
Something to think about! It probably won’t go as planned. Hang in there.
-Jan R

Something to think about! It probably won’t go as planned. Hang in there.
-Jan R

I write a lot about rejection because it’s a part of life if you’re an unpublished author seeking a literary agent or publishing contract. Many would-be authors allow a simple rejection to end their attempts at writing. Their thought – I must not be good enough. Well maybe that’s true, but odds are it is not.
Manuscripts are rejected for numerous reasons, and many have nothing to do with your work. So what are you supposed to do if you receive a rejection?
A writer not being able to deal with rejection, is like a doctor not being able to deal with death. It’s going to happen, and like successful authors, you will have to learn to live with it.
-Jan R

Something to think about!
-Jan R

Don’t you hate it when you’re talking to somebody and they are all wishy-washy? Why can’t they just come out and say it? Most of the time you know what they are getting at and want to spit it out for them. Well, the same thing goes for writing.
The surest way to gain and hold a reader’s attention is through definite, specific, concrete writing. Don’t make me as a reader try to figure out what you are trying to say. It’s not my place to write your novel. I just want to read and enjoy it. Allow me to enter the realm of your imagination without trying to figure out every little detail myself.
Examples:
The weather was dreadful. vs. It rained every day for a week.
He was happy to take possession of his well-earned reward. vs. He smiled as he placed the coin in his pocket.
I don’t think I have to point out which sentence in these examples is the more specific and concrete. Also, you may have noticed when I went concrete, I lost the passive “be” verbs đ
Best-selling authors are effective because they deal in particulars and report details that matter in a definite, specific, concrete way.
Just something to think about.
-Jan R

Something to think about!
-Jan R

I write a lot about perseverance, because from everything I’ve read, it’s the one characteristic all published authors have in common. They don’t give up! They take their day or two or however long they need to get over the rejection from yet another agent, and then they dust themselves off and get back to work.
Don’t take rejections personal. The agent’s/publisher’s decision is business related, and truth be known, it may have nothing to do with your manuscript. If there are no obvious flaws with your work, send it out to other agents. Just because you were rejected by one agent, doesn’t mean you will be by the next.
The New York Times best selling author of “The Help”, was rejected by 60 different agents. You read that right. Her 61st attempt was a success. The book was on the best seller list for the entire year and eventually made into a movie.
So why do books get rejected?
Maybe your manuscript just isn’t ready.
Maybe your manuscript is ready but….
What I’m trying to say, is there are a lot of reasons books get rejected, and they may have nothing to do with your work. I’ve read more than once, that perseverance is the key.
If you have a great, publishable piece of work, don’t give up, submit it to other agencies for review. If you have less than perfect work, roll up your sleeves and get to work. Don’t expect someone to fix it for you. They won’t.
It might be time to hire that editor, but don’t give up!!!
-Jan R

Something to think about đ
-Jan R

It seems like it’s been a long time since I truly sat down to write. I’ve been doing posts, but mainly older blogs revisited or simple quotes.
My life has been hectic over the last year or so, and it’s been maybe a little too easy for me to say, “I just don’t have the time to write”. I allowed one day to grow into two days and then three and on and on and on.
Before I knew it, I was barely writing at all. I now fully understand why many professional writers encourage you to write every day.
We all have days or personal situations to arise that hinder us from getting to the keyboard. I’m not condemning anyone for taking a needed day off. Life happens!
The problem I had, was the longer I went without writing, the easier it became to put it off. I had become so engulfed with what was going on around me, that I had pushed writing to the side.
Something that I truly enjoyed doing had become an afterthought. Should I write today or not. The answer usually was not.
I am back in the game and wanted to warn those who follow my blog, listen to the experts.
Write! Write! Write! Hopefully, you got that. Just Write!
-Jan R

