How To Succeed in Writing By Really, Really Trying - Janet Raye Stevens
Hello YA-Outside-the-Liners
and welcome to February!
We’re one month closer to spring and maybe even closer
than that if we take Punxsutawney Phil’s word for it (in
case you were huddling in a groundhog hole for warmth yesterday and missed it,
Phil didn’t see his shadow, so that means an early end to winter!).
This month’s
theme is what success looks like now. I was thinking of writing about what
success in my everyday life looks like but recounting my skill at successfully
matching up every pair of socks I pull out of the dryer or my uncanny ability
to snag the last bunch of ripe bananas at the supermarket, while riveting,
seems off-topic.
So, I’ll talk about success in writing. And instead of focusing
on the now, I’ll start by taking us back to yesteryear and what I thought writing, or rather
publishing, success looked like then—back
in the days when traditional publishing was king, queen, and emperor all rolled
into one. When the big New York publishers actually promoted mid-list authors and
“self-publishing” was a dirty (hyphenated) word.
Back then, success to me looked
like this:
- Big book deal with a big-time publisher
- In-house PR department & promotion
- Conference appearances
- Keynote speaker opportunity
- Book tour
- Book signings
- Multiple print runs
- Swag & free author copies to pass around
- Books released in print (both mass-market and trade paperback size)
- ...and of course, money
Unrealistic, I know, even back then. But when I first started writing for publication, I wanted
all of that. Correction, I thought I
wanted all of that.
Since then, the industry has changed, and I’ve changed with it. We’ve
both matured. We’ve both been battered by the vagaries of the market and the
times that are a-changing. While Amazon and the indie-pub revolution has been chipping
away at traditional publishing’s success, I’ve been traveling a convoluted route as I've striven to find my own publishing
success.
I’ve taken classes and workshops and seminars, learning my craft. I’ve
sent out hundreds of queries and received an equal number of rejections in
return. I had a literary agent offer to rep me and 2 days later change their
mind. I’ve entered numerous contests, finalled in and even won some of them, got
another agent, and yet another. I’ve been writing and writing and managed to get
eight short stories published. All while hoping to eventually ink that big book
deal, get that keynote speaking engagement, the multiple print runs, all the swag,
and of course, the money.
Then, one day at a conference, as I sat listening to
a multi-best-selling author talk about her long and equally convoluted and Sisyphus-ian
journey to success, I realized I didn’t want any of that anymore. Didn’t care
about being a keynote speaker or the swag or any of the woo-woo stuff.
I just
wanted to write. And write well.
Success to me now is writing. Cooking up fun and fabulous new plots and bringing those
plots to life. Diving into research of other times and places. Continuing to
learn the craft and delighting in discovering new facets of my abilities. Success
is meeting other authors and becoming friends. Cheering their successes and commiserating
with them on their rejections or bad reviews or myriad other un-successes. And success
is, of course, the money, in the form of a royalty check I just received for one of my short stories
totaling an impressive $2.25.
But most of all, success is having someone tell me
they loved reading something I wrote.
Janet Raye Stevens is the successful
author of YA, mystery, paranormal, and contemporary romance novels and such short
stories with long titles as Mrs.
Featherpatch and the Case of the Skewered Ham.
Oh, man, I connect with this. And I LOVE this definition of success: "Success to me now IS writing."
ReplyDeleteThanks, Holly! This biz can be so daunting, focusing on the important stuff is the only way to stay sane.
ReplyDelete