Category: The Publishing Industry


This year no excuses

This year, we’re finally going to do it.

We’re going to buckle down and write more. If you haven’t started your dream project, you’re going to. If you’re stalled on the novel, you’re going to plow ahead. If you are mid-career and writing so very slowly, you are going to trust your fingers and type faster.

We’re going to pin our ears back and go straight down the middle to the goal posts.

Because if you’re not on the field, you’re not going to have the ball (pardon all the football talk, but ’tis the season) and if you’re not going to do it this year, then when?

The thing about writing

The thing is, you’re going to have to write a lot to have a career. It really won’t do to be a one-book wonder or a v-e-r-y s-l-o-w writer. The reasons for this are many, but generally have to do with visibility, dependability, building a base of readers, giving publishers something to sink their teeth into, promote and have faith in.

That being the case, it’s time to hustle, people. Read More »


It ain’t solitary confinement

I’ll be at World Fantasy in San Diego this week (see my schedule at bottom), and will be looking to do some business. But mostly, I’m going to see friends.

I hope, having said that, that I will not lose my membership in Introverts Anonymous.

Thing is, in this business you need a little help from your friends. Writing is a solitary endeavor, but it’s not solitary confinement. It’s hard to have a big success in this field, but working harder won’t necessarily make that happen. Actually, it’s far likelier to happen if you build a support group to help you stay balanced and achieve perspective.

Don’t make the mistake of thinking that to be a writer you mostly have to hunker down and write. You do, of course, have to write. But you also have to survive the slings and arrows of a very tough business. For this, there is nothing like a friend.

If possible, a very close friend. A best pal can anchor you in the writing life, providing:

  • Advice and problem-solving.
  • A friendly ear when one hits bottom.
  • Someone who’ll applaud you without (too much) envy when a success comes.
  • A  companion for conferences and signings.
  • A mirror to your own writing life, to give perspective.
  • Source of laughs, gossip, and wisdom.
  • Dependable guerrilla marketing and cross-promotions with you. Read More »

The Saga of a Short Story

This is a tale of luck.

It’s also a typical story of how a short story gets published. I’m relating this tale to assure those of you who may feel discouraged about selling stories and depressed about rejections, that rejection is common even for multi-published writers. And–in the shared misery category–to assure you that all writers hate to be turned down.

And how you persevere and sell the damn thing anyway.

My little tale goes like this: A couple years ago I read a news article that inspired me to write a science fiction short story. I finished the thing and thought it was quite good. Quirky, a little slow. But original and moving. And if you’ve been following my blog, you know I like stories that tap your emotions.

I promptly sent it off to a prominent SF magazine which, with lightning speed, said no. So, I thought, that is one benefit of being a published author: you sure get your short stories read and rejected right away. Read More »


An Introvert’s Guide to Worldcon

This is part of my series “An Introvert’s Guide to Writing.” For more tips on going to conventions see post #5 in the Introvert series.

I’m going to Reno next week along with several thousand others, many of whom will, like me, wish they were somewhere else. Like in the hotel room writing or watching “House” reruns.

Why go to these endless networking confabs? People who say “To see my friends!” are doubtless looking forward to the dozens of close friends they have made in the biz. Maybe even hundreds of best friends! However, for the introvert, we are happy to see friends, of course, but both of them live in Indiana. So why are we going to Reno?

1. Because we learn stuff.

2. Because we may be able to do business with editors and collaborators.

3. And because, like it or not, we shall meet people.

Here is the thing about meeting people

The world is run by people, the writing/publishing business is run by people and the people we meet may know someone else who knows someone else who will be fun or productive to know. Thus, meeting people at conventions is a very nice door into the world you are trying to break into.

It just won’t happen all at once or all at one convention. It will be incremental. Read More »


I might as well quit and other demented notions

Writers often harbor seemingly reasonable beliefs that are actually rather deranged. We see conspiracies, cling to unrealistic expectations, succumb to pointless envy and other maladies. Here are some checks to patently unhelpful thinking. Remember, you do not have to believe everything your brain tells you!

(This post, slightly edited, was first published in December ’09. I’ve had some requests to reprint… oh dear, you’re falling back to those demented notions?)

1. If the right people would help me, I could break in. Actually, publishers and agents are constantly trolling for great stories. Don’t engage in conspiracy thinking; the  industry is not against you. There is no secret handshake. It’s all in the story.

2. Two years wasted; I can’t sell that novel. Patient has bizarre thought patterns. Subject actually believes people sell every novel they write! Maybe you can’t sell that novel, but you might well sell the next one, and having written one beforehand is great practice.

3. I might as well self-publish. If you are a beginning author, publishing through vanity presses or amazon is a prescription, usually, for low sales. With e-books this is changing, but we’re not there yet. (Three quarters of all books sold are paper.) Cultivate patience. See my post, Publishing Jitters.

4. I have no talent, or I would have sold by now (won an award by now, gotten a big advance by now . . .) *Therapist is laughing.* Patient actually thinks it’s about talent! It’s about determination and growing. Why do we torment ourselves with the talent bugaboo? Writing is a craft, not an art. You can learn to write a knock-out story.

5. I can’t believe that writer’s sales. Crap sells, I guess. So did you think the business was about fine writing? Nope, it’s about entertainment, and I’m as sorry about this as you are. I, too, love really fine writing. But consider: What that story lacks in style it makes up for in story appeal, possibly entertaining hundreds of thousands of people. Best to let go of envy and glean some insights from so-and-so’s wildly popular story.

6. He just broke in and he’s outselling me. Subject is succumbing to envy again. (Note to self: do not succumb to envy!) Also, let’s not imagine a trend where none exists. The writing life has ups and downs. There may be trends, but usually they’re too chaotic to see. Furthermore, it’s not helpful to see the world of publishing as fair and logical: if he is selling better than I it must mean he has more talent, or the industry hates me, or I killed my pet in a previous life. My friend, none of these things is likely true. Ups and downs! Put this on wall in big letters. Ups and downs.

7. Two bad reviews in a row. They really hate me. Don’t read tea leaves. Two bad reviews in a row actually only means two stinkers in a row. If all reviewers hated the  book and it sold badly, it still just means they didn’t like the book, which says nothing about you. The next one could do just fine.

8. I might as well quit. Patient is threatening her own brain with a bizarre and punishing notion. You don’t really want to quit. Yes, the marketplace can be spectacularly unfair.  So can politics, your love life, and golf. And since you really won’t quit, stop catastrophizing and get on with the next story.

Big hug. See you at the next session.


Facing the Fear

This past weekend Chelsea Cain gave a little gem of a talk at Write on the River. Hers was an inspirational review of her climb to fame. She said that perhaps someone in the audience would have a million-dollar idea for a novel. Hearing her personal story, many of us left that auditorium feeling that we just might be the one to have the next big success.

Mining your life

One of the things Chelsea Cain did to find her million dollar story (Sweetheart, Heartsick, Evil at Heart) was to pay attention to the things she was afraid of. She talked about the Green River serial killer, and how she grew up knowing that death came to young women in horrible ways right here in the Pacific Northwest. She was able to mine her own childhood to find the emotional depth to tell her serial killer stories partly because she was always afraid of one. Read More »