Sunday, February 28, 2010

My Publishing Journey #3: Stumbling Towards Success

Today's story reveals a few of my naive escapades when I first entered the publishing world. You may find them amusing... or cautionary. :-)

In June 2007, I found two critique partners in my hometown. We met once a month to exchange constructive comments on each other's work.

Two of us signed up to attend a local conference. I was enthusiastic about my appointment with one agent who would be attending. She was a general market agent but had brokered a few CBA deals.

By the time the conference finally rolled around in April 2008, I was ALMOST finished with my novel.

Do not use an impending conference as a deadline to finish a novel draft.

Why?

Because if you stay up late at night finishing your draft the night before the conference, you may be in a slightly emotional state when your agent appointment rolls around.

NAIVE MOVE THE FIRST: THE WEEPING WRITER

Squirm.

Yes, it's true. I stayed up far past my bedtime finishing that novel. I didn't realize how sleep deprivation plus the emotional wallop of completing such a long project would affect me.

It wasn't the best pitch you've ever seen. Ha ha!

I knew what I was supposed to say, in theory, but when I actually made it to my place in front of the agent, I sensed that my general pitch might not be exactly what she wanted to hear.

"What else would you like to know?" I asked, staring at her like a deer in headlights.

"Tell me about your heroine and your hero."

"Well, they're both based on real people who lived in a small town in Ohio in 1854..."

So far, so good. But as I described these real people, I choked up and my eyes watered. I was overwhelmed by the realization that my long, solitary work was finished and it was finally time to share it with the world. I really, really loved these characters, and I couldn't believe I had made it to this point.

Fortunately, I recovered myself sufficiently that I didn't burst into a full sobbing fit during the pitch, but it was very embarrassing nonetheless.

The agent was nice enough to request a full manuscript. I was overjoyed! But I was also a little nervous. What if this agent made me an offer? I hadn't really clicked with her on a personal level. All sobbing aside, I sensed that our personalities probably were not a perfect match, and I knew nothing about how she would work with a client.

About a week later, my little family headed to California for the annual Pepperdine lectures. Before we bunked down for the night in a hotel room, I checked my email.

Lo and behold, an announcement from American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) had arrived in my inbox. A friendly fellow writer wanted to pass along a message from Rachelle Gardner, who had recently joined Wordserve Literary as an agent after many years as a high-level editor.

Rachelle was seeking quality manuscripts in my genre.


I immediately went online to investigate her credentials, and found that she was my dream agent. Her editorial background was superb. I could trust her to know good work from bad, and to care about quality as well as commercial appeal.

NAIVE MOVE THE SECOND: THE STINKY QUERY

I wrote a really, really awful query letter in the darkness of that hotel room, while my family slept.

Oh, the pitch was OK, if not perfect. I presented my novel well.

It's the OTHER stuff that stunk to high heaven.

Some of it I can't confess even now, though you would howl with laughter if you heard it.

Here's just a teeny, weeny sample. In my ignorance, I told Rachelle that I really wanted her to be my agent, but that another agent already had my manuscript, and I was afraid she might take it before Rachelle could respond.

(Pause here while I simultaneously cringe and chuckle at my own foolishness.)

NOW, in hindsight, I know that publishing moves at a glacial pace, and that there was almost no chance that the other agent would have responded to me in a week, or even three weeks.

THEN, I was honestly filled with dread that the other agent would call me up, drooling over my manuscript, and I would miss my chance to sign with Rachelle, the agent I really wanted.

Double cringe.

Ever gracious, Rachelle said nothing about my faux pas at that time. After reviewing my query and sample, she requested that I send her a partial manuscript.

O frabous day! Calloo! Callay!

Despite NAIVE MOVES THE FIRST AND SECOND, I seemed to be headed in exactly the right direction.

Next: My Publishing Journey #4: In Which Our Hapless Writer Faces a Reckoning

9 comments:

Tamika: said...

I loved this Rossiyln! You have a wonderful agent and a wonderful story to boot.

Dreams really do come true! I can't wait to hear the rest.

Jody Hedlund said...

Great story, Rossyln! It's great hearing more about your journey toward publication! Thank you for sharing it! I think I can guess what Rachelle decided! ;-)

Wendy @ All in a Day's Thought said...

I did the inside laugh thing while reading this whole post. Been there and done that on some of those. Second chances are good. ;)

I've heard countless positive things about Rachelle. I'm glad you've been blessed with such an agent.
~ Wendy

Caroline Starr Rose said...

I love the human side of all this! Thanks for being willing to share.

And anyone who quotes "Jabberwocky" is a friend of mine.

Kat Harris said...

This was awesome. Your posts are bringing light to my Mondays. I can't wait for next week.

DL Hammons said...

That was an awesome story. Thank you for humanizing the whole process for us.

Rosslyn Elliott said...

Thanks for your encouraging words! Tomorrow, the big news finally breaks. What a relief, to end the long silence. :-)

Mary Aalgaard said...

Thanks for your honest and insightful journey stories.

Warren Baldwin said...

Humorous recital of a tension filled story.