Despite all those maybes (and there were plenty more), I noticed something. Not all of me was excited. While the hyperactive happy puppy part of my brain was gamboling about imagining a fan-run wiki and people dressing up like my characters for Halloween, the cranky leash-holding part of my brain was saying, “Heel, pup, because something ain’t right.” It didn’t feel safe.
So I did two things. First, I did more research on the publishing company and their books and authors. I asked around. I asked friends to ask friends to ask friends. The results were mixed. In the name of realizing a publication dream, I might have gone for it.
But the second thing I did was sit quietly and think about what I wanted. (Fine, we’ll call it what it was: brooding.) Did I want this particular book to be my debut novel? Did this book represent my best work? Would it put me on the path to writing more of the same, or would it allow me to grow and experiment? This was an old manuscript—I wasn’t even writing in that genre anymore. And what about self-promotion—how much time and energy would that take away from my new WIP?
We all know what happened in the end. Obviously, because um, I haven’t published a book. Maybe I never will. But it was important to me to follow my intuition, improve my craft, and wait. At the SCBWI Summer Conference in August, agent Steven Malk talked about slowing down and having a plan, really evaluating where you want your writing career to go.
Steven Malk addressing kidlit lovers at the SCBWI Summer Conference in 2013. I'm off to the far left--sitting next to one of my writer crushes, Sonya Sones! Thank you, Lee Wind, for permission to use the photograph. |
I read this back at Halloween-time and asked Beth if she would share it here as a guest post over the holidays - she kindly agreed. Check out more of her posts at YA Muses.
Illustrate and Write On,
Lee
6 comments:
I needed to read this, Beth and Lee. Thank you for your honesty, for keeping real yet motivating. The advice is helpful.
Great post. This is something we all need to think about. Slowing down and really thinking about what you want to do with your writing is hard but necessary.
Great post. Yes, slow down but also beware of the "perfectionist" gremlin who will keep you from ever submitting your work. I have author wannabee friends who have piles of manuscripts sitting doing nothing. There comes a time when you need to believe in your story, let go, submit and see what happens.
I am in a hurry. I better take a nap.
Sincerely,
Lupe F.
Thanks, Nathalie & Sue!
Sandra--good point. As with everything: BALANCE.
Lupe--Zzzzzzzz. :)
Excellent post, Beth. Thanks!
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