Kathryn Stockett, author of The Help, writes in The Best Advice I Ever Got: Lessons from Extraordinary Lives that her manuscript was rejected by 59 literary agents before it was finally accepted!
She talks about her persistence (i.e. stubbornness) and multiple re-writes as she continually changed and shaped her manuscript. Wouldn’t you like to know what the 60th agent saw in the manuscript that the other 59 did not? Could it be that Kathryn changed and improved the manuscript over the years to the point where it was a different book?
Wading through my own first revisions, these are the questions that I ask myself.
Susan Henderson, author of Up from the Blue has advice that has truly resonated with me. “Don’t edit the heart out of your story.”
As I revise my manuscript, changing the heroine’s occupation and thus part of the setting, and adding and deleting secondary characters I am reminded to keep the original vision of my story intact. One of my biggest problems is that this is not the story that I felt driven to complete. I worry at times that it never had a beating heart to begin with.
This story is more or less an experiment. I belonged to a writer’s group last year which encouraged me to finish something. At the time I had three novels in different stages of completion. I chose to finish this book because I thought it would be ummm, the easiest to complete!
As I wrote, it was not my intention to even attempt to write The Great American Novel. I was quite pragmatic and decided to target a particular publisher, a “niche” publisher. I hoped it would fit nicely into that little sub-genre. Now I’m not certain.
Is it best to target a particular publisher, or to follow your heart and write the story that you’re passionate about?
I had heard that "The Help" was turned down 59 times and was amazed by that. It is a fabulous book, we read it in our book club and totally loved it. We went to see the movie together and there were a few book clubs there at the same time.
ReplyDeleteJ.K. Rowlings was turned down a lot of times too and with persistnce, look where she ended up!
I love the quote about keeping the heart in the book and I think that's so important.
Don't lose sight of what you want that novel to be, what you want it to say and who you want the characters to be.
I say go with your heart, write what you want it to be and then go from there. I think if you try to write for a specific publisher or niche, you may not go with what you really want, but what you think they may want.
Can't wait to hear more about your novel!