--GONNA BE A CAR CRASH TONIGHT
…There are few pursuits where rejection is more commonplace than
writing. Acting, perhaps. Maybe music.
Some of other arts then.
Writing is personal and subjective.
What one person likes, another loathes.
You throw yourself out there and a lot times you come caroming back, boomeranging
back.
It takes a lot of guts vat and a person has to have a tough shell. It reminds me of saying to someone, “Go
ahead, take a whack at me. Hit me in the
gut as hard as you can.”
I got novel rejected the day before.
The editor who asked to see it was the same one who picked my story to be
the winner at the PNWA Writer’s Conference.
He said I’d won by a long shot and wanted to see anything else I had. I warned him that the story I’d written wasn’t
my usual fare, that typically I write dark fiction where the characters
struggle mightily and often suffer tragically.
I could tell he didn’t believe me.
He said, send me you novel anyway.
So it came back with a blunt note saying “Sorry, the story just didn’t
grab me.”
And that’s okay, because a novel has to entirely believe in your work
if they’re going to support it. The
problem is, after a while, I start disbelieving in the novel myself. Maybe it’s not very good, maybe it’s too
quirky or poorly written.
You send your work out and you wait, and when it comes back, even if it’s
accompanied with a kind note, it stings.
Always, it does.
Yesterday I got a poem rejected.
Funny, because that same piece has already been published and since I
sent it out to the rejecting publisher almost a year ago, I’d already assumed
he passed on it. Said publisher said he “admired
my writing” and would like to see more.
I guess the thing to do is believe him.
In her book, “Bird By Bird” Anne Lamott says, “Try not to feel sorry
for yourself. You’re the one who wanted
to be a writer.” That’s true, but
self-pity sinks in now and then, whether one tries to shield themselves from it
or not.
It’s a part of the game.
A friend of mine said, “Getting published isn’t all it’s cracked up to
be.” She has a book out, of course, and
therefore has license to spout such a thing.
And maybe it’s not all it seems.
I’ve had just under 700 short pieces published, I’ve won some contests
and prizes, and my debut collection is coming out in a couple of years. Still none of that is good enough to buffer
the latest rejection. I’m always left
wandering, always left wanting more.
Maybe I’m a greedy bastard, a whiner.
Certainly, I’m better at feeling sorry for myself than the next guy or
gal.
I’m okay. Just a little
self-reflection and ranting. I don’t do
that often here. But it sort of felt
good to get it out. Hope you don’t mind.
Now I’m off to work on the novel which I hope to finish in days,
polish, polish some more, and then shoot it out to the ether.
Wish me luck.
Hey... Good luck on that novel. Hoping it finds a home soon. I can't wait to read it!
ReplyDeleteAndrew,
ReplyDeleteThanks so much. I appreciate your thoughtfulness.