Following is the end of my interview at a cool website for newbie and professional writers, The Writer's Block, at Raychelle-Writes.blogspot.com. Specifically, you can find my interview here. But it's an interesting site, so look around!
You can find Part One of this series a couple of blog entries ago, or here. Part Two is a few entries ago, or here.
7) How do you promote your work? What methods have worked best for you?
Well, I’m still relatively new at this, so I do what I can without letting it overwhelm the actual writing time, plus the career that I love which also pays The Man. I blog, usually three to four entries per week. I’m a member of (too many) online writers groups. I befriend (or is it e-friend?) other bloggers, and I comment on their blogs. I tell everyone who is related to me, who likes me, or who might be interested—or any combination—about my published work. I just took a copy of Space and Time with my story in it to the local library and asked if they could subscribe to it, since my story was in it—and they said “Yes!” (That was completely spur-of-the-moment.) A few other things are in the works.
Despite all this, I firmly believe that the best method of promoting my work is to finish more of it, to send it out, to get it published, and to advertise that—then repeat. I very strongly believe that a writer’s best advertising is his own high-quality, published work.
8) What are your upcoming plans for 2012?
To finish, send out, and publish every single title I mentioned I was working on in #3!!! Plus everything else festering in this overactive head of mine that I haven’t had time to jot down yet. And to set up a better schedule for myself so that I can do all that.
9) What is your definition of success as an author?
This is actually pretty simple, and I’m happy you used the word “author” rather than “writer,” or it wouldn’t be so simple. A successful author is one who gets paid to his/her own satisfaction for the work he or she has produced. Success, unlike beauty (though we could argue about that, too), is in the mind of the individual, not the beholder.
10) What advice would you offer to aspiring authors?
Read a lot.
Write a lot.
Send it out a lot.
Stir. Repeat.
Showing posts with label published. Show all posts
Showing posts with label published. Show all posts
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Monday, April 16, 2012
My Published Interview
The link below is to The Writer's Block, a great website for writers, newbie or not. The owner of the site was nice enough to interview me about my writing, the published story, and other things, awhile back, and she posted it on the eleventh. Check it out, and while you're there, look around at all the other cool links for writers and readers, too.
Thanks! And thanks to Rachelle for interviewing me and for posting it! If you didn't click the link above, click the one here:
http://www.raychelle-writes.blogspot.com/2012/04/writers-block-interviews-steven.html
Thanks! And thanks to Rachelle for interviewing me and for posting it! If you didn't click the link above, click the one here:
http://www.raychelle-writes.blogspot.com/2012/04/writers-block-interviews-steven.html
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
A Real Achievement
A bit of an eye-opener today: an e-friend of mine wrote to say that I should be congratulated, that a 76,000-word, complete novel is a real achievement. Funny that I'd never, not once, thought of it that way. I've always been so hellbent on being published that the actual completion of the manuscript wasn't a big deal to me. I'd felt, and still do to an extent, that if I didn't get the novel published, I (and it) was a failure. Period. The completion of it was nothing special--though I'd been through a bit of hell to finish it--and the only purpose of its existence was to see it published.
I now see that this was a bad attitude to have toward the art of writing, as well as towards the business in general. First novels don't sell, usually. Unless you're J.D. Salinger, or Harper Lee, or maybe F. Scott Fitzgerald, your first completed manuscript won't ever see the light of day. More importantly, most aspiring writers don't ever finish their first novel-length manuscript. They say they're writing, and they call themselves writers, but they're not writing, and most of these writers never complete anything.
I did. I not only finished what is called a publishable manuscript (even by the agents who've rejected it), but I also wrote a lot more stuff and eventually sold a story to a print magazine. These are achievements--not only the published stuff, but the completed stuff. Novels, stories, poems, essays, etc. Everything a writer finishes is an achievement, and as long as I continue to see it that way, I will finish more pieces, and perhaps sell more. If I only think of my writing as a success if I sell it, than most of the time I will feel like a failure--which I had, especially during an eight-year hiatus from writing at all. (For some reason, I found myself saying that to a roomful of professors and writers, all of whom expressed their condolences to me, and who told me to continue writing, that I was too good to stop for any reason.)
So I say all of this not only for myself, but for every writer who reads this blog. Do not think of your writing solely as potentially published pieces; if you do, and if they don't sell, you'll fall victim to despair like I did. Look at your writing as potentially living and breathing pieces; this way, once you've completed them (and I do mean fully complete, not just a "rough draft" complete), you'll feel as if you've given life to something that had never existed before. You'll feel a sense of accomplishment. This way, also, you won't be waiting around for that piece to sell; you'll feel successful and write (and complete) something else.
I now see that this was a bad attitude to have toward the art of writing, as well as towards the business in general. First novels don't sell, usually. Unless you're J.D. Salinger, or Harper Lee, or maybe F. Scott Fitzgerald, your first completed manuscript won't ever see the light of day. More importantly, most aspiring writers don't ever finish their first novel-length manuscript. They say they're writing, and they call themselves writers, but they're not writing, and most of these writers never complete anything.
I did. I not only finished what is called a publishable manuscript (even by the agents who've rejected it), but I also wrote a lot more stuff and eventually sold a story to a print magazine. These are achievements--not only the published stuff, but the completed stuff. Novels, stories, poems, essays, etc. Everything a writer finishes is an achievement, and as long as I continue to see it that way, I will finish more pieces, and perhaps sell more. If I only think of my writing as a success if I sell it, than most of the time I will feel like a failure--which I had, especially during an eight-year hiatus from writing at all. (For some reason, I found myself saying that to a roomful of professors and writers, all of whom expressed their condolences to me, and who told me to continue writing, that I was too good to stop for any reason.)
So I say all of this not only for myself, but for every writer who reads this blog. Do not think of your writing solely as potentially published pieces; if you do, and if they don't sell, you'll fall victim to despair like I did. Look at your writing as potentially living and breathing pieces; this way, once you've completed them (and I do mean fully complete, not just a "rough draft" complete), you'll feel as if you've given life to something that had never existed before. You'll feel a sense of accomplishment. This way, also, you won't be waiting around for that piece to sell; you'll feel successful and write (and complete) something else.
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