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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: submission process for writers, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. On a Personal Note

This blog is intended as a place of safety and support for writers on their individual writer's journey. A place where I offer up tips about plot and the Universal story form for novelists, screenwriters, memoirists, and those who dabble in creative non-fiction. Never have I expressed much about my personal writing life yet now I feel drawn to share the following excerpt from a letter of condolence and support to a fellow writer. That it helped renew her enthusiasm and passion for writing and submitting her work to agents perhaps, if you too are faltering, my words might serve as a lift:


I wish you could share your journey to getting your novel published in an article for Writers Digest or a similar writer's magazine. Yes, the trauma you have suffered in your life makes you more sensitive. Yet you speak for all writers when you voice your despair over the submission process.  

The pain you feel from rejection letters is universal. Truly. Gifted writers, gifted creators of all kinds stop writing every minute because of rejection. 

We writers share our innermost soul on the page and to have our writing rejected means we're being rejected -- that which is most personal and meaningful to us. Sure, we should buck up, grow a thicker skin, not take it personally, but lots of those things we "should" do and feel are never as simple as they sound. 

People like you who are brave enough to write about the pain are the reason for the phenomenal success of the Indie industry. Perhaps that's what indie publishing really is -- a gift of separation from the powers-that-be in NYC. The release from having to be judged by the arbitrary board of gate-keepers to that which we long -- a readership to enjoy our words and stories.

I rarely submit... anymore. Early on I did. Too early. I cringe when I think of some of the writing I sent out before I knew better.

The novel I recently completed is my best by far. I wrote Angle of Reflection for an agent who had rejected an earlier novel and asked me to send him any future work, saying he loved my "voice" / writing style. I have not heard back from that query. The novel I completed before this one, I queried two agents: the one who rejected it. The other immediately asked for the entire manuscript. After 6 months, I have yet to hear yea or nay.

I have not given up. Quite to the contrary. I am simply writing and waiting. Today, publishing, as with almost every institution steeped in tradition, experiences upheaval. Things shift, making room for the new to emerge. 

In the meantime, I continue to help writers achieve their publishing dreams (I include a list of current and former clients I am proud to announce have books being released this fall). 

I've found peace through this approach and trust that when the time and I am right, my fiction will be published.  In my acceptance, I make my way toward my dreams by studying the craft and continuing to write. I have given myself until I am 99 years old. If I've not had my fiction published -- yes, I could go the Indie route, but hold out for NY -- then I'll despair. In the meantime, I write...

I am proud of you for keeping to the pursuit of your dreams. For continuing to find resources to help heal you and strengthen you. For voicing your pain. For fighting back. For protecting yourself from those out to suck dry the creative and brilliant and lovingly magical soul of yours.

I believe in you. I almost hate to say that because I feel that by encouraging you I send you back out into that which can destroy you, and just as easily lift you to heights you never imagined. You're strong enough to survive this. In surviving, you triumph! In your triumph, we all triumph!!

My only advice is to keep writing. We get better every time we show up for our writing. Write through your pain. Write down your pain. Write, write, write. Ignore anyone who doubts you. Concentrate on yourself, your writing, and the divine energy of creation. You channel that power every time you show up for your writing. You perform a sacred rite through your writing. Make the writing itself enough... for now... write....

WRITERS TO WATCH (books with a Fall 2009 release date by authors who have credited my plot support as help in their success publishing): 

Daily Coyote (softcover release) by Shreve Stockton (Simon Schuster) 
http://www.dailycoyote.net/

Sounds Like Crazy by Shana Mahaffey (Putnam) 
http://shanamahaffey.com/

Love in Translation by Wendy Nelson Tokunaga (St. Martin's) 
http://www.wendytokunaga.com/pages/

The Lodge by David Brandin (iU -- Editor's Choice Award) 

(If I neglected to mention your book, please let me know and I'll add you to the list.)

2 Comments on On a Personal Note, last added: 8/19/2009
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2. Formatting for Submission

Same writer as in the previous post has finished her outline, synopsis, and bio, and her entire book has been edited and is now ready to go out to interested agents.

In making sure her attachments can be opened -- some problems arose earlier because instead of word doc files, she had gif files and docx files I could not open -- this time I could open. When I did, I caught a couple of issues which I addressed in an email, a portion of which I include here:

Comments on formatting (these are no biggies, but I believe industry standards???):
1) Appears you've justified both margins, meaning the words begin and end on each line at the same place. It's best if the right margin is more ragged-looking and you only justify the left.

2) You've place the page numbers on the bottom right. "Should" be at the top right.

In sending these comments to you, I can hear a short story friend rant about picky rules when submitting to literary contests. She's highly creative, bigger-than-life writer, as I imagine you to be. She rails against such "left-brain" sort of rules as I imagine you do. I do, too. Most of us do except those lucky ones who like organization and order and rules...

These submission guidelines are yet another challenge -- antagonist -- writers must overcome. Yes, there are those writers who are picked up who break all the rules. They are the exception. Yes, you, too, can be an exception, but if you can, why not format your submission in such a way that all the agent notices is the writing.......

P.S. -- Yes, I am quite aware that this is not a "plot" issue. Yet, I am confident that most of you reading this blog will, if you haven't already, one day hit this phase in your writing life -- the submission process -- and may benefit. That's my hope anyway...

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3. The Writers Submission Process

One of my favorite writers recently attended at a meet-the-agents day in NYC where she pitched her latest writing project to a slew of agents. She returned home with a headache and a long list of interested agents. Now that the excitement and nervous energy is abated, she's left with burn-out and overwhelm.


Following is my sympathetic response to her experience.

...as for your burn-out. I'm not surprised. All that interfacing and the nervous energy from all the writers around you. Congratulations for taking time to rest and take care of yourself.

Once you are rested comes the tedium of sending out all the different packets --not the easiest thing for any of us, but especially difficult for right-brained, highly creative types such as yourself. You just have to put your head down and do it, one submission at a time.

The submission process is a brutal business fraught with more rejection that one person should have to endure. However, it's a part of life and one we have to toughen up for. 

There are agents who will love what you've written -- they are the ones you're looking for. 

Rejections from the others have to be brushed off without the sting allowed to pierce your body. These agents are those who either have just signed on a new writer and don't want to take on another, promised to clear their desk today and send out a sweeping stack of form rejection letters. Others are in a bad mood and take it out on the stacks of awaiting submissions. And the list goes on... 

There are as many reasons for rejections as there are agents and writers, Many, many, many of the rejections have absolutely nothing to do with your project at all.

0 Comments on The Writers Submission Process as of 6/3/2009 6:46:00 PM
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