
In less than three weeks, I’ll be releasing my book about indie writing, sharing everything I’ve learned over the last seven years. You can preorder Suck a Little Happy Juice here. I’ll be sharing some of my most popular columns that are now in the book to whet your appetite…
Every writer has a list of things they wish theyâd known when they started. Writing is a craft, like any other, and each mistake teaches us something new. Here are a few things I would tell my younger self if I could, knowledge that would have made my writing journey a little easier.
Rejections Happen. Donât Let Them Stop You: If you give up being a writer just because you received a few rejections, youâve already lost the game. You may be awful at writing, or you might be the best writer who ever lived. Either way, you will be rejected, sooner or later (and probably a lot). It may not have anything to do with the quality of your writing, and even if it does, you can work on your skills and become a better writer. Most likely, your story just didnât connect with that editor at that particular time. I got rejected by ten big publishers when I was twenty-seven, and I let it derail my writing career for almost two decades. Donât do what I did. Believe in yourself and forge ahead.
It Doesnât Need to Be Perfect the First Time: Another newbie writer error is trying to make sure the story is perfect in its first draft. The perfect really is the enemy of the good. If you spend more than a week tweaking one page of your book (unless itâs the first one and youâre angling to snag an agent or big publisher with it), youâve probably fallen into this trap. Let it go and keep writing. You can fix any issues in later drafts.
The Muddy Middle is Real: Many writers get bogged down in the story somewhere around the middle (for me itâs usually two-thirds of the way throughâwhat I call the âmuddy middleâ). What once seemed fresh and daring now seems hokey, trite, and overdone, and you canât ever see yourself selling the cursed thing. But take heartâmaybe it sucks, maybe it doesnât. But itâs all fixable. Stick to your goal, move on, and finish the story. Leave it to your future self to determine if itâs really bad as you think. You might be surprised once you have a chance to get a little distance and perspective.
Start Out In The Market You Want To Be In: When I began writing seriously in 2013, my first submission was to some anthologies in the Romance market. Romance wasnât my first loveâthat would be sci-fi/fantasy. But publishers I knew about in that market had openings for stories that I knew how to write, and so I took a chance. While I donât regret my decisionâIâve made some amazing friends and published a bunch of great stories through those channelsâI ended up spending years moving from the Romance market to the sci-fi/fantasy market. Figure out where you want to be, and focus all your efforts there.
Learn The Rules: There are a lot of rules to writingâand a lot of strong publisher and editor preferences, backed up by the various style guides. Since Iâve come back to writing, Iâve learned that double spaces between sentences are out, that I should never use semicolons and rarely use adverbs. Writers no longer underline italics, and in many genres rarely use âhe saidâ or âshe said,â though this is still in vogue in literary fiction. So learn the rules first. But hereâs the thing, once you know them, you can break them. You just need to know why youâre doing it, and for what effect.
Write Whatâs In Your Heart: Thereâs always some new, hot trend in the market. Werewolves, Mars, vampires, RPG, zombies, etc. But very few people are able to chase the market successfullyâby the time you get there with your story, it has already moved on to something new. In the long run, youâll be happier writing the thing that makes you happy, even if it doesnât make you tons of money. And when you write what you like, your enthusiasm shines through your work, making it that much more likely that you will find success with it.
Make FriendsâLots and Lots of Friends: Networking is the lifeblood of this market. And while having lots of friends doesnât guarantee your success, it does give you connections and options. Identify editors, successful authors, and others in your specific niche and get to know them. Offer to help them with their own needs, sharing their work, beta reading for them, etc. and they will most likely return the favor. Build bridges, not walls.
Donât Read Your Goodreads or Amazon Reviews: Or if you do, bring along a friend and a bottle of whiskey to buffer the pain. We writers are notoriously thin-skinned. We wear our art on our sleeves, and one nasty review can obliterate ten five-star ones. Be very careful checking your reader reviews, especially at first. The writers who quit their craft after reading a single horrible review are legion. Donât be one of them.
Donât Be Afraid To Sell Yourself: Youâre an author. Itâs probably because you feel a deep-seated need to writeâyou have stories in your soul that need to be told. Be proud of it. How many people say they want to be writers and actually follow through with it? How many people actually put out a first book, or a second, or a third? You are a rare breed. Donât be afraid to promote yourself and what you do. Thereâs a whole audience out there waiting to find you.
Donât Be Afraid Of The Tech: This oneâs especially important if you are indie publishing. The ability to indie pub has become so much easier in the last few years, but itâs still daunting. When I published my first indie author book a couple years back, I bit my nails down to the quick, worried sick I was doing it wrong. But hereâs the good news. Remember all the friends I made you make above? Well, Iâm betting at least one of them knows how to do each and every one of the technological things youâll need to learn, and is willing to help. So dive in, and call those lifelines when you need them. Youâll figure it all outâI have faith in you.
Donât Expect to Become an Overnight Bestseller: Does it happen? Sure! Sometimes an unknown author strikes gold on their first try with exactly the right idea, decent writing, and the right contacts, all at the same time. But most of us slog along for years before we have anything approaching an overnight success. So itâs nose-to-the-grindstone time. Write as much as possible, learn to be the best writer you can, and see where it takes you. Effort is often destiny.
Always Doubt Yourself: Okay, so I know this sounds weird. But I mean it in a good way. Be humble and remember that you can always improve your craft. I had the fortune to not hit it big with my first novel. Itâs easy when you find great success to start believing in your own mythology and writing ability. But a healthy streak of self-doubt keeps you striving to be better.
Support Your Fellow Writers: If you have a blog, offer it up for announcements of your writer friendsâ works, especially those who have audiences that overlap with yours. Cheer your fellow authors on when they have triumphs and console them when they fall. Build the community you want to be a part ofâin the long run, it will pay you back.
Be Kind: Over your career as a writer, youâre going to meet a bunch of wonderful people. Youâll also meet a motley assortment of fools, assholes, jerks, and folks who are just happening to have a crappy day when they cross your path. Be nice. It costs you nothing, and over time will become a part of your brand and will be reflected in the way people treat you back. And when you do run across someone who makes you feel small, donât return the favor. Be kind to them. Have a couple of close friends you can vent to privately to blow off steam. And if someone persists in being a jerk, donât be afraid to block them from your social media. After all, âbe kindâ doesnât mean âbe a pushover.â Itâs just means putting out into the world what you want to see more ofâa little light.
Celebrate the Wins: Youâll have enough heartache and disappointment in your life as an author. So when you sell a book, or have one come out, or get a great review, stop and savor the moment. Get yourself a chocolate bar or glass of champagne. Go out to dinner with your honey. Take a long bubble bath and donât skimp on the bubbles. Do whatever makes you happyâyou deserve it.
There are others I could shareâparticulars about how to manage backlist, where to distribute your books, etc. But starting with the basics will help you with your long-term plan, whatever challenges you end up facing.
Define your own success.
Author friends: what do you wish you had known when you were first starting out as a writer?