Did anybody sit down and draw like Michelangelo after a few
tries? Play like the master cellist Pablo Casals? Till his death at 96, Casals
practiced every day “because I feel as though I’m making improvements.” Don't give up if you're a new or aspiring writer.
You get better at it the more you write. No one else brings
to your manuscript the same life experiences that color the characters,
setting, and plot that you are writing. Your story is important.
Don't give up.
Liking a book--or not--is subjective. It may be something as simple as the setting
is a place where a reader may have broken up with an old girlfriend. Your
reader picks up your book and the first five pages remind him of heartbreak.
That is not a judgment on your book.
Your book description may have conveyed the impression this
was a light-hearted “cozy” featuring cats and an amateur detective. Instead
your book is really noir, dark in tone, and not something your reader is in the
mood for. Again, not a judgment on your book.
Your reader may be the kind that reads only a few books a
year and may face your book with many competing agendas for his time. Just
because you read dozens of books a year and are in the habit of reading, too
many others aren’t. They’re TV watchers, or gardeners, or like to hang out with
the family in their leisure time.
Another book may have taken precedence. All this publicity
over Harper Lee’s new book may have compelled your reader to take another look
at To Kill a Mockingbird.
Your first five pages may have started slow. There’s no zing
there to keep the reader turning pages and to get them away from the TV.
A speaker, at one of the first writer’s conferences I went
to, said when you’d written a million words you’d be published. I’d written
about 5000 at that point so you can imagine how those words resonated. Now when
writers no longer have to win their way past the bottleneck of agent and
publisher to publication, these words may no longer to true in one sense. You can publish your second draft, without the
advice of an editor, critique group, or proofreaders. Your mother loves it.
That’s good enough.
The reason readers may not like your book is that you may
not be at the top of your game yet, sad to say. Your next story, or your next
novella or full-length piece of crime fiction may be the one that grabs notice.
Sometimes it’s perplexing to look at two books side by side
and wonder why one succeeds and another doesn’t. It’s all subjective (when you hit all the high
points that are currently popular in your genre.)
The important thing is to honor your own voice, to keep
going when the shadows creep in and darken your optimism. Keep going when the most published author in
your critique group, the one with the most insistent loud voice, tells you to
make your heroine a hero, rewrite the ending, or just give up on this story.
Don’t do it. Persevere.
If you have completed a manuscript that has a beginning,
middle, and end, with a plot that makes sense, characters that are alive and
engaged with each other, and a colorful setting—whatever else is wrong with it
can be improved.
If your spirits are sagging, along with the middle of your
story, don’t give up. Take an online writing course, find a critique partner,
trust a friend who loves reading your genre. If you’re ready to listen and
learn, and take criticism to heart, there are techniques you can learn to
improve your writing.
I know a little about writing mysteries and the craft of
telling stories. You might check out my eBook series on “Writing Your FirstMystery.”
3 comments:
Great post. Many writers can use some encouragement. They're almost where they should be, but want to give up when something doesn't work right.
I love self help books. I haven't read yours, but I read at least one every year and I learn something from each and every one. I'll remember these. Yes, I still need help. I'm not sure I'll ever get past the stage with wanting to learn more about writing.
Excellent post! We writers all seem to have times when we have self-doubts about our books.
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