Last month, I mentioned that an agent had asked for my full
manuscript. Friends and strangers alike squealed in delight—yes, sounds
transmit quite well through email J—and
they congratulated me profusely on my accomplishment. It was then that I realized
that I have a whole passel full of non-writers who read my blog and that,
perhaps, I should take some time to review the process of moving toward
publication.
While a request for a full manuscript is terrific, it is but
one step on a very long journey in the world of a writer. I did not start out
writing with an eye to publication. I began because a story kept percolating
and bubbling into my consciousness and I was curious about whether or not I
could get it down on paper. Two and a half novels and three novellas later, it
seems that I can.
As I refined my writing through beta feedback, multiple
edits and endless revisions, it was inevitable that the thought of entering the
competitive world of publishing should enter my mind. After all, it's a lot of work
to simply tuck away in the proverbial drawer. My betas (for the uninitiated,
these are folks who read your manuscript and tell you, either in a broad or
narrow sense, what works for them and what doesn't) are strangers and have no
vested interest in humouring me. They give constructive feedback and assure me that
they like my stories, enjoy my writing. So, between the hours of creation and
the stroking of ego, I decided to enter the business side of writing.
In this day and age, there are basically two options:
traditional or self-publishing. Now, self-publishing is filled with success
stories and certainly has proven to be lucrative for many. As an added bonus,
you don't have to jump the often-defeating hoops of traditional publishing. I
won't say any more about it because, quite frankly, I haven't explored it in
great detail. I am old fashioned enough to want to make an honest go at the
traditional route. So, this is what that looks like:
1.
Agonize, fret, gnash your teeth and pull your
hair out…that's the writing the novel part.
2.
Build an online presence so, if you are ever published,
people can find you. This blog is part of that. You can also find me on Twitter
@roserambles1.
3.
Search far and wide and create a list of agents
who are interested in your genre, who seem like a good fit (you stalk them on
Twitter and their blogs to make this decision) and who are actually open to
looking at new authors.
4.
You query the agent(s) of your choice. Now, the
query is your talent in a nutshell, disguised as a business letter. In 200 or
so words, your letter must grab the agent's attention enough for him/her to want
to see what you've got. Keep in mind, in any given week, this letter hits that
agent's inbox along with a hundred or so others.
5.
Agonize, fret, gnash your teeth and pull your
hair out…waiting to hear back from agent.
6.
Odds are in favour that you get a polite, usually
kind, form rejection. You don't know if said agent has even read your query or
if an assistant has decided it's a "no go." (A no response means no
interest is the worst of these. Did they even receive the query? Are they just
behind in reading their emails? Not even being worthy of a standard rejection
does make one feel like the lowest of the low.) Now, if you're lucky, you go to
#7. If you're really lucky, you jump to #8.
7.
Agent likes your query and requests a partial,
which is literally a piece of your manuscript—30 pages, 50 pages; it depends on
the agent. You go back and hang out at #5, hoping it won't take too long and that
you'll be able to move on to #8.
8.
Agent likes your query and requests full manuscript.
You ship that puppy off faster than you can shout "Yahoo!"
and then you go directly to #9.
9.
Agonize, fret, gnash your teeth and pull your
hair out…waiting to see if you actually have an agent.
10.
This is the best stage of this part of the game
or the worst. Either you get a rejection on your manuscript, that baby you
slaved over and love oh, so much, or you get a phone call offering
representation. If it is the first, you go back to #4 and start all over again.
If it's the latter, you pull out that special bottle of champagne you've been
keeping just for that moment. (Well, you pull out a bottle of champagne because the first ten you've saved for that
moment have already been consumed because you keep stalling at #6, #7 or option
one in #10. J)
Then, my dear non-writer friends,
you know what happens with your book? Absolutely nothing…yet. This process
starts all over again, only this time you have a partner in agony—your
agent—and you both get to work through the pain of finding an editor who wants
your work. And, do you know what happens when you hook an editor's attention?
You got it, they have to present to the acquisition board and it has to pass
muster to move into the publishing process…which is a whole other blog. And, I haven't even touched upon the potential rewriting that occurs between agent and acquisition!
The road to publishing is not an
easy one to travel. Writing is my happy place and I hate leaving it to make the
journey. Self-doubt hides around every corner, discouragement sits waiting at
dead-ends. But you, dear readers, with your interest and your curiosity, are
part of the fuel that fires the dream. I thank you for dropping by each week,
for sending me emails, for making me feel like I am someone worth reading.