by Warren Adler @WarrenAdler
Edie here, and today I'm so excited to welcome one of our newest regular contributors to The Write Conversation, Warren Adler.
On Rejection and Renewal: A Note to Aspiring Novelists
You’ve spent months, perhaps years, composing your novel. You’ve read and reread it hundreds of times. You’ve rethought it, rewritten it, and revised it, changed characters, dialogue and plot lines. Writing your novel is the most important thing in your life. It has absorbed your attention, almost exclusively. Both your conscious and your subconscious mind have been obsessed with it. You have read parts of it to your friends, family, former teachers. Most think it’s wonderful.
We are all waiting for Godot. Sometimes he
comes.
TWEETABLES
There really are only 3 choices for writers - wisdom from author @WarrenAdler on @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
On Rejection & Renewal: A Note to Aspiring Novelists from author @WarrenAdler on @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
Edie here, and today I'm so excited to welcome one of our newest regular contributors to The Write Conversation, Warren Adler.
On Rejection and Renewal: A Note to Aspiring Novelists
You’ve spent months, perhaps years, composing your novel. You’ve read and reread it hundreds of times. You’ve rethought it, rewritten it, and revised it, changed characters, dialogue and plot lines. Writing your novel is the most important thing in your life. It has absorbed your attention, almost exclusively. Both your conscious and your subconscious mind have been obsessed with it. You have read parts of it to your friends, family, former teachers. Most think it’s wonderful.
You
have finally considered it finished. Armed with optimism and self-confidence,
you obtain from the Internet a list of agents and begin to canvas. You agonize
over whether to send your precious manuscript to one agent at a time or to a
number of agents. You choose the first option. Just in case, you send it
electronically, unsure of whether or not this is now standard practice. You
have high hopes. You are aware of the massive changes in the publishing
business, but have chosen to take the traditional path as your first option.
Weeks
go by, then months.
The agents are, you believe, reading it in the office,
passing it around, deciding to take it on. You live on such hopes. Finally you
call the agent’s office. They haven’t a clue as to who you are. Somehow, they
are reminded and search through the piles of manuscripts in their office, find
yours and send you back a standardized letter, perhaps out of politeness made
to look like an original.
Well then, you
tell yourself, it is only one agent’s
opinion. You send it off to another agent. A letter comes back
swiftly, similarly worded. You get bolder, send your manuscript to two agents
at a time, then three, then every agent you can find. Nothing happens. “Good
luck on getting published,” they tell you. “Not for us.” Sometimes there is a
personal, scribbled note that says something nice and you live in its glow for
days.
Years
go by.
You start another novel, but you are less optimistic now, less
confident, unsure. You tell yourself you have not paid enough attention to the
marketplace. You begin to analyze what is selling, what is not selling, what is
being published. You read books on the bestseller lists and are certain you can
do a lot better. You try to use these books as a guide to what is selling and
you write accordingly. Nothing helps. You are continuously rejected.
You
begin to read on various websites about how you can publish your own books and
get them marketed on electronic venues. Some sites promise that they can get
your book in front of movie producers for a price. Some say they have the magic
to make you a successful career novelist, again, for a price. For even more
money, you will be told how best to market your book. You debate the idea and
as your pile of rejection letters mount, you give it a try.
You
spend money. A book is produced in print on demand format and an e-book is
created and placed on every electronic sales venue on the net. Your family buys
copies and sends them to friends. It is even reviewed in publications that
review self-published books, yet again for a price. There is a word or two of
praise in the review and you send it around to the media and everybody you
know. Unfortunately, there is little or no sales, no afterlife. Despite your
confidence in your ability, despite the fact that you truly believe your novel
is certainly worthy of publication, you feel the full impact of rejection and
failure.
Still,
you cannot shake the certainty or your talent. You write another novel. Perhaps
a third. Perhaps more. You go through the same process. Again and again you are
rejected. You begin to question your ability, your ideas and your talent. Is it
a fantasy, an exercise in unrealistic aspirations? You are becoming embittered.
Your dream is crashing.
If
you are fortunate, your wife, husband, partner and family stick by you,
continue to encourage your dream, help you keep it alive. Other realities begin
to chip away at the dream. You have financial obligations. Your kids are
growing up. You are losing out in the job market. Others are moving up in their
jobs, while you are falling behind.
You
feel lost, adrift. Rejection after rejection has beaten you down. You see this
as the end of your world, the end of your hopes and aspirations. Your high
hopes and self-confidence in your own talent is petering away.
What
now?
If
you’ve read this far without your stomach congealing, I suppose you are
awaiting some prescription offering a magic pill for coping. Sorry, there isn’t
any available your corner drug store, and you won’t find it here. Luck–that
strange, illusive, heaven sent, burst of good fortune–has not fired a missile
in your direction. Not yet.
You
have three choices.
- The first is personal surrender. You’ve been on a fool’s errand following an adolescent dream. Time to throw in the towel and concentrate on your day job. At least you tried.
- The second choice is postponement. You weren’t ready. You needed more experience of life. But you continue to believe it will come. Some talented people are late bloomers. Give the dream a rest. Wishing won’t make it so. There are enough popular clichés to give you courage.
- Now, for your third choice, the clincher. It is not recommended for the faint of heart. Never give up. Never, never, never. It may be impractical, unwise, foolish, pure madness, but if you truly believe in yourself, your talent, your ideas, your calling, your personal mission, why not, as Lewis Carroll wrote, “go on until the end, and then stop.”
To
do this requires a monumental ego, total self-confidence in your talent, and an
unshakeable belief that you have been anointed with the right stuff. You will
require obsessive focus, singleness of purpose, a draconian ruthlessness and
total devotion to a belief in your artistic ability. Fancy words, I know, but
with the absence of luck, you will need these attributes to sustain you through
the process.
What
this means for the true novelist is that he or she must continue to soldier on,
keep writing, keep trying, taking the increasingly painful hits of rejection
after rejection until, well, until someone out there catches on…or doesn’t.
TWEETABLES
There really are only 3 choices for writers - wisdom from author @WarrenAdler on @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
On Rejection & Renewal: A Note to Aspiring Novelists from author @WarrenAdler on @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
I learned early in my career to don that rhino skin! Fortunately, I know I didn't know anything. That helped. LOL
ReplyDeleteIt's hard for most authors to accept rejection, but you have to learn to. The worse thing for me, as a publisher, is to write a rejection letter. When I write "that" letter, I try to help them write their book better. No one likes rejection, but agents and publishers can be nice about it.
ReplyDeleteAnd some of us appreciate that very much. Thanks.
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