Friday, February 23, 2007

Always a Bridesmaid, Never a Bride!

I have a confession to make. I withheld some writing-related information from you this week. See, I had to sit with it a while before I blogged about it. Or, more accurately, I had to throw myself a little pity party. And now that the world's smallest fiddle has finished playing the world's saddest song, I'm ready to talk about it!

So, remember that CONNections Contest sponsored by the Connecticut RWA chapter that I entered an eon ago and finaled in a half-eon ago? (I'd link all that stuff up, but there's nothing new on their website, so I won't bother!) Well, on Wednesday, I heard the results. Living in Sin placed third.

Again.

I know, I know. I should be happy that I finaled. I should be thrilled that I placed. That I should have done so not once, but twice, should have made me ecstatic.

But the truth is, I was none of those things. I was disappointed. More than a little. And disheartened. More than a little. Because, you see, I'd done quite a bit of work on the manuscript between that contest entry and the Golden Rose entry (where it also finished third) and, I'll be honest, I hoped to do better this time around. I didn't have my heart set on winning or anything, but second place would have been awfully nice! Not to mention it would have validated the changes I made.

Yes, a second place or better finish would have said, this manuscript is getting closer. It's good. It's almost there.

Instead, what I felt I got was, Sorry, this really isn't ready for prime time and never will be. Go back to the drawing board.

I have to admit, I had a real crisis of faith in this manuscript.

So, what's the first thing I did? Well, of course, I cried on my critique partners' shoulders. All of whom basically told me to quit my caterwaulin' and suck it up. (In the nicest way possible, of course. Erica, in particular, gave a fabulous pep talk.)

And now that it's had a few days to sink in, I know this isn't remotely as awful as it seemed at first blush.

We are, after all, talking about two editors and two houses. Hardly the entire romance novel publishing industry by any stretch of the imagination. So two of them didn't think it was the best manuscript in the competition and beg me for a full. There's more fish in the sea. (Not a lot lot more fish, but more than two for sure!)

And there's no accounting for personal taste. For whatever reason, these two editors liked other manuscripts in the competition better than mine. So what? That doesn't mean there isn't an editor or agent somewhere in the big wide world who's going to love my story and want to buy it (or sell it, as the case may be).

But, I'm also willing to entertain the possibility that the doomsday message I felt I read in those contest results that first day is the right one. Maybe I won't ever be able to sell Living in Sin. Hey, it's my first book. (Well, not counting all the horribly atrocious ones I wrote as a teenager. I don't have to count those, do I?) Most published authors didn't sell their first books, after all. Those who did often admit to having written the first book from scratch several times.

What published authors didn't do was give up on writing or trying to get publish what they wrote. And I have no intention of giving up on writing (as if I could--I'm an addict, peeps!) or on trying to publish what I write (because as much as I'm addicted to writing, I'm addicted to trying to share what I write with the world). There may come a day when I decide my first book is just never going to sell and I have to put it on the shelf. I'm okay with that. I'm nowhere near that point. I know that. But it's nice to be able to acknowledge this fact and be comfortable with it.

And I am.

Mostly :->!

(Oh, and ya'll should read Lacey's blog today while you're at it!)

6 comments:

Beverley Kendall said...

You are right on all counts. YOU CAME IN THIRD!!!! Some would give their arm and leg just to final. And like you said, there is no accounting for tastes. NBC turned down Desperate Housewives and ABC said we'll give it a shot. Look who's crying now. And yes, it's your first novel. If not this one, then certainly the ones you write in the future will see publication. You did GOOD!!!!

Ann Aguirre said...

That's the most important thing. If you want it, just don't give up.

Pam Skochinski said...

Congratulations on third. That's really an accomplishment!

And it is your first, my "first" short story didn't sell until almost 10 years after I wrote it! And I had to rewrite it pretty much from scratch. But I sold others and learned so much.

Don't be disheartened -- I'm looking forward to the day that we see a "coming soon to a bookshelf near you!" sign with a book title by JACQUELINE!

Tessa Dare said...

You know, I'd take two 3rd places any day over a win and a non-final. It means your work is *consistently* recognized as among the very best. And maybe something about this particular project just didn't grab these particular editors the right way - but that's no reason to conclude it won't find a home somewhere.

I'm sure it's disappointing not to win, but I'd be encouraged if I were you. Elizabeth Hoyt was a Golden Heart runner-up last year - look where she's at now. I bet whoever won would switch places with her in a heartbeat. I read on someone else's website that she entered 2 manuscripts in the GH - one finaled, but the other was the one eventually contracted for publication - and it got a 2, 3, and 8 from the GH judges.

So anyway, congrats! Celebrate!

Tessa Dare said...

Okay wait - that was confusing. The person who got a 2, 3, and 8 was not Elizabeth Hoyt, it was someone else whose name i forget.

Jackie Barbosa said...

Thanks for the chin-ups, folks. I just got the feedback sheets in the mail, and they're interesting to say the least. In the first round, I got one perfect score and two high but not exorbitantly high ones. The editor's feedback suggests the basic story premise and hero/heroine combination are good but that the title needs work (and believe me, I've TRIED to come up with something I like better and keep failing!). The editor also said she wasn't sure the dialogue felt natural, which was interesting to me because I usually get pretty positive comments on my dialogue. So, I have to say hmmmm to that one.

But, her comments are more encouraging than discouraging, which makes me feel better.

As an aside, I haven't been able to find out who beat me because no official announcements have been made anywhere. If they had, I'd definitely Google 'em though, Leigh.

And Tessa, could the author you're thinking of be Kalen Hughes? I know she sold the manuscript that DIDN'T final in the GH rather than the one that did.