Monday, May 4, 2015
Elizabeth Varadan: Tuesday Two Cents' Worth
Welcome to Tuesday Two Cents' Worth! Today, Elizabeth
Varadan, writer extraordinaire for young audiences is shelling out some
excellent advice. The stage is yours, Elizabeth!
The Value of Patience and Persistence –
Elizabeth Varadan
All my life I
wrote stories and poems, but as an adult I was mainly focused on getting
through college, and then a teaching career consumed my time and creativity. I
wasn’t serious about writing until I retired early to write full time.
My first lesson in
persistence was the reality that, no matter what one’s flair for language and
story ideas, one must spend significant time and effort learning the craft of
good writing. (My efforts earlier had gone into the art of good teaching.)
Character was my
strength, but a supportive writing group helped me discover that plotting was
my weakness. I read books on plotting. I reread favorite authors and new ones,
paying attention to what made their plots engaging. I took classes. All of that
took time, but gradually I saw improvement. Persist in learning the nuts and
bolts of your craft.
Lesson number two:
Re-write forever. At times, it feels that way. Early on, I wanted to submit
manuscripts too soon. A good critique group keeps your enthusiasm high for
writing while helping you to resist that temptation. Writing is about more than
the quest for publication. It only took me a few weeks to write The Fourth Wish, and the same is true
for Imogene and the Case of the Missing
Pearls. But I spent couple of years
rewriting each one, and then rewriting it again and again – more times than I
can count – before it was ready. This is key for those who self-publish: Resist
the temptation to get your book published too soon. Persist in making it your best work.
Lesson number
three: Keep on, despite rejection. I self-published The Fourth Wish after an online magazine ran it as a serial,
because readers liked it. I started a blog, and a world of new friends opened
up. From blog friends I’ve learned so much about what’s out there, if you only
persist. For Imogene, though, I wanted
to be traditionally published. That meant writing more of those dreaded query
letters and synopses (which do get easier with time. Anything you persist at
gets easier with time.)
But, whether you
self-publish or seek traditional publication, never give up. We’ve all heard
this, which isn’t the same as living through it – so much disappointment and
then picking yourself up again! Still, when I heard that Kathryn Stockett’s
marvelous book, The Help, had been
reject 60 times – 60! – I told my
husband, “Obviously I haven’t been rejected enough! What if she hadn’t sent it out 61 times?”
That made me keep
submitting Imogene and the Case of the
Missing Pearls, a middle grade mystery involving Sherlock Holmes, until I found
the perfect match in MX Publishing, an independent publisher that specializes
in Sherlock Holmes books.
So there you are:
Don’t stop. Never quit. Persist.
Imogene and the Case of the
Missing Pearls can
be pre-ordered
And
at Book Depository:
Author contact
information:
and
Twitter: @4thWishVaradan
Amazon
Author page: http://www.amazon.com/Elizabeth-Varadan/e/B003VOTCFG/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1308264854&sr=1-1
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