Or in our case, one word. Something to think about đ
-Jan R

This is one of my favorite blogs. I have published it a couple of times as a reminder to my readers and myself. I wish I could claim it, but the post was actually written by Jerry Jenkins. I love his work. If you haven’t visited him, I would highly recommend you do. He did put a disclaimer at the end of this article saying it was ok to share with friends, so I am in no way stealing his work. Hope this helps someone and hope you consider visiting his site.
It doesnât sound fair.
It doesnât seem right.
But hereâs a dirty little secret of the writing life you need to hear:
Any veteran editor can tell within two minutes whether theyâre going to reject your manuscript.
It takes longer to decide whether theyâll recommend it for purchase, of course, butâsad to sayâit can, and often does, go into the reject pile just that fast.
âWhat?â you say. âBefore Iâve had a chance to wow them with my stupendous villain? Before my mind-blowing twist? Before my plot really takes off?â
Sorry.
And Iâm not exaggerating.
Because the competition is so stiff and editors have so many manuscripts to read, you have only nanoseconds to grab them by the throat and hang on.
Every writing mentor hammers at this ad infinitum: Your editor is your first reader.
Every word counts. You get one chance. You must capture them from the get-go.
Am I saying editors look for reasons to reject your work?
No, no, a thousand times no! Theyâre looking for the next Harry Potter!
Then how can they know so quickly that your book wonât cut it?
In my lifetime in the business Iâve heard dozens of reasons, but let me give you my personal top five from my experience as both an editor and publisher:
This is what editors call anything that comes before a story or chapter finally, really, begins. It usually consists of a page or two of scene setting and background. Get on with the story. Get your main character introduced, establish and upset some status quo, then plunge him into terrible trouble that reveals the engine of your story. Is it a quest, a journey, a challenge, what?
Thereâll be plenty of time to work in all those details that seemed so important while you were throat-clearing that would have cost you a sale. For now, your job is to start with a bang.
Iâm usually wary of generalizations or hard and fast rules, but almost any time I see more than three characters within the first few pages, my eyes start to swim. If I feel like I need a program to keep track of the players, I quickly lose interest.
Your reader is trying to comprehend the story, and if you ask him to start cataloging a cast of characters right away, you risk losing him. Keep things simple until the story has taken shape.
Maintain a single Point of View (POV) for every scene. Violate that cardinal rule and you expose yourself as an amateur right out of the gate. Beginners often defend themselves against this criticism by citing classics by famous authors or citing J.K. Rowling, the exception who proves the rule.
Times change. Readersâ tastes evolve. This is the rule for today, and itâs true of what sells.
There are also clichéd situations, like starting your story with the main character waking to an alarm clock, a character describing herself while looking in a full-length mirror, future love interests literally bumping into each other upon first meeting, etc.
Also avoid beginning with an evocative, dramatic scene, and surprise, surprise, the main character wakes up to discover itâs all been a dream. Thereâs nothing wrong with dreams, but having them come as surprises has been used to death and takes all the air from the balloon of your story.
Itâs also a clichĂ© to have your main character feel his heart pound, race, thud, or hammer; and then he gasps, sucks wind, his breath comes short⊠If you describe the scene properly, your reader should experience all that and you shouldnât have to say your character did. Put your character into a rough enough situation, and the reader will know what heâs feeling without having to be toldâand hopefully, heâll share his distress.
This is what I call that special language we all tend to use when we forget to Just Say It. I recently edited this sentence from a beginner: âThe fire drop from the pommel of Tambreâs sword shot past the shimmering silver mist of her involuntary dispersal.â
I had to read a few more paragraphs to have a clue to what it even meant. Thatâs written-ese.
Hollywood screenwriters coined this term for prose that exactly mirrors real life but fails to advance your plot. Thereâs nothing wrong with the words themselves, except that they could be synopsized to save the readerâs time and patience. A perfect example is replacing all the hiâs and helloâs and how are youâs that precede meaningful dialogue with something like: âAfter trading pleasantries, Jim asked Fred if heâd heard about what had happened to Tricia. âNo, what?ââ
Avoid state-of-being verbs. Change sentences like âThere was a man standingâŠâ to âA man stoodâŠâ
The most famous rule in the bible of writing hints, The Elements of Style, is âOmit Needless Words,â which follows its own advice. This should be the hallmark of every writer.
Example: The administrative assistant ushered me through the open door into the CEOâs office, and I sat down in a chair across from his big, wood desk.
Edit: Obviously, there would be a door. And even more obviously, it would be open. If I sat, I would sit âdown,â and naturally it would be in a chair. Because Iâm seeing the CEO, a description of his desk would be notable only if it werenât big or wood.
Result: The administrative assistant ushered me into the CEOâs office, and I sat across from his desk.
Re-examine these 5 common mistakes, and study more self-editing tips here,
-Jan R