Rejection Tips (on My Decade Birthday) by Dean Gloster
I
write fiction.
“I
thrive on rejection” is an example.
No
one likes rejection. But with writing, like many ventures, when you cast off your canoe
of dreams into the rough waters of the commercial world, your only certain
companions are rejection and its cousins—unruly criticism and surly indifference.
(“Meh.”) Not everyone will love your work. And not all of your work will be
entirely lovable.
I’m
now working on two somewhat weird novels. And today,
coincidentally, is my birthday, one of those alarming speed limit change-of-decade numbers.
(It might be an even
bigger number than the one on this sign.)
So
I’m acutely aware that I don’t have forever to get my stories out into the
world. And that when I finish either of those stories, I face the prospect
of rejection.
Which
is hard. As someone said, writing a novel is like telling a joke and then
waiting two years to find out if it’s funny. Writing is a long unpaid
internship, and each novel not under contract is something of a lottery ticket.
So
here is my advice on rejection. It’s couched in terms of what we writers
face, but you might find it echo in other places you seek acceptance,
achievement, or connection. You know—rejection's hunting grounds.
First,
don’t send your work out too soon. You should make it as good as you can before
you hit send, and that includes workshopping it with critique partners, writing
classmates, beta readers, and your writers’ group. If you don’t belong to that
kind of network, take writing classes and join organizations to find other
writers. Maggie Stiefvater even has a Google group to match up critique partners.
Second,
keep getting better as a writer. Rejection isn’t failure. It’s part of the
process of getting to acceptance, and your job is to put in the work: That means reading other writers, studying the craft, and—you know—actually
writing. It also means listening to feedback.
Third,
rejection is often temporary. There are more ways than ever for authors to find
an audience. As Ray Bradbury said, “You only fail if you stop writing.” You can
learn a lot more from setbacks than from success, but the tuition is high, and
it’s often paid in rejection.
There
is an element of chance and lucky timing about publishing that you can’t
control. But you do have control about some things: Whether you put in the work
and whether you keep getting better. Make it hard for them to reject you.
Some
books find an audience, as difficult as that is.
Some
writers find a career.
And
some of us find stories that sing to us, demanding to be told.
That,
friends, is magic. Even more amazing, sometimes that magic—combined with
persistence and putting in the work over time—can pay the rent.
Which
is powerful magic indeed.
Dean Gloster has an MFA in writing for
children and young adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts. He is a former stand-up
comedian and a former law clerk at the U.S. Supreme Court. His debut YA novel
DESSERT FIRST is out now from Merit
Press/Simon Pulse. School Library
Journal called it “a sweet, sorrowful, and simply divine
debut novel that teens will be
sinking their teeth into. This wonderful story…will be a hit with fans
of John Green's The Fault in Our Stars
and Jesse Andrews's Me and Earl and the
Dying Girl.” Dean is on Twitter: @deangloster
Well said...And Dessert First was spot on.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Be well.
ReplyDeleteAh, Bradbury. So true.
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