When I started writing this book last February, I didn't think it would be any different than the tens (maybe even hundreds) of other novels I've started writing in my life but never finished. I did it purely for my own amusement, not because I had any aspiration to or expectation of publication.
But then the darn thing went and took on a life of its own. A month after I'd begun, I'd written somewhere in the neighborhood of 40,000 words and started thinking not only that I might actually finish the darn thing, but that it might be pretty good. And writing it was becoming like an obsessive-compulsive disorder. I thought maybe I'd better try to find out whether it was worth it to keep devoting so much of my time to writing. I needed some honest people to tell me whether my story was any good at all or whether I was just wasting my time.
That's where the Internet in all its glory came into the picture. I started looking for other aspiring writers to commune with. I found and joined a Yahoo group called Aspiring_Romance_Writers. Many of the posters there read my work and their comments were encouraging. It seemed like maybe I had some talent and wasn't just engaging in an act of pure mental masturbation.
So I got more serious. I started exchanging chapters regularly with Lacey Kaye, who became my first and most indispensible critique partner. (To this day, I send her every chapter as soon as it is written and she always gives me fantabulous feedback.) I learned from the ARW folks about Romance Writers of America (RWA). After dithering for a month, I found a contest I wanted to enter (the Seattle Chapter's Emerald City Opener) and decided to fork over my $100 for membership. That proved to be a good decision, however the contest turns out (I believe results are supposed to come out in August) because through RWA, I found my other critique partners and they are all terrific (you know who you are and if you want me to publish your name and website here, just e-mail me!).
As of last week, I finished my 15th chapter and have a whopping 70,000 words written of an expected 100,000. Looking at my plot line, I think it'll actually wind up more like 110,000 to 120,000 words when I finish the first draft, but I know there's stuff I can go back and remove to get it back down to the 100,000 mark.
And reaching that milestone has made me even more serious. I've chosen a pen name (a riff on my real first name and my maiden name that I came up with when I was 16) and am setting up a website (not that there's anything there yet) and this blog. I've tasked myself with completing my first draft by September 30th and hope to have all the critiques incorporated by October 31st. With any luck, I'll start sending out query letters on the first November.
Whether or not I ever succeed in getting anything I write published (I already have characters and plots for two follow-ups to my current book), I've learned a lot in this process. I've learned that I'm brave enough to let other people read my work (for years, I couldn't bear the idea). I've learned things about writing a romance I never even dreamed of (e.g. internal vs. external GMC). I've learned how to put my ego in the box I keep next to computer when I read a critical comment on what I've written rather than just getting my feelings hurt. And I've learned that there's a whole world of other people out there aspiring to write and publish their own novels, but that rather than viewing them as competitors, I can view them as friends and compatriots. We're all in the same boat, so to speak.
Finally, I've learned that writing is a business. It's not just a matter of writing the best romance novel evah. Because you could write the best romance novel ever and never get it published if you don't also write a great query letter, a great synopsis, and, most importantly, get yourself out there. There's no substitute for self-promotion in this industry; no one else is going to do your work for you.
4 comments:
WHOO HOO!! You're up and running, girl!
Way to start getting yourself out there, my friend. And let me be the first to welcome you to the fun and obsessive world of blogging...and you thought writing your novel was compulsive. bwa ha ha ha
and then when you get published they just want you to start all over and do it again.
Holy shit, Kate Rothwell posted to my blog HOW long ago? And I didn't even notice! Holy crap on a cracker!
Hi Kate! I am so, er, beyond flattered.
Thankfully, the starting over again thing doesn't bother me at all. I am ITCHING to finish this manuscript because I have got at least two others fighting to get out of my head next. But I'd LOVE to be starting over for an editor, not just to relieve myself of my multiple personality disorder!
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