Lesson 4: What to
do when you’re rejected
Once you’ve done all that, and been rejected, send
your work to another publisher right away. After all, it’s just one editor’s
opinion and what one editor hates, another may love. If you’ve sent it to ten
publishers and they’ve all rejected it, it’s time to rewrite it. If you’ve sent
it to twenty, chuck it away and start again. If forty, assuming you can find
that many publishers, write something completely and utterly different and
change your name.
To experience the extraordinary diversity of
opinions any work will get, check out the reader reviews, for any book you know
well, on Amazon. For a laugh, take a look at what eighty-odd readers say about
my first book, A Shadow on the Glass.
One reader will attack the book, the author, editor, proof-reader, publisher
and everyone else associated with it, as if mere publication of this book was a
personal insult. The next reader will say it’s the best book they’ve ever read.
For my own amusement, I once matched up a dozen professional reviewers comments
on this book into pairs that contradicted each other.
Don’t take rejection to heart. I once had my
editor knock back a manuscript as ‘unpublishable’. A fortnight later my agent
sold it to another publisher for lots of money and they offered me a three-book
contract into the bargain. The series had terrific reviews and I did about a
hundred interviews, quite a few of them for national media so, even though
sales were modest, the books and the publicity lifted my author profile
tremendously.
But if none of the above is working, tomorrow’s
post, Why most writers never get
published, may tell you why.
- For more about me and my books: http://www.ian-irvine.com/
- To say Hi or talk to me about books and writing: http://www.facebook.com/ianirvine.author
- To follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/ianirvineauthor
- My blog about the novels I write, and the writing life: http://ian-irvine.blogspot.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment