With
shaking fingers and a hopeful heart you click open the email. It's
not been a long wait, three, maybe four, five, six months – still
the wait is behind you now. This is the publisher who is bound to be
the one that says, “We would like to publish your novel. Contract
on it's way.”
But
it isn't.
It
says curtly, highhandedly, no room for hope, thanks, but no thanks.
The email falls short of actually saying – 'sod off', but only
just.
Tears
well up in your eyes. You say, “Fuck it.” As you brush your tears
away – I don't think. What you really do is collapse in a shapeless
heap of misery, and bawl your eyes out.
Have
you finished crying? Good.
Bawling
done – it is now time to pull yourself together, and hit the
bottle.
Does
the genre you write determine your choice of booze?
Here's
a helpful list, if you are not sure which form of this particular
pain-killer you should go for.
Horror
writers --- Bourbon, Sour mash whiskey, any type of hard liquor.
Theirs is a tough genre, it calls for tough drinking.
Romantic
types --- Champagne or Cava, depending on cash-flow.
Sci
Fi geeks --- Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster. What else?
Paranormal
--- Red wine. Think of vampires.
Erotica
--- Cocktails. It takes all sorts!
Comedy
--- coffee. Why not alcohol? A caffeine life is a happy one. No
caffeine – then – 'die you bastards.' - is not the attitude you
should have if you want to make people laugh.
Of
course, you could be teetotal – but if you are a writer, I doubt
it.
Ex-smokers,
who haven't smoked, in heavens knows when, should not start searching
down the back of the couch for that long lost packet of of 20. Chew
your finger nails, looks nasty, but not so dangerous to your health.
Don't
over look the therapeutic properties of good old fashioned – sex.
Shag 'till exhaustion sends you to sleep, thus blotting out the
misery of rejection, only works it you have someone to do it with,
unless you are a gadget freak.
Of
course, all of the above may not necessarily appeal. So here's some
alternative suggestions.
Think
on this. Some of the most successful authors of all time, have
experienced multiple rejections from agents, and publishers alike.
With
a wonderful twist of irony, how stupid must the agents and publishers
feel, who rejected J. K. Rowling?
All
that lovely commission having slipped through their fingers.
Life
is full of disappointments. Some small. Some not so small.
Disappointments are one of the many hard facts in life we have to put
up with. Get used to them. You won't every stop being disappointed as
you weave your way to your final chapter, but you can lessen the blow
with a positive attitude of mind.
Tell
yourself, if agents and publishers can reject mega successful authors
like Stephen King, and J. K. Rowling, they obviously don't always get
it right. And in your case, they have definitely got it wrong.
If
your rejection isn't just a short note, but an editor has taken the
trouble to give you the benefit of his/her wisdom, read it – digest
it - because often the reason you will get an editor commentating,
is, they like your writing style, and think you show promise. Editors
don't wast their time on no hopers.
An
editor gives out advice for one reason, they think you and your book
or any future books you might write, could suit their publishing
house, once you have listened to them, and acted on their advice.
Take
heart. Basically – they like you. Would like to publish you.
If
it is a curt rejection you get, remember Stephen King and J. K.
Rowling. Pick yourself up, dust yourself down, and send your MS to
another publisher, giving it one more read through before you do.
But
if you really hate the idea of being rejected again – love 'em or
hate 'em, thanks to companies like Amazon, it is now much easier to
self-publish your book. As is typical of human enterprise, a whole
new industry has sprung up.
The
Indie Industry.
Professional
proof readers, editors, book cover designers, and agencies where you
can buy an ISBN number from, are only a Google click away.
Some
Indie authors, have landed solid book contracts from publishing
houses. If your book sells well because you have gone to the trouble
to present it in a professional format, then being noticed by the
'big boys' becomes easier.
All
editor's opinions are subjective. If it's a curt note. Delete it with
a 'yaboo sucks to you' attitude – remembering the mega greats who
also got rejected.
If
the email has good advice, act on it.
But
if there is one thing you should take heart from when you get a
rejection slip/email. Your sense of self-belief.
Deep
in your soul, you know you
are going to become a published author. You must never let go of
knowing you can
achieve your dream.
If
you can sit at a keyboard for weeks or months on end, diligently
creating your imagination into a book, then you have truly succeeded,
no matter what someone else says. Your work maybe rough around the
edges, your story may not appeal to everyone who reads it, but you
did it.
You
wrote your story. You sent it off to a publisher.
So
say to yourself, fuck the publisher who doesn't like what you have
written, revise your MS one more time, click on Predators and
Editors, and find that publisher who has the foresight to take a
chance on you.
thanks
for reading this post...and if you enjoy my articles – please share
them --
The
Riotous Writer
More
of my books – through my American publisher.
When a boy ghost meets a girl human in a hot-tub. Romance - Yes. Sex - Definitely.
Vampires - not the undead - aliens from another galaxy.
reject picture by courtesy of digital art at FreedigitalPhotos.net
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