the tone.

-Damn it, Renee. You don't need to set the tone. It should be present from the first lines. What the hell were you thinking? Make it work without the first chapter.

-But I like the first chapter. It's good.

-But it contains neither of the protagonists. Why bother? It begins with a character that dies. What is that about?

-I don't know.

-Of course you don't. Fuck, you make my brain hurt.

-Wanna get some chips or something?

-Yeah. I'm done with this shit.

-I think we've got cookies too.

-Yeah? Chocolate chip?

-Oreos.

-Oreos are gross.

-You're an ass.

-So are you.

And then it happened. That psycho bitch that lurks in the deepest, darkest part of my brain found her opening.

You suck. The manuscript sucks. Why did you even send this out? Hell, everything you've written is boring as shit. You're not special. You're never going to publish unless you do it yourself. You've been lying to yourself this entire time. This "author" dream is a fucking joke. You could be out working and making a decent living instead of chasing rainbows or saving pennies for a stupid editor so you can do it yourself. God, you'll never learn will you? Just keep on trying to achieve the impossible.

Yeah, that bitch. I had a day or two of what you could call utter depression and then the real me, the one who knows what she wants and isn't afraid to step on/crush anyone to get it, came out to play.

First, the manuscript can use some work. Manuscripts can ALWAYS use more work. That's not something that should shock me. Second, I am an author. I've published short fiction, over 1000 articles (that someone else paid me for), and that little book Carlos and I wrote, which is doing well so far. Just because I haven't achieved my primary goal does not mean that I suck, it means I haven't been chasing the right rainbows.

The rejection still stings and I'll probably wince every time I read it. Oh yes, I'm keeping this one. As I said, it's the best and worst I've gotten so it should be framed so that on the day I achieve my goal, I can burn the fucker right on top of the rest of them.

What to do now? I've been thinking over this whole "traditional" publishing goal. Why do I want it so much? What's wrong with self-publishing? Do I have a choice?

I do.

I will not self-publish my fiction just yet. But I am giving up on the agent search. I don't feel that with the way the industry is at this moment I'll be able to find an agent no matter how kickass my writing is. (And I'm not saying it is kickass, but it doesn't suck either.) Also, I don't think I need one at this time. True, an agent is the key to getting the big publishers' attention, but what can I do with that right now?

Instead, I'm looking at small presses while I research this new growth in self-publishing. My mistake for a very long time was in thinking a "real" contract meant print and possibly digital. Obviously that's just a retarded way to think. I haven't even scratched the surface of what's available to new authors in the e-publishing industry. And what an opportunity wasted.

A very good friend recently reminded me that I have been focusing on the wrong things. (Thanks, Katrina.) In my head it's been agent, publisher, book, agent, publisher, book. No deterring from that path. I've sent out about 300 queries. 300. Three-zero-zero. Do you know how much damage that many rejections can do to an ego? It can crush your soul to pathetic bits of nothing. (And I have a pretty healthy ego most of the time.) Never once did I consider that maybe my approach was wrong or maybe, just maybe, this wasn't the right path to take. I was adamant that I NEEDED an agent. But again I come back to the question; Do I?

When I make plans, goals, etc., I tend to forget to adjust them now and then. I mean, nothing stays the same, right? It stands to reason that occasionally, you should look at said plans and change them accordingly. Duh. This industry has changed drastically in the past few years. Sure, when I started writing, my plan made sense. Now? As a "new author" I can't succeed with this approach. Not before I reach 40 anyway. Hell, who am I kidding? I'll be in diapers and putting my teeth in a damn jar on the nightstand before it happens with the path I've been on.

My biggest weakness is my impatience. I want what I want and I want it NOW. This process has been really hard because of that. It's been several years since I "decided" that I wanted to publish my writing; years that I've wondered many times if that was the right decision.

It was and it is.

You all have inspired me in different ways. Some of you I know well, have inspired me personally, others I know just by the comments you make here on The Edge, but you've inspired me through those comments and what I read on your blogs. So I'll ask you and I really want to know what you think: After two years of hammering on agents' doors and trying to publish traditionally, am I crazy for giving up that dream? Or do you agree that there comes a time when something just isn't working anymore and you have to abandon it?





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Published on November 05, 2011 16:29
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message 1: by Nikki (new)

Nikki Broadwell Well Renee, you know what I'm going to say...the world of publishing has changed and is changing as we speak. I went to a talk the other night about using social media to promote one's work and it was very enlightening. Ron Gompertz(No Roads Lead to Rome) gave a detailed description of what works and what doesn't and one of the main things he said was that his book sales on Kindle are WAY higher than on paper. According to him the world is going digital!
So I say explore EVERY avenue right now and experiment a bit--it sounds like you have a wealth of work that is complete. And don't let a bunch of farging iceholes get you down! You know your writing is good!
According to Ron social media promotion is completely doable, expecially for one as savvy as you are--I'm still struggling with Twitter but I have more followers now and I think I understand hashtags finally, although I'm still not sure how to use them within tweets...


message 2: by Renee (new)

Renee Haha. Thanks, Nikki. I do have several manuscripts finished, but I think they could use some professional editing should I decide to go it on my own. I want the best possible product, and the only way to get that is with editing.

