tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2796003403467725916.post5425570179899941367..comments2023-05-28T08:18:44.278-04:00Comments on Kelly Freestone: What if I'm not good enough?Kelly Freestonehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10212826771270227641noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2796003403467725916.post-22983990943079714522010-05-11T17:53:55.899-04:002010-05-11T17:53:55.899-04:00thanks so much, Wendy.
Love all the good advice......thanks so much, Wendy.<br />Love all the good advice...and it wasn't harsh critique...it was honest, and I've felt that this book prooobably wont be published.<br />But you know, it's so frustrating!<br />LOL<br />I think I need to wrestle with this one for a while till it's finished.<br />It's the inspiration I had while writing and doing the online class with Lori Wilde.<br />She told me to finish one and don't quit till it's done.<br />So, that's what I'm doing.<br />The end is in sight, I just have to get there with minimal bruising and hair pulled.<br />lol<br />As frustrating as this one is,<br />every time I wake up ready for a new work day, things end up on the page...so its not hopeless.<br />I pray so hard before I get to writing that God will wirte the words and have what He'd want on there, not what I think is best.<br /><br />I know when I'm done, I'll feel as though I can do anything...<br />and yes, this one is a bit boring..but just like us here on earth, the author's not finished with me yet <br />;)<br />THanks for being a faithful commenter. :)<br />hope you have a good day, hon.Kelly Freestonehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10212826771270227641noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2796003403467725916.post-82507937002639284612010-05-11T16:49:35.858-04:002010-05-11T16:49:35.858-04:00Ahhh, the lies that can pound in our head...
I thi...Ahhh, the lies that can pound in our head...<br />I think the key, Kelly, is to realize your writing MAY be boring. Your story MAY flop. (Doesn't sound encouraging? Wait for it.) You may fall flat on your face and endure countless rejection. (Hold on, I promise.) In fact you probably, almost certainly will.<br /><br />THAT being said, (here it comes, finally!) something to keep in mind in all that bad and painful writing, all the wounding critques and outright hurtful rejection is this: They're rejecting a BOOK, not YOU.<br /><br />There's a good chance your first query won't land you a yes from your dream agent or editor. In fact, you may very well not sell your first book at all. (Have you read the million words theory? I think Rachelle Gardner has posted on it.) If you face something that tells you your work is in fact NOT good enough I advise these steps:<br />1. Keep trying. Submit to more agents or rewrite the query. Wendy Lawson's blog from today is timely: http://www.booksandsuch.biz/blog/queryfail-debunking-the-myths<br />2. Move on. I don't mean give up writing - I mean move on to the next book. It's probably very rare that an author actually publishes their first book. I've read the first book is about learning to write a book. Just like Michelangelo's first pre-K scribbles aren't in any museums (not to my knowledge anyway, and I will just assume he made some.) sometimes we have to learn the craft and put hours into that phase before we actually can triumph the first publishable book.<br /><br />So my advice is this: keep at your WIP and when you finish it stick it in a (literal or digital) drawer for three months - no peeking. Then work on something else.<br />After you finish that first draft or 3 months (whichever comes later) look at your current WIP again. It needs editing. Is it still the project you want to edit or do you need to set it aside, put your just finished work in the drawer and start a new WIP?<br />(I do say stick the new work in the drawer because you need to let the work become fresh again to edit as well as possible. It's a cyclical thing in my mind.)Wendy Delfossehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16614782334273299261noreply@blogger.com