So, I got out of that temporary funk. The secret to writing is to write. You can't publish a book that isn't written. You can't market a book that isn't written. You can't tell your friends and family to buy a book that isn't written.
So, I wrote. Or, I edited, which is also writing in my opinion. You have to be able to edit to be successful. Once my book is edited I will start to query publishers (which is not really writing, not creative, anyway). As I do that, I will start writing something else. Or I'll edit something else. It's a process. Write, rewrite if necessary, query/submit, repeat until successful/dead. Rinse. Lather. Something.
And I've figured out how to edit in a way that takes less time and isn't as annoying as before. I use MS Word's Review and Track Changes functions. It let's me go through my manuscript, cross things out (it keeps the text so I can still see what was there) make comments that stick on the side, and it does it all in red so when I make the revisions I can easily see what I want to change.
If you read a whole lot of books, you are going to find the kinds of books you really like. When you write, you then write something you like to read. Since books you like are already published, you have immediate target publishers to offer your book to.
At least that is how it works in theory...
I am planning on being published postumously....
Lynda
I too tend to get sidetracked with my worries about how marketable my book is, or how I am going to learn all I need to know about the publishing industry.
Truth is, that is all that is useless untill I actually have a finished manuscript.
*sigh* Enough wasting time on Hatrack, back to work.
quote:
I start to worry that no one will want my book and what will I do then? Will I self-publish? Will I use a Print on Demand service. Will I sit at home and cry?
I sit home and cry. Then I start to write again. I love to write. It's the only thing that takes away the sting of rejection--the reminder of why I write. It also helps to know that many of my critique readers are eagerly waiting for my next novel to be finished. If only agents and publishers were as excited, but I do believe I will be published within the next ten years by one of the major publishers. If not this novel, then the next...or the next...or the next. It probably also helps that my non-fiction work sells decently and has a fan base. But I still cry...
I once talked to a friend of mine who is a clinical psychologist about attitude and goals. He believed (and I agreed) you must have total belief in achieving your goal. If you have any doubts about the book you are writing, it may well show up in the writing itself and confirm your fears. I've read some well known authors who believe this also. Worry over the book is wasted energy better spent directed toward writing and publishing the book.
Jim Butcher said most of success comes down to keep going while others give up.
Keep writing. Try and make it the best you can possibly make it each and every time, and you'll get better and better.
I also suggest that all aspiring novelists read WRITING THE BREAKOUT NOVEL by Donald Maas.