As for Twitter, I just mess with those hashtags because I can. The important ones, to us anyway, are #amreading, #amwriting, #amediting, etc. There are a few others that link your tweets to groups that might be beneficial to you. Make note of what your Tweeps are using. Type the hashtag into the search bar and it'll pull up all tweets using those hashtags.

Oh and to increase your followers, #WW (writer Wednesday) and #FF (follow friday). I like the tweets that only list one Tweep and say something funny or personal. These are to tell other Tweeps who you feel is worth following. Also it puts you out there b/c those who are mentioned will retweet your twitter name to them.

What the fuck? I'll explain. Say I tweet "WOnderful writer and cake baker extraordinaire @Nikki #WW" So you're like "Renee, I don't bake cakes. Jeepers." and I'm like "Who cares. My 700+ followers just saw that and some checked out your profile and followed you. You, as a thanks to me for mentioning you will RT the entire tweet maybe with a "thanks" in front of it, and so your followers see my awesomeness and check out my profile and follow.

Make sense?

I didnt' think so.


message 3: by Nikki (new)

Nikki Broadwell thanks Renee--makes a little bit of sense-every day in every way I'm understanding twitter better and better! okay so #ww and #ff..one person keeps favoriting my tweets even though they are stupid or nothing..what's that about?

I did get a professional editor before I embarked on this self-publishing thing--and now I'm going through the 2nd book and making my husband read it over and over for line editing...unbelievable amount of work... and the 3rd book is even longer and now that I've added so much to book 2 I have tons to edit in book 3!!!maybe there's some trade you can do since you're connected with several publishers for your short works...or how is your husband for reading your work?


message 4: by Renee (new)

Renee Sometimes spammers will do that. Other times, they're just weirdos.

My husband only reads a gunpoint. I'm lucky to have awesome writer friends though, many will some mad editing skills.


message 5: by Nikki (new)

Nikki Broadwell Before starting a complete re-write of manuscript in question I would hand it off to one of your editing friends--

Tomorrow I may see you on Twitter! (if I remember the #ww thingy)


message 6: by Renee (new)

Renee Haha. I try, but usually forget to post. I do make sure I RT and thank anyone who mentions me though.


message 7: by Nikki (new)

Nikki Broadwell yeah, I've been doing that too...


message 8: by Paul (new)

Paul I don't see why you can't follow the 'traditional' route and self-publish at the same time. I'm going to do that.

When I've finished an anthology of linked short stories called 'The 'Erebus Chronicles' I plan to publish via Lulu or Smashwords. Under a nom-de-plume of course, because revealign you're self published is likely to cause agents and publishers to ditch your stuff without even reading it.

Meanwhile, I plan to submit novels under my own name to agents and wait.

If I'm traditionally published, I can reveal my secret identity and watch sales of e-books soar. If the e-books do really well, I can just toss that casually into the covering letter to an agent - 'author of the 50K selling e-book...'.

A sort of cross pollination. Or is that self fertilization?

Renee, I haven't got 300 rejections yet. Still 250 to go. It does suck, I agree, but hang in there. You will make it.


message 9: by Renee (new)

Renee Self pollination maybe? ;)

Thanks, Paul. I like your plan. I've started looking at small presses and there is some hope there. I also submitted Dirty Truths into a Harlequin Romance contest. It's likely to be rejected because while in my opinion it's romance, I don't think it's what a romance publisher is looking for. But I won't know unless I try, right?


message 10: by Paul (new)

Paul Worth trying. To get published at all requires such an unlikely chain of coincidences it's a miracle anything by a new author ever gets out there.

Just consider: your manuscript, plus forty others, lands on the desk of an intern reader. (Intern = less than minimum wage.) They have to read it and like it, so it has to be a genre they are familiar with, in a tone they find agreeable, with a POV they can relate to. It has to reach them when they aren't in a hurry to get away for the weekend, and when they aren't hung over from the weekend. Then they have to have the balls to pass it up the food chain for consideration. Since they are only one bad recommendation away from severance, it takes some doing. Then the deputy-assistant-under-vice-editor has to like it...

But it does happen, and it will happen for us.

Eventually.

In the meantime, if you want any editing or beta reading or whatever, feel free. I always enjoy reading your stuff. I'll be advertising fee paying services on OFW, but for you it will be free.
Forever.


message 11: by Renee (new)

Renee Thanks. You know I love you, right? I have two WIP coming along. If I ever get a minute to really go at them with my "red pen" they'll be ready for readers.


message 12: by Paul (new)

Paul Looking forward to them...


message 13: by Renee (new)

Renee I hope you feel the same when you get them. ;)


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