Writing through
Rejection Part II Publishing
December 5, 2017
Linda Lee Kane
Publishing is
frustrating. No matter how much – or how little – success you’ve had,
parts of it will always be out of your control. But the writing is
completely in your control. And for me, I try to keep the two as separate
as possible. I still think of creating the books as something fun I’m
doing for myself, and the publishing and marketing side as a job.
Obviously, they have to overlap, but the more I can keep them separate (I even
write in a different place than I do marketing and other publishing work), the
more I keep the joy in the writing process.
Before I was published,
I used a lot of methods to keep myself motivated while I waited for “the
call.” First, I surrounded myself with people who really understood what
it meant to be a career-oriented writer, because they were doing it too.
I met up with a critique partner at a coffee shop one evening a week, every
week (which meant that no matter what else was going on in my life, for those
hours, I was always writing). I joined writers organizations, especially
local ones, where I could sit for a few hours a month soaking up industry and
craft knowledge, and sharing frustrations and excitements of the business
(seeing other people succeed reminds you that you can do it too!).
Secondly, I focused on
methods that kept me writing. I set goals every week with my critique
partner (that accountability is important) and the two of us also set rewards
for meeting those goals (it’s amazing what I’ll do for chocolate or a spa
trip). I set aside a regular writing time that I tried to stick to, because
then it becomes habit and that’s important too. If I ever couldn’t write
in that time, I edited, because at least then I was still moving forward.
And perhaps most
importantly, I believed I could do it. Remember what I mentioned about
stubborn and determined? Those may be the most important tools in your
arsenal. Of course you have to hone your craft and learn the industry and
keep writing, but at the end of the day, when one hundred agents and editors
tell you “no,” you have to believe in yourself enough to think “I know better
than they do. I’m going to get there.”
Linda L. Kane MA in Education, PPS, School
Psychologist, and Learning Disability Specialist, is the author of The Black
Madonna, Chilled to the Bones, and Murder on the Vine, A Daisy Murphy Mystery.
She lives with her husband, three dogs, one bird, and six horses in California.
2 comments:
It does help to be among people who have the same goals. That's why I go to my Chicago-North RWA Chapter meetings. It keeps me motivated.
Rejection has never really stopped me, I just keep pushing onward.
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