|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
Monday Jul 18, 2005
Cooling Heels, Cool Head
The Waiting Game: Tips for keeping cool - Keep sending your writing out so that you always have an "iron in the fire." - Know that rejection is just part of the publishing game. If you aren't getting rejections, you aren't sending stuff out--and if you aren't sending stuff out, you aren't going to get published. - Don't linger on disappointments. "When I first started sending my writing out," says Laurie [Henry, author of The Novelist's Notebook], "I thought it would be a good idea to pin all my rejections on the wall above my desk. It turns out that was a bad idea--too depressing!" -Don't get too fixated on any one publication. As Laurie says, "If you repeatedly get a form rejection letter, with no personal note from the editor or reader, you might be barking up the wrong tree." - Learn to recognize success. If your recipient takes the time to add a personal note, suggesting revisions or inviting you to send in other material, rejoice! Editors are busy, so this is a good sign. |
|
|||